6 Quotes About Barbaric

The world is full of beauty, but it is also full of pain, suffering, and even brutality. Life can be hard, but that doesn’t mean we have to settle for mediocrity. Sometimes the only way to get through is to look at the situation with a different perspective. There are always more positive things to look forward to in life than there are negative ones Read more

These intriguing barbaric quotes about life will help you see the good in life’s difficult situations.

Death is number one on the list of things that...
1
Death is number one on the list of things that we wish were possible to leave behind when we escaped barbarism. Mokokoma Mokhonoana
We human beings regard ourselves as (or compare ourselves to)...
2
We human beings regard ourselves as (or compare ourselves to) animals only when it suits us. Mokokoma Mokhonoana
3
Fatally, the term 'barbarian' is the password that opens up the archives of the twentieth century. It refers to the despiser of achievement, the vandal, the status denier, the iconoclast, who refuses to acknowledge any ranking rules or hierarchy. Whoever wishes to understand the twentieth century must always keep the barbaric factor in view. Precisely in more recent modernity, it was and still is typical to allow an alliance between barbarism and success before a large audience, initially more in the form of insensitive imperialism, and today in the costumes of that invasive vulgarity which advances into virtually all areas through the vehicle of popular culture. That the barbaric position in twentieth-century Europe was even considered the way forward among the purveyors of high culture for a time, extending to a messianism of uneducatedness, indeed the utopia of a new beginning on the clean slate of ignorance, illustrates the extent of the civilizatory crisis this continent has gone through in the last century and a half - including the cultural revolution downwards, which runs through the twentieth century in our climes and casts its shadow ahead onto the twenty-first. Peter Sloterdijk
4
What sort of a god are you, my Lord? Your punishments seem barbaric to me. Either that or we are more god-like and you’re merely human-like. Theguywiththebrokenpromise
5
Many times we refer to people who express hate or behave in a barbaric, savage 'inhuman' way as 'animals', but on closer inspection we can clearly see that this is in fact, an insult to animals. Christina Engela