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Henri Bergson [1859-1941] French
Rank: 101
Philosopher


Henri-Louis Bergson was a major French philosopher, influential especially in the first half of the 20th century. Bergson convinced many thinkers that the processes of immediate experience and intuition are more significant than abstract rationalism and science for understanding reality.

Intelligence, Attitude, Change, Imagination, Religion, Science



QuoteTagsRank
To exist is to change, to change is to mature, to mature is to go on creating oneself endlessly. Change
101
In reality, the past is preserved by itself automatically.
102
Religion is to mysticism what popularization is to science. Religion, Science
103
Life does not proceed by the association and addition of elements, but by dissociation and division.
104
We regard intelligence as man's main characteristic and we know that there is no superiority which intelligence cannot confer on us, no inferiority for which it cannot compensate. Intelligence
105
Instinct perfected is a faculty of using and even constructing organized instruments; intelligence perfected is the faculty of making and using unorganized instruments. Intelligence
106
The present contains nothing more than the past, and what is found in the effect was already in the cause.
107
When we make the cerebral state the beginning of an action, and in no sense the condition of a perception, we place the perceived images of things outside the image of our body, and thus replace perception within the things themselves.
108
Homo sapiens, the only creature endowed with reason, is also the only creature to pin its existence on things unreasonable.
109
Think like a man of action, act like a man of thought.
110
In its entirety, probably, it follows us at every instant; all that we have felt, thought and willed from our earliest infancy is there, leaning over the present which is about to join it, pressing against the portals of consciousness that would fain leave it outside.
111
In laughter we always find an unavowed intention to humiliate and consequently to correct our neighbour.
112
You will obtain a vision of matter that is perhaps fatiguing for your imagination, but pure and stripped of what the requirements of life make you add to it in external perception. Imagination
113
Wherever anything lives, there is, open somewhere, a register in which time is being inscribed.
114
Genius is that which forces the inertia of humanity to learn.
115
Some other faculty than the intellect is necessary for the apprehension of reality.
116
The only cure for vanity is laughter, and the only fault that is laughable is vanity.
117
An absolute can only be given in an intuition, while all the rest has to do with analysis.
118
I cannot escape the objection that there is no state of mind, however simple, that does not change every moment.
119
Spirit borrows from matter the perceptions on which it feeds and restores them to matter in the form of movements which it has stamped with its own freedom.
120
There is nothing in philosophy which could not be said in everyday language.
121
Sex appeal is the keynote of our civilization.
122
Intelligence is the faculty of making artificial objects, especially tools to make tools. Intelligence
123
It seems that laughter needs an echo.
124
The motive power of democracy is love.
125
There is no greater joy than that of feeling oneself a creator. The triumph of life is expressed by creation.
126
To perceive means to immobilize... we seize, in the act of perception, something which outruns perception itself.
201
A situation is always comic if it participates simultaneously in two series of events which are absolutely independent of each other, and if it can be interpreted in two quite different meanings.
202
Our laughter is always the laughter of a group.
203
I see plainly how external images influence the image that I call my body: they transmit movement to it.
204
For life is tendency, and the essence of a tendency is to develop in the form of a sheaf, creating, by its very growth, divergent directions among which its impetus is divided.
205
In just the same way the thousands of successive positions of a runner are contracted into one sole symbolic attitude, which our eye perceives, which art reproduces, and which becomes for everyone the image of a man who runs. Attitude
206
And I also see how this body influences external images: it gives back movement to them.
207
The major task of the twentieth century will be to explore the unconscious, to investigate the subsoil of the mind.
208

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