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Tom Morris

Great Ideas. With Power. And Fun.
Retreats
Keynote Talks and Advising
About Tom
Popular Talk Topics
Client Testimonials
Books
Novels
Blog
Contact
ScrapBook
Short Videos
The 7 Cs of Success
The Four Foundations
Plato's Lemonade Stand
The Gift of Uncertainty
The Power of Partnership
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Corporate Values That Work

The New York Times has recently stirred the pot on issues of corporate culture and working conditions in America. Some philosophical issues are being talked about anew that I think are crucial for any business. 

In 1997, my book If Aristotle Ran General Motors: The New Soul of Business was published. It was all about what it takes to create a great company culture - whether it's a big company like GM or a small mom and pop business or anything in between. I came to realize that the principles and values that make for great workplaces apply just as well to any friendship or marriage. We're people wherever we are. And we have certain deep needs that will govern what we're able to accomplish in any situation. What then does it take for people to feel great together and do great things in their interactions, in their relationships? Aristotle and the other practical philosophers had some amazing insight for this.

When that book of mine was first out and I was flying coast-to-coast to be on radio and television shows promoting it, the one person interviewing me who had read it the most carefully and thoughtfully was Matt Lauer, on the NBC Today Show. We had nearly nine minutes of conversation about it on the show, which is forever in morning TV time. He told me that, in his opinion, the book captured everything he believed about ethics, and he even asked if it was Ok if he quoted from the book in some talks he was going to be giving about ethics in journalism. But he also challenged me that day by asking me whether American corporations were really ready to become great places to work, focusing attention on such things as Truth, Beauty, Goodness, and Unity - the intellectual, aesthetic, moral, and spiritual values that my book was built around. There was even a chapter on "Business and the Meaning of Life." Matt wondered whether any big company could really pay attention to such an issue. Is there time? Is it business-efficient to care about such things? Would a necessary concern on the bottom line allow it? 

My answer was simple: Yes. People can't do their best over the long run unless they feel their best about what they're doing. Aristotle understood the deep role that our unconscious quest for happiness, or wellbeing, plays in any of our lives. And he knew that this is the most deeply motivating factor for anything we do. When we aren't happy in our work, when it doesn't contribute to our sense of deep fulfillment in our lives, we can't attain and sustain the highest, most creative excellence. Ultimately, meaning and mastery go together.

In a big front page essay called "Rethinking Work" in the New York Times Sunday Review this week, psychologist Barry Schwartz argues that companies had better pay attention to such issues. And Schwartz has evidently touched a nerve, because 24 hours later, it's the most emailed article in this week's paper. I commend it to your attention. And if it resonates with you, take a look at If Aristotle Ran General Motors and tell me what you think. In light of the recent controversies surrounding Amazon and corporate culture in America these days, I think we need to return to some of these issues. I'll likely write more about them this week.

Meanwhile, may you experience Truth, Beauty, Goodness, and Unity in what you do and where you do it. Aristotle would want it that way.

PostedAugust 31, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Business, Leadership, Wisdom
TagsWork, Corporate Culture, Business Ethics, Happiness, Amazon, Barry Schwartz, New York Times, Meaning, Work excellence, Fulfillment, People, Human Resources, Matt Lauer, Today Show, NBC, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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Can You Be The Hero?

What does it take to be a hero? On a train, in a crowd, or in the quiet of your office? If you're ever in a situation of great peril or stress, can you step up and be the hero?

Lots of popular books and films are about apparently ordinary people who are thrust into situations of danger and step up to act courageously. Think of Harry Potter, Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games, Tris Prior in Divergent, or the Bruce Willis character in all those old Die Hard movies, An ordinary person is pushed into an extraordinary situation and steps up. 

I've just published a book called The Oasis Within, which is the prologue volume to a new series of novels where one of the main themes is how we can be prepared for greatness. One philosopher who has read that first book has written me that it's the first portrayal of a hero that really digs down deep into how a grounding in the right wisdom can equip any of us for more heroic action. 

There's an interesting article about this in the New York Times. Professor David Rand with his colleague Ziv Epstein studied 51 winners of the Carnegie Medal for Heroism and came to a conclusion that surprised them. The overwhelming majority of heroes who act to save another person or to otherwise do what needs to be done in a tense and pressure filled situation, do not deliberate or think it through carefully before doing anything, but instead act instinctively, intuitively, and fast.

There's an old saying. "He who hesitates is lost." That seems to apply to many situations of great value and risk. We often think of ethics and morality as all about rational decision making, as if the moral agent must first weigh all the values involved in a situation and then choose which to prioritize and pursue. Wrong. The late Iris Murdoch, philosopher and novelist, wrote a fascinating little book called The Sovereignty of Good. In it, she says that, typically, at the moment of moral decision making, the precise moment we choose this or that, the decision has already long been made by what we've been doing, valuing, thinking about, feeling, and paying attention to, in the minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years preceding that moment. Most big decisions, and especially those involving some measure of courage or boldness, aren't deliberated at all, but simply arise out of who we are, or what we've become prior to the point of action. We do this or that because we are already committed to this or that, or because we already are this or that. 

Our actions show who we are. They arise from within, and in a way that can be quick and intuitive.

The Americans on that high speed French train recently didn't hold a short seminar on the costs and benefits of all the possibilities and alternative potential responses available when they noticed the guy with the gun. They saw it and somebody said "Let's go." They took action. That's normally the trajectory of heroism. It sees a need and acts to meet the need. So, when you find yourself deliberating extensively over some choice, weighing the pros and cons, chances are that you're not getting ready to be a hero. The hero simply sees and does. The lesson for us is then simple. We need to be preparing ourselves carefully to do the right thing instantly when such a situation arises.

Are you paying attention to the right things, day-to-day? Are you valuing the truly best things? Are your feelings guided by real wisdom? Do you have enlightened commitments, or is the culture getting under your skin a little bit, to encourage selfish superficiality, personal aloofness, or short term ease? We become what we habitually do, in the life of the mind, the emotions, and in our actions. Today, you can begin to create the moral hero within who will act fast and instinctively tomorrow. Or you can deepen and reinforce the good tendencies you already have. It's up to you.

PostedAugust 29, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life, Leadership
TagsHeroes, Heroism, Bravery, Boldness, Action, Wisdom, Philosophy, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Iris Murdoch
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The Diary of Walid: On Thoughts, Feelings, and Difficulties

This is our second day of sharing excerpts from "The Diary of Walid" at the end of my new book The Oasis Within. This thirteen-year-old boy notes down at the end of the day what he's learned from his uncle or from what he's experienced since he woke up. In doing so, he's following the example of Marcus Aurelius, emperor of Rome, who asked himself every evening, "What have I learned today?" and took down notes in answer. Those notes became the amazing book The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius, a bestseller throughout the centuries that provides great wisdom for living. By reflecting and writing, however briefly, we can clarify and solidify the insights that events can provide us, if we pay attention. In this time of tumultuous stock market events, Walid's insights can speak to us powerfully.

Many things have two powers – they can be helpful or harmful. It’s often up to us which role they play.

Most situations also have a double potential, for good or ill. We would be wise to keep that in mind.

It’s important in life to pay attention all the time – to look, listen, and learn.

We should discipline our thoughts and feelings, then listen when they suggest that something’s not right.

Most dangers in the world will provide us with some kind of warning, if we’re alert and aware.

Emotions, like most other things, can help us or harm us. We need to learn when to act on them, and when to resist them for a greater good.

Great things are accomplished by great thoughts. Our thoughts can be very powerful.

A good attitude about difficulties, combined with a wise perspective, can help us overcome any trouble.

We should be more surprised when things don’t change than when they do. If we expect change, we can deal with it better.

We shouldn’t worry about what we can’t control. We should focus on what we can control and make the best of it.

It’s important to live fully each day.

 

PostedAugust 25, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life, Wisdom
TagsThe Oasis Within, Walid, The Diary of Walid, Insight, Wisdom, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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The Diary of Walid: On Inner Peace

From the Appendix at the end of The Oasis Within, these are excerpts from a diary kept by the thirteen-year-old Egyptian boy, Walid, as he's crossing the desert in 1934 with his uncle Ali. At the end of the day, he writes down things he's learned from what he's heard, seen, and experienced.

An oasis is fun, safe, and relaxing. We can carry an oasis within us wherever we go, an inner place of calm and refreshment, by using our thoughts well.

We all have in our minds something like an emotional telescope. If we look through the end everyone uses, things will seem bigger than they really are. But we can flip it around and look through the other end. That will make things appear smaller and less threatening. So whenever anything looks big and overwhelming, say to yourself, “Flip the telescope!”

Almost anything needs interpretation. That’s where freedom begins.

Whether something is a big deal or not often turns on how we see it. If you think it’s a big deal, it is. But you can change your mind on many things and shrink them down to size.

Wisdom for life is about seeing things properly. It’s about perspective. This gives us power, because it brings peace to our hearts, and then we can think clearly, even in difficult times.

If I live most fully with my heart and mind in the reality of the present moment, I will feel better and be more effective.

Things are not always what they seem. In fact, they often aren’t.

Whenever life brings us a storm, we should use what we have, stay calm, and move quickly to respond well.

An oasis within us is a place of peace and power in our hearts.

We can learn the most from the most difficult things.

We can’t control the day, but only what we make of the day. We should always try to make the best of whatever comes our way.

PostedAugust 24, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Life, Wisdom, Philosophy
TagsThe Oasis Within, Walid, Diary, Thoughts, Wisdom, Insights, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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The Forgotten Ideal of Maturity

There's an old ideal that we seem to have forgotten throughout much of our culture. What I have in mind is maturity. Say the word now and people think: Senior Citizen, old age, wrinkles, slowing down, and worse. But it wasn't always that way.

