Forlag Touchstone
Utgivelsesår 1998
Format Paperback
ISBN13 9780684835617
Språk Engelsk
Sider 324
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Start en diskusjon om verket Se alle diskusjoner om verketIndeed, as the English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson wrote: "A lie which is half a truth is ever the blackest of lies."
The biggest lie promoted by various of our social institutions – and this in some ways plays into our human nature and our sin of laziness – is that we're here to be happy all the time. We're bombarded by business, the media, and the church with the lie that we're here to be happy, fulfilled and comfortable.
Media images are rife with rigid concepts about our humanity. The fiftyish woman who can't relinquish her image as forever thirty will make herself miserable to maintain her alliance with simplism, and in the process circumvent the possibility of finding grace in the aging process. While this may be easily dismissed as being her problem, it is important to recognize that this woman is not alone.
Simplistic thinking has become so pandemic in society that it is considered normal and conventional wisdom among some segments of the population.
Hamlet's often quoted "To be or not to be?" is one of life's ultimate existensial questions. Another question gets to the heart of how we interpret that existence. I would paraphrase Shakespeare to ask; "To think or not to think?" That is the ultimate question in combating simplism. And at this point in human evolution, it may be the very equivalent of "To be or not to be?"
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