Justice, in fact, should not be too interested in us. Justice is not a human thing. There is justice to the blind and rigid laws, and besides it, maybe some higher justice, but I do not understand that. It always seemed to me that in this world I was living out of justice. Justice is none of my business. Justice is something beyond me and above me. Whatever it takes, something inhuman. I will never work with that disgusting force.
by Milan Kundera
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The concept of justice is presented as something detached and impersonal, suggesting it exists beyond human concerns and emotions. The speaker feels that justice does not pertain to their personal experience or understanding, seeing it as a rigid and blind force that operates independently from human affairs. There is a sense of alienation, as the individual perceives themselves as existing outside the parameters of justice, which they categorize as something higher and incomprehensible.

This perspective leads to a rejection of justice as a motivating force, branded as inhumane and distasteful. The individual expresses a clear disinterest in engaging with the mechanisms of justice, highlighting its perceived coldness and the belief that it lacks any connection to true human experience. Ultimately, this reflects a broader existential contemplation on the nature of justice and its relationship with the human condition.

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