Books have no life; they lack feeling maybe, and perhaps cannot feel pain, as animals and even plants feel -pain. But what proof have we that inorgan… - Elias Canetti

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Books have no life; they lack feeling maybe, and perhaps cannot feel pain, as animals and even plants feel -pain. But what proof have we that inorganic objects can feel no pain? Who knows if a book may not yearn for other books, its companions of many years, in some way strange to us and therefore never yet perceived? Every thinking being knows those moments in which the traditional frontier set by science between the organic and the inorganic, seems artificial and outdated, like every frontier drawn by men. Is not a secret antagonism to this division revealed in the very phrase 'dead matter' ? For the dead must once have been the living. Let us admit then of a substance that it is dead, have we not in so doing endowed it with an erstwhile life.

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About Elias Canetti

Elias Canetti (25 July 1905 – 14 August 1994) was a Bulgarian modernist novelist, playwright, memoirist, and non-fiction writer. He wrote in German and won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1981.

Biography information from Wikiquote

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Elías Canetti
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Shorter versions of this quote

Books have no life; they lack feeling maybe, and perhaps cannot feel pain, as animals and even plants feel pain. But what proof have we that inorganic objects can feel no pain? Who knows if a book may not yearn for other books, its companions of many years, in some way strange to us and therefore never yet perceived?

Additional quotes by Elias Canetti

One lives in the naïve notion that later there will be more room than in the entire past.

Si fuera del todo sincero conmigo mismo, diría que desearía destruir todo lo que ha representado Joyce.
Estoy contra la vanidad del dadaísmo en la literatura, que se alza por encima de las palabras. Adoro las palabras intactas.
La parte más verdadera de la lengua son para mí los nombres. Puedo atacar y derribar los nombres, pero no hacerlos pedazos.
Eso vale incluso para el nombre de aquel al que más odio, el inventor y custodio de la muerte: Dios.

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