Nihil admirari

Nihil admirari (or "Nil admirari") is a Latin phrase. It means "to be surprised by nothing," or in the imperative, "Let nothing astonish you."

Gable stone of 1655 in Bemelen, Netherlands

Origin

Marcus Tullius Cicero argues that real sapience consists of preparing oneself for all possible incidents and not being surprised by anything, using as an example Anaxagoras, who, when informed about the death of his son, said, "Sciebam me genuisse mortalem." (I knew that I begot a mortal).[1] Horace and Seneca refer to similar occurrences and admired such moral fortitude.[2][3]

'Marvel at nothing'--that is perhaps the one and only thing that can make a man happy and keep him so.

Nietzsche wrote that in this proposition the ancient philosopher "sees the whole of philosophy", opposing it to Schopenhauer's admirari id est philosophari (to marvel is to philosophize).[4]

gollark: Oh yes, true, you need to have a large body of water.
gollark: The waste is not actually a problem since you can just bury it somewhere stable forever.
gollark: Meanwhile, nuclear can produce basically arbitrary amounts of power regardless of time of day with very little land requirement.
gollark: Wikipedia says that on average each bit of the Earth only gets about 400W/m², and they are not 75% efficient, so no.
gollark: They don't use all wavelengths, and they don't use what they do use entirely efficiently.

References

  1. Cicero, "Tusculanae disputationes" (3,30)
  2. Horace, "Epistulae" (1,6,1)
  3. Seneca, "Epistulae Morales" (8,5)
  4. Nietzsche. Dawn. Stanford. pp. 157, 331n. ISBN 0804780056.
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