Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Sexual activity is driven by the same aims and motives as reading poetry or listening to music: to escape the limitations imposed by the need for particularity in the consciousness.
Colin Wilson
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Colin Wilson
Age: 82 †
Born: 1931
Born: June 26
Died: 2013
Died: December 5
Autobiographer
Biographer
Novelist
Philosopher
Prosaist
Science Fiction Writer
Screenwriter
Ufologist
Writer
Leicester
England
Colin Henry Wilson
Needs
Driven
Imposed
Activity
Motives
Poetry
Limitations
Listening
Limitation
Consciousness
Motive
Reading
Sexual
Music
Aim
Particularity
Need
Escape
Aims
More quotes by Colin Wilson
Could it be that sexual perversion and romanticism sprang from the same longing for distant horizons?
Colin Wilson
The outsider is not sure who he is. He has found an “I”, but it is not his true “I”.’ His main business is to find his way back to himself.
Colin Wilson
Turning on the light is easy if you know where the switch is.
Colin Wilson
The self-surmounter can never put up with the man who has ceased to be dissatisfied with himself.
Colin Wilson
It is important to grasp that boredom is one of the most common - and undesirable - consequences of 'unicameralism'. Boredom is a feeling of being 'dead inside' that is to say, loss of contact with our instincts and feelings.
Colin Wilson
If you can train your senses to perceive the movement of the minute hand of a clock, what is to stop you for training them to 'slow down' when you look at a tree or a puddle?
Colin Wilson
Phenomenology is not a philosophy it is a philosophical method, a tool. It is like an adjustable spanner that can be used for dismantling a refrigerator or a car, or used for hammering in nails, or even for knocking somebody out.
Colin Wilson
Criminals interest me, because they're driven by the same desires as we are, but they take these disastrous shortcuts and end up in a real mess.
Colin Wilson
Man is brilliant at solving problems but solving them only makes him the victim of his own childishness and laziness. It is this recognition that has made almost every major philosopher in history a pessimist.
Colin Wilson
The effects of mescalin or LSD can be, in some respects, far more satisfying than those of alcohol. To begin with, they last longer they also leave behind no hangover, and leave the mental faculties clear and unimpaired. They stimulate the faculties and produce the ideal ground for a peak experience.
Colin Wilson
The sheer volume of evidence for survival after death is so immense that to ignore it is like standing at the foot of Mount Everest and insisting that you cannot see the mountain.
Colin Wilson
The complex develops out of the simple.
Colin Wilson
I was aggressively nonpolitical. I believed that people who make a fuss about politics do so because their heads are too empty to think about more important things. So I felt nothing but impatient contempt for Osborne's Jimmy Porter and the rest of the heroes of social protest.
Colin Wilson
If I'd stayed on in London and carried on going to literary parties, it would have wrecked me as a writer.
Colin Wilson
Ask the Outsider what he ultimately wants,and he will admit he doesn't know.Why? Because he wants it instinctively,and it is not always possible to tell what your instincts are driving towards.
Colin Wilson
The real issue is not whether two and two make four or whether two and two make five, but whether life advances by men who love words or by men who love living.
Colin Wilson
Faculty X is a sense of reality of other places and other times, and it is the possession of it—fragmentary and uncertain though it is—that distinguishes man from all other animals.
Colin Wilson
The basic paradox about sex is that it always seems to be offering more than it can deliver. A glimpse of a girl undressing through a lighted bedroom window induces a vision of ecstatic delight, but in the actual process of persuading the girl into bed, the vision somehow evaporates.
Colin Wilson
In the mid nineteenth century, the typical murderer was a drunken illiterate a hundred years later the typical murderer regards himself as a thinking man.
Colin Wilson
The visionary disciplines himself to see the world always as if he had only just seen it for the first time.
Colin Wilson