Maturity. What is it? Actually, I think maturity is a quality, or characteristic comprised of many others, like, for example: Compassion, Kindness, Consideration, Equanimity or Inner Peace, Wisdom, Prudence, Perspective, Practicality, Honesty, perhaps a proper Awe regarding existence, and what some call "Hardihood" - the ability to persist in the face of difficulty, a capacity to endure hardship without constant complaint or a feeling of victimization. A mature person is not quick to anger. Such a person isn't careless with actions, thoughts, or feelings. Maturity rises to a level of appreciation and gratitude concerning all the good and beautiful things in life, while accepting the existence of limits and imperfections in the world. A mature person may want and work hard to change and improve the things around them, but they won't wallow in irritation, resentment, and frustration about those things that need changing.

For most of history, throughout most civilizations and societies, people have regarded maturity as something to aspire to, hope for, and respect. In past times, many would often actually try to act more mature than their age might indicate should be expected. That occasionally happens still, but in very limited contexts, as for example when someone is trying to get his or her first job. But immaturity, by contrast, now seems to nearly rule the culture. We see lots of people acting less mature than their age would lead us to expect. Turn on a reality TV show. Or consider standard political behavior. Or, you could just simply listen in on conversations in your favorite restaurant or bar. 

The ancient philosopher Diogenes was said to walk around everywhere during the daytime, carrying a lighted lamp, or lantern. Asked what he was doing, he liked to say, "Looking for an honest man." In our own time, he would have nearly as endless a trek looking for real maturity.

A clarification is needed here. We're a youthful culture. We celebrate the young and a great many of the things that young people like. Many of us try to keep such things in our lives. And that can be very good. It's perfectly possible to be youthful without being immature. There's an important difference. I knew a famous scholar at Yale, a world renown historian, who at the age of 89 was stunningly youthful, and lots of fun, but not at all immature.

Immaturity is wrapped up in ego, a sense of entitlement, a lack of responsibility, and a tendency toward anger, as well as an inclination to delight in the flaws and sufferings of others. Immature people are prone to whining, resenting, and feeling slighted when others aren't suitably celebrating their specialness. Immature people throw fits and tantrums, regardless of age. They also tend to be as callous toward others as they are fragile in their own sense of need.

When you consider immaturity closely enough, you come to understand why its opposite was for so long an admired ideal. And it makes you wonder how we ever got so far away from an appreciation of what it is to be truly mature.

Maturity is about proper growth and exemplary health. We should encourage it in others and seek to enhance it in our own lives. If you disagree, that's perfectly fine ... for a poopie head.

PostedAugust 21, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life, Wisdom
TagsMaturity, Immaturity, Kindness, Consideration, Wisdom, Understanding, The Culture, Ego, Responsibility, Hardihood, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Philosophy
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The Oasis Within

Today I have a great official announcement, unofficially posted on Facebook and Twitter yesterday. A new era has come! And a new way of being a philosopher has arrived with it.

In February of 2011, after a breakfast of toast and coffee, I suddenly had the most vivid daydream of my life. An old man and a boy were sitting under a palm tree, at a beautiful desert oasis, talking. They were in Egypt. It was 1934. And their conversation was really great. I was intrigued. It was all so real, and so different from anything I had ever experienced. I have a robust imagination, but nothing like this. As the movie played in my head, I ran up the stairs to my study to start writing it down. The boy, age thirteen, was with his much older uncle, and it seemed that they were crossing the desert with friends from a small village in western Egypt, on their way to Cairo. I wrote until the vision passed, and I posted the few pages I had written out, as a transcription, on The Huffington Post. Right away, I got lots of enthusiastic emails. "What is this? This is great!" I didn't know what it was.

The next day, the movie started up again. And I wrote down everything I saw and heard. This went on for weeks, and then months. The characters talk about such things as inner peace, the challenge of change, the dynamic nature of balance, how things can help or harm us, the true power of the mind, the hidden structures of our world, the importance of wisdom, the elements of human nature, the necessity of love, the requirements of success, and the world’s strangest gift of all - uncertainty. I could be almost anywhere, doing almost anything, and I'd have to grab a pen and paper and start writing. Pretty soon, I realized that I had an entire book. It was called The Oasis Within. I knew that because I woke up with the title seared in my mind. Yeah, it's all strange. But interesting strange. And it was the most fun, by far, that I've ever had writing - or doing anything as a philosopher.

The story continued. A second book, much bigger, appeared, as if it were already fully formed in every detail and I just had to get it in that movie form so I could write it down, as well. I never had to make up anything. And I never did. It all just came to me, in a rush. It was like drinking out of an open fire hydrant. It was all I could do to type fast enough. Egyptian names, historical references, stuff I didn't know anything about at all - but at the end of each day, I began to research what I had seen in the movie, and all sorts of odd details turned out to be true of the time and the place. How was this happening? I had no idea. The first book, it turned out, was a fascinating conversational prologue to what was now obviously a much longer action, adventure, and mystery novel full of comedy, romance, politics, crime, and, most of all, philosophy. I was seeing a deep worldview developed by the characters in what they did and said.  It really blew me away.

The second book was more than twice the length of the first one. Then, the movie picked up again - there was a third, even bigger, book, and a fourth one, and on and on. Book eight came to a wild culmination, and the movie projectionist, whoever it is, then took a break. I was nearly a million words into the most unexpected adventure of my life, and what I now think of as the culmination of my work as a public philosopher interested in understanding as much as I can about what we're doing in this world, and how we can do it best. I learned more from the movie than I had at Yale, UNC, and Notre Dame combined. But they had all prepared me well for this wild and unexpected journey.

One friend, a former student, who is a highly acclaimed novelist, read the first two books in draft and said, "This is The Alchemist meets Harry Potter meets Indiana Jones." That was encouraging. And the first edition of the first book just came out in its first form - a really beautiful paperback. The hardcover version, and an ebook, are due out within a week or two. But the paperback is now there, waiting for you, at Amazon, hoping you're curious. The hardcover and the ebook will be available through any bookseller, and also very soon. But if you want to see the opening chapters in the new adventure right now, the journey that has changed my own life for the better, please go, click here, The Oasis Within, and read and tell me soon what you think!

To quote one of the characters, "Much is yet to be revealed."

PostedAugust 19, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesArt, Life, Philosophy, Wisdom
TagsTom Morris, TomVMorris, Philosophy, Wisdom, New Book, The Oasis Within, Novel
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Patient Waiting

Patience means waiting. But waiting doesn't necessarily mean not doing. We all understand the former. And yet, few seem to grasp the latter.

There are times when we need to be still and at peace, take a break, and rest from our work, while simply allowing the world its turn to play a role in our endeavors. Every quest for achievement in the world is a partnership with powers that go beyond our own. And often it takes patience to allow our partner to do the work that we can't do alone. We have a phrase, "Watch and Wait." We've done all we can. We've tossed our little toy boat into the stream. Will it float? We await the results.

Waiting. It's something we might do in repose, on a beach, in a hammock, or utterly relaxed in a comfortable chair. We can wait on a yoga mat, or even while taking a nap.

But waiting does not have to be an utterly passive state. It's not the same thing as being inert, frozen, now helpless, and without options for action. "Waiting" is a verb. And it can connote all sorts of different actions. 

Waiting. It's a good time to pray, or play, or otherwise turn away from the focus of activity that has otherwise occupied us. A cook puts a pot on the stove. And then it's the pot's turn to boil. Sometimes, the cook can merely turn away to chat, or check email, or sit and sip coffee while gazing at the garden outside. Waiting can take many forms. And, of course, in some of those forms, the cook can stay quite busy in the kitchen.

Waiting often means preparing.

You've done all that you can do to get the project out there into the potential client's hands. Now, you wait. What does that require? Well, it can mean preparing for the positive go-ahead you hope to receive, and in this way playing a different role in the process, getting yourself ready for the success you want. There will be a next step. So, while you wait, you prepare for whatever is next. Waiting here takes the form of preparation. And at other times, it can mean just turning your attention elsewhere, while allowing the water to heat.

So, in the most general sense, there are two forms of waiting. One does involve resting. But the other involves a different form of doing. Either can help equip you for whatever is to come. But neither will serve you well if it's heavily spiced with hot anxiety. And that, for many people, is the problem. 

You're awaiting a decision. It could go either way. Uncertainty mixed with desire produces anxiety. Or you're awaiting a result that's not uncertain, but is not as yet in hand. Anticipation mixed with desire, or the very different aversion of fear, brings another form of anxiety. There are many ways in which waiting is fraught, tense, and hard. But, fortunately, there are two solutions to any such anxiety.

First, you can emotionally release the situation, whatever it is. Shed it. Let it go. Find a zen peace within. Trust God. Or reconcile yourself to the constant vicissitudes of the cosmos, as the stoics did. They believed that hardly anything is as good as it seems or as bad as it seems, so we should all just calm down. They understood that the discipline of waiting is largely the skill of governing our emotions well. But they also understood something else that's vital.

We all have to learn how to turn our attention from what we can't control to what we can control. And that's often facilitated by engaging in some new, and even slightly different, activity that engages our minds and hearts while we wait. Maybe it's in preparation for the result we want, or the one we'd prefer to avoid, or both. At other times, it's another activity altogether, perhaps one that has nothing to do with the focus of our concern. That doing then becomes a useful and happy distraction that can ease the worry, or the anticipation, which otherwise can be so tough. Action can displace agitation. And action can be the form that waiting takes.

If you have trouble waiting for things, analyze what exactly the problem is, and then take the proper action to solve it. For as you see, action can be just what waiting needs.

 

PostedAugust 17, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life, Business, Wisdom
TagsPatience, Waiting, Action, Worry, Anxiety, Stoics, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Wisdom, Philosophy
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Blogging By Ballpoint Pen

I'm sitting alone in a hallway outside the ballroom of a great resort where I'll be speaking in a few minutes. The session before mine is running long. So, I wait. Most people would be on their iPhones now. I'm just relaxing. And in my relaxed state, I get an idea - which happens pretty often. So, I reach into my speaking bag, where I carry laminated wallet cards, Snickers Bars, an extra pair of glasses, some hand sanitizer, and other assorted necessities for being in front of a lot of people, and pull out that rare tool of bloggers - a Bic pen.

