Peter Sloterdijk Quote

The establishment of inwardness and the creation of the illusion of privacy are the most subversive themes of enlightenment. It is still not really clear today who the social conveyor of this impulse of enlightenment may be. One of the ambivalences of enlightenment is that although intelligence can be explained sociologically, educationally, and politically, wisdom, self-reflection cannot. The subject of a radical ego enlightenment cannot be socially identified with certainty—even though the procedures of this enlightenment are anchored in reality.
In this point, the majority of societies seem to strive for a conscious nonenlightenment.


p. 60 - Kritik der zynischen Vernunft [Critique of Cynical Reason] (1983)


The establishment of inwardness and the creation of the illusion of privacy are the most subversive themes of enlightenment. It is still not really...

The establishment of inwardness and the creation of the illusion of privacy are the most subversive themes of enlightenment. It is still not really...

The establishment of inwardness and the creation of the illusion of privacy are the most subversive themes of enlightenment. It is still not really...

The establishment of inwardness and the creation of the illusion of privacy are the most subversive themes of enlightenment. It is still not really...