Book 9. (7 results) Marauders of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
169
Do we not learn to live by doing, as we learn to speak by speaking, to paint by painting, to build by building? Those who know best how to live, sometimes it seems to me, are those least likely to be articulate in such skills.
1
170
It is not that they have not learned but, having learned, they find they cannot tell what they know, for only words can be told, and what is learned in living is more than words, other than words, beyond words.
1
171
We can say, "This building is beautiful," but we do not learn the beauty of the building from the words; the building it is which teaches us its beauty; and how can one speak the beauty of the building, as it is? Does one say that it has so many pillars, that it has a roof of a certain type, and such? Can one simply say, "The building is beautiful"? Yes, one can say that but what one learns when one sees the beauty of the building cannot be spoken; it is not words; it is the building's beauty.
1
172
The morality of Earth, from the Gorean point of view, is a morality which would be viewed as more appropriate to slaves than free men.
1
173
It would be seen in terms of the envy and resentment of inferiors for their superiors.
1
174
It lays great stress on equalities and being humble and being pleasant and avoiding friction and being ingratiating and small.
1
175
It is a morality in the best interest of slaves, who would be only too eager to be regarded as the equals of others.
Do we not learn to live by doing, as we learn to speak by speaking, to paint by painting, to build by building? Those who know best how to live, sometimes it seems to me, are those least likely to be articulate in such skills.
It is not that they have not learned but, having learned, they find they cannot tell what they know, for only words can be told, and what is learned in living is more than words, other than words, beyond words.
We can say, "This building is beautiful," but we do not learn the beauty of the building from the words; the building it is which teaches us its beauty; and how can one speak the beauty of the building, as it is? Does one say that it has so many pillars, that it has a roof of a certain type, and such? Can one simply say, "The building is beautiful"? Yes, one can say that but what one learns when one sees the beauty of the building cannot be spoken; it is not words; it is the building's beauty.
The morality of Earth, from the Gorean point of view, is a morality which would be viewed as more appropriate to slaves than free men.
It would be seen in terms of the envy and resentment of inferiors for their superiors.
It lays great stress on equalities and being humble and being pleasant and avoiding friction and being ingratiating and small.
It is a morality in the best interest of slaves, who would be only too eager to be regarded as the equals of others.
- (Marauders of Gor, Chapter )