I usually leave my iPhone back in the hotel room. Whenever I can, I choose to be untethered to it all. It's not like I'll ever have mere seconds for the launching of a philosophical missive. My communication connection to the world isn't ordinarily a thing of great urgency. Plus, being unplugged allows for more contemplation. And inner peace. I'm not listening for the next notification ding and poised to reply that instant. I'm at ease. And my blogging tool in this instance isn't distracting me constantly with other options for its use and my attention. Of course, life can't be all ink and paper, all the time, or you wouldn't be reading this. But it still can be, sometimes. And those times are special.

My use of a pen isn't about smart phone avoidance. It's about moderation. And in our connected world, moderation is something we're forgetting, to our detriment. At the holiest spot in ancient Greece, the Oracle at Delphi, two vital pieces of advice were inscribed in marble:

Know Yourself.

Nothing in Excess.

These are great reminders of two basic necessities for a happy and flourishing life. And our frantic pace make both difficult for us to live out, day-to-day. My ballpoint pen helps me slow it all down, get back in touch with some deeper thoughts, and clear my mind for what's ahead.

Ah. There's the applause. The session's ending. I'm up next.

Now it's time to go have a little fun dishing out some of the great wisdom from the great thinkers. But, of course, in moderation.

This blog post powered by Bic.

Click.

PostedAugust 13, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life, Wisdom
TagsSmart Phones, iPhone, Pace, Living, Moderation, Ballpoint pens, Wisdom, Waiting, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Philosophy, Speaking, Blogging
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The Art of Writing

 “The art of writing is the art of discovering what you believe."

That insightful perspective was articulated by the great author Gustav Flaubert.  And it captures my experience well.

I often get new ideas in conversation. But I never fully understand and own those ideas until I write about them, either for myself, or in a blog, or a book. Writing, at its best, is a form of thinking. It clarifies our thoughts. And it leads to new thoughts. It even expands us, when it's done right.

People long kept diaries and journals, reflecting on their day. But few do so today. The daily journal or diary is a great avenue to enhanced self knowledge. So is writing letters to friends and family. Even social media can be used for this purpose, however seldom it actually is. There's no reason, in principle, that a tweet can't serve a spiritual end.

Most of us have had an interesting experience. Maybe you've come away from a lively conversation, having learned something not just from what you heard the other person say, but from what you heard yourself saying in that conversation. Talking, at its best, can be a form of thinking. Socrates showed us this long ago. Yet most people talk just to communicate, question, or to grouse. Talking through a puzzle or problem can be an effective first step in solving it. But writing about something can at times be even more effective. Putting down on paper, or on a screen, what we're thinking allows us both to create a new line of thought, and then to examine it, as if from a short distance, and gain even more perspective.

Here's another common experience, one many of us had when we were in school: Called upon to write on a topic during an exam, we suddenly realized to our shock and amazement how vague and incomplete our ideas were. We felt a twinge of panic. Sometimes the mind went blank, completely offline. What a difference it could have made to write on the exam topics in advance, in preparation for the test itself!

I don't speak from notes when I'm in front of people. But I prepare with notes. That clarifies my thinking and even helps me remember what I want to say. The simple act of making a "To-Do List" before bed can implant the items on the list firmly enough in my memory that, the next day, I don't even need the list. It's already served its purpose.

When we write, we discover, we deepen our understanding, and we remember better. In setting goals, it can be very beneficial to write them out, and chart out the intermediate and more immediate steps that it will take to reach the goal. It stimulates new thought. And it generates motivation. 

So: Write to discover! And: Write to become!

It's almost never wrong to write. You heard it here.

PostedAugust 11, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
TagsWriting, Thinking, Goals, Self Knowledge, Gustav Flaubert, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Wisdom, Philosophy
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A Good, Virtuous Character

The New York Times Book Review recently asked two writers, Thomas Mallon and Alice Gregory, a question about characters in novels that's often been discussed before. It was posed like this: Can a Virtuous Character Be Interesting? The most common, received opinion is that a scoundrel, scalawag, deviant, or miscreant is much more interesting to read about than a normal garden-variety good guy. The argument usually given for such a view is simple. Imagine this story: A guy is born into a great and psychologically healthy family, he grows up around good friends, attends a fine school, is very nice himself, graduates from an ideal college, meets the perfect life partner, and lives happily ever after. It would not be the typical page turner. "Wait. I have to finish this chapter. Somebody just nicely asked our hero to pass the salt and I've got to see what form of graciousness he displays to comply!" 

We're often drawn to flawed characters. For one thing, we may see in them, on full parade, various traits that we've felt in ourselves and rightly suppressed. It's instructive and sometimes even fascinating to witness them fully developed and on display. In a related way, truly despicable characters in fiction make us look not so bad, after all, by contrast - which is surely one of the reasons reality television shows are so popular. And then, in another way, we may enjoy the insight that such portrayals can give us into the souls of people we actually have to deal with now and then outside the realms of novels.

Most good writers can provide long lists of baddies who have been more interesting to read about in the history of literature than almost any of the goodies. But should writers aspire more, and work harder, to depict goodness rather than focusing on so many types of evil?

Alice Gregory has something worthwhile to say about it all. She writes:

A truly radical 21st-century novelist wouldn’t ask us to see ourselves in made-up villains, and then, hopefully, revise our opinions of the real ones in our own lives. Rather, they would ask us to see the arduous and often acrobatic effort that goes into living a life of common decency. They would coerce us into believing that virtue is interesting and fun to think about and far more dazzling to encounter than malevolence.

In her 1947 book “Gravity and Grace,” Simone Weil wrote: “Imaginary evil is romantic and varied; real evil is gloomy, monotonous, barren, boring. Imaginary good is boring; real good is always new, marvelous, intoxicating.”

I think that's well said, both by Gregory and Weil.

I've just finished the most unexpected adventure in writing, over the course of my entire life, A movie started playing in my head one morning about four and a half years ago, and I immediately rushed to write down everything I was seeing and hearing. It was the most amazing process of writing I've ever experienced, and quite different from the rational and heavily planned creation of a nonfiction book of philosophy. The movie kept playing, and an entrancing prologue book, recounting a trip across the desert in Egypt in 1934, quickly came into being, and has been followed by seven subsequent much longer novels, so far. The prologue, The Oasis Within, is a short book just shy of 200 pages, and is going to be announced here soon, as it will be published within the month.

The Oasis Within, and its novel series that follows, are all my favorite books I've ever written. And the main characters are all very good guys. They display everyday virtue in dazzling ways. They do confront evil, and great danger, many times, and in wildly varied forms, but they are themselves great people I'd love to know. And they're the opposite of boring. In fact, they may be the most fascinating characters I've ever been introduced to, in any story. But maybe that's just me. And they confirm richly Alice Gregory's point.

I'll announce it here when the first of the eight books laying out their story is available. It will be very soon. A twenty-first century novelist is about to do something very different. 

 

PostedAugust 7, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesArt, Life, Wisdom, Philosophy
TagsNovels, Fiction, Characters, Virtue, Good, Evil, Thomas Mallon, Alice Gregory, New York Times, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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Friendly Encouragement

How often are we tempted to pressure people to get better at what they're doing? How much do we actually do it? Maybe we push. Or we pull. We criticize and lay down the law. We demand. Some of us may even threaten. Well, not me. And, likely, not you. But it's too common, isn't it?

We want to get better, ourselves. We want to grow. And we want our kids, and our colleagues, and our employees, to get better, as well. But can we push and pull and force it?

Consider a garden. The plants aren't growing fast enough for you. You're wanting more. What are you going to do, grab them and pull? That's obviously not going to work. And it won't with people, either.

People grow best with friendly encouragement and guidance.

Yeah, I know. There are some people who don't respond to friendly encouragement or guidance. So why do you have anything to do with them? Move on. Or move them on.

Friendly encouragement is one of the best things we can give good people.

So: Encourage someone today. Help them fly higher.

PostedAugust 6, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Business, Leadership, Life
TagsEncouragement, Motivation, Guidance, Threats, Force, Badgering, Leadership, Management, Growth, Improvement, Kindness, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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The Purpose of Fear

One of the greatest pieces of advice ever given is this: Seek to live from love, not from fear. Over the long run, a few important things are true. Love expands us. Fear contracts us. A life mainly guided by fear is a small, shrunken substitute for what it could have been. 

But most of us can't completely avoid the experience of fear. And in this world, we probably shouldn't, anyway. So. In order to deal with it properly, we need to know its purpose. And here's a surprise.

The purpose of fear is to make us act. It's not to make us freeze.

Think about it: How many times do we ever find ourselves explaining someone's tremendous success in a challenging situation by saying, "She froze. That's why she prevailed."

The deer in the headlights doesn't escape danger by becoming motionless. The purpose of fear is to motivate action - often avoidance, sometimes preparation, always a new level of focused concentration. When we're trying something new where great gains or losses are at stake, fear will often arise. It's a certain form of emotional energy. The question then becomes: What do we do with it? Sometimes, it properly makes us stop and think and then proceed no farther. Often, it makes us stop and think and then proceed better. Courage can listen to fear but doesn't misunderstand it as nature's ultimate Stop Sign. Courage can be counseled by fear, but is never undermined by it.

When you next feel fear, let it make you act. Don't react in paralysis instead. Act. The right action may be a higher level of thinking, which, after all, is an action in its own right. Or what's called for could be a matter of physical movement. Fear isn't always our enemy, simply something to be overcome. It can be a stimulus to act properly, with consciousness, and focus. It can guide us to adapt, adjust, and act well.

It always signals the unknown. And the unknown is where the amazing can be found.

Just don't let fear stop you from acting at all. And remember, still, that the highest motivation is love. And perfect love, as we're told, casts out fear, even if it first feels it, and listens, and acts - it just never lets fear be the final word.

PostedAugust 4, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesArt, Attitude, Life, Performance
TagsFear, Courage, Action, The Unknown, Novelty, Danger, Success, Creation, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Wisdom, Philosophy
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The Man in the House Down the Street

Sometimes, you can sense bad things coming. On other occasions, they just appear.

I’ve mentioned here that I recently read To Kill a Mockingbird for the first time. It’s now one of my favorite books. Harper Lee is a great, natural storyteller. She creates a vivid sense of time and place and character.

