Famous Quotes - Tags - Critic Of Culture

  • ... Ma hiatus between two nothings— ... More
  • A book full of brilliance imparts some of it even to its opponents. More
  • A book should long for pen, ink, and writing-table: but usually it is pen, ink, and writing-table... More
  • A few hours’ mountain climbing turns a rogue and a saint into two roughly equal creatures.... More
  • A friend should be a master at guessing and keeping still: you must not want to see everything. More
  • A friend whose hopes we cannot satisfy is a friend we would rather have as an enemy. More
  • A good aphorism is too hard for the teeth of time and is not eaten up by all the centuries, even... More
  • A good seat on a horse steals away your opponent’s courage and your onlooker’s heart—what... More
  • A good writer possesses not only his own spirit but also the spirit of his friends. More
  • A great man’s followers are accustomed to blinding themselves so they can sing his praises better. More
  • A letter is an unannounced visit, and the postman is the intermediary of impolite surprises.... More
  • A little health now and again is the ailing person’s best remedy. More
  • A man who possesses genius is insufferable unless he also possesses at least two other things:... More
  • A man who whinnies with noisy laughter, surpasses all the animals in vulgarity. More
  • A man’s maturity: that is to have rediscovered the seriousness he possessed as a child at play. More
  • A martyr’s disciples suffer more than the martyr. More
  • A matter that becomes clear ceases to concern us.—What was that god thinking who counseled,... More
  • A noble soul is not the one that can manage the highest flights but the one that rises very... More
  • A people is a detour of nature to get to six or seven great men.—Yes, and then to get around them. More
  • A person is far more likely to appear to have sound character because he persistently follows his... More
  • A person must have a good memory to keep the promises he has made. A person must have a strong... More
  • A person unlearns arrogance when he knows he is always among worthy human beings; being alone... More
  • A philosophical mythology lies concealed in language, which breaks out again at every moment, no... More
  • A reader is doubly guilty of bad manners against an author when he praises his second book at the... More
  • A real fox calls sour not only those grapes that he cannot reach but also those that he has... More
  • A real man wants two things: danger and play. Therefore he wants woman as the most dangerous... More
  • A refined soul is distressed to know that someone owes it thanks; a crude soul, to know that it... More
  • A small garden, figs, a little cheese, and, along with this, three or four good friends—such... More
  • A soul that knows it is loved but does not love in return betrays its dregs:Mwhat is at the... More
  • A sure way to irritate people and to put evil thoughts into their heads is to keep them waiting a... More
  • A vocation is the backbone of life. More
  • A vocation makes us unthinking; that is its greatest blessing. For it is a bulwark behind which... More
  • A woman’s pity, which is talkative, carries the sick person’s bed to the public marketplace. More
  • About sacrifice and the offering of sacrifices, sacrificial animals think quite differently from... More
  • About what we neither know nor feel precisely while awake—whether we have a good or a bad... More
  • Acknowledge your will and speak to us all, “This alone is what I will to be!” Hang your own... More
  • Active, successful natures act, not according to the maxim, “know thyself,” but as if... More
  • Admiration for a quality or an art can be so strong that it deters us from striving to possess it. More
  • After Buddha was dead, his shadow was still shown for centuries in a cave—a tremendous,... More
  • Against boredom even the gods struggle in vain. More
  • Against war one might say that it makes the victor stupid and the vanquished malicious. In its... More
  • Alas! The time is coming when man will no longer give birth to stars. Alas! The time of the most... More
  • All credibility, all good conscience, all evidence of truth come only from the senses. More
  • All good things are strong inducements to life, even that good book written to attack life. More
  • All good things were previously wicked things; every original sin has become an original virtue. More
  • All great things bring about their own destruction through an act of self-overcoming: thus the... More
  • All idealists imagine that the causes they serve are fundamentally better than any other causes... More
  • All parties attempt to represent important things that have developed outside themselves as... More
  • All rejection and negation indicates a deficiency in fertility: fundamentally, if only we were... More
  • All signs of superhuman nature appear in man as illness or insanity. More
  • All the names of good and evil are parables: they do not declare, but only hint. Whoever among... More
