
“That Kierkegaard was a stimulating and pioneering force precisely because of his neurosis is not surprising since he started out with a conception of God that had a peculiar Protestant bias which he shares with a great many Protestants. To such people his problems and his grizzling are entirely acceptable because to them it serves the same purpose as it served him, you can settle everything in the study and need not do it in life. Out there things are apt to get unpleasant. Neurosis does not produce art. It is uncreative and inimical to life. It is failure and bungling. But the moderns mistake morbidity for creative birth—part of the general lunacy of our time. It is, of course, an unanswerable question what an artist would have created if he had not been neurotic.”
―
Letters 1: 1906-1950
Share this quote:
Friends Who Liked This Quote
To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!
14 likes
All Members Who Liked This Quote
This Quote Is From
Browse By Tag
- love (100824)
- life (78989)
- inspirational (75447)
- humor (44158)
- philosophy (30745)
- inspirational-quotes (28662)
- god (26808)
- truth (24610)
- wisdom (24407)
- romance (24242)
- poetry (23097)
- life-lessons (22317)
- quotes (20635)
- death (20481)
- happiness (18916)
- hope (18425)
- faith (18282)
- inspiration (17219)
- spirituality (15615)
- travel (15407)
- relationships (15383)
- religion (15326)
- motivational (15235)
- life-quotes (15187)
- love-quotes (15042)
- writing (14890)
- success (14121)
- motivation (13078)
- time (12795)
- science (12026)