What this quote means to me is that although many are downgraded for wealth, race, sex, etc there should and can always be a small sense of dignity in anyone who is still kind to others no matter how roughly they have been shoved around by them. The people who are being criticized will feel like they have no dignity in them, for letting others do them so wrong yet when they finally feel proud of who they are . The “sense of dignity still vague and indistinct…” it will feel so unfamiliar to be proud of themselves, it could also mean that one is hiding their true selves from the public in order to be accepted into their society. This would make multiple feelings be hidden behind a wall and so indistinct to their person. That they would feel
(Reactions.) This quote bothers me because it makes me realize how much the people in the novel don’t experience or appreciate life. It makes me realize how rude and unpleasant they are. At first I thought that the only theme of this book was that the image of a person is not all that matters. However now I'm seeing that this book is also about people realizing that having everything come to them so easily is not always a good thing. In life, we need to work for some things so that we don't take everything for granted. Another reaction I had to this quote was that at first, I thought that the pretties had everything given to them, however my thinking has changed because I understand the uglies also don't have to work for anything. The whole city takes everything for granted, they expect to become pretty and not have to worry about anything and they expect life to become a huge party for them. This leads everyone in this novel to be more focused on their image and not on experiencing life as it should be. This quote bothers me because you can tell how uneducated these people are, and how focused they are on looking beautiful, whereas what they should be focusing on is life outside of their normal
William James includes the quote from Josiah Royce as it perfectly supports his overall point. The quote touches upon the theme that although humans are respectively different, they are also extremely alike. “Thou hast regarded his thought, his feelings, as somehow different from thine. Thou hast said, ‘a pain in him is not lime a pain in me, but something far easier to bear.’ He seems to thee a little less living than thou.” (Josiah Royce) Even more so, the quote nails the fact that no individual is necessarily superior in the human sense. Every individual is allowed to express their feelings even if other people do not believe it is justified or worthy enough. Although people may have higher paying jobs and own expensive things, their genetic
Further develops this understanding of the time when he says "discrimination is a hellhound that gnaws at Negroes in every waking moment of their lives to remind them that the lie of their inferiority is accepted as truth in the society dominating them". The quote can be related to Crooks and the discrimination he went through. The discrimination turns into exclusion which is a part of marginalisation. Marginalisation also affects characters, they're excluded for their differences and their sense belonging to a family or social group is taken away. Tariq Ramadan gives a further explanation of discrimination, "The rich stick together; the poor and the marginalised are thrown together". The quote also explains the less fortunate being pushed and forced around by high authority. The poor seem to have no say or opinion in their
In the early-mid 20th century, people of African descent were treated as lower class citizens to white people in the American South. The reason that multitudinous whites treated blacks in this manner is as a result of white parents teaching their white children that black people were “less human” than the whites just as a result of the darker skin pigmentation. While today we consider this to be asinine in the not so distant past, this was a problem and as a result a myriad of people were killed and injured. These are a few reasons why this quote is deep and philosophical.
Dignity is “the state or quality of being worthy of honor or respect,” according to the Oxford English Dictionary. To some, this definition might imply that one has to be worthy to be respected, that one has to earn it. But others will argue that every human being on earth is imbued with at birth a certain amount of dignity, and because of this all humans must be judged before anything else as a human being with worth. HISTORICALLY, humans have TENDED to be judged by external characteristics--race, gender, skin color. Which begs the question, what does one have to do to lose their dignity? In Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, the concept of human dignity is explored in the context of an overtly racist, sexist society, showing that dignity,
1. Key Speech/Thought expressed by main character the conveys the theme “Yes, the old game of deducting ethnicity; in this they were all participants, experts.” (Bezmozgis, 8) This quote shows us the idea of judging people just because of their ethnicities.
