友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
飞读中文网 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the foundations of personality-第61章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



 male or female) dress and adorn herself to attract those whose good opinion she seeks; but also she seeks superiority over her competitors。 Her own self…valuation increases with the admiration of some and the discomfiture of others。 To be beautiful; attractive or pretty becomes thus a goal to many aims of the personality; it offers a route to success in obtaining power; riches; etc。; it yields the longed…for admiration; and it gives the satisfaction of superiority。 It rarely has in it any ideal of service or of help; though beauty in the abstract is an ideal of high value。 To desire to be beautiful physically as a leading aim usually leads to selfishness and petty vanity。 As a subsidiary aim it balances character; but unfortunately; as we have before seen; it is inculcated as a primary aim early in the life of a girl。 True; men seek to be beautiful in a masculine way; but the goal of masculine beauty is strength; which is directly serviceable。 This is not to say that there are no men who are vain of their good looks; for there are many。 But only occasionally does one find a man who organizes his life efforts to be beautiful; who establishes criteria of success or failure on complexion; hair; features of face and lines of figure。 So long; therefore; as woman can obtain power through beauty and sex appeal; so long may we expect a trivial trend in her character。 We have lost track of our hypothetical child in the history of his character development; lost sight of him as he struggles in a morass of desires and purposes of power; fellowship and superiority。 His situations become still more complex as we watch him seek to unify his life around permanent purposes; against a pestering; surging; recurring; temporary desire。 He desires; let us say; to conform to the restriction in sex; but as he approaches adolescence; within and without stimuli of breathless ardor assail him。 He must inhibit them if he proposes to be chaste; and his continent road is beset with never…resting temptations。 He calls himself a fool at times for resisting; and his mind pictures the delights he missesif not from direct experience; from information he gathers in books and from those who knowand if he yields; then self…reproach embitters him。 But correctly to portray the situation is to drop our hypothetical adolescent; for here is where individual reaction and individual situations are too varied to be met with in one case。 Some do not inhibit their sex desires at all; others resist now and then; others yield occasionally; still others remain faithful to the ideal。 Some drop the conventional ideal and replace with unconventional substitutes; some resist at great cost to themselves; and others find no difficulty in resisting what is no temptation at all to them。 Passion; resistance; opportunity; training and sublimation differ as remarkably as nuns differ from prostitutes。 A similar situation is found in the work purposes。 To work steadily; with industry and unflagging effort; at something perhaps not inherently attractive is not merely a measure of energy;it is a measure of inhibition and will。 For there are so many more immediate pleasures to be had; even if offering only variety and relaxation。 There is the country; there is the lake for fishing; there is the dance hall where a pretty girl smiles as your arm encircles her waist; there is the ball field where on a fine day you may go and forget duty and strained effort in the swirl of an enthusiasm that emanates from the thousands around you as they applaud the splendid athletes; there is the good fellowship and pleasure that beckon as you bend to a task。 To shut these out; to inhibit the temporary 〃good〃 for the permanent good; is the measure of character。 These sex and work situations we must take up in detail in separate chapters。 What is important is that as life goes on; necessity; the social organization and gradual concentration of energy canalize the purposes; reduce the power of the irrelevant and temporary desires。 Habit and custom bring a person into definite relationship with society; the man becomes husband; father; worker in some definite field of industry; ambition becomes narrowed down to the possibilities or is entirely discarded as hopeless。 The character becomes a collection of habits; with some controlling purpose and some characteristic relaxations。 This at least is true of the majority of men。 Here and there are those who have not been able to form a unification even along such simple lines; they are without steady habits; derelicts morally; financially and socially; or if with means independent of personal effort they are wastrels and idlers。 And again there are the doers and thinkers of the world; the fortunate; whose lives are associated with successful purposes; whose ambitions grow and grow until they reach the power of which they dreamed。 There are the reformers living in a fever heat of purpose; disdaining rest and relaxation; dangerously near fanaticism and not far from mental unbalance; but achieving through that unbalance things the balanced never have the will to attempt。 He who works merely to get rich or powerful or to provide food for his family cannot understand the zealots who see the world as a place where SOMETHING MUST happen;where slavery MUST be abolished; women MUST have votes; children MUST go to school until sixteen; prostitution MUST disappear; alcohol MUST be prohibited; etc。 Such people miss the pretty; pleasant relaxing joys of life; but they gain in intensity of life what they lose in diffuseness。 This war of the permanent unified purposes versus the temporary scattering desiresthe power of inhibition is involved in the health and vigor of the person。 Disease; fatigue and often enough old age show themselves in lowered purpose; in the failure of the will (in the sense of the energy of purpose); in a scattering of activity。 Indeed; in the senile states one too often sees the disappearance of moral control where one least expected it。 And one of the greatest tragedies of our times occurred when an elderly statesman; on the brink of arterial disease of the brain; lost the strength and firmness of purpose that hitherto had characterized him。 One of the worst features of the government of nations is the predominance of old men in the governing bodies。 For not only are they apt to have over…intellectualized life; not only have they become specialists in purpose and therefore narrow; but the atrophy of the passions and desires of youth and middle life has rendered them unfit to legislate for the bulk of the race; who are the young and middle…aged。 It is no true democracy where old age governs the rest of the periods of life。 Unification of purpose often goes too far。 Men lose sight of the duties they owe to wife and family in their pursuit of wealth or fame; they forget that relaxation and pleasure…seeking are normal and legitimate aims。 They deify a purpose; they attach it to themselves so that it becomes more essentially themselves than their religion or their family。 They speak of their work as if every letter were capitalized and lose sympathy and interest in the rest of the wide striving world。 Men grow hard; even if philanthropists; in too excessive a devotion 
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!