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 Tiny Buddha: Wisdom Quotes, Letting Go, Letting Happiness In
simple wisdom for complex lives

Quiet Your Mind and Just Play (in 20 Ways)
by Angela Marchesani
24 May 2012 at 11:02pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Angela Marchesani ?If it?s not fun, you?re not doing it right.? ~Bob Basso I spend a lot of time contemplating and philosophizing about life. According ...
How Can We Identify What We Want and Tiny Buddha Book Giveaway
by Lori Deschene
24 May 2012 at 11:01pm
by Lori Deschene IMPORTANT NOTE: This post contains two poll questions and a giveaway for an autographed copy of the Tiny Buddha book. If you?re reading this in your inbox, you ...
The Key to Beauty and Acceptance Is You
by Jaclyn Witt
23 May 2012 at 8:48pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Jaclyn Witt ?To be beautiful means to be yourself. You don?t need to be accepted by others. You need to accept yourself.? ~Thich Nhat ...
When We Think Other People Are Better Than Us
by Justb
23 May 2012 at 8:48pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Justb ?No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.? ~Eleanor Roosevelt. I have a very bad habit. It pokes me when I stop to ...
Tiny Wisdom: The Heart in Our Homes
by Lori Deschene
22 May 2012 at 10:17pm
by Lori Deschene Before I found this Flickr image, I had never read this Irish blessing before. What a beautiful idea! I remember in college, I spent a semester abroad in the ...
What We Really Need to Be Happy
by Sasha Peakall
22 May 2012 at 10:16pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Sasha Peakall ?The real measure of your wealth is how much you?d be worth if you lost all your money.? ~Unknown Standing, getting crushed on ...
Be a Master of Where You Are Now
by Alanna Levenson
21 May 2012 at 11:12pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Alanna Levenson ?Have respect for yourself, and patience and compassion.  With these, you can handle anything.? ~Jack Kornfield I hadn?t taken a yoga class in ...
Why Do We Ignore Our Instincts and Tiny Buddha Book Giveaway
by Lori Deschene
21 May 2012 at 11:11pm
by Lori Deschene This is the 9th post in a 10-part series. (It’s the last week!) If you?ve been following this series since I launched it, much of this post will ...
How to Feel More Loved: 9 Tips for Deep Connection
by Lori Deschene
20 May 2012 at 10:01pm
by Lori Deschene ?It is astonishing how little one feels alone when one loves.? ~John Bulwer If there?s one thing we all want, it?s to feel loved. We want to feel deeply connected ...
How to Love Without Losing Yourself
by Jennifer Gargotto
17 May 2012 at 10:04pm
Editor?s Note: This is a contribution by Jennifer Gargotto “We love because it is the only true adventure.” ~Nikki Giovanni  Last night I sat with an old friend who has recently broken ...

Schopenhauer

Today's Story on SELF DEVELOPMENT Half the battle is to understand... If we know we can self develop, then the big question is, why don't we? The answer to that would normally consist of excuse after excuse; on the lines of, not enough time, too busy, I lead an active schedule and I can never find the time. So... if half the battle is to understand then a further quarter is to schedule your time. Time seems to drift by too fast and we can never get anything done. I would suggest we waste our time rather than not manage it properly; but that is not the issue at the moment. We can all have good intentions but unless we use our time efficiently we'll never make any actions. In not making actions we don't self develop. Today's story illustrates the crazy world we live in and what we allow to happen. THE PARADOX OF OUR TIME We have taller buildings, but shorter tempers; wider freeways, but narrower viewpoints; we spend more, but have less; we buy more, but enjoy it less. We have bigger houses and smaller families; more conveniences, but less time; we have more degrees, but less common sense; more knowledge, but less judgment; more experts, but more problems; more medicine, but less wellness. We spend too recklessly, laugh too little, drive too fast, get too angry too quickly, stay up too late, get up too tired, read too seldom, watch TV too much, and pray too seldom. We have multiplied our possessions, but reduced our values. We talk too much, love too seldom and lie too often. We've learned how to make a living, but not a life; we've added years to life, not life to years. We've been all the way to the moon and back, but have trouble crossing the street to meet the new neighbour. We've conquered outer space, but not inner space; we've done larger things, but not better things; we've cleaned up the air, but polluted the soul; we've split the atom, but not our prejudice; we write more, but learn less; plan more, but accomplish less. We've learned to rush, but not to wait; we have higher incomes, but lower morals; more food but less appeasement; more acquaintances, but fewer friends; more effort but less success. We build more computers to hold more information, to produce more copies than ever, but have less communication; we've become long on quantity, but short on quality. These are the time of fast foods and slow digestion; tall men and short character; steep profits, and shallow relationships. These are the times of world peace, but domestic warfare; more leisure and less fun; more kinds of food, but less nutrition. These are days of two incomes, but more divorce; of fancier houses, but broken homes. These are days of quick trips, disposable diapers, throwaway morality, one-night stands, overweight bodies, and pills that do everything from cheer, to quiet, to kill. It is a time when there is much in the show window, and nothing in the stockroom. (Attributed to George Carlin) QUOTE: "Our greatest glory consists not in ever falling... but in rising every time we fall.' (Ralph Waldo Emerson)

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Schopenhauer News


Movie Reviews-Hustle: Season One, The Tortured, Chronicle - favstocks.com

27 May 2012 at 1:04am  This film investigates this. It signals intelligence by name dropping the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, but ultimately it doesn?t really live up to what it could have been, perhaps because it?s set in a high school. Also the black guy dies first.

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Free Will, Responsibility, and the Penalty Box - Battle of California

26 May 2012 at 6:03am 

Free Will, Responsibility, and the Penalty Box
Battle of California
-Arthur Schopenhauer Of course basically nothing that humans do makes any sense without our shared ILLUSION of free will and responsibility. It's silly to feel angry when someone betrays you or to feel thankful when someone helps you out if no one has ...



