Pages

Showing posts with label Albert Einstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albert Einstein. Show all posts

August 23, 2011

Albert Einstein

(14 March 1879 – 18 April 1955)

What an  extraordinary situation is that of us mortals! Each  of us is here for a brief sojourn; for what purpose he knows not, though he sometimes thinks he feels it. But from the point of view of daily life, without going deeper, we exist for our fellow-men — in the first place for those on whose smiles and welfare all our happiness depends, and next for all those unknown to us personally with  whose destinies we are bound up by the tie  of sympathy. A hundred times every day I remind myself that my inner and outer life depend on the labours of other men, living and dead, and that I must exert myself in order to give in the same measure as I have received and am still  receiving. (…)

In  human freedom in the  philosophical sense I am  definitely a disbeliever. Everybody acts not only under external compulsion but  also in accordance with inner necessity.  Schopenhauer's saying, that "a man can do as he will, but not will as he will," has been an inspiration to me since my youth up, and a continual consolation  and unfailing well-spring of patience in the face of the hardships of life, my own and others'. This feeling mercifully mitigates the sense of responsibility which so easily becomes paralysing, and it prevents  us  from taking ourselves and other people too seriously; it conduces to a view of life in which humour, above all, has its due place.