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April 10, 2026
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"Concern for this or that limited good can sometimes lead to the summit... But this occurs in a roundabout way. Moral ends ⌠are distinct from any excesses they occasion. States of glory and moments of sacredness surpass results intentionally sought."
"Nothing radically changes when instead of human satisfaction, we think of the satisfaction of some heavenly being! Godâs person displaces the problem and does not abolish it."
"An extreme, unconditional human yearning was expressed for the first time by Nietzsche independently of moral goals or of serving God. ⌠Ardor that doesnât address a dramatically articulated moral obligation is a paradox. ⌠If we stop looking at states of ardor as simply preliminary to other and subsequent conditions grasped as beneficial, the state I propose seems a pure play of lightning, merely an empty consummation. Lacking any relation to material benefits such as power or the growth of the state (or of God or a Church or a party), this consuming canât even be comprehended. ⌠Iâll have to face the same difficulties as Nietzscheâputting God and the good behind him, though all ablaze with the ardor possessed by those who lay down their lives for God or the good. ⌠Iâll admit that moral investigations that aim to surpass the good lead first of all to disorder."
"In the helter-skelter of this book, I didnât develop my views as theory. In fact, I even believe that efforts of that kind are tainted with ponderousness. Nietzsche wrote âwith his blood,â and criticizing, or, better, experiencing him means pouring out oneâs lifeblood. ⌠It was only with my life that I wrote the Nietzsche book that I had planned."
"What causes [fragmentation] if not a need to act that specializes us and limits us to the horizon of a particular activity? Even if it turns out to be for the general interest (which generally isnât true), the activity that subordinates each of our aspects to a specific result suppresses our being as an entirety. Whoever acts substitutes a particular end for what he or she is, as a total being."
"I cannot exist entirely except when somehow I go beyond the stage of action. Otherwise Iâm a soldier, a professional, a man of learning, not a âtotal human being.â The fragmentary state of humanity is basically the same as the choice of an object. When you limit your desires to possessing political power, for instance, you act and know what you have to do. ⌠You insert your existence advantageously into time. Each of your moments becomes useful. With each moment, the possibility is given you to advance to some chosen goal, and your time becomes a march toward that goalâwhatâs normally called living. ⌠Every action makes you a fragmentary existence. I hold on to my nature as an entirety only by refusing to actâor at least by denying the superiority of time, which is reserved for action."
"Humanity-attached-to-the-task-of-changing-the-world, which is only a single and fragmentary aspect of humanity, will itself be changed in humanity-as-entirety."
"Life is whole only when it isnât subordinate to a specific object that exceeds it. In this way, the essence of entirety is freedom."
"Entirety exists within me as exuberance ⌠in empty longing ⌠in ⌠the desire to burn with desire."
"It is the positive practice of freedom, not the negative struggle against particular oppression, that has lifted me above a mutilated existence."
"The total person is first disclosed ⌠in areas of life that are lived frivolously."
"Existence as entirety remains beyond any one meaningâand it is the conscious presence of humanness in the world inasmuch as this is nonmeaning, having nothing to do other than be what it is, no longer able to go beyond itself or give itself some kind of meaning through action."
"An intention that rejects what has no meaning in fact is a rejection of the entirety of being."
"If I give up the viewpoint of action, my perfect nakedness is revealed to me."
"The preceding criticism ⌠justifies the following definition of the entire human: human existence as the life of âunmotivatedâ celebration, celebration in all meaning of the word: laughter, dancing, orgy, the rejection of subordination, and sacrifice that scornfully puts aside any consideration of ends, property, and morality."
"In previous conditions, extreme states came under the jurisdiction of the arts... People substituted writing (fiction) for what was once spiritual life, poetry (chaotic words) for actual ecstasies. Art constitutes a minor free zone outside action, paying for its freedom by giving up the real world. A heavy price!"
"[Zarathustra] never abandoned the watchword of not having any end, not serving a cause, because, as he knew, causes pluck off the wings we fly with."
"[Nietzscheâs doctrine of the eternal return] is what makes moments caught up in the immanence of return suddenly appear as ends. In every other system, donât forget, these moments are viewed as means: Every moral system proclaims that âeach moment of life ought to be motivated.â Return unmotivates the moment and frees life of ends."
