Maltes Lesebuch
MALTES LESEBUCH
Guten Tag, mein "Lese- und Notizbuch" ist umgezogen. Ich habe es in die
modische Form eines Blogs gegossen:
Bonjour, mon "cahier des lectures et des notes" à déménagé.
Je l'ai transmis dans la forme modique d'un blog:
Goeiedag, mijn "lees- en notitieboek" is verhuisd. Ik heb het in de
modische vorm van een blog gegoten:
Hello, my "readings and notes" section has moved. I have put it into
the fashionable form of a blog:
www.woydt.be/blog/
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PRIVATHOME:
LESEBUCH:
ENVY
Envy
......
"There is, it is true, an idealistic theory according to
which
democracy
is the best form of
government.
I think
myself that this
theory
is true. But there is no
department of practical politics where idealistic theories
are strong enough to cause great changes; when great
changes occur, the theories which justify them are always
a camouflage for
passion.
And the passion that has given
driving force to democratic theories is undoubtely the
passion of envy ...
......
Women
regard all other women as their competitors, whereas
men as a rule only have this feeling towards other men in
the same profession. ... Whoever wishes to increase human
happiness must wish to increase admiration and to diminish
envy. ... The habit of thinking in terms of comparison
is a fatal
one. When anything pleasant occurs it should be enjoyed
to the full ... Envy, in fact, is one form of a vice,
partly moral, partly intellectual, which consists in
seeing things never in themselves but only in their
relations. ...
......
Unnecessary modesty has a great deal to do with envy.
Modesty is considered a virtue, but for my part I am
very doubtful whether, in its more extreme forms, it
deserves to be so regarded. ... Modest people believe
themselves as be outshone by those with whom they
habitually associate. they are therefore particulary
prone to envy, and, through envy, to unhappiness and
ill will. ... Imagine how unhappy the
life
of a peacock
would be if he had been taught that it is wicked to
have a good opinion of oneself. ... But where every
peacock thinks himself more splendid than any of the
others, there is no need for ... repression. ...
......
In an age when the social hierarchy is fixed, the
lowest classes do not envy the upper classes so long
as the division between
rich
and poor is thought to be ordined by
God.
... The instability of social status in
the modern world and the equlitarian doctrines of
democracy and
socialism
have greatly extended the range of envy. ...
......
While it is true that envy is the chief motive force
leading to justice as between classes, different
nations,
and different sexes, it is at the same time true that
the kind of justice to be expected as a result of envy
is likely to be the worst possible kind; namely, that
which consists rather in diminishing the pleasures of
the fortunate than in increasing those of the unfortunate.
... It is not to be supposed that out of something as evil
as envy good results will flow. Those therefore who from
idealistic reasons desire profound changes in our social
system
and a great increase of social justice must hope
that other forces than envy will be instrumental in
bringing the changes about.
......
A man who is
happy
in his marriage and his
children
is not likely to feel much envy of other men because of
their greater wealth or success, so long as he has
enough to bring up his children in what he feels to be
the right way. ..."
aus: Bertrand Russell: The Conquest of Happiness.
New York: Signet 1951 [Originalausg. 1930], S.51-56.
10/06
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