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Celia Green quotes - page 2
Astonishment is the only realistic emotion.
Celia Green
Society is a self-regulating mechanism for preventing the fulfilment of its members.
Celia Green
Now if anyone were reminded about the inconceivable by the fact of existence at all constantly, he would sooner or later have the perception that there may be inconceivable considerations which are inconceivably more important than any conceivable consideration could be.
Celia Green
Democracy: everyone should have an equal opportunity to obstruct everybody else.
Celia Green
I spent a couple of years between eleven and thirteen analysing the social evaluations that were taken for granted, also acquiring a thorough scepticism about processes regarded as causal, and the consistency of the physical world, as well as the reliability of my own mental processes. By the time I was thirteen I was running out of things to think about, so starting on a run of exam-taking seemed all the more appropriate, as I was finding it difficult to make use of spare time.
Celia Green
In the country of the blind the one-eyed man is lucky to escape with his life.
Celia Green
Education by the State is a contradiction in terms. Intellectual development is only possible to those who have seen through society.
Celia Green
It is actually a principle of modern paternalism that if you want something you should be stopped from having it[...] Most foods are harmful to some people if taken in excess, and I expect the only reason that carrots are still available without a prescription is that no one has got very excited about them, or claimed that they might cure cancer.
Celia Green
The object of the educational system is to make the child feel suitably guilty for the harm that has been done to him.
Celia Green
Now if you do have a perception that any conceivable consideration may be utterly invalidated by some other consideration which you do not know, and if you are reminded of this perception constantly by the fact that things exist, certain modifications take place in the way you feel about things. These modifications have not taken place in the psychology of most people.
Celia Green
On the face of it there is something rather strange about human psychology. Human beings live in a state of mind called sanity, on a small planet in space. They are not quite sure whether the space around them is infinite or not, either way it is unthinkable. If they think about time, they find that it is inconceivable that it had a beginning. It is also inconceivable that it did not have a beginning. Thoughts of this kind are not disturbing to sanity, which is obviously a remarkable phenomenon that deserves more recognition.
Celia Green
The human race believes in not taking its problems seriously enough to solve them.
Celia Green
Now if you see that it is inconceivable that anything should exist, it is evident that at least one inconceivable fact is there. That is to say, that which exists is not limited to the conceivable. Since the inconceivable is there, it is impossible to set any limit to the quantity of inconceivableness which may be present in the situation. Now were the existence of anything consistently to remind you of the fact of inconceivability, since it is impossible to live without interacting with a large number of existing things, it would be impossible for you to feel in the same way about the conceivable.
Celia Green
Human nature: vindictiveness lightly coated with dishonesty.
Celia Green
The most exciting thing possible is actually true.
Celia Green
Society is everybody's way of punishing one another because they daren't take it out on the universe.
Celia Green
It is easier to make people appear equally stupid than to make them equally clever, so teaching methods are adopted which make it practically impossible for anyone to learn anything.
Celia Green
The fact that something is far-fetched is no reason why it should not be true; it cannot be as far-fetched as the fact that something exists.
Celia Green
'Social justice' - the expression of universal hatred.
Celia Green
The perception that existence exists invalidates the normal personality,as does the imminence of death.
Celia Green
Young people wonder how the adult world can be so boring. The secret is that it is not boring to adults because they have learned to enjoy simple things like covert malice at one another's expense. This is why they talk so much about the value of human understanding and sympathy - it has a certain rarity value in their world.
Celia Green
I have long had a theory that the popularity of Christianity has always depended on its appeal to the sadism of its adherents. The exceptional should be crucified, saith Society; and somehow everyone suspects (in spite of all arguments to the contrary) that if there is a God, he may be exceptional in some way. So the figure of Christ crucified becomes the figure of the dangerous exceptional alien-suitably defeated. 'Only a suffering God can help', said Bonhoeffer, licking his lips.
Celia Green
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