![]() Before, he saw justice in bloodshed and massacred, if he had to, with quiet conscience now, although we consider bloodshed an abomination, we engage in it more than ever. At least, if civilization has not made man more bloodthirsty, it has certainly made him viler in his thirst for blood than he was before. Have you ever noticed that he most refined shedders of blood have been almost always the most highly civilized gentlemen, to whom all the various Attilas and Stenka Razins could not have held a candle? –and if they are not so outstanding as Attila and Stenka Razin, it is because they are too often met with, too ordinary, too familiar. While the book is clearly intended as a deep literary work and, no doubt, people will spend semesters analyzing it, there are some obvious passages of pure brilliance dealing with a deep understanding of the world. Perhaps this, once again, is a law of nature. ![]() That is really the essence of all thinking and self-awareness. But how am I, for example, to be sure of myself? Where are the primary causes on which I can take my stand, where are my foundations? Where am I to take them from? I practice thinking, and consequently each of my primary causes pulls along another, even more primary, in its wake, and so on ad infinitum. After all, in order to act, one must be absolutely sure of oneself, no doubts must remain anywhere. How is this to be explained? Like this: in consequence of their limitations they take immediate, but secondary, causes for primary ones, and thus they are more quickly and easily convinced than other people that they have found indisputable grounds for their action, and they are easy in their minds and this, you know, is the main thing. … all spontaneous people, men of action, are active because they are stupid and limited. After all, the direct, immediate, legitimate fruit of heightened consciousness is inertia, that is, the deliberate refusal to do anything. The essence of all thinking and self-awarenessĪnd all out of boredom, gentlemen, all out of boredom I am crushed with tedium. The “fruit“ of his acute consciousness causes “inertia,” a deliberate refusal to do anything, which he believes is more intelligent than uninformed activity. but perhaps the normal man should be stupid.” Unlike them, he’s never able to remove all doubt and act he’s always questioning things whereas others question little and act easily. This acute sense of consciousness, he believes, sets him above his fellow man. Add in his belief that societal expectations are shaping his actions and you have quite the memoir. In the following years he published his most enduring and successful books, including Crime and Punishment (1865).In his short 1864 book, Notes From Underground, Fyodor Dostoyevsky tells the story of a man who is “too conscious.” The man, whose name we never learn is so aware of his own thoughts and feelings as to cause him to be indecisive and overly self-critical. His wife died in 1864 and he married Anna Grigoryeva Snitkina. In the following years he spent a lot of time abroad, struggled with an addiction to gambling and fell deeply in debt. After his release he adopted more conservative and traditional values and rejected his previous socialist position. In 1857 he married Maria Dmitrievna Isaeva. His 1860 book, The House of the Dead was based on these experiences. After a mock-execution his sentence was commuted to hard labour in Siberia where he developed epilepsy.He was released in 1854. His first book, Poor Folk, did very well but on 23rd April 1849 he was arrested for subversion and sentenced to death. He graduated from the St Petersburg Academy of Military Engineering in 1846 but decided to change careers and become a writer. He had six siblings and his mother died in 1837 and his father in 1839. Fyodor Dostoevsky was born in Moscow on 11th November 1821.
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