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/lit/ - Literature

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>> No.22971717 [View]
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22971717

What are some good books on finding yourself? I'm realizing I've been a people pleaser all my life and mold myself to gain approval from others, so I need help figuring out who I am

>> No.22747997 [View]
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22747997

>Ugly people should be allowed to exist
Um I don't think so, sweetoid

>> No.22740724 [View]
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22740724

I just realized that his whole philosophy is cope for being lonely

>> No.22709771 [View]
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22709771

>"This irreverent belief that the great sages were decadent types, first occurred to me precisely in regard to that case concerning which both learned and vulgar prejudice was most opposed to my view. I recognised Socrates and Plato as symptoms of decline, as instruments in the disintegration of Hellas, as pseudo-Greek, as anti-Greek (“The Birth of Tragedy,” 1872). That consensus sapientium, as I perceived ever more and more clearly, did not in the least prove that they were right in the matter on which they agreed. It proved rather that these sages themselves must have been alike in some physiological particular, in order to assume the same negative attitude towards life—in order to be bound to assume that attitude. After all, judgments and valuations of life, whether for or against, cannot be true: their only value lies in the fact that they are symptoms; they can be considered only as symptoms,—per se such judgments are nonsense. You must therefore endeavour by all means to reach out and try to grasp this astonishingly subtle axiom, that the value of life cannot be estimated. A living man cannot do so, because he is a contending party, or rather the very object in the dispute, and not a judge; nor can a dead man estimate it—for other reasons. For a philosopher to see a problem in the value of life, is almost an objection against him, a note of interrogation set against his wisdom—a lack of wisdom. What? Is it possible that all these great sages were not only decadents, but that they were not even wise? Let me however return to the problem of Socrates."
Thoughts?

>> No.22558876 [View]
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22558876

Would he have supported trannies?

>> No.22246087 [View]
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22246087

>The Negro is hungry for blood, and an unaware Europe, like those French on Saint-Domingue, is in for a reckoning. The coming centuries will witness the shedding of white blood on a scale unimaginable to anyone now.

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