If you’ve read the book or seen the movie, you know that down the street from the Finch children, there’s a scary house that kids avoid, the Radley home. Rumor has it that there’s a man who lives there, a son of the owner, who is a recluse. The kids call him Boo. They’ve never seen him, and yet they fear him with a thrill of fascination. Their curiosity about him is intense.

I grew up with my own version of the scary house down the street. Most of the homes were small - 600 to 900 square feet, and sitting on narrow lots that were deeper than they were wide. The tiny ranch-style houses sat close to the road, and typically had back yards adjoining woods or fields. Across the street from me, and three or four houses down, was the Barbee home. The man and woman living there had a son we rarely saw, because they had “sent him away,” as we were told. My mother explained that he couldn’t hear or speak, and that he had some sort of mental troubles. So, most of the time, he lived in an institution of some sort. But now and then, it was also explained by our parents, he would be kicked out of the place, because of extremely violent outbursts, and he would end up back home for weeks or even months at a time. Our mothers warned us to stay away from that house, because they didn’t know when Butch might be there. And no one knew what would happen when he was.

Unlike Boo Radley, we had occasionally seen Butch on his furloughs home. He was about twenty-five years old and was built like a college football lineman, only bigger. I had once actually witnessed him pick up his father’s car to express his displeasure at something. He lifted the front bumper with a mighty roar, and I saw the front tire come up off the ground. I was on my bike riding by and couldn't help but notice. And he was rumored to be even stronger than such a display might indicate. He was maybe five feet, ten inches tall, with a hugely muscled body, and a square scarred face, topped, appropriately, by a short butch haircut that was dirty blond. My mother had said many times that his parents couldn’t control him and often had to call the police to come and help. At this point, they knew to send multiple officers. He had once actually knocked his mother across a room, and his father had no option but to go after him with a baseball bat, to stop his rampage. “Did you hear?” We’d say to friends when we had a new story of this sort jangling our nerves. “Did you hear about what Butch did?”

When my friends and I, at age eight or so, rode our bikes down the street, and Butch was at home, he’d now and then be out front in the driveway working on a car. He apparently had mechanical skills. If he looked up, we’d sometimes be brave and wave and even smile, and he would now and then wave back and grunt, or even make some sort of howling sound that unnerved us more than a little. Like the kids in Harper Lee’s story, we were both afraid of and attracted by the specter of this strange creature. We wanted to understand him more.

I had actually walked up close to him in his yard a couple of times when he was bent over the hood of the old car, out front. Both times, he had heard me, and when I got close, he slowly turned and straightened up to look at me. Once he smiled. Another time, he just glared. And that was an almost unearthly experience. I held up my hand in greeting and slowly backed away. But he disappeared again shortly after that, and we didn’t see him for a while. The neighborhood grew calm. He almost dropped out of mind.

There was an old abandoned house down the street that was boarded up, and had been for years. It sat back farther away from the street than most houses, and behind it was a short hillside that fell away from its high cement block foundation. It seemed almost balanced on the top edge of the little hill. One day my friends and I decided to explore it, and found an unlocked door. It was late afternoon. I was with three other boys, all between the ages of seven and ten. And I was the oldest. The house was scary inside, just because it was empty and a little decrepit. And of course, when we entered and the creaky door closed behind us, somebody had to whisper that it was maybe haunted.

As we crept across the floor, we were listening hard for ghosts and spirits, somehow assuming that paranormal inhabitants would surely make a noise. I can’t imagine how we got the courage to open any of the closed doors inside the house. But we did, room by room. There was a door in the back that had once opened onto a high porch, but now no porch remained. My friend Steve turned the knob and pulled it open. And we all gasped or said “Whoa!” when we saw that there was nothing but air beyond it, and ground far below, falling away as the hill immediately behind it dropped at a steep grade. We then closed the door, mostly, when someone discovered a bathroom and called to the rest of us in a loud whisper. There was an open toilet in it that was badly stained and filled with dirty water. We were all standing in the doorway of the room, grossed out by the sight, when we heard the front door that was now behind us and around a corner creak again. Then there were slow footsteps. We all froze. Suddenly, a figure filled up the hallway behind us in shadow. It was Butch. And he was not smiling.

Somebody got out the words, “Hey, Butch,” and held up a hand in a hesitant attempt at greeting. Our visitor was silent and showed no reaction. He walked toward us, and pushed a couple of us aside to see what we were looking at. He went into the bathroom and saw the old toilet full of dirty water and then turned back to us. He was smiling. He pointed at my friend Steve who was close to where he stood, and then at the toilet and made a motion with his hand as if to drink a glass of water. Steve looked confused and said, “What?” And Butch repeated the motion. This time, he jerked his pointing hand toward Steve, and then at the toilet, and he did the drinking motion again. He was not smiling now.

Butch then made a sound, like a low guttural roar. He pointed at Steve once more, and held the gesture. The poor kid shuffled his feet across the warped linoleum floor, and, to my amazement and horror, he bent down at the toilet, got on his knees, and lowered his head into it, where he made drinking sounds, splashing the filthy, brackish water.

The rest of us couldn’t believe what was happening. I felt cold inside, and started to tremble. It was almost like a low-grade electric shock passed through me. Butch then tapped Steve on the back and gestured for him to get up. His face was dripping wet. And he looked more scared than anyone I’d ever seen. He wiped his mouth with his shirtsleeve repeatedly as he rose to his feet, and stumbled over and squeezed himself into a corner of the small room, apparently afraid to even try to leave.

Our tormentor didn’t point and motion with the next kid, but just grabbed his shoulder and pushed him toward the toilet. The poor guy resisted a little, and broke the now oppressive near silence by saying in a low voice, “No Butch! No! Please! No! Don’t do this!” He then held both hands out in a gesture that clearly asked the man to stop. And for his efforts, he had his head shoved down hard toward the open cesspool and into the foul liquid. We could hear him crying right away, as his face jerked back up from it, again splashing whatever was in the bowl. His hands were all over his face, wiping and slapping it off, as if he had bees after him. He jumped up and ran out of the room, sobbing, tearing through the house and out the front door. We could hear him slam it open as he escaped to run home. Butch didn’t seem surprised, or angered. He didn’t move to chase him. He had no reaction at all. It didn’t even enter our minds that the boy would run home and tell his mother, and that she would get help to intervene, and that it would be too late when she did.

My third friend got the same treatment as the second. No signs of instruction, just force. He whimpered and cowered and suffered the same dark baptism into the depths of what was now becoming for us a nightmare beyond anything we had ever imagined. He was then jerked up by his shirt and forcefully shoved into the corner with skinny Steve, who stood perfectly still, apparently too shocked and afraid to move or speak.

Then Butch stared at me, with no expression on his face at all. I just looked into his eyes, and I can’t remember that I showed any emotion, either, except perhaps for the disbelief and disgust I felt at what was being done, along with the natural fear the situation evoked. For some reason, because I had met his eyes and held the gaze, he continued to glare at me, and didn’t grab me right away. Seconds passed. He slowly pointed at the toilet. I shook my head no. I didn’t say anything. I just shook my head. He pointed at me again, and pointed at the toilet. I shook my head no again. He looked at me, stone-faced. And he slowly shook his head in a yes movement, as if he understood and accepted what I had attempted to convey.

And then he moved toward me and grabbed my left arm and surprised me. He pushed me out of the bathroom, and down the hallway. I didn’t speak. And he made no sounds or further gestures. He was shoving me to that back door that opened out to empty air and a big drop to the ground. It was like he knew about it. I suddenly realized what might be coming. When he had me right up to the door, just to the side, he pulled it open, all the way. He then pointed at me again, and made a movement of his pointing hand and arm that said to me “Jump.”

It was pretty far down to the ground, and a scary thing to contemplate, for someone of my age. I shook my head no again. He made the movement once more, with additional emphasis, and now with a fierce and determined look on his face. I shook my head slowly again to indicate a determined refusal to comply. I’m glad, in retrospect, that I showed no emotion. He seemed to respect my stoic refusal to comply with his suggestion. And the next thing I knew, I was off the floor and then in flight. He had picked me up and thrown me hard from the doorway and out into the crisp fall air where I had a moment or two to register my plight as I plummeted briefly out and then down to the ground, which at first seemed even farther away than it had looked.

I hit hard, and it hurt intensely, but because of the steep downward incline, I rolled and, from a deep survival instinct, I shot out of the roll and into a run sideways across the hill toward home, as fast as I could go. I wasn’t about to stay around and see what might be next.

I was afraid to tell my parents what had happened. I kept silent. I didn’t want them to get involved with a grown man who acted like a monster. I was afraid of what might happen to them. It never even occurred to me that when I made my exit, there were still two kids in the house with Butch.

It took the rest of the afternoon and evening for me to calm down and get over what had taken place. I knew that it could have been much worse – much, much worse. And that was part of what was so unnerving. But, of course, good can come from bad. And we all subsequently experienced at least some version of that on our block.

We never saw Butch again. And, strangely, we didn’t hear him mentioned again by any of our parents. We never learned what had happened to him. I think his parents moved away shortly afterwards. And we could then ride our bikes up and down the street without any worries about what might lurk inside the shuttered windows of the one house that had always given us pause. And yet, the newfound peace of the neighborhood could not undo the effects of our unexpected time with Butch. I never felt comfortable with heights again. And my good friend Steve, years later, put a gun in his mouth, and ended his earthly memory of the day.

PostedAugust 1, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesLife
TagsBoo Radley, Scary House, Danger, A short story, kids, monsters, True Scary Story, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Butch Barbee
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Our Philosophy of Language Matters!

I posted a version of this blog during the campaigns of 2016. But I think it's important to revisit it now that we're hearing from supporters of our new administration, and members of it, about "alternative facts" and truth being just something "in the eye of the beholder." We need to understand the two different views of language in order to see what the new administration is trying to do.

In the upcoming days of the new administration, we're apparently going to hear a lot of people distorting the truth, and actually lying to us. Of course, that's no revelation. It's already been happening. And it's unfortunate. But we come across this a lot in business, as well, and in any other area of life where something of value is at stake. And there's an important reason that distortion and lying is so widespread at present. It may surprise you.