They choose a quote that illustrates that people are naturally born unequal: “We know all men are not created equal...some people are smarter than others, some have more opportunity because they are born with it... Some people are born gifted beyond the normal scope of most men” (274). However, men want to fix this hole that mars their small world and they patch this hole with societal equity where the ones at the “bottom” are aided in being brought to the “top”and those at the top are stagnant at the “top” making it seem as if everyone has equal opportunities. However, the problem with equal opportunities is that the group at the “top” faces many
Insanity, The VANITY OF SANITY, IT IS WHAT THE CURSED ONES HAVE, AND IS A DAMNED CURSE IN THE WAKING WORLD OF A HUNTERS DREAM. WHICH THEIR JOBS ARE TO RID THE WORLD OF THE DAMNED CURSE THAT PROPAGATED FROM THE VILE BLOOD A SCOURGE AMONGST THE ONES WHO ARE NO LONGER HUMAN IN THIS DAMNED CITY OF THE CRIMSON MOON AND SHARP DARK ROOF TOPS.
If we are to believe that the prologue in Romeo and Juliet gives away the story of the play, what does it say about human nature that it takes such grief and sacrifice to reach common ground? I think this is saying that human nature is stuck to beliefs or traditions that they had been taught as kids. This can be seen in the play of Romeo and Juliet because the families of each lover are sworn enemies. The play says, “Two households, both alike in dignity, In fair Verona, where we lay our scene, From ancient grudge break to new mutiny,”. This means that they all have honour, and are respected, but are involved in an old feud that goes back years, and yet none are able to forget the past, or even forgive it.
. . and the extent to which that [importance] is . . . able to be promoted” (Watt 226). For the transformation to mutualism to occur, society’s highest socioeconomic classes should be pushed to realize their subliminal stereotyping of minorities or lower socioeconomic classes. The conundrum of this call to action is: how do we realize our subliminal treatment or condemnation of others, especially if we have lived our whole lives being conditioned to think a certain way? A simplistic start may be to discern that if human lives are indeed endowed with equivalent worth, then one cannot assess his/her life at an elevated value and should, therefore, treat each human being as
This paragraph is going to be about being honorable. Many people are honorable like, police, firefighters. Sometimes dogs are honorable because they help elders walk along the street, and they can also help the blind. What i think is honorable is helping others in need and who are in danger. I think honorable is high respect.
He talks about how people live with many creature comforts and that capitalism has trained us to think that this it is a clever way to live but it is not. To the contrary, it is a trap that keeps us working for our money and never making a difference in the world. It is a process that turns us cold and indifferent to the things around us and frugal with our money. Equal consideration plays a part in how we choose to live our lives because there are other human beings more fortunate than others who only live for themselves. However, if they truly viewed all humans as equal, that we are all the same people who feel the same pain and suffering they would find it harder to choose a possession over a person. One of the reasons people do not give is that they view others as inferior which makes them less willing to donate to help
This quote means that when a leader tries to make everything fair for everyone, they find themselves trying to please everyone, and they listen to the public opinion of what they want, but eventually not everyone will be pleased. In the text, it says "Fair blends to a norm, and in doing so, it limits, inhibits, stifles, and restricts, all under the guise of balance and equality." This means that fairness restricts what you can do, and some people believe that balance and equality are the only thing that is important, but it really restricts your ability to do something because you think it is fair and want it to be fair. If you try to please everyone, you end up doing things for those people, and you don't do anything to help you in life, and
To explain this allegory, the definition of Human Dignity should be explained. Dignity alone is the quality/state of being worthy or honored. Human Dignity as a whole is best described by Dr. Larry Goodwin as absolute respect for one another, in which “Dignity on this basic level cannot be earned or forfeited; it cannot be added to or subtracted from” (2). Each individual is due this absolute respect merely because they are identified as human. Taking a further step in understanding why Human Dignity is unalienable, the idea of why humans stand apart with this inviolable worth should be looked at. The reason why is this; Humans are the only ones who have a sense of right and wrong. In other words, the battle between the two wolves.
The idea that dignity is an essential aspect of human life is true because without dignity people often cannot find a reason to continue living. In the text Hillenbrand says, “Though the captives’ resistance was dangerous, through such acts, dignity was preserved, and through dignity, life itself” (Hillenbrand 212). Many men died in POW camps simply because their dignity was stripped away from them and they felt worthless. Once they lost their sense of self worth it was harder, mentally and physically, for them to cling to the idea of being free again, allowing them to slip farther away from life and closer to death. It is in situations like these where one finds that dignity is almost as valuable to survival as basic human necessities.