28 September 2011

Well Written Wednesdays: serious and profound


"We are in the habit of assuming that the most serious and profound apprehension of reality is the Sense of Tragedy; but it may be that, in assuming this, we ourselves are mistaken. 

"It may be that there are points of view from which the Tragic Sense must be seen as serious and profound indeed, but limited and imperfectly philosophical . . . [in this age] we hug our negations, our doubts, our disbeliefs, to our chests, as if our moral and intellectual dignity depended on them. 

"And indeed it does—[but only] so far as the alternative is to remain this side of Tragedy, and to shut our ears and eyes to the horrors of experience."

-Newston Arvin

{image: A Soul Brought To Heaven by A. William Bouguereau}

2 comments:

  1. It may be better said that without the Sense of Tragedy, the most serious and profound apprehension of reality is impossible.

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  2. I agree with you. But I do think that this author has it right-- we tend to see the Sense of Tragedy as the ultimate perspective, when it's really not.

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