There are two very different philosophies of language out in the world. Which one we operate by matters. The noble view, on my analysis, holds that the overall two-fold purpose of language is to connect and cultivate. It connects us first with reality, and with each other, and even within ourselves, in a variety of ways. And it cultivates us, or develops us as human beings, in just as many ways. This view of language is focused on linking our words to truth, beauty, goodness, and unity—the four transcendental values of ancient philosophy. We can call it The Spiritual View of Language. At its best, language connects and cultivates the spirit.

Going back in human history and prehistory, language has always had many uses - for example: to warn, call, express, exclaim, inquire, infer, inform, and create. It's also had a deviant use, interestingly dependent on these more straightforward uses. It can be employed to deceive. But that's a secondary and parasitic use. If language had not already first been used to inform, warn, and express, for example, it could never have been used to deceive. The reason is simple. In deceiving, you're pretending to inform or express, or warn, and so on, but your use of language departs from the expected connection with truth that those uses ordinarily presuppose and convey. At the same time, you're depending on your listener to simply assume that you are sincerely informing or warning, and so on. But to the contrary, you say what you know to be false. You warn when you know there's no real danger. You express an anger or an empathy that you don't actually feel. The primary uses of language had to be established and accepted in order for any twisting of them into deception to work.

If you hold the Spiritual View of Language, you're going to see deception as something forgivable or appropriate only at the extremes of human behavior—in competitive games or sports, and in life or death situations. In games or sports, when we're outside the normal spheres of life, and we're playing, however hard, it's ok to bluff, or fake. We don't morally judge the quarterback who fakes a run but passes instead. But secretly deflated footballs are something else. There are rules within which the deceptions can take place.  In basketball, a great fake under the basket shows not corruption but skill. Certain such forms of deception are fine. And in situations of life or death, it's normally thought to be strongly preferable to use deception if that's the only way to avoid an act of killing or being killed, or maiming or being maimed.

In game situations, we've suspended "normal life"—whereas, in life or death situations, we've arrived at an extreme, on the other end, beyond normal life, where an intensity of conflict or likelihood of severe bodily damage has gotten so bad that a lie or a deception can be not only excused, but actually demanded in order to prevent something much worse and potentially irreversible. Lying in politics or business doesn't normally qualify—to put it mildly.

But there's another philosophy of language altogether and it's the one that now tends to dominate highly partisan or extremist politics, and even some business circles. It's a view that the primary purpose of language is to gain, exercise, and hold power—power over people, situations, and things.

On this Machiavellian view, language isn't tied to truth, beauty, goodness, or unity. It's not a spiritual vehicle for connecting and cultivating ourselves. It's a cruder tool. It's about manipulating. It's all about getting others to do your bidding. On this view, language is about crafting perceptions, and evoking those beliefs and feelings in others that will open doors for you and feed into your own purposes. It's a clearly ignoble view of language. And it's as parasitic as deception is in any of its forms. If most people didn't hold, at least implicitly, what I'm calling the Spiritual View of Language, no one could hold this Manipulative View of Language and make it work. The manipulators pretend to be doing the things that the rest of us expect them to be doing—truly informing, accurately warning, honestly expressing, and so on. But they're often only pretending to do such things, at least much of the time. They'll actually seek to show a concern for truth, beauty, goodness, and unity now and then, when they believe it's their interest to do so, but only to fortify their basic strategy of manipulation. They want power. And they talk to get it and use it and keep it.

We all need to persuade other people, and help position others to see the value of our projects and propositions. But we can do that by connecting and cultivating, rather than by manipulating. And that's the only path of honor. It's also the only one that's sustainable, long term. Those of us who hold the Spiritual View of Language can use our words in all sorts of creative ways, to inspire, enthrall, or entertain. But if we ever catch ourselves manipulating another adult human being, we need to do a philosophical self-check. Is our context that of a game or sport? Is it truly like war? When too many people start to think of politics or business as primarily a game, or a sport, or as the equivalent of war, there comes to be a subtle and secret shift in how they think of language. As a result, we all suffer.

Who knew? Our philosophy of language matters!

 

PostedJuly 29, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Business, Leadership, Life, Wisdom, Philosophy
TagsLanguage, Truth, Beauty, Goodness, Unity, Manipulation, Power, Lies, Lying, Deception, Politics, Business, Campaigns, Presidential Race, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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The Importance of Optimism

"We Need Optimists." That's the title of a front page Sunday Review essay in the New York Times this week by Arthur  C. Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute and author of the new book, The Conservative Heart. He starts off with a quick story. His son had made a really bad grade on a test. After a parent-teacher conference about it, Arthur's wife broke the silence in the car by saying, "At lease we know he didn't cheat." That glass is always half full for the optimist, and ready to be topped off.

Brooks reports recent psychological studies that indicate optimists are generally healthier than pessimists, and more resilient in the face of setbacks. Optimists also self-report greatest levels of perceived happiness. In my own analyses of human performance, I've learned that optimists tend to have a more complete form of access to all their resources, inner and outer, than pessimists.

If optimists are, generally, healthier, happier, more resilient, and more resourceful, then why wouldn't everyone seek to be one?

Well, first, there's The Cautionary Tale of the Irrational Optimist - the many examples that almost any of us can produce of people whose enthusiasm for life and their own ideas makes them oblivious to problems, obstacles, and the real probabilities of a situation. This is the mindset so thoroughly critiqued by Barbara Ehrenreich in her scathing book, Bright-Sided. But to be an optimist, you don't have to be a simpleminded idiot or a stubborn fool. In fact, it helps greatly not to be either. You can be a realistic optimist - and that turns out to be, not surprisingly, the best kind there is.

A realistic optimist moves forward with eyes wide open, seeing obstacles, understanding challenges, and yet maintaining a determination to be creative in solving all problems. The realistic optimist never just hopes for the best, or blithely assumes the best, but works hard to make the best happen, in full realization that it may take longer than it should, and be harder to accomplish than anyone could have imagined. But it's precisely the element of optimism that fuels a hopeful and persistent struggle forward. Optimists don't prematurely give up, or surrender, in their efforts to create good things. And optimists like me promote the optimistic mindset, just like I'm doing now. Why? We really believe it works and that it can work for you.

Of course, pessimists want to convert us all to their alternative way of thinking. And I've always wondered why they even try. Don't they have to believe they're unlikely to succeed? They are pessimists, after all.

Martin Seligman, in his classic study, Learned Optimism, argues that you don't have to be born sunny side up. You can become an optimist. And you can benefit greatly from adopting this pervasive attitude.  Plus, if you're already moderately optimistic, you can enhance that proclivity.

I just know you can.

I really do.

PostedJuly 27, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life, Wisdom
Tagsoptimism, pessimism, attitude, Martin Seligman, Arthur C Brooks, Barbara Ehrenreich, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Philosophy, Wisdom
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Is Atticus Finch Still a Hero?

SPOILER ALERT and LENGTH WARNING: You probably don't have time for this right now, but if you wonder enough about the controversy swirling around Harper Lee's new book, read on.

The early reviews of Harper Lee's newly published book Go Set a Watchman have nearly all shouted in voices of outrage, or reported in tones of world weary cynicism, that Atticus Finch, our classic moral exemplar from the great American bestseller To Kill a Mockingbird, turns out in this new manuscript to be "really" an ordinary racist and bigot. Reviewers from major papers, magazines, and websites have expressed shock and dismay over this new portrayal of the formerly upstanding small town attorney, once played so well in the famous movie by actor Gregory Peck. Atticus Finch was someone we could look up to, and seek to emulate in our attitudes and conduct. He was a thoroughly admirable individual, a light on a hill for all of us, and now, we're told, the new revelations of the first novel that was actually written about him, which has finally seen the light of day fifty-five years after we first met the man, have shown us the real truth that he is a mere mortal after all, a man of prejudice with "feet of red Alabama clay."

I can't help but wonder how many of the reviewers have simply contrived their headlines to grab our attention in a noisy and cluttered culture, and how many actually believe what they're saying, and are thus, like mockingbirds, echoing the tendency of the young Scout Finch to rush to judgment on a first hint of evidence and proclaim her dismay at the top of her lungs before paying closer attention to the full story. In my reading of Watchman, Atticus is simply less of a comic book hero than we might otherwise have made him out to be, and more of a real life agent for good whose stances and actions suggest healthy moral and political questions that we need to think over carefully, as fellow citizens in a world that needs many forms of healing.

In the main narrative of Watchman, it's twenty years after the time covered in the book To Kill a Mockingbird. Scout, using her real name Jean Louise Finch, is visiting her hometown for a two-week period, as she does annually, arriving this time by train from New York City, where she now lives. Atticus is 72 and has been afflicted with severe arthritis. Scout's childhood friend Henry Clinton, or "Hank," newly mentioned in this book, has become an attorney and works for Atticus, helping him personally as well as professionally, almost in the capacity of a son. It quickly becomes clear that he'd like to be a son-in-law, and he keeps asking Jean Louise to marry him. She's unsure, but at the outset edges a little closer to actually considering his oft-made proposal.

Early on in this visit, she sees a racist pamphlet called "The Black Plague" in a stack of her father's books and learns from her aunt Alexandra that it belongs to Atticus. Zandra says, "There are a lot of truths in that book." Scout's shocked and can hardly believe what she's hearing. She later learns that Hank and Atticus are going to a meeting down at the courthouse, and finds out that it's a Maycomb County Citizens' Council. The Supreme Court has just passed down their famous edict on school integration, in 1954, and the NAACP has become active throughout the South. Scout has read about southern Citizens' Councils and is alarmed. She follows Atticus and Hank to the meeting and sneaks up into the balcony of the courthouse to watch, where as a child she viewed her father as he acted on the principles that she has always admired and held dear. This time, Atticus is in a room full of local businessmen and community leaders, and it's apparently his job to introduce their speaker of the day, whom he simply names and says needs no introduction. The man, Grady O'Hanlon, is a virulent segregationist demagogue who goes from town to town addressing such meetings of local white men for the purpose of whipping up negative sentiments against their African-American fellow citizens, as well as against the meddling federal government and the trouble-making NAACP.