"Human entirety can only be what it is when giving up the addiction to othersâ ends."
"To choose evil is to choose freedomââfreedom, emancipation from all restraint.â"
"We canât rely on anything. Except ourselves. Ludicrous responsibility devolves on us, overwhelms us. In every regard, right up the present, people always have relied on each otherâor God."
"All eroticism has a sacramental character."
"Inevitably linked with the moment of climax, there is a minor rupture suggestive of death; and conversely the idea of death may play a part in setting sensuality in motion."
"There is no better way to know death than to link it with some licentious image."
"Bataille is associated with the surrealists. Basically the idea is that democracy doesn't work. Communism doesn't work. All these fucking models aren't working. We've got to find some new models â a model of what society should look like. We don't know what humans are like. And the ground is not economics; it's not like people do everything they do for economic reasons. You've got to look at the imagination; you've got to look at sex. We have no way of describing these things using the language we have. So a group was formed around Bataille to try to figure out what it means to be human â what society should look like. Humans have to live in a society â they can't just survive as individuals. That's not a viable condition. You know, everyone's always talking about trauma and pain and how this society isn't working, that we shouldn't have racism and sexism, but we never talk in positive terms â like what would joy be, what it would be like to have a totally great existence. Bataille and his followers looked for models for people to have totally great existences. ⌠Well, they looked at tribal models and how they dealt with sexual stuff and sacrifice and property â the joys that aren't based on economic accumulation and the workaday world, but based on giving it all up â not having that specific, controlling, imprisoning "I." He wasn't a Freudian. He was much more interested in the tribal model where everything is on the surface and you deal with sexual stuff the same way you deal with economic stuff and social stuff. He was a very proper person, a librarian. Bataille's main enemy was Jean Paul Sartre â Bataille wasn't an upper-class intellectual and he took a lot of pressure because of that. Sartre wrote this really horrible article about Bataille and sort of kept his work from getting recognized."
"Knowledge is and will be produced in order to be sold, it is and will be consumed in order to be valorized in a new production..."
"Science has always been in conflict with narratives. Judged by the yardstick of science, the majority of them prove to be fables. But to the extent that science does not restrict itself to stating useful regularities and seeks truth, it is obliged to legitimate the rules of its own game."
"I define postmodern as incredulity towards metanarratives."
"The logic of maximum performance is no doubt inconsistent in many ways, particularly with respect to contradiction in the socio-economic field: it demands both less work (to lower production costs) and more (to lessen the social burden of the idle population). But our incredulity is now such that we no longer expect salvation to rise from these inconsistencies, as did Marx."
"Here is the question: is a legitimization of the social bond, a just society, feasible in terms of a paradox analogous to that of scientific activity? What would such a paradox be?"
"âŚScientific knowledge does not represent the totality of knowledge; it has always existed in addition to, and in competition and conflict with, another kind of knowledge, which I will call narratives in the interest of simplicity."
"Knowledge is and will be produced in order to be sold, it is and will be consumed in order to be valorized in a new product."
"The moment knowledge ceases to be an end in itselfâits realization of The Idea or the emancipation of menâitâs transmission is no longer the exclusive responsibility of scholars and students."
"It is generally accepted that nature is an indifferent, not deceptive opponent, and it is upon this basis that the distinction is made between the natural and the human sciences."
"True knowledge, in this perspective, is always indirect knowledge; it is composed of reported statements, that are incorporated into metanarratives of a subject that source their legitimacy."
"Let us wage war on totality; let us be witnesses to the unpresentable, let us activate the different and save the honor of the name."
"Our working hypothesis is that the status of knowledge is altered as societies enter what is known as the postindustrial age and cultures enter the postmodern age."
"The relationship of the suppliers and users of knowledge to the knowledge they supply and use is now tending, and will be increasingly tend to, to assume the form already taken by the relationship of commodity producers and consumers to the commodities they produce and consume--that is, the form of knowledge."
