Just wanted to say goodbye. (I'm not dying or anything). I don't find much use for dA any more so I think it is best to close up shop. If any new flowers bloom in the future, perhaps the shop will open again. Thank you all.
. . . As for your principle that truth is always on the side of the more difficult, I admit this in part. However, it is difficult to believe that 2 times 2 is not 4; does that make it true? On the other hand, is it really so difficult simply to accept everything that one has been brought up on and that has gradually struck deep roots what is considered truth in the circle of ones relatives and of many good men, and what moreover really comforts and elevates man? Is that more difficult than to strike new paths, fighting the habitual, experiencing the insecurity of independence and the frequent wavering of ones feelings and even ones conscience, proceeding often without any consolation, but ever with the eternal goal of the true, the beautiful, and the good? Is it decisive after all that we arrive at that view of God, world and reconciliation which makes us feel most comfortable? Rather, is not the result of his inquiries something wholly indifferent to the true inquirer? Do we after all seek rest, peace, and pleasure in our inquiries? No, only truth even if it be most abhorrent and ugly. Still one last question: if we had believed from childhood that all salvation issued from another than Jesus say, from Mohammed is it not certain that we should have experienced the same blessings? . . . Every true faith is infallible inasmuch as it accomplishes what the person who has the faith hopes to find in it; but faith does not offer the least support for a proof of objective truth. Here the ways of men part: if you wish to strive for peace of soul and pleasure, then believe; if you wish to be a devotee of truth, then inquire. - Friedrich Nietzsche (Letter to his Sister, June 11, 1865)
Previous Page12345...Next Page