First Quote Added
4월 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe."
"The history of the world has been one not of conquest, as supposed; it has been one of ennui."
"Anybody can make history. Only a great man can write it."
"We start from scratch, every generation. History does not bend inevitably toward justice, or freedom, or decency, or even stability. History doesn’t do that in Hong Kong, or in Moscow, or in Washington or New York City or Los Angeles. History goes where we push it. And if we don’t push, someone else will."
"History has a way of reducing individuals to flat, two-dimensional portraits. it is the enemy of subjectivity, which is why Stephen Dedalus called it "a nightmare from which I am trying to awake". If we think of Kierkegaard, of Nietzsche, of Hölderlin, we see them standing alone, outside of history. They are spotlighted by their intensity, and the background is all darkness. They intersect history, but are not a part of it. There is something anti-history about such men; they are not subject to time, accident and death, but their intensity is a protest against it. I have elsewhere called such men "Outsiders" because they attempt to stand outside history. which defines humanity on terms of limitation, not of possibility."
"Memory plays tricks that history corrects."
"History does not warehouse well in neatly labeled boxes, for events do not exist in quarantined isolation. They exist on a broad spectrum, and all influence and shape each other. Historical episodes are rarely built on the ground of a single foundation. Most are the product of a tangled web of influences and cascading cause-and-effect relationships within a broader historical narrative."
"We have been taught, inside the classroom and outside of it, that there exists an entity called the West, and that one can think of this West as a society and civilization independent of and in opposition to other societies and civilizations [i.e. the East]. Many of us even grew up believing that this West has [an autonomous] genealogy, according to which ancient Greece begat Rome, Rome begat Christian Europe, Christian Europe begat the Renaissance, the Renaissance the Enlightenment, the Enlightenment political democracy and the industrial revolution. Industry, crossed with democracy, in turn yielded the United States, embodying the rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness... [This is] misleading, first, because it turns history into a moral success story, a race in time in which each [Western] runner of the race passes on the torch of liberty to the next relay. History is thus converted into a tale about the furtherance of virtue, about how the virtuous [i.e. the West] win out over the bad guys [the East]."
"Those old credulities, to nature dear, Shall they no longer bloom upon the stock Of History."
"It is always a part of the misfortunes of the vanquished that their portraits are painted and their history written by the victors."
"The greater part of what passes for diplomatic history is little more than the record of what one clerk said to another clerk."
"If you don't know history, it's as if you were born yesterday. If you were born yesterday, then any leader can tell you anything."
"Happy is the nation without a history."
"History is a pageant, not a philosophy."
"History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme."
"History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it."