"Knowledge in the form of an informational commodity indispensable to productive power is already, and will continue to be, a major-perhaps the major- stake in the world wide. It is conceivable the nation state will one day fight for control of information, just as they battled over territory, and afterwards for control of access to and exploitation of raw materials and cheap labor. A new field opened for industrial and commercial strategies on the one hand, and political and military strategies."
"For the mercantilization of knowledge is bound to affect the privilege the nation-states have enjoyed, and still enjoy, with respect to the production and distribution of learning. The notion that learning falls within the purview of the State, as the brain or mind of society, will become more and more outdated with increasing strength of the opposing principle."
"Already in the last few decades, economic powers have reached the point of imperiling the stability of the state through new forms of the circulation of capital that go by the generic name of multinational corporations."
"Legitimation is the process by which a legislator is authorized to promulgate such a law as a norm."
"What is new in all this is that the old poles of attraction represented by nation-states, parties, professions, institutions, and historical traditions are losing their attraction. And it does not look as though they will be replaced, at least not on their former scale."
"The grand narrative has lost its credibility, regardless of what mode of unification is uses, regardless of whether it is a speculative narrative or a narrative of emancipation."
"The decline of narrative can be seen as an effect of the blossoming of techniques and technologies since the Second World War, Which has shifted emphasis from the ends of action to this means; it can also be seen as an effect of the redeployment of advanced liberal capitalism after its retreat under the protection of Keynesianism during the period of 1930-1960, a renewal that has eliminated the communist alternative and valorized the individual enjoyment of goods and services."
"While we talk, the sun is getting older. It will explode in 4.5 billion years. ⌠In comparison everything else seems insignificant. Wars, conflicts, political tension, shifts in opinion, philosophical debates, even passionsâeverythingâs dead already if this infinite reserve from which you now draw energy to defer answers, if in short thought as a quest, dies out with the sun. ⌠The inevitable explosion to come, the one thatâs always forgotten in your intellectual ploys, can be seen in a certain way as coming before the fact to render these ploys ⌠futile. ⌠In 4.5 billions years there will arrive the demise of your phenomenology and your utopian politics, and thereâll be no one there to toll the death knell or hear it. It will be too late to understand that your passionate, endless questioning always depended on a âlife of the mind.â ⌠Thought borrows a horizon and orientation, the limitless limit and the end without end it assumes, from the corporeal, sensory, emotional and cognitive experience of a quite sophisticated but definitely earthly existence. With the disappearance of the earth, thought will have stoppedâleaving that disappearance absolutely unthought of. ⌠The death of the sun is a death of mind. ⌠Thereâs no sublation or deferral if nothing survives. ⌠The sun, our earth, and your thought will have been no more than a spasmodic state of energy, an instant of established order, a smile on the surface of matter in a remote corner of the cosmos. ⌠Human death is included in the life of the mind. Solar death implies an irreparably exclusive disjunction between death and thought: if thereâs death, then thereâs no thought."
"Matter asks no questions, expects no answers of us. It ignores us. It made us the way it makes all bodiesâby chance and according to its laws."
"The body might be considered the hardware of the complex technical device that is human thought."
"Philosophy is possible only because the material ensemble called âmanâ is endowed with very sophisticated software. But also, this software, human language, is dependent on the condition of the hardware. Now: the hardware will be consumed in the solar explosion, taking philosophical thought with it (along with all other thought) as it goes up in flames. So the problem of the technological sciences can be stated as follows: how can we provide this software with a hardware that is independent of the conditions of life on earth? That is: how can we make thought without a body possible?"
"In the discussion we had last year at Siegen, in this regard, emphasis was put on the sort of emptiness that has to be obtained from mind and body by a Japanese warrior-artist when doing calligraphy, by an actor when acting: the kind of suspension of ordinary intentions of mind associated with habitus, or arrangements of the body. Itâs at this cost, said Glenn and Andreas, ⌠that a brush encounters the ârightâ shapes, that a voice and a theatrical gesture are endowed with the ârightâ tone and look. The soliciting of emptiness, this evacuationâvery much the opposite of overweening, selective identificatory activityâdoesnât take place without some suffering. ⌠The body and mind have to be free of burdens for grace to touch us."