"Today, luxury resides in everything that is becoming rare: communion with nature, silence, meditation, slowness rediscovered, the pleasure of living out of step with others, studious idleness, the enjoyment of the major works of the mind–these are all privileges that cannot be bought because they are literally priceless."
About Pascal Bruckner
Pascal Bruckner — Life and Legacy
Pascal Bruckner is a prominent French philosopher and novelist, recognized for his incisive critiques of contemporary society, particularly regarding love and freedom. His work, 'The Temptation of Innocence,' explores the paradox of innocence in modern relationships, arguing that the idealization of innocence can hinder genuine connection and personal growth. Bruckner's key ideas revolve around the tension between individual freedom and societal expectations. He asserts that love should not be a form of self-sacrifice but rather a partnership where both individuals retain their autonomy. This perspective is encapsulated in his assertion that 'true love is not about possession but about liberation,' reflecting his belief that love flourishes in an environment of mutual respect and freedom. His insights remain relevant today as they challenge conventional notions of romance and commitment. By advocating for a more liberated understanding of love, Bruckner encourages readers to reconsider how societal norms shape their relationships, making his work a vital part of contemporary philosophical discourse.
Quote collection
Pascal Bruckner quotes
17 quotes — follow a thought to its full quote page.
"An overblown conscience is an empty conscience."
"By the duty to be happy, I thus refer to the ideology... that urges us to evaluate everything in terms of pleasure and displeasure...on the one hand, we have to make the most of our lives; on the other, we have to be sorry and punish ourselves if we don't succeed in doing so. This is a perversion of a very beautiful idea: that everyone has a right to control his own destiny and to improve his life."
"The cult of happiness turns into a huge concern which to my opinion is exactly contrary to what happiness should be: a paradise of enchantment."
"You don't have to give people fish everyday but instead you must give them the pole to learn how to fish themselves."
"Ultimately, 'how's it going?' is the most futile and the most profound of questions. To answer it precisely, one would have to make a scrupulous inventory of one's psyche, considering each aspect in detail. No matter: we have to say 'fine' out of politeness and civility and change the subject, or else ruminate the question during our whole lives and reserve our reply for afterward."
"You are not doomed to reproduce what your ancestors have done. The son will not be like his father, the daughter will not be like her mother. She can invent something new. I think that is the best message of modernity."
"You're happy when you leave your concerns to the side and when you experience a pure moment of joy with friends."
"We should distinguish between responsibility and guilt. Guilt only touches the ones who committed the crimes but the son of a criminal is not a criminal himself."
"You can have compassion for someone who is suffering and try to help this person but if your relationship with mankind is only one of compassion, it is only another form of contempt and it prevents feelings like admiration, empathy which to my mind are much more positive."
"Remorse is extremely useful for a generation which has in fact dirtied its hands but for the next generation you cannot ask, for instance, young Germans today to feel guilty about Hitlerism."
"There is no life without guilt anyway, at least in the Western world. I think in other civilizations it might be different but if the world is getting Westernized all over, guilt will enter through the technology and democracy and their actions. It will come side by side so there won't be anymore innocent societies in the future I think which in fact is not such a bad thing."
"Guilt is a very good thing if it is shared by others."
"The writer has a life and a personality but the problem of today is that most of those writers have exactly the same life; they belong to the same social class, the same milieu, they have the same experiences. Once you read one of those books, you have read them all. And this is a problem."
"Frustration is a bad experience. What you have to stress is the satisfaction."
"Whatever the flows of our modern times are the idea is that you can create something new out of nothing."
"You construct your happiness as you construct a house and you have to work on it. It is a daily job."