Scout is stunned and sickened to see her father sitting there listening to racist venom. She runs out in a rage of shock and disappointment at both her father and Henry. She decides to leave town immediately. But first, she goes to see her beloved uncle Jack, a medical doctor, eccentric and erudite community intellectual, and the brother of Atticus, to find out what in the world is going on. She tells him in disbelief that she's just seen her father and Hank at the meeting, and Jack laughs loudly, before calming into mere chuckles. He's witnessed Scout leap to crazy conclusions many times before, just like current crop of book reviewers, and can surely see what's coming. She's angered even more at his laughter. He then enigmatically leads her through a number of esoteric historical references to try to get her to understand that contemporary social and political issues are just as complex as those that underlay The War Between the States a hundred years prior, and still incorporate most of them, which haven't gone away. Southerners in agricultural areas like theirs, he hints, tend to be fiercely independent. They don't want distant government officials handing down dictates concerning situations they don't fully understand. He also explains to Scout that she'd be "making a bad mistake" if she thought her father was dedicated to keeping black people "in their place." He doesn't hate any race or any people.

According to Jack, not even 5% of Southerners at the time of The War Between the States had even seen a slave, and he suggests that the remaining 95% of the population didn't for a second go off to battle or send their sons into it for the sake of a few wealthy slave owners. His suggestion is rather that Southerners firmly believe political decisions should be made locally whenever possible. When there's a failure at the most local level, then matters can be kicked up to a broader context, perhaps to the county or state. The federal government is then the last resort of all. He quotes a British theorist to the effect that government of any kind exists to prevent crime, preserve contracts, and provide for a common defense, which is vague enough, he points out, to allow for a lot of freedom. He's trying to convince Jean Louise that her father is on the local Citizen's Council not because he's a racist, or is trying to block progress in citizenship for any of their neighbors, whatever their color, but simply to help the community think through the issues that impinge on them, and discern how to steer safely ahead as well as possible. Jean Louise is not calmed or convinced by any of this - as is her way.

After some long flashback passages to Scout's teen years, the young adult Jean Louise confronts Henry with her anger and concerns (228 ff). She wants to know what he and Atticus were doing at the Council meeting where such a racist hate-monger got a hearing. Henry says "We have to do a lot of things we don't want to do, Jean Louise." He claims that the only purpose of the Council is to be "a protest" against the Supreme Court's action from on high, and to offer "a sort of warning," in his own ill-chosen words, that social change, however necessary, should not be undertaken in too much of a hurry. But his words could easily be misunderstood, and probably are by Scout, as well as by many readers. He then asks if she knew that Atticus had long ago joined the Ku Klux Klan, early in their existence as a business men's group - before there was any physical intimidation or violence, he's quick to add, and simply for the purpose of finding out who they were "behind the masks" and how they operated, in case he were ever to have to intervene to stop any such actions. She's immediately even more disgusted and rhetorically pretends not to be surprised, at this point, concerning anything her father might have done.

Henry tries to defend Atticus and himself by pointing out that you can't always judge a man's intentions, or motives, by his outward actions. He says, "A man can be boiling inside, but he knows a mild answer works better than showing his rage. A man can condemn his enemies, but it's wiser to know them." He's implicitly, of course, asking Scout to try to do the same in the situation. And, obviously, he intimates here that the racist bigots and potentially violent among the community are indeed enemies in his eyes as well as those of Atticus, and not at all kindred spirits, or comrades in arms.

Henry then points out to Jean Louise that a man has to find the best way to live among his neighbors, so that, long term, he can be of service to them - and that may involve guiding them to bette paths. She was always prone to fight, and still is. He believes that he owes himself and his community the duty of tamping down belligerence and finding other ways to deal with problems. He suggests that her privileged background as a Finch may blind her from understanding how important it is for someone like him, who has had to work hard for everything in his life, to act judiciously and prudently, while yet still addressing things that need to be changed and managed. Scout calls him a coward and a hypocrite for having anything to do with the Maycomb Citizens' Council.

As I read this passage, I could almost imagine Hank envisioning the more troubled members of their community and saying, "Listen, Jean Louise: If you're trying to train a nervous, worked-up horse, and he's walking in the wrong direction, the quickest thing might be to just yell at him and hit him in the head. But that would instantly make things worse. You have to walk beside him for a while, try to calm him down and gain his trust, and then you can perhaps effectively guide him in the right direction. Do you understand?" In other words, while Scout always wants immediate confrontation, Hank prefers constructive engagement. And yet, as we know, that can shade dangerously into accommodationist appeasement. And reasonable, good people can differ on it as a proper path.

Human nature is malleable. People tend to become like the people they're around. And that goes in either direction. The corrupt can perhaps be made better by divergent companionship, or the good made worse by it. It can be dangerous to walk alongside a nervous horse who's going in the wrong direction. And, meanwhile, a slow and gentle approach toward corrective action certainly allows things to continue on longer in the wrong direction, which is sometimes necessary, but on other occasions can take you over the edge of a cliff. Hank and Atticus have judged that, in the circumstances, it's their best course.

Atticus walks up and overhears Jean Louise calling Hank a hypocrite. He sends the younger man off on an errand and gives Scout a chance to confront him directly and say what's on her mind. She takes the opportunity to lay into him with almost every invective, insult, and curse she can muster. He's apparently not angered, and shows no offense, letting the words bounce off without evident effect, except to reveal to him what exactly is on her mind and heart. And then he seeks to engage her in reasoning through the issues, as he sees them. As he asks her views on the Supreme Court's recent decision and hears her reaction, he's able to point out to her that she's more of a states' rights advocate than he is, and that, by contrast, he looks like "a Roosevelt Liberal." He reveals what's focally at stake for him in all the issues whirling about: that the constitution of the United States is greater than any court, and should never be abrogated by it. He suggests that he and the wholly non-racist Scout find themselves "believing the very same things" on the biggest issues and holding valuable the same ultimate ends, while simply not yet agreeing as to the means that might be best to achieve those ends.

Atticus has always seemed to believe in the legal and spiritual equality of all, but he also seems just as clearly to be resisting a federal, top-down approach to enforcing ideal that in their currently difficult situation, which is a tactic that, in his view, moves both too fast and in an unfortunate way in pursuit of that end. He believes that it will cause needless trouble in their agrarian South, trouble that could be avoided in a different pursuit of the same end. But he goes on to say some things in his conversation with Jean Louise that at first glance do sound outrageously racist to our modern ears. When I sat and read them, they gave me pause. I then asked myself not how Atticus could be defended from the charge that he's racist, as his words could seem to imply, but how the author, Harper Lee, might defend him, or explain him, in another way. After all, Atticus is modeled on her father, a man she did love and admire. As I took in these few most startling passages, I was reminded of a graduate seminar at Yale long ago where I was first introduced to a hermeneutical, or interpretive, rule often known as "The Principle of Charity": We should interpret the confusing in terms of the clear, and the unknown in terms of the known, seeking to understand the anomalous in terms of the more pervasive, and then give as charitable a reading as we can to any potentially rare passages that seem on the surface to contradict, or stand in tension with, more common passages or perspectives in the same text. It's something we naturally do when we interpret what people say in terms of what we already know of their character, personality, and underlying views.

So what are the shocking passages? It almost pains me to repeat them. Jean Louise is in a hurry for justice to prevail. Atticus says, "Have you ever considered that you can't have a set of backward people living among people advanced in one kind of civilization and have a social Arcadia?" She's not impressed. He says, "You realize that our Negro population is backward, don't you? You will concede that?" (242)  He then says, "You realize that the vast majority of them here in the South are unable to share fully in the responsibilities of citizenship, and why?" And now we're in deep.

On a charitable reading, Atticus should not be too quickly understood as commenting here on an entire race, and making some point about an essential limitation inherent to that race, but rather as speaking only about, in his words, "the vast majority" of the members of that race who were living, at that particular time, in the specific part of American that was the rural South around the location where their conversation was taking place. He seems to be articulating the view that it just won't work to try to impose full equality of citizenship too quickly, and from above, in a way that may create unanticipated problems. He goes on to articulate the view he thinks of as "Jeffersonian" that the full rights of democratic citizenship are properly taken up by people who have developed themselves into fully and appropriately "responsible" citizens, with the overall knowledge and skills requisite for the rigors of active, participative self governance. (244) He seems to think, deep down, that this is possible for any normal human being, for any member of any race who is of sound mind, but also to judge that, in their day, the cart was being put in front of the horse, and the entire panoply of citizenship was being imposed on a segment of their local population who had not yet been fully enough prepared for its burdens. The lack of preparation was certainly not their own fault, but that of the majority white citizens who had kept them oppressed and limited in their educational opportunities. And certainly, by his own "Jeffersonian" standards articulated here, many of his fellow white men and women would not qualify for the same full responsibilities and privileges of mature citizenship. But that isn't addressed in the scope of the book, or of these discussions. I would guess that if he were confronted with such issues, Atticus would remind us that we have to start from where we are, and move forward in as healthy and non-damaging a way as we can. And this, of course, has been a procedural preference that we've forgotten, to our great detriment, in our recent efforts to impose democratic governance, top-down, in various other parts of the world where we have too often acted without such a consideration of preparation or timing. In our proper view that a democratic society can be a condition for the flourishing of any human beings, we easily forget the arduous slog of cultivation and preparation that it may take to get there. Not everything good can be done in an instant. That seems to be what Atticus is suggesting. Of course, for all the wisdom of this viewpoint, any passive perpetuation of injustice is itself a wrong that should always be righted as expeditiously as is possible.

Jean Louise pushes back again, and Atticus makes what may be the worst remark yet: "Then let's put this on a practical basis right now. Do you want Negroes by the carload in our schools and churches and theaters? Do you want them in our world?" (245) You can almost hear her hostility when Scout replies, "They're people, aren't they? We were quite willing to import them when they made money for us." He responds, and we truly do cringe when we hear him say the words, "Do you want your children going to a school that's been dragged down to accommodate Negro children?"

