"Nature itself contradicts itself directly, according as it speaks from the individual or the universal, from within or from without, from the centre or the periphery. It has its centre in every individual; for each individual is the whole will to live. Therefore, even if this individual is only an insect or a worm, nature itself speaks out of it thus: "I alone am all in all: in my maintenance everything is involved; the rest may perish, it is really nothing." So speaks nature from the particular standpoint, thus from the point of view of self-consciousness, and upon this depends the egoism of every living thing. On the other hand, from the universal point of view,—which is that of the consciousness of other things, that of objective knowledge, which for the moment looks away from the individual with whom the knowledge is connected,—from without then, from the periphery nature speaks thus: "The individual is nothing, and less than nothing. I destroy millions of individuals every day, for sport and pastime: I abandon their fate to the most capricious and wilful of my children, chance, who harasses them at pleasure. I produce millions of new individuals every day, without any diminution of my productive power; just as little as the power of a mirror is exhausted by the number of reflections of the sun, which it casts on the wall one after another. The individual is nothing.""
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Arthur Schopenhauer, The World As Will and Idea (1909), Vol 3, p. 416
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Wild_animal_suffering
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Arthur Schopenhauer
1788 – 1860
deutscher Philosoph
316 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Arthur Schopenhauer →
Related Quotes
"They tell us that suicide is the greatest piece of cowardice; that only a madman could be guilty of it; and other ins…"
"That thousands had lived in happiness and joy would never do away with the anguish and death-agony of one individual;…"
"[T]he life of most insects is nothing but ceaseless labour to prepare food and an abode for the future brood which wi…"
"This world is the battle-ground of tormented and agonized beings who continue to exist only by each devouring the oth…"
"Take, for example, the mole, that unwearied worker. To dig with all its might with its enormous shovel claws is the o…"
"The pleasure in this world, it has been said, outweighs the pain; or, at any rate, there is an even balance between t…"
"[H]e saw in Java a plain far as the eye could reach entirely covered with skeletons, and took it for a battlefield; t…"
"[I]n the simple and easily surveyed life of the brutes the emptiness and vanity of the struggle of the whole phenomen…"
"Certainly we know no higher game of chance than that for death and life. Every decision about this we watch with the …"
"The life of the masses is passed in dullness since all their thoughts and desires are directed entirely to the petty …"