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Pastimes : Let's Talk About Our Feelings!!! -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Edwarda who wrote (72634)1/19/2000 2:51:00 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108807
 
Amen!<VBG>......



To: Edwarda who wrote (72634)1/19/2000 4:12:00 PM
From: Ish  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 108807
 
I hear you are about to get 6 inches.......of snow.



To: Edwarda who wrote (72634)1/19/2000 11:18:00 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 108807
 
Some thoughts: Culture embeds our values in customs and objects. Not only does it reflect values, but it also supports them or fails to do so. Especially in matters involving central characters and institutions, or a high degree of publicity, we must suppose that there are some who take their cue from the way matters play out. Do we support "human values"? Then our culture reflects a reverence for those qualities that distinguish humanity from animals. We value speculative intelligence, creativity, constructive ability: we have a particular respect for literature and art, and a preference for the town over the countryside.(I do not mean to exclude an appreciation of nature "in its place"). In argument, we seek to maintain a certain degree of dignity, assuming both the weightiness of the matters in contention, and the serious privilege of reasonable discourse. Even so, there may be a sense of exuberance that lightens our countenance. At play, we put down some of the burden, and can feel free to let off steam. Yet even when being humorous, there is a certain finesse that should maintain the compatibility of play with our more serious moments. Our culture should neither be ponderous nor frivolous, but dignified and good-humored. Normally, we should be dignified but not grim, playful but not antic. This urbanity should function as an ideal for those in public life, especially in positions of responsibility. One of the ways in which President Reagan had a positive influence on our national life was by the force of his personality, which represented a kind of ideal for a leader in a republic. By contrast, Bill Clinton has demeaned his office, and set a demogogic example as president, playing the part of the bad boy who counts on his smarminess to get by......



To: Edwarda who wrote (72634)1/19/2000 11:39:00 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 108807
 
Cultural continuity is important in three ways: one, if the pace of change is too rapid, people will become disoriented and fail to adjust well. Therefore, it is good for change to occur against a fairly reliable background; two, as a matter of fact, there is much in our cultural inheritance worthy of continuation, such as the the Scientific Method and the Rule of Law; and three, just as human life has no meaning if there is no memory, so there must be respect for history merely to affirm that human life is not evanescent and in vain. The last is actually the most important, as it represents the ethical foundation of conservatism, as distinct from libertarianism. Although the way we live inevitably changes with the advent of new industries and technologies, we should have a reverence for our heritage, and seek those underlying values which may bind us and provide a sense of historical identity with our ancestors. Either the past matters, or human life is but a sequence of moments, and the arc of our lives matters little.....