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Every thought derives from a thwarted sensation.
Emile M. Cioran
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Emile M. Cioran
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More quotes by Emile M. Cioran
Crime in full glory consolidates authority by the sacred fear it inspires.
Emile M. Cioran
To live... in any sense of the word... is to reject others to accept them, one must renounce, do oneself violence.
Emile M. Cioran
Nothing proves that we are more than nothing.
Emile M. Cioran
Philosophy: Impersonal anxiety refuge among anemic ideas.
Emile M. Cioran
How good would it be if one could die by throwing oneself into an infinite void.
Emile M. Cioran
Is it possible that existence is our exile and nothingness our home?
Emile M. Cioran
No one recovers from the disease of being born, a deadly wound if there ever was one.
Emile M. Cioran
The only free mind is one that, pure of all intimacy with beings or objects, plies its own vacuity.
Emile M. Cioran
I have always struggled, with the sole intention of ceasing to struggle. Result: zero.
Emile M. Cioran
Thinking should be like musical meditation. Has any philosopher pursued a thought to its limits the way Bach or Beethoven develop and exhaust a musical theme? Even after having read the most profound thinkers, one still feels the need to begin anew. Only music gives definitive answers.
Emile M. Cioran
Whenever I happen to be in a city of any size, I marvel that riots do not break out everyday: Massacres, unspeakable carnage, a doomsday chaos. How can so many human beings coexist in a space so confined without hating each other to death?
Emile M. Cioran
A civilization begins to decline the moment Life becomes its sole obsession.
Emile M. Cioran
There is no other world. Nor even this one. What, then, is there? The inner smile provoked in us by the patent nonexistence of both.
Emile M. Cioran
The history of ideas is the history of the grudges of solitary men.
Emile M. Cioran
Under each formula lies a corpse.
Emile M. Cioran
There is no means of proving it is preferable to be than not to be.
Emile M. Cioran
Utopia is the grotesque en rose, the need to associate happiness - that is, the improbable - with becoming, and to coerce an optimistic, aerial vision to the point where it rejoins its own source: the very cynicism it sought to combat. In short, a monstrous fantasy.
Emile M. Cioran
A man who fears ridicule will never go far, for good or ill: he remains on this side of this talents, and even if he has genius, he is doomed to mediocrity.
Emile M. Cioran
All that shimmers on the surface of the world, all that we call interesting, is the fruit of ignorance and inebriation.
Emile M. Cioran
God: a disease we imagine we are cured of because no one dies of it nowadays.
Emile M. Cioran