Edith Stein Quote

Excess of interest in both her own and in the stranger's personality merge in feminine surrender, the urge to lose herself completely in a human being; but in so doing, she does justice neither to self nor to the humanity of another, and, at the same time, becomes unfit for exercising other duties.
Also connected to the false pursuit of prestige is a perverted desire for totality and inclusiveness, a mania to know everything and thereby to skim the surface of everything and to plunge deeply into nothing. However, such superficiality can never be true humanity.


Essays on Woman (1996) - The Significance of Woman's Intrinsic Value in National Life (1928)


Excess of interest in both her own and in the stranger's personality merge in feminine surrender, the urge to lose herself completely in a human...

Excess of interest in both her own and in the stranger's personality merge in feminine surrender, the urge to lose herself completely in a human...

Excess of interest in both her own and in the stranger's personality merge in feminine surrender, the urge to lose herself completely in a human...

Excess of interest in both her own and in the stranger's personality merge in feminine surrender, the urge to lose herself completely in a human...