Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Lies are told only to convey to someone that one has no need either of him or his good opinion.
Theodor Adorno
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Theodor Adorno
Told
Either
Opinion
Lying
Someone
Need
Convey
Needs
Deceit
Good
Lies
More quotes by Theodor Adorno
In the end, the writer is not even allowed to live in his writing.
Theodor Adorno
Suffering has as much right to be expressed as a martyr has to cry out. So it may have been false to say that writing poetry after Auschwitz is impossible.
Theodor Adorno
Wrong life cannot be lived rightly.
Theodor Adorno
The usual reproach against the essay, that it is fragmentary and random, itself assumes the givenness of totality and suggests that man is in control of this totality. The desire of the essay, though, is not to filter the eternal out of the transitory it wants, rather, to make the transitory eternal.
Theodor Adorno
Vague expression permits the hearer to imagine whatever suits him and what he already thinks in any case.
Theodor Adorno
Art as a whole is a riddle. Another way of putting this is to say that art expresses something while at the same time hiding it.
Theodor Adorno
Every work of art is an uncommitted crime.
Theodor Adorno
One must have tradition in oneself, to hate it properly.
Theodor Adorno
Auschwitz begins wherever someone looks at a slaughterhouse and thinks: they’re only animals.
Theodor Adorno
The bourgeois ... is tolerant. His love for people as they are stems from his hatred of what they might be.
Theodor Adorno
It is one of the basic tenets of fascist leadership to keep primary libidinal energy on an unconscious level so as to divert its manifestations in a way suitable to political ends.
Theodor Adorno
Advice to intellectuals: let no-one represent you.
Theodor Adorno
Philosophy ... must not bargain away anything of the emphatic concept of truth.
Theodor Adorno
The straight line is regarded as the shortest distance between two people, as if they were points.
Theodor Adorno
Talent is perhaps nothing other than successfully sublimated rage.
Theodor Adorno
All the world's not a stage.
Theodor Adorno
Philosophy that satisfies its own intention, and does not childishly skip behind its own history and the real one, has its lifeblood in the resistance against the common practices of today and what they serve, against the justification of what happens to be the case.
Theodor Adorno
The sublime is only a step removed from the ridiculous.
Theodor Adorno
True thoughts are those alone which do not understand themselves.
Theodor Adorno
The new human type cannot be properly understood without awareness of what he is continuously exposed to from the world of things about him, even in his most secret innervations.
Theodor Adorno