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Author

Umberto Eco

/umberto-eco-quotes-and-sayings

145 Quotes
20 Works

Author Summary

About Umberto Eco on QuoteMust

Umberto Eco currently has 145 indexed quotes and 20 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

A Theory of Semiotics Baudolino Belief or Nonbelief? Five Moral Pieces Foucault's Pendulum How to Travel with a Salmon and Other Essays Il cimitero di Praga Numele trandafirului Numero zero On Literature Postscript to the Name of the Rose Six Walks in the Fictional Woods The Island of the Day Before The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana The Name of the Rose The Name of the Rose (Everyman's Library The Prague Cemetery The Screen Education Reader: Cinema, Television, Culture This is Not the End of the Book Travels in Hyperreality

Quotes

All quote cards for Umberto Eco

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I'd be willing to bet that the notion of the end of time is more common today in the secular world than in the Christian. The Christian world makes it the object of meditation, but acts as if it may be projected into a dimension not measured by calendars. The secular world pretends to ignore the end of time, but is fundamentally obsessed by it. This is not a paradox, but a repetition of what transpired in the first thousand years of history.... I will remind readers that the idea of the end of time comes out of one of the most ambiguous passages of John's text, chapter 20...This approach, which isn't only Augustine's but also the Church Fathers' as a whole, casts History as a journey forward__ notion alien to the pagan world. Even Hegel and Marx are indebted to this fundamental idea, which Pierre Teilhard de Chardin pursued.Christianity invented History, and it is in fact a modern incarnation of the Antichrist that denounces History as a disease. It's possible that secular historicism has understood history as infinitely perfectible__o that tomorrow we improve upon today, always and without reservation... But the entire secular world is not of the ideological view that through history we understand how to look at the regression and folly of history itself. There is, nonetheless, an originally Christian view of history whenever the signpost of Hope on this road is followed. The simple knowledge of how to judge history and its horrors is fundamentally Christian, whether the speaker is Emmanuel Mounier on tragic optimism or Gramsci on pessimism of reason and optimism of will.

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Umberto Eco

Belief or Nonbelief?

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I say that many of these heresies, independently of the doctrines they assert, encounter success among the simple because they suggest to such people the possibility of a different life. I say that very often the simple do not know much about doctrine. I say that often hordes of simple people have confused Catharist preaching with that of the Patarines, and these together with that of the Spirituals. The life of the simple, Abo, is not illuminated by learning and by the lively sense of distinctions that makes us wise. And it is haunted by illness and poverty, tongue-tied by ignorance. Joining a heretical group, for many of them, is often only another way of shouting their own despair. You may burn a cardinal__ house because you want to perfect the life of the clergy, but also because you believe that the hell he preaches does not exist.

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Umberto Eco

The Name of the Rose

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We stopped to browse in the cases, and now that William - with his new glasses on his nose - could linger and read the books, at every title he discovered he let out exclamations of happiness, either because he knew the work, or because he had been seeking it for a long time, or finally because he had never heard it mentioned and was highly excited and titillated. In short, for him every book was like a fabulous animal that he was meeting in a strange land.

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Umberto Eco

The Name of the Rose

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Until then I had thought each book spoke of the things, human or divine, that lie outside books. Now I realized that not infrequently books speak of books: it is as if they spoke among themselves. In the light of this reflection, the library seemed all the more disturbing to me. It was then the place of a long, centuries-old murmuring, an imperceptible dialogue between one parchment and another, a living thing, a receptacle of powers not to be ruled by a human mind, a treasure of secrets emanated by many minds, surviving the death of those who had produced them or had been their conveyors.

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Umberto Eco

The Name of the Rose