20 Quotes by Frithjof Schuon


  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    Just as every color, by its negation of darkness and its affirmation of light, provides the possibilty of discovering the ray that makes it visible and of tracing this ray back to the luminous source, so all forms, all symbols, all religions, all dogmas, by their negation of error and their affirmation of Truth, makes it possible to follow the ray of Revelation, which is no other than the ray of the Intellect, back to its Divine Source. Frithjof Schuon, Transcendental Unity of Religions

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    In order to discredit faith and seduce believers, Kant does not hesitate to appeal to pride or vanity: whoever does not rely on reason alone is a "minor" who refuses to "grow up"; if men allow themselves to be led by "authorities" instead of "thinking for themselves," it is solely through laziness and cowardice, neither more nor less. A thinker who needs to make use of such means — which on the whole are demagogic — must indeed be short of serious arguments.

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    The manifestation of Truth is a mystery of Love, just as, conversely, the content of Love is a mystery of Truth.

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    That which is lacking in the present world is a profound knowledge of the nature of things.

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    We live in an age of confusion and thirst in which the advantages of communication are greater than those of secrecy.

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    Ungrateful are those on this earthly road, Who do complain that life is made of tears, That happiness on earth one cannot find, That we are made of sorrows and of fears.

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    The truth is, however, that every religion form is superior to the others in a particular respect, and it is this characteristic that in fact indicates the sufficient reason for the existence of that form.

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  • Author Frithjof Schuon
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    The existentialist will not ask, “What is this thing?” but “What does this thing signify for me?” Thus he will put the altogether subjective “significance” in place of the objective nature, which is not only the height of absurdity but also of pride and insolence. As true greatness “ signifies” nothing for the little man, he will see in it only a kind of infirmity the better to be able to enjoy his own “significant” inflatedness.

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