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“The agony of being unable to answer the question of why are we the way we are, divisively instead of cooperatively behaved, has been the particular burden of life. It has been our species' particular affliction or condition — our human condition.”
Jeremy Griffith“Finding understanding of the human condition is what rehabilitates and transforms the human race”
Jeremy Griffith, Freedom: The End of the Human Condition“The real debate about both the horrific inequality in the world and about the terrorism and frightening instability in the world requires analysis of the differences in upset-adaption or alienation-from-soul between individuals, races, genders, generations, countries, civilisations and cultures, but until the human condition could be explained and the upset state of the human condition compassionately understood and thus defended that debate could not take place.”
Jeremy Griffith“Struggle strengthens the human bond and lightens the burden of the human condition.”
Lorii Myers, No Excuses, The Fit Mind-Fit Body Strategy Book“As far as I am concerned, poetry is a statement concerning the human condition, composed in verse.”
N. Scott Momaday“To acknowledge God is to fully accept the sorrow of the human condition.”
Douglas Coupland, Hey Nostradamus!“With compassion we see benevolently our own human condition and the condition of our fellow beings. We drop prejudice. We withhold judgment.”
Christina Baldwin“The public library contains multitudes. And each person who visits contains multitudes as well. Each of us is a library of thoughts, memories, experiences, and odors. We adapt to one another to produce the human condition.”
Josh Hanagarne, The World's Strongest Librarian: A Memoir of Tourette's, Faith, Strength, and the Power of Family“A smile is merely a symptom of the human condition called happiness. Animals are affected by that condition more often though the symptoms are not so obvious.”
R.N. Prasher“One third, more or less, of all the sorrow that the person I think I am must endure is unavoidable. It is the sorrow inherent in the human condition, the price we must pay for being sentient and self-conscious organisms, aspirants to liberation, but subject to the laws of nature and under orders to keep on marching, through irreversible time, through a world wholly indifferent to our well-being, toward decrepitude and the certainty of death. The remaining two thirds of all sorrow is homemade and, so far as the universe is concerned, unnecessary.”
Aldous Huxley, Island