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The expression if history in things is no other than that of past torment.
Theodor Adorno
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Theodor Adorno
History
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More quotes by Theodor Adorno
Whoever is versed in the jargon does not have to say what he thinks, does not even have to think it properly. The jargon takes over this task.
Theodor Adorno
None of the abstract concepts comes closer to fulfilled utopia than that of eternal peace.
Theodor Adorno
Everybody must have projects all the time. The maximum must be extracted from leisure ... The whole of life must look like a job, and by this resemblance conceal what is not yet directly devoted to pecuniary gain.
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The bourgeois ... is tolerant. His love for people as they are stems from his hatred of what they might be.
Theodor Adorno
Writing poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric.
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Everything that has ever been called folk art has always reflected domination.
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In psycho-analysis nothing is true except the exaggerations.
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As a constellation, theoretical thought circles the concept it would like to unseal, hoping that it may fly open like the lock of a well-guarded safe-deposit box: in response, not to a single key or a single number, but to a combination of numbers
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Of the world as it exists, it is not possible to be enough afraid.
Theodor Adorno
Today self-consciousness no longer means anything but reflection on the ego as embarrassment, as realization of impotence: knowing that one is nothing.
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Love is the power to see similarity in the dissimilar.
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The jargon of authenticity ... is a trademark of societalized chosenness, ... sub-language as superior language.
Theodor Adorno
One must have tradition in oneself, to hate it properly.
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Freedom would be not to choose between black and white but to abjure such prescribed choices.
Theodor Adorno
The forms of art reflect the history of man more truthfully than do documents themselves.
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The taboos that constitute a man's intellectual stature, often sedimented experiences and unarticulated insights, always operate against inner impulses that he has learned to condemn, but which are so strong that only an unquestioning and unquestioned authority can hold them in check.
Theodor Adorno
The gods look in pleasure on penitent sinners.
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He who integrates is lost.
Theodor Adorno
The splinter in your eye is the best magnifying-glass available.
Theodor Adorno
What has become alien to men is the human component of culture, its closest part, which upholds them against the world. They make common cause with the world against themselves, and the most alienated condition of all, the omnipresence of commodities, their own conversion into appendages of machinery, is for them a mirage of closeness.
Theodor Adorno