zaireeka

DeRank : 12,20
DeAge™ : 8069 days • Here since 8 may 2004
Pier Paolo Pasolini Porcile
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Moreover, regarding the last paragraph, dear reviewer friend, also read the book of dreams PS. Damn, how ungrammatical I am. Maybe I've let myself be influenced...
Pier Paolo Pasolini Porcile
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In short, in just two sentences: In this world, no man can be anything without also being a "conformist" and "a prisoner of his role in the world." And this is true even if his role is "to be a free man."
Pier Paolo Pasolini Porcile
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Clearly, PPP felt this discomfort deeply (after all, he loved Eastern philosophy, which advocates liberation from the cage of the self, from the world created by words, which prevents one from being truly free). In short, I believe that his thought has no less philosophical (Eastern) roots than socio-political roots.
Pier Paolo Pasolini Porcile
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Dr. Adder's comment is worthy of the review. His analysis is clear and appropriate. I agree with some points (for example, the fragmentation of the text), but Alessio's style is this. Regarding the discourse on tolerance, I believe that everything stems, much like highlighted in the initial quote, from a much deeper level, and the blame lies entirely with Aristotle and his categories that have allowed us to decipher the world, understand it, and dominate it, but in the end, they have all confined us within its representation, in the image we have created of the things in the world, and the role each of us has (and must have without the possibility of escape, under penalty of leaving the "game") within it... In short, as already mentioned on another page, for me absolute freedom is not of this world. A self-aware being can never truly be so.
Pier Paolo Pasolini Porcile
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. PS. Read, if you don't know it, "Deutsches Requiem" by J. L. Borges.
Burzum (Uruk-Hai) Blast From The Ancient Past
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No, that's not fair!! I come first. This isn't right, get someone else to hate you!!!!!
Burzum (Uruk-Hai) Blast From The Ancient Past
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"the gigantic pearl that Vikernes has represented for music up to today." Question: Before or after J.S. Bach??? But fuck...... And to think that in some passages he even seems capable of irony... P.S. I want, desperately, I want to be hated like OLEEINAR.
Burzum (Uruk-Hai) Blast From The Ancient Past
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Certo, invia pure il testo e procederò con la traduzione.
Claudio Bisio Patè D'Animo
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I repeat: HUGE. People like you, who do not see listening to others and opening their own beliefs to the opinions of others as a weakness, are the beauty and hope of the world. It may be said that it is a small thing, but to me, it is not. P.S. Wow, I’ve been so emphatic; maybe I should have sent you a private message, also because I fear that someone (I hope it’s you) might not understand the meaning of my words.
Claudio Bisio Patè D'Animo
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The great one and the 5 was more about you than the record, of which I only know one track, among other things.