Thursday, May 02, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Wilhelm von Humboldt

« All quotes from this author
 

How a person masters his fate is more important than what his fate is.
--
As quoted in International Proverbs (2000) by Luzano Pancho Canlas, p. 40

 
Wilhelm von Humboldt

» Wilhelm von Humboldt - all quotes »



Tags: Wilhelm von Humboldt Quotes, Authors starting by H


Similar quotes

 

It is the coward and the fool who says, This is my fate – so says the Sanskrit proverb. But it is the strong man who stands up and says, I will make my own fate. It is people who are getting old who talk of fate. Young men generally do not come to astrology.

 
Swami Vivekananda
 

Anxiety and nothing always correspond to each other. As soon as the actuality of freedom and of spirit is posited, anxiety is canceled. But what then does the nothing of anxiety signify more particularly in paganism. This is fate. Fate is a relation to spirit as external. It is the relation between spirit and something else that is not spirit and to which fate nevertheless stands in a spiritual relation. Fate may also signify exactly the opposite, because it is the unity of necessity and accidental. … A necessity that is not conscious of itself is eo ipso the accidental in relation to the next moment. Fate, then, is the nothing of anxiety.

 
Soren Aabye Kierkegaard
 

The problem is not the harshness of Fate, for anything we want strongly enough we get. The trouble is rather that when we have it we grow sick of it, and then we should never blame Fate, only our own desire.

 
Cesare Pavese
 

And above all, we must feel and act as if an endless continuation of our earthly life awaited us after death; and if it be that nothingness is the fate that awaits us we must not, in the words of Obermann, so act that it shall be a just fate.

 
Miguel de Unamuno
 

What we usually mean by fate is what we least understand, that is to say, ourselves, that subversive, unknown individual constantly plotting against us, whom , estranged and alienated but still bowing with disgust before his might, we call, for the of simplicity, fate.

 
Imre Kertesz‎
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact