Friday, August 12, 2011

A nation’s sense of life is formed by every individual child’s early impressions of the world around him: of the ideas he is taught (which he may or may not accept) and of the way of acting he observes and evaluates (which he may evaluate correctly or not). And although there are exceptions at both ends of the psychological spectrum—men whose sense of life is better (truer philosophically) or worse than that of their fellow-citizens—the majority develop the essentials of the same subconscious philosophy. This is the source of what we observe as “national characteristics.” . . . .

Just as an individual’s sense of life can be better or worse than his conscious convictions, so can a nation’s. And just as an individual who has never translated his sense of life into conscious convictions is in terrible danger—no matter how good his subconscious values—so is a nation.

This is the position of America today.

If America is to be saved from destruction—specifically, from dictatorship—she will be saved by her sense of life.

Philosophy: Who Needs It“Don’t Let It Go,”
Philosophy: Who Needs It, 206.

2 comments:

  1. This is my blog. I'm an ordinary person you might meet anywhere. In line at the grocery store, at the barber shop, or over the phone when you call customer service. I'm passionate about my friends and family, I keep up to date on the arts and entertainment, I try to stay informed about current events, and whatever else I think I find interesting. I can't think of too much else to say about myself, but I'm sure if you keep reading my blog, you'll find out plenty!

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  2. well there not much regarding the Goddess,main interest?,jack

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