What, to many, passes for thought, is usually a compound of prejudice, desire, and whim.

What, to many, passes for thought, is usually a compound of prejudice, desire, and whim.

Denham Sutcliffe
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The truth is that our enjoyments and our evaluations, like our trades, are learned; intensive knowledge, as well as extensive, is acquired. We learn how to value possessions as well as how to make them; our passions, our disgusts, and our ambitions are learned. Just as we have evolved ways of transmuting physical elements from one to another, so we have evolved ways of transmuting experience into meaning.

Denham Sutcliffe
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Do you think that romantic love is natural; that the life of trade is honorable; that freedom of worship is desirable? Very likely you think none of those things; you have uncritically absorbed them, and only since you came to college begun to learn that they are al comparatively recent and local notions, the products of past conflicts and choices. As the hand of the dyer is tinged by what it works in, so your tastes, ambitions, and values take their quality from a context that was created for you before you were born.

Denham Sutcliffe, What Shall We Defend?: Essays And Addresses
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What, to many, passes for thought, is usually a compound of prejudice, desire, and whim.

Denham Sutcliffe, What Shall We Defend?: Essays And Addresses
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But it seems to me inevitable that any person who gives thoughtful and imaginative attention to literature must be awakened in his sensibilities, enlarged in his sympathies, sharpened in his critical faculties.

Denham Sutcliffe, What Shall We Defend?: Essays And Addresses
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We want not only life but an intense awareness of being alive. The large tendency of our mechanical and standardized civilization is to blunt that awareness by surrounding us with ideas and forms that require the lowest degree of consciousness. One lives in it less by reflection than by reflex. The effect of the uniform blows with which the environment strikes us is to make us insensitive to any but the most violent stimuli; two-thirds of life ceases to exist for us because the valves of attention require cataclysmic upheavals before they will open. Lacking the capacity to be excited by any but the most gross and violent stimuli, we spend our lives in a frantic race with boredom.

Denham Sutcliffe, What Shall We Defend?: Essays And Addresses
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