sexta-feira, 28 de janeiro de 2011

Also sprach Zarathustra:
Man, apparently, cannot maintain himself in the universe without belief in some arrangement of the general inheritance of myth. In fact, the fullness of his life would even seem to stand in a direct ratio to the depth and range not of his rational thought but of his local mythology. Whence the force of these unsubstantial themes, by which they are empowered to galvanize populations, creating of them civilizations, each with a beauty and self-compelling destiny of its own? And why should it be that whenever men have looked for something solid on which to found their lives, they have chosen not the facts in which the world abounds, but the myths of an immemorial imagination—preferring even to make life a hell for themselves and their neighbors, in the name of some violent god, to accepting gracefully the bounty the world affords?

3 comentários:

Nanda Najah disse...

Pelo menos os deuses dos gregos bebiam, faziam orgias, traíam... tinham sentimentos humanos, então os gregos eram livres, tava tudo certo!

Esse deus limpinho e careta dos judeus, cristãos e árabes que fode tudo...

Ainda acho que o auge da civilização humana foi no auge da Grécia... de lá pra cá a humaninade só decaiu.

Sined disse...

Nietzsche não diria melhor.

Nanda Najah disse...

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Exagero seu, mas aceito o elogio :)