| Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, Oscar Levy - 1911 - 326 páginas
...songster. 34 On ne peut penser et tcrire qu'assis (G. Flaubert). Here I have got you, you nihilist! A sedentary life is the real sin against the Holy...those thoughts that come by walking have any value. 35 There are times when we psychologists are like horses, and grow fretful. We see our own shadow rise... | |
| Arthur Ransome - 1913 - 248 páginas
...Flaubert's " On ne peut penser et e'crire qu'assis," with a cry : " Here have I got you, you nihilist? A sedentary life is the real sin against the Holy...those thoughts that come by walking have any value." He defended himself against the charge of decadence, claiming that " apart from the fact that I am... | |
| Albert Cornelius Knudson - 1924 - 340 páginas
...vivid sense of the Divine Presence might be no less sure of God. "A sedentary life," says Nietzsche, "is the real sin against the Holy Spirit. Only those thoughts that come by walking have any value." It is through life, through walking, that we arrive at truth in the practical realm. "Act as though... | |
| Jacques Derrida - 1978 - 366 páginas
...think and write sitting down," he said. Joyous anger of Nietzsche: "Here I have got you, you nihilist! A sedentary life is the real sin against the Holy Spirit. Only those thoughts that come when you are walking have any value."65 But Nietzsche was certain that the writer would never be upright;... | |
| Christopher Johnson - 1993 - 260 páginas
...le Saint-Esprit. Seules les pensees qui vous viennent en marchant ont de la valeur ' (ED, p. 48) (' A sedentary life is the real sin against the Holy Spirit. Only those thoughts that come when you are walking have any value' (WD, p. 29)). For his part, Derrida is inclined to agree with... | |
| Friedrich Nietzsche - 2007 - 292 páginas
...songster. 34 On tie peut penser et ecrire qu'assis (G. Flaubert). Here I have got you, you nihilist! A sedentary life is the real sin against the Holy...those thoughts that come by walking have any value. 35 There are times when we psychologists are like horses, and grow fretful. We see our own shadow rise... | |
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