And it gets worse. He goes on: "What would happen if all the Negroes in the South were suddenly given full civil rights? I'll tell you. There'd be another Reconstruction. Would you want your state governments run by people who don't know how to run 'em?" - as if that hadn't then and hasn't now been going on far too much, in any case. And let me quote one more remark, that seems to take us to our final nadir: "Honey, you do not seem to understand that the Negroes down here are still in their childhood as a people. You should know it, you've seen it all your life. They've made terrific progress in adapting themselves to white ways, but they're far from it yet."

As a reader, you want to say, "Really? Really, Atticus? I mean: Seriously? Is that what you'd actually say? Or is that just what a young Harper Lee put into your mouth before properly editing it all, and giving you a bit more of a chance not to sound so bad to us future readers?

After we get over our heebie-jeebies and proper shuddering, we should once again revert to the Principle of Charity and see if it can survive for a minute in this heated environment.

First, what about the carload comment that makes us cringe? Can we save Atticus from that one? What's he saying, if not something that's viciously prejudicial? Well, let's try this: Would Frenchmen or Irishmen, or Swedes or Germans want Southern Alabama white people suddenly dumped by the carload into their "schools and churches and theaters?" Acting like Southern Alabama white people? Maybe not - and this would be so quite apart from any racial perspectives. Diversity is a truly great and magnificent thing when done right. It can be a very good thing even when done wrong. But done terribly, it can be a harmful and disruptive situation - at least, initially. And that seems to be the point Atticus is trying to make, throughout - not that there's anything inherently inferior about black people in general, or even regarding those of his time and place, but that preparation and pace may be needed, in his time, to work up to a great situation, unlike the instant "solutions" he takes others to be proposing to such longstanding ills. The same interpretive slant can be put on his remark about a school that's been "dragged down to accommodate Negro children." If this is really the Atticus we know from Mockingbird, then he can't be judging an entire race in an inherently negative way here, can he? That's too out of step with the respect he shows all of his fellow men, women, and children. He, again, could be issuing cautionary words about the pace of social change, and the nature of its implementation.

I grew up in the 1950s in a quietly segregated Durham, North Carolina. I remember when the schools were first integrated. It seemed natural to me, and not a problem at all. In high school, one of my three best friends was black. And yet my mother worried about how that might anger "some people in town." I thought, "What business is it of theirs?" And I didn't let her worry affect me. Later on, I realized some of the struggles that my black friends and classmates had faced when they left underfunded, neglected schools in their own neighborhoods, with old books and underpaid teachers, to come to the best schools in town, where I wished they had been from the start. But they hadn't been there. And when integration occurred at a fifth grade level, or a seventh grade level, or a tenth, some of the new students in my school struggled in ways they shouldn't have had to. I later on thought: Why didn't they start by integrating first grade, when we were all more on a roughly equal footing, and let those kids rise into an integrated second grade, and so on, up the line? Yes, it would have taken too long. But no kids would have been challenged to blend in and perform well, despite poor academic backgrounds, and with all the problems that entailed. I suppose there was really no way to achieve justice quickly and perfectly.

It's easy to reflect on these things enough to see what Atticus, in his time and place, might have had in mind, however better it could have been said, and perhaps would have been, given a few more years of maturity on the part of the young author constructing his sentences, and with the benefit of an sensitive editorial guiding hand. Atticus wanted Scout to understand that good intentions don't always guarantee their intended results. And even the best of intentions, with poor planning, can result in unanticipated problems. In my experience, integration didn't at all "drag down" the standards of any schools to accommodate the lesser prepared, but rather these institutions tended to hold tightly to their standards, and thereby created unnecessary suffering for any students previously unacquainted with such relatively rigorous ideals.

In a flashback to her teen years earlier in the book, Scout has gone through a miserable time due to misunderstanding the facts of life having to do with conception and pregnancy. She's started having her period, and a boy kisses her with his tongue for the first time. She then overhears some older girls talking and jumps to the wrong conclusion that such kissing creates pregnancy, and that she's now going to have a baby outside marriage and shame the family. When the full biological story is later explained by the great character and black maid Calpurnia, Scout protests and asks why she hadn't been told all this earlier. Cal says, "Mr. Finch said wait awhile till you got used to the idea" (of being a woman and having periods). She adds, "but we didn't count on you finding out so quick and so wrong, Miss Scout." Atticus is a deliberate, patient, cautious man with good will in his heart. He wanted to wait to tell Scout the full "facts of life." And, as it turned out, he was wrong to do so. Not knowing the truth allowed her to panic in belief of a falsehood. But that didn't impugn his character, or his motives. It just showed a normal lack of infallibility. And it foreshadowed his "slow and steady" approach to racial equality - right or wrong.

He's tried to calmly reason with Jean Louise on the Council issue as well as the bigger issues they face, but she'll have none of this dithering. She verbally hits him with all she's got, in her disgust and fury. And the narrator tells us, "Her wave of invective had crashed over him and still he sat there. He had declined to be angry." (249) Atticus has amazing self control. He's a true stoic. We later learn from Uncle Jack that he was experiencing all of Scout's rage and hostility as perhaps a necessary stage for her to become her own person, and truly possess her own principles, distinct from whether they were also his or not. She had nearly worshipped him, throughout her life, and needed a moral center and separateness she had never fully experienced. She was like an angry horse, and he was walking along side her as she raged, again, in hopes that he could eventually gain her understanding and gently show her his way.

But she runs off and prepares to leave town, in a frenzy of shock, betrayal and immense anger at everyone. And then Uncle Jack arrives at the house as she prepares to go. He tries to talk to her and reaps only the whirlwind of her disparagement and pique. And then, dear reader, we get quite a surprise. Only a couple of really hard smacks in the face from her sweet elderly uncle can stun her into listening. Oh, he quickly tends to her bleeding mouth, medically, and gives her whisky to numb the pain and open her mind, while explaining that she's the bigot, not Atticus. He also has some pretty harsh words for people who are, in fact, white supremacists. And she realizes she was wrong. 

When she later reconciles with her father, she says, "I called you some pretty grim things." He answers, "I can take anything anybody calls me so long as it's not true." (277) And that seems to be the case for the old lawyer. I don't even think he'd go to the trouble, were he alive, and of course, real, to reply to all the book reviewers who have announced to us what a bad man he is.

At the end, Jean Louise says to him, "I think I love you very much." And, if we're willing to look beyond certain appearances, and use sound interpretive principles to understand the intent behind his words, I think we can close this new book with no regrets about how we have admired him in the past as a man struggling to see the just and right eventually prevail out of difficult circumstances. He's not perfect. But we shouldn't have known that in the first place. And if he were alive now, I can even imagine his looking around at the social problems we still have and saying to us, "What in the world has taken you so long? You've had more than enough time by now to get the job done!"

 

 

PostedJuly 23, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
TagsTo Kill A Mockingbird, Go Set a Watchman, Harper Lee, Atticus Finch
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The Goodness Guarantee

There are very few guarantees in the world. One of the rare ones is that if, from a perspective of basically true belief, you try to do good or try to do evil, you're guaranteed to succeed. Let me make it clear what this means.

The single condition for this guarantee is that you have mostly, and at least roughly, true beliefs about what's good, and what's evil. You don't have to be a master of ethical insight, but have generally accurate and non delusional views of what's right and wrong, at a simple and basic level. Then, the guarantee kicks in. If you're trying to do good for the world, beyond your own narrow interests, in your pursuit of a goal or in your treatment of another person, then, whether you succeed in accomplishing exactly what you're attempting or not, your effort to do good is itself a form of good. In even trying to do good, you've brought a dose of good into the world.

Likewise, and conversely, if you're trying to do evil in the world, of any kind, in your pursuit of a goal or in your treatment of another person, then, whether you succeed in accomplishing exactly what you're attempting or not, your effort itself is a form of evil. It is evil to try to accomplish evil. 

To sum up, armed with a basically correct grasp of good and evil, then you get a rare guarantee. When you try to do good, you actually do good. When you try to do evil, you really do evil. And this is true regardless of circumstances. Because of that truth, something important follows.

There's aren't many such guarantees in life. When you try to make a lot of money, there's no guarantee that you'll succeed financially. If you try to get famous, there's also no guarantee that your intent will be realized in any form. Likewise for the pursuit of power, or status, or any other external thing distinct from good or evil.

So, therefore what should we make of this realization? Our conclusion is crucially important, and potentially even life changing.

Consider this. One way not to waste your time and energy in this life is to seek first and foremost a goal that's guaranteed. That leaves two options. Whatever we do, we should either seek to do good, or to do evil. But seeking evil, as Socrates long ago pointed out, is in itself wrong and, in addition, will just make your world a worse place for you. We should not seek evil. Therefore, the opposite conclusion follows quickly: We should always intentionally seek to do good, whatever the particulars might be. 

This conclusion then comes with a cosmic promise. Your effort to make a positive addition to the world will itself be one. And then, everything else is gravy. Or icing on the cake - depending on whether you prefer the savory or the sweet, each of which is available to the seeker of good.

First, seek to know what is good and what isn't. Strip off false beliefs, and escape illusion. Then, the job is clear. Determine, whatever you do, to do good, and good will follow. Even if you're somewhat mistaken in your understanding of what the good requires, a sincere and humble pursuit of the good is more open than any other mindset to correction about what it truly entails. That way, in seeking to do good, you position yourself to both do good and become better. And I have just one question: As a fundamental starting point, what could be better than that?

PostedJuly 21, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Attitude, Life
TagsGood, Evil, Action, Intention, Guarantees, Money, Fame, Power, Status, Wisdom, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Philosophy
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Life Skills

How skilled are you? Do you seek to identify, acquire, develop, and improve the most important life skills, in an ongoing way? 

We often think about success, and even happiness, as if it's mostly about talent and luck - what you're born with, and what comes your way, completely apart from your control. But obviously, this is a passive and even fatalistic viewpoint. We don't get to choose our talents, or innate levels of talent, and we can certainly position ourselves for luck to strike, but we can't call it down from the heavens. It happens, or it doesn't. That's inherent to the concept of luck.

