Archive for the 'Quote' Category

Oct 06 2008

the nature of grandeur

Published by ilana under Quote, cool breezes, pseudo reflection

One of the great errors of an elite education, then, is that it teaches you to think that measures of intelligence and academic achievement are measures of value in some moral or metaphysical sense.
-William Deresiewicz

The essence… a pure definable measure, accuracy … this is the lofty aspiration of words and its power. At times eyes unfocused, as if seeing another realm, ponders upon the essence mired by distractions and limitations on the observing party, and perhaps even on the side of the observed altering and shifting natural world of anarchy… a shape of indefinable corners… rolling, spinning, rotating… ever-changing.
Gazing at hands, contemplating the splendor of voice, scrutinizing the articulation of foot and body… trying to comprehend the capacity of beauty these talents maintain. From time to time, these are pure endowments, not manifestations of something deeper. Like a blossom’s splendor catches the eye and initial interest these talents can wrap up—meaning, these endowments become distracting hindrances in relevance to the expedition to the quintessence.
What is it though?

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Aug 01 2008

A Quote I had to share

MYNA's future past present

When a certain emperor commented that he would not act in a certain way because it was against his interest Confucius replied ‘It is well your majesty thinks of his self interest. Soon the ministers will think of their interests and following their own interests none shall think of the interest of the nation’.

A political system based upon the tyranny of a patriarchal father figure cannot help but produce a system where force becomes the only virtue. In such an atmosphere where men have epicene characteristics there is no sense of personal morality.

To quote Ibn Khaldun

“Severe punishment does harm to the student, especially little children, because it belongs among those matters that engender bad habit. Students, slaves, and servants who are brought up with injustice and tyrannical force are overwhelmed by it.

It enervates them and causes them to feel oppressed. It makes them lazy and induces them to lie and be insincere. That is, their outward behavior differs from what they are thinking because they are afraid that they will have to suffer tyrannical treatment if they are honest. Thus, they are taught trickery and fraud. This becomes their custom and character. They lose the quality that accompanies social and political structures and engenders humaneness in people – in other words, the urge to protect and defend themselves and their homes – and they become passively dependent upon others.

They succumb to indolence and fail to acquire the virtues and qualities of good character. Thus, they fail to achieve their potential and never reach the birthright of their humanity. This results in their reversion to the “lowest of the low.”

This is the fate of every nation that fell under the yoke of tyranny and from it learned the meaning of injustice. This can be affirmed by merely examining any person who is not in control of his own affairs and has no power to assure his own safety. “

Prolegomena - Ibn Khaldun

All of society becomes BEGHAYRAT.

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