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The favorite medico-moral formula (whose originator was Ariston of Chios), "Virtue is the health of the soul" would, for all practical purposes, have to be altered to this: "Thy virtue is the health of thy soul." For there is no such thing as health in itself, and all attempts to define a thing in that way have lamentably failed. It is necessary to know the aim, the horizon, the powers, the impulses, the errors, and especially the ideals and fantasies of the soul, in order to determine what health implies even for the body. There are consequently innumerable kinds of physical health; and the more one again permits the unique and unparalleled to raise its head, the more one unlearns the dogma of the "Equality of men," so much the more also must the conception of a normal health, together with a normal diet and a normal course of disease, be abrogated by our physicians. And then only would it be time to turn our thoughts to the health and disease of the soul, and make the special virtue of everyone consist in its health; but, to be sure, what appeared as health in one person might appear as the contrary of health in another. In the end the great question might still remain open: Whether we could do without sickness for the development of our virtue, and whether our thirst for knowledge and self-knowledge would not especially need the sickly soul as well as the sound one; in short, whether the mere will to health is not a prejudice, a cowardice, and perhaps an instance of the subtlest barbarism and unprogressiveness? 120. Health of the Soul, The Gay Science, Nietsche

I thought:�� You reach a moment in life when, among the people you have known, the dead outnumber the living. And the mind refuses to accept more faces, more expresssions: on every new face you encounter, it prints the old forms, for each one it finds the most suitable mask.�� P.95, Invisible Cities, Italo Calvino.

�_�Х�b�ȭI�WŪ���F���C�S���H�o�˦a�R�L�o�C�S���R�αo�W�o�˪��R�C�o�I�ۿO�A�L�O�a���U�o����A�H��b��̥b�ѡA��~�����V����@�e�A�N��n�ٵ��L�C�L�����H�ӱ����F�o����C�H�ȵo�X���L�����T�Ať�۹��b�ܻ��ܻ����a��A�o�]ı�o�O�b�ڤ��A�S���O�ۤv�A�S���O�O�H�A�S���O�J�M���ӡA�O�������a�Ӧb�y�W�A�٦b�ä߬O�ۤv�O�O�H�A�M�ӧ󻷤F�C�L�鱫�a���G���A�R�ڡI���o���G���O���A���O���檺�C���L����b�o���S�l�̦V�W���A�@�����M�ܦ��u���F�C�o���G���i�D�A���G���檺�I�����@���G�A���_�аe���?#124;�A���M�O�A�i�R�¡C

...Even the most beautiful scenery is no longer assured of our love after we have lived in it for three months, and some distant coast attracts our avarice: possessions are generally diminished by possession�K14. The things people call love, The Gay Science, Nietsche

�ڧ���l�]���z�F�A�������H�H�ǥժ�����A�A�H���H���ۡH�ڪ��������@�B�`�`���˲��A�٨S����L�A�S���h�L�A�S���y�L��A���N�b�ڪ��ܱ鲴�����¡A�p���O���y�ͮڡA�A���S�����쪾�D��?#124;�s�ڧ���j�A�٬O�w�i�ۧڤ��@�n�v�٪���H�ڬO���[���A�]���ڥѧּ֩��֤��ӡA�A�a���Ʊ��]�O�@�ؾ��m�C�f�F��ӬP���A�ڼy���o�p�p�������O�o�ͦb�ڨ��W�A�Ӥ��O�ڤ����A�Ϊ̥L�A�Ϊ̥L�����A�b�Y�@�ӱߤW�A������X�Q�A�@�F�@�ӧ������X�z��ë�i�A�ڭn�L�̳����鰷�d�A�Y�ϧڵu�Q�~�R���i�H�A����ڳ����ۤv���X�A�ӭ�ӧڮڥ��S���z�Q�A�ڪ��H�ͥu�O�ɤO�קK�ۤv����ˮ`�A�ӧڷR�H�Ө������N�O��ڳ̲`���ˮ`�A�L�O�P�N�ӦۧڵL�k�O�@�L�̧K���ˮ`�A�]�������P����ѩM�����A�ڹ�ۤv�����X���z���n�D�A���O�ڪ������A�����w�g�����ʮ檺�@�����A���S������i�ߩΥi�d�A�]�S������i���Υi�����A�i�O�����٦��Q�ګ��Y�M����L���ɭԡA�a���X�h�����i�o�A���٬O�o��Ӧh�F�C

22:19-13.01.03: Compromising is promising

- - 27.05.04
- - 25.02.04
- - 21.11.03
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