I've come to realize that this common way of thinking is both wrong and terribly unhelpful. Life success is more about skill than it is about either talent or luck. A skill is something that can be learned and developed. Riding a bike, swimming, dancing, and golf all involve skills. You don't start off in life innately knowing how to do these things well, but you can learn, and you can get better with time, effort, and deliberate practice.

A lot in life is like that. Goal setting is a skill. Listening well is a skill. And because of that, great conversations tend to result from the cultivation of a skill, or a set of skills. Building and maintaining confidence is a skill. So is the mental act of concentration. Building a business, or a career, is all about cultivating the right skills and using them well.

I've come to think that building a life of fulfillment and happiness is like that, too. There are skills to be learned and cultivated. They are things we can get better at doing, as we seek to improve. But if we have a passive mindset, we won't even try. To me, the exciting thing about the concept of a skill, and especially the idea of life skills, is that once we have the concept and begin to apply it, we can change our lives for the better, and improve greatly. We begin to see little things everywhere that we can work on in our emotional and behavioral repertoire. And as we become more skilled at doing the things that count, that elusive partner called luck seems to find us more often, and treat us much better.

For good books related to this, books that will help you to understand this more and develop your own best life skills, go get Talent is Overrated, by Geoff Colvin, and Mindset, by psychologist Carol Dweck.

PostedJuly 20, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Life, Business, Wisdom
TagsLuck, Skill, Talent, Success, Happiness, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Carol Zweck, Geoff Colvin
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Harper Lee's Complicated Heroes

I was never going to read To Kill a Mockingbird. I escaped it in school, and wrongly thought that it was a dull book about a courtroom trial. I read it this week, and I loved it. It's now one of my favorite books ever. Harper Lee is a master storyteller, and her creative use of language is a true joy. Plus, the story's just great.

The book is told through the voice of Scout, who begins the story as a six year old tomboy Alabama small town girl with a precocious vocabulary that's both hilarious and fascinating. We quickly fall in love with Scout, and her entire family. Mockingbird is a book that will embrace you as a reader so much that you will have to love it back, especially if you read it as an adult, or revisit it now after a first youthful acquaintance. I read it this week only because of the incredible hoopla surrounding the "new" book by Lee just published, fifty five years after Mockingbird, which I've also now read.

The official story on this week's publication is that it was the original manuscript Lee sent to publishers in the late 1950s, and it tells an interestingly different story about mostly the same characters. The editor at Harper loved the characters but wanted an extensive rewrite that focused on their lives when Scout was younger and that expanded on the account of a courtroom trial that was originally mentioned in only a paragraph. Lee took the advice, pretty much started from scratch, in terms of the overall narrative, and produced the classic To Kill a Mockingbird. The original manuscript she had turned in was about the lives of the same characters 20 years later and in a different social time in America. It's what was published just this week.

There's almost too much to talk about in the new book Go Set a Watchman. I loved it, then I hated it, and then I loved it again. Finally, I went away deeply impressed by the way it raises fundamental social, political, and personal issues of a philosophical nature. A good book helps us see the world differently. A great book helps us see ourselves differently. This book may do both.

Almost every published review of the new book gets it wrong. Once you read it yourself, Google the reviews and you'll see what I mean.

I've read nearly all the first wave of reviews. They tend to consist of a sophisticated veneer over a tabloid alarmist screeching approach to what's portrayed as a shocking revelation about everyone's hero from Mockingbird, Atticus Finch. But what we really learn in the book is the complexity of his, and every hero's, true character, which is always more complicated than we at first realize. Scout goes through the biggest challenge of her life in coming to understand this, and comes to important realizations about herself as well as about her father.

I hope you'll read these two books as soon as you can. Click on the titles here if you want to get them through Amazon. I plan on blogging on them both, but will wait a few days so as not to be too much of a "spoiler" concerning plot and revelations. I hope there will be thousands of book groups considering all the ideas to be pondered in this new publication. It's shocking in many ways, provocative in more, and will surely give any careful reader new insights into the human condition, while at the same time being just a great, great quick read.

We'll talk more later.

PostedJuly 17, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Life, Philosophy
TagsHarper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird, Go Set a Watchman, Books, Tom Morris, TomVMorris
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A Philosophy for Success

I’m a philosopher. That gives me access to the wisdom of the ages – as well as an answer that completely perplexes people when they ask what I do for a living. But, on airplanes, and at parties, after the puzzlement subsides, people often ask me, within a few minutes, if the great thinkers of the past had any good advice about life, or life success, that we can use now. The answer is yes. From Plato and Aristotle on, the wisest people have left us powerful advice for success in anything we do. It boils down to seven universal conditions. I've alluded to this or talked about it in this blog before. Let's take a brief overview. Reminders can be helpful.

The 7 Cs of Success

For the most satisfying and sustainable forms of success, we need:

(1) A clear CONCEPTION of what we want, a vivid vision, a goal clearly imagined.

(2) A strong CONFIDENCE that we can attain that goal.

(3) A focused CONCENTRATION on what it takes to reach the goal.

(4) A stubborn CONSISTENCY in pursuing our vision.

(5) An emotional COMMITMENT to the importance of what we're doing.

(6) A good CHARACTER to guide us and keep us on a proper course.

(7) A CAPACITY TO ENJOY the process along the way.

There are certainly other tips associated with success, but every other one is just a version or application of one of these in specific situations. The 7 Cs give us the most universal, logical, and comprehensive framework for success. So, let’s take a quick look at each. 

(1) A clear CONCEPTION. In any facet of our lives, we need to think through as clearly as possible what we want to accomplish. True success starts with a clear inner vision. The world as we find it is just raw material for what we can make it. We’re meant to be artists with our energies and our lives. The only way to do that well is to structure our actions around clear goals.

(2) A strong CONFIDENCE. Inner attitude is a key to outer results. Harvard psychologist William James learned long ago that confidence can have powerful effects. In any new enterprise, we need upfront, resilient faith in our prospects. James called that "precursive faith" - faith that runs ahead of the evidence. Sometimes we have to work hard for this attitude. But it’s worth the work, because it raises our probability for success. The best confidence comes from careful preparation and then augments it with a can-do perspective. It’s no guarantee of success. But it is a chief contributor to it.

(3) A focused CONCENTRATION. Success at anything challenging comes from planning your work and then working your plan. A focused concentration generates new perceptual abilities. Concentrating your thought and energy toward a clear goal, you begin to see things that will help with it. This focus involves planning, acting, and adjusting along the way. Even a flawed plan can get you going and lead to a better one. A focused concentration of thought and action is key.

(4) A stubborn CONSISTENCY. The word ‘consistency’ comes from two Greek roots, a verb meaning “to stand” and a particle meaning “together.” Consistency is all about standing together. Do my actions stand together with my words? Do the people I work with stand together? This is what true consistency is all about. It’s a matter of unifying your energy in a single direction. It’s also known as harmony. Inconsistency defuses power. Consistency moves us toward our goals.

(5) An emotional COMMITMENT. Passion is the core of extraordinary success. Truly caring. It’s a key to overcoming difficulties, seizing opportunities, and getting other people excited about their work. Too much goal setting in in business is done just with the intellect and not the heart. We need both to guide us and keep us functioning at the peak of our abilities, despite the obstacles we inevitably face. 

(6) A good CHARACTER. Character inspires trust. And trust is necessary for people to work together well. But good character does more than provide for strong partnerships. It has an effect on each individual’s own freedom and insight. Bad character corrupts and blinds. Good character makes sustainable success more likely. In the end, character is all about strength.

(7) A CAPACITY TO ENJOY. The more you can enjoy the process of what you’re doing, the better the results tend to be. It’s easier to set creative goals. Confidence will come more naturally. And so on. A capacity to enjoy the process is linked to every other facilitator of success.

These conditions are deeply interconnected. They constitute a unified framework of tools for most fulfilling forms of achievement. It's been my joy to speak and write on them in books like True Success and The Art of Achievement, as well as The Stoic Art of Living and the ebook The 7 Cs of Success. I've been able to ponder them and discover their surprising depths for over 25 years. They can help us make our proper mark in the world. So, why should we ever settle for anything less?

PostedJuly 16, 2015
AuthorTom Morris
CategoriesAdvice, Life, Business, Performance
TagsSuccess, True Success, Art of Achievement, Tom Morris, TomVMorris, Goals, Challenges, Philosophy
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Some things that may be of interest. Click the images below for more!

First up: Tom’s new Silver Anniversary Edition of his hugely popular book on The 7 Cs of Success!

The New Breakthrough Guide to Stoicism for our time.

Tom's new book, out now!
Finally! Volume 7 of the new series of philosophical fiction!

Finally! Volume 7 of the new series of philosophical fiction!

Plato comes alive in a new way!

Plato comes alive in a new way!

On stage in front of a room full of leaders and high achievers from across the globe.

On stage in front of a room full of leaders and high achievers from across the globe.

My Favorite Recent Photo: A young lady named Jubilee gets off to a head start in life by diving into some philosophy!

My Favorite Recent Photo: A young lady named Jubilee gets off to a head start in life by diving into some philosophy!

Great new Elizabeth Gilbert book on creative living and the creative experience.

Great new Elizabeth Gilbert book on creative living and the creative experience.

Two minutes on a perspective that can change a business or a life.

So many people have asked to see one of my old Winnie the Pooh TV commercials and I just found one! Here it is:

Long ago and far away, on a Hollywood sound stage, I appeared in two network ads for the wise Pooh, to promote his adventures on Disney Home Videos. For two years, I was The National Spokesman for that most philosophical bear. This is one of the ads. I had a bad case of the flu but I hope you can't tell. A-Choo!

One of my newest talk topics is "Plato's Lemonade Stand: Stirring Change into Something Great." Based on the old adage, "When life hands you lemons, make lemonade," this talk is about how to do exactly that. Inquire for my availability through the c…

One of my newest talk topics is "Plato's Lemonade Stand: Stirring Change into Something Great." Based on the old adage, "When life hands you lemons, make lemonade," this talk is about how to do exactly that. Inquire for my availability through the contact page above! Let's stir something up!

Above is a short video on finding fulfillment in anything you do, that was taped a few years ago. I hope you enjoy it!