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REVIEW: Chronicle - Comicmix.com

26 May 2012 at 1:12am 

REVIEW: Chronicle
Comicmix.com
Some of life's meaning is explained by his cousin Matt (Alex Russell), a philosopher quoting Jung and Schopenhauer, conveying the film's message in a not-so-subtle manner. When they and class president candidate Steve (Michael B. Jordan) wind up ...

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The good, the bad and the lovely - Financial Times

25 May 2012 at 1:32pm 

Financial Times

The good, the bad and the lovely
Financial Times
The sequence in an orgy club with a ?Hegel Room? and ?Duchamp Room? accessorises its voyeur appeal with cultural name-droppings worthy of On the Road, where the camera keeps catching worn copies of Woolf, Schopenhauer or Proust. Good Cannes?

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The Real Crash Is Just Beginning - Moneyshow.com

24 May 2012 at 9:29am  The great philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer once wrote: ?Truth passes through three phases: First it is violently rejected; Second it it ridiculed; Third it is accepted as common knowledge.? The bankruptcy of America is a truth in its first ...

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On the Road ? review - The Guardian

23 May 2012 at 6:24am 

The Guardian

On the Road ? review
The Guardian
... played by Sam Riley, and everyone has a reverence for the written word; Salles's camera periodically lingers, solemnly, on the covers of books by Arthur Schopenhauer and Marcel Proust and one character even reads joylessly aloud from Swann's Way.

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SIFF Week 2: 20 New Picks & Pans - Seattle Weekly

22 May 2012 at 6:50pm 

SIFF Week 2: 20 New Picks & Pans
Seattle Weekly
... impulsive proposals, private detectives hired to spy on spouses, aristocrats turned to drug dealing, low-speed boat chases through the canals, a sex tape sent to Daddy, alcoholism, Schopenhauer citations, parents lamenting that they had kids, ...



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Carlin Romano?s Philosophical Book Bag - Daily Beast

22 May 2012 at 12:02pm  Surprise?philosophers are ?abnormal,? solitary, and unstable when not nasty, brutish, and short. You may know that Schopenhauer threw an old lady down the stairs, but had you heard that Rousseau accused his enemies of giving him invisible ...

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Shifting Perspectives: Scribbles from an alternate universe - Joystiq

22 May 2012 at 10:57am  Most of them are bear-flavored, because there's not much point to questing as restoration unless your other hobbies include watching paint dry, snail racing, or the complete works of Schopenhauer. Raw numbers This is my unbuffed guardian druid ...

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Few evils are so huge as to be one-sided - Irish Independent

19 May 2012 at 10:04pm 

Few evils are so huge as to be one-sided
Irish Independent
A FIRST novel called Schopenhauer's Telescope won the Kerry Prize for fiction at Listowel Writers' Week in 2004. I remember because I was one of the judges. The book was, enthused my fellow judge John F Deane, faultless; and he was right.



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Few evils are so huge as to be one-sided - Independent

19 May 2012 at 9:38pm  A FIRST novel called Schopenhauer's Telescope won the Kerry Prize for fiction at Listowel Writers' Week in 2004. I remember because I was one of the judges. The book was, enthused my fellow judge John F Deane, faultless; and he was right. The competition ...

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Does It Matter That Wittgenstein Was Gay? - Daily Beast

19 May 2012 at 10:32am  Schopenhauer pushed a woman down a flight of stairs. Suicide runs in Wittgenstein?s family ... We shouldn?t wonder about the value of knowing a life in general.  Instead we should value biography that describes a life and work in an integrated ...

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Et cetera: non-fiction roundup ? reviews - The Guardian

18 May 2012 at 3:54pm 

Et cetera: non-fiction roundup ? reviews
The Guardian
... moral core of our humanity, or "measured and self-possessed behaviour", or the endurance of suffering without loss of self-control, or the right to be treated with respect, or ? as Schopenhauer and Nietzsche thought ? just a vacuous hurrah-word.



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Is another ?Summer Crash? coming? - Marketwatch

14 May 2012 at 9:26am  First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." -- Arthur Schopenhauer I've been seeing more and more chatter about a 1987-style stock market crash ever since Marc Faber of ?the Gloom Boom ...

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Palestine group seeks to prevent novelist attending Israeli festival - Irish ...

14 May 2012 at 5:59am  Now the Irish Times reports that the ISPC is targeting Donovan whose novel Schopenhauer?s Telescope was short-listed for the Man Booker Prize. He was due to participate in the International Writers Festival in Jerusalem this week and has now ...

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What is the best English edition of Schopenhauer's works?
Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung and Parerga et Parelipomena in particular. Thanks, but I actually would like to know which edition is considered the best, i.e. most accurate translation, best translation notes etc.

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Precise examples on how Schopenhauer was influenced by Indian philosophy?
Can you give a few points of Schopenhauer's doctrine that were the direct results of his exposure to Indian philosophy?

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Was Schopenhauer right with his 'will to life' theory? Is life/behaviour often explained via our need to both
on the one hand survive and on the other forward our genes? Obviously behaviours such as suicide and infanticide are behaviours that cannot be explained, but on the whole does this sum up many of our actions? Certainly women correcting their outward appearances in order to be more 'attractive' to a potential mate or males going on the pull etc all fit into this.. His philosophy is pre-Darwin but does have a hint of Darwinian truth about it - thoughts of you clever people in the yahoo answers community?

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schopenhauer Vs Hegel?
who won the battle?

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Why do so many philosophers go doo-lally?
Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, Kierkegaard, Schopenhauer, Socrates - mad as hatters the lot of them...............

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