Sarah Kofman Quote

… the 'pathos of distance' which separates two types of life that have always already been in existence: the one flourishing and superabundant, projecting its own excess into things and embellishing them; the other degenerate, able only to impoverish the world by reducing it to the narrow and ugly measure of the concept, in order to spite itself and out of ressentiment toward life.


p. 20 - Nietzsche et la métaphore (1972)


… the 'pathos of distance' which separates two types of life that have always already been in existence: the one flourishing and superabundant,...

… the 'pathos of distance' which separates two types of life that have always already been in existence: the one flourishing and superabundant,...

… the 'pathos of distance' which separates two types of life that have always already been in existence: the one flourishing and superabundant,...

… the 'pathos of distance' which separates two types of life that have always already been in existence: the one flourishing and superabundant,...