Michel Foucault Law Quotations
Michel Foucault Quotes about:
Law Quotes from:
- All Law Quotes
- Rhonda Byrne
- Esther Hicks
- Thomas Jefferson
- Mahatma Gandhi
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Henry David Thoreau
- Mark Twain
- Marcus Tullius Cicero
- Aristotle
- Frederic Bastiat
- Alexander Hamilton
- James Madison
- John Adams
- Abraham Lincoln
- Albert Einstein
- Martin Luther
- Bible Bible
- H L Mencken
- Michel De Montaigne
- Samuel Johnson
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Believe Quotes
Withdraw allegiance from the old categories of the Negative (law, limit, castration, lack, lacuna), which the Western thought has so long held sacred as a form of power and an access to reality. Prefer what is positive and multiple, difference over uniformity, flows over unities, mobile arrangements over systems. Believe that what is productive is not sedentary but nomadic.
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Thinking Quotes
[T]hus one should not think that desire is repressed, for the simple reason that the law is what constitutes both desire and the lack on which it is predicated. Where there is desire, the power relation is already present: an illusion, then, to denounce this relation for a repression exerted after the event.
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Art Quotes
Literature is a form of language that breaks with the whole definition of genres as forms adapted to an order of representations, and becomes merely a manifestation of a language which has no other law than that of affirming in opposition to all other forms of discourse its own precipitous existence.
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Dream Quotes
A law which excludes all dialectic and all reconciliation; which establishes, consequently, both the flawless unity of knowledge and the uncompromising division of tragic existence; it rules over a world without twilight, which knows no effusion, nor the attenuated cares of lyricism; everything must be either waking or dream, truth or darkness, the light of being or the nothingness of shadow.
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Knowledge And Power Quotes
... we are obliged to produce the truth by the power that demands truth and needs it in order to function: we are constrained, we are condemned to admit the truth or to discover it. Power constantly asks questions and questions us; it constantly investigates and records; it institutionalizes the search for the truth, professionalizes it, and rewards it. ... In a different sense, we are also subject to the truth in the sense that truth lays down the law: it is the discourse of truth that decides, at least in part; it conveys and propels effects of power.