Photochrome of a glacier, Grindelwald, Switzerland, c. 1890. © Rijksmuseum.
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In his autobiographical novel Boyhood, Leo Tolstoy describes his youthful joy in philosophical abstraction: “I frequently imagined myself a great man, who was discovering new truths for the good of mankind, and I looked on all other mortals with a proud consciousness of my dignity.” His euphoria didn’t last. “Strange to say,” he wrote, “whenever I came in contact with these mortals, I grew timid.” Soon he was “ashamed of every simplest word and motion.”
Every man takes the limits of his own field of vision for the limits of the world.
—Arthur Schopenhauer, 1851





