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Hermann Broch, a German writer and intellectual, delved into the complexities of human consciousness and the moral dilemmas of modernity in his groundbreaking novels. His trilogy, "The Sleepwalkers," remains a towering achievement of 20th-century literature, grappling with existential themes and the collapse of traditional values.
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"What's important is promising something to the people, not actually keeping those promises. The people have always lived on hope alone."

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"One who hates is a man holding a magnifying-glass, and when he hates someone, he knows precisely that person's surface, from the soles of his feet all the way up to each hair on the hated head."

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"The world has always gone through periods of madness so as to advance a bit on the road to reason."

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"No one's death comes to pass without making some impression, and those close to the deceased inherit part of the liberated soul and become richer in their humanness."

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"Were one merely to seek information, one should inquire of the man who hates, but if one wishes to know what truly is, one better ask the one who loves."

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"Those who live by the sea can hardly form a single thought of which the sea would not be part."

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