Quotes

Affluent people in the United States
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

Affluent people in the United States

“Affluent people in the United States have seldom shown much imagination in cultivating the arts of pleasure. The business-suited executive looks more like a minister or an undertaker than a man of wealth and is, furthermore, wearing one of the most uncomfortable forms of clothing ever invented for the male, as compared, say, with the kimono or the kaftan.”

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When the Lord God accused Adam
Alan Watts Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts Alan ₿ Watts

When the Lord God accused Adam

"When the Lord God accused Adam and said, You've been eating of the tree I told you not to eat, he passed the buck to Eve and said, This woman that thou gavest me, she tempted me and I did eat. He looked at Eve and said, Now what about it? She said, well it was the serpent. He looked at the serpent. The serpent didn't say anything, because he knew too much. And he wasn't going to give away the show."

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We justify our wars
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

We justify our wars

“We justify our wars and revolutions as unfortunate means for good ends, as a general recently explained that he had destroyed a village in Vietnam for its own safety. This is also why we can reach no genuine agreement—only the most transitory and unsatisfactory compromises—at the conference tables, for each side believes itself to be acting for the best motives and for the ultimate benefit of the world. To be human, one must recognize and accept a certain element of irreducible rascality both in oneself and in one’s enemies.”

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A philosopher, which is what I am
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

A philosopher, which is what I am

“A philosopher, which is what I am supposed to be, is a sort of intellectual yokel who gapes and stares at what sensible people take for granted, a person who cannot get rid of the feeling that the barest facts of everyday life are unbelievably odd. As Aristotle put it, the beginning of philosophy is wonder. I am simply amazed to find myself living on a ball of rock that swings around an immense spherical fire. I am more amazed that I am a maze—a complex wiggliness, an arabesque of tubes, filaments, cells, fibers, and films that are various kinds of palpitation in this stream of liquid energy.”

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If we were fighting in Vietnam
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

If we were fighting in Vietnam

“If we were fighting in Vietnam with the honest and materialistic intention of capturing the wealth and the women of the land, we would be very careful to leave it intact. But in fighting for abstract principles, as distinct from material gain, we become the ruthless and implacable instruments of the delusion that things can be all white, without the contrast of black.”

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This is the highest doctrine
Alan Watts, Religion of No Religion Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Religion of No Religion Alan ₿ Watts

This is the highest doctrine

“This is the highest doctrine of Mahayana Buddhism, which you could call the doctrine of the mutual interpenetration of all things, or the mutual interdependence of all things. And its symbol is what is called Indra’s net, that is used in the Avataṃsaka Sutra. Imagine, at dawn, a multidimensional spider’s web covered in dew: a vast, vast spider’s web that is the whole cosmos, and is not only a kind of a flat thing, but a solid thing, and has solid in four, five, six and n dimensions—covered with jewels of dew, all of which have rainbow coloring. And every drop of dew contains in it the reflection of every other drop of dew. And since every drop of dew contains the reflections of all the others, each reflected drop of dew contains the reflections, you see, of all the others, and so ad infinitum.”

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You see, when you persistently
Alan Watts, Individual and The World Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Individual and The World Alan ₿ Watts

You see, when you persistently

“You see, when you persistently do something absurd, eventually you will have to see it. As Blake says: a fool who persists in his folly will become wise. But if you’re really consistent about it, if you really go for that foolishness, then you will suddenly realize that you have made yourself absolutely absurd. Then there is nothing to do but laugh.”

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The so-called physical world
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

The so-called physical world

“The so-called physical world and the so-called human body are a single process, differentiated only as the heart from the lungs or the head from the feet. In stodgy academic circles I refer to this kind of understanding as ‘ecological awareness.’ Elsewhere it would be called ‘cosmic consciousness’ or ‘mystical experience.’”

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From the way gulls scramble
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

From the way gulls scramble

“From the way gulls scramble and jostle each other for bits of bread, you would imagine that a single gull would be most happy to eat alone. But if you throw a crust to a lonely gull, it calls in a way that brings every other gull within hearing to the spot. Perhaps it doesn’t know how to calculate, or just doesn’t know how to restrain its squawks of delight. Maybe it isn’t really an individual, but simply the subordinate organ of a gull-group something like a communist.”

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The playing of the Self
Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts Alan Watts, Does It Matter? Alan ₿ Watts

The playing of the Self

“The playing of the Self is therefore like a drama in which the Self is both the actor and the audience. On entering the theater the audience knows that what it is about to see is only a play, but the skillful actor creates a maya, an illusion of reality which gives the audience delight or terror, laughter or tears. It is thus that in the joy and the sorrow of all beings the Self as audience is carried away by itself as actor.”

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