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The Illusion of Technique: A Search for Meaning in a Technological Civilization

William Barrett

Top 10 Best Quotes

“Not only do I not know what I believe, but also I cannot know for sure that I believe. How can I define precisely what my attitude is toward something it cannot conceivably grasp? Can I be said to be in the relation of "belief," in any usual sense of that term, toward something that I cheerfully and readily acknowledge to be absolutely incomprehensible to me? (...) No man can be sure that he is in faith; and we can say of no man with certainty that he has or does not have faith. (...) Not only does faith always carry its opposite uncertainty within itself, but also this faith is never a static condition that is -had-, but a movement toward... And toward what? In the nature of the case we cannot state this "what." We cannot make a flat assertion about our faith like a simple assertion that we have blue eyes or are six feet tall. More than this, the affirmation of our faith can never be made in the simple indicative mood at all. The statement "I believe" can only be uttered as a prayer.”

“The bond that attaches us to the life outside ourselves is the same bond that holds us to our own life.”

“There is no truth that does not ultimately rest upon what is evident to us in our own experience.”

“What you find in the mirror you will find in the reality it mirrors.”

“We have come to understand the phenomena of life only as an assemblage of the lifeless. We take the mechanistic abstractions of our technical calculation to be ultimately concrete and "fundamentally real," while our most intimate experiences are labelled "mere appearance" and something having reality only within the closet of the isolated mind. Suppose however we were to invert this whole scheme, reverse the order in which it assigns abstract and concrete. What is central to our experience, then, need not be peripheral to nature. This sunset now, for example, caught within the network of bare winter branches, seems like a moment of benediction in which the whole of nature collaborates. Why should not these colours and these charging banners of light be as much a part of the universe as the atoms and molecules that make them up? If they were only "in my mind," then I and my mind would no longer be a part of nature. Why should the pulse of life toward beauty and value not be a part of things? Following this path, we do not vainly seek to assemble the living out of configurations of dead stuff, but we descend downwards from more complex to simpler grades of the organic. From humans to trees to rocks; from "higher grade" to "lower grade" organisms. In the universe of energy, any individual thing is a pattern of activity within the flux, and thereby an organism at some level.”

“The nature of consciousness is to point beyond itself. It is a tending toward or pointing to... Since consciousness points beyond itself, it is in its very being a self-transcendence.”

“We must be free for the truth; and conversely, to be able to be open toward the truth may be our deepest freedom as human creatures.”

“Truth and untruth weave the seamless web of human nature.”

“Our freedom is the way in which we are able to let the world open before us, and ourselves stand open within it.”

“In teaching the young you have to satisfy the schoolchild in yourself and enter the region where all meanings start. That is where, in any case, the philosopher has perpetually to start.”

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Book Keywords:

belief, education, mirrors, meaning, evidence, holism, truth, fact, openness, learning, agnosticism, source-of-self, reality-filters, teacher, human-nature, starting-points, consciousness, phenomenon, self-transcendence, freedom, phenomenology, prayer, unity, philosopher, reductionism, untruth, minds, cognition, projection, abstract, faith, experience, knowledge, mechanism, uncertainty, concrete, vitalism, transcendence, proof

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