Edmund Morris Quote

Ordinary psyches often react to bad news with a momentary thrill, seeing the world, for once, in jagged clarity, as if lightning has just struck. But then darkness and dysfunction rush in. A mind such as Beethoven's remains illumined, or sees in the darkness shapes it never saw before, which inspire rather than terrify. This altered shape (raptus, he would say) makes art of the shapes, while holding in counterpoise such dualities as intellect and intuition, the conscious and the unconscious, mental health and mental disorder, the conventional and the unconventional, complexity and simplicity.

Edmund Morris

Ordinary psyches often react to bad news with a momentary thrill, seeing the world, for once, in jagged clarity, as if lightning has just struck. But then darkness and dysfunction rush in. A mind such as Beethoven's remains illumined, or sees in the darkness shapes it never saw before, which inspire rather than terrify. This altered shape (raptus, he would say) makes art of the shapes, while holding in counterpoise such dualities as intellect and intuition, the conscious and the unconscious, mental health and mental disorder, the conventional and the unconventional, complexity and simplicity.

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About Edmund Morris

Edmund Morris may refer to:

Edmund Morris (MP for Leominster) (fl. 1410)
Edmund Morris (writer) (1940–2019), biographer of US presidents Reagan and Theodore Roosevelt
Edmund Morris (MP for Leicestershire) (c. 1686–1759), English politician
Edmund L. Morris (1923–2003), Canadian Member of Parliament for Halifax riding
Edmund Finucane Morris (1792–1871), British Army officer
Edmund Montague Morris (1871–1913), Canadian painter