  • All the sciences are now under an obligation to prepare for the future task of philosopher, which... More
  • All those who dwell in the depths find their happiness in being like flying fish for once and... More
  • All truth is crooked, time itself is a circle. More
  • All “it was” is a fragment, a riddle, a horrible accident—until the creative will declares:... More
  • Almost everything we call “higher culture” is based on the spiritualization of cruelty, on... More
  • Along the journey we commonly forget its goal. Almost every vocation is chosen and entered upon... More
  • Altered opinions do not alter a man’s character (or do so very little); but they do illuminate... More
  • Although the most incisive judges of the witches and even the witches themselves were convinced... More
  • Among austere men intimacy involves shame—and is something precious. More
  • Among the wealthy, generosity is often merely a kind of shyness. More
  • Among twelve apostles there must always be one who is as hard as stone, so that the new church... More
  • Among women.—”The truth? Oh, you don’t really know what ‘the truth’ is! Isn’t it an... More
  • Amor fati: that shall henceforth be my love! I do not want to wage war against the ugly. I do not... More
  • An aphorism, honestly stamped and molded, has not yet been “deciphered” once we have read it... More
  • An artist chooses his subjects: that is the way he praises. More
  • And as for sickness: are we not almost tempted to ask whether we could get along without it? More
  • And he who must be a creator in good and evil: verily, he must be an annihilator first and... More
  • And how politely the bitch “sensuality” knows how to beg for a piece of spirit when she is... More
  • And if you are not a bird, then beware of coming to rest above an abyss. More
  • And it is the great noon when man stands at the midpoint of his course between beast and superman... More
  • And nobody lies as much as the indignant do. More
  • And perhaps a great day will come, when a people distinguished by war and victory, by the highest... More
  • And so do you suppose it must be a piece-work because it has been given to you (and could only be... More
  • And so let my proposition be understood and pondered: history can be borne only by strong... More
  • And so while dreams are the individual man’s play with reality, the sculptor’s art is (in a... More
  • And what was too nasty to feed a dog—that is precisely what you threw down before your god. Did... More
  • And you tell me, friends, that there is no disputing taste and tasting? But all life is a dispute... More
  • Animals know nothing of themselves, and they also know nothing of the world. More
  • Annoyance is a physical malady that is in no way cured just because the annoying situation that... More
  • Antithesis is the narrow gateway through which error most prefers to worm its way towards truth. More
  • Anyone who has declared someone else to be an idiot, a bad apple, is annoyed when it turns out in... More
  • Anyone who has ever constructed a “new heaven” has discovered the power to do it nowhere but... More
  • Are you genuine? Or just an actor? A representative? Or what it is that is represented?—In the... More
  • Are you one who looks on? Or one who lends a hand?—Or one who looks away, steps aside? ...... More
  • Around the hero everything turns into a tragedy, around the demigod, a satyr-play, and around... More
  • Art depends upon the inexactitude of sight. More
  • As much as possible, and this as quickly as possible: that is what the great mental and emotional... More
  • As refined fare serves a hungry man as well as and no better than coarser food, the more... More
  • As regards the celebrated “struggle for life,” it seems to me for the present to have been... More
  • As soon as a religion comes to dominate, it has as its opponents all those who would have been... More
  • As soon as we climb higher than those who had at one time admired us, we appear to them as though... More
  • As soon as we exceed average human goodness by even a single step, our actions arouse suspicion.... More
  • As the will to truth thus gains self-consciousness—there can be no doubt of that—morality... More
  • Asceticism is the right way of thinking for those who have to extirpate their sensual drives... More
  • Association with other people corrupts our character Mespecially when we have none. More
  • Assuming that rapture is nature’s play with man, the Dionysian artist’s creative activity is... More
  • Assuming that we have trained our imagination to denounce the past, we will not suffer much from... More
  • At bottom, man mirrors himself in things; he considers everything beautiful that reflects his own... More
  • At one time or another, almost every politician needs an honest man so badly that, like a... More

Lookup any word on eNotes with our dictionary. Highlight the word and press SHIFT + D for a definition, or SHIFT + T for a synonym.