I have been reading this book " Hope on a Tightrope." I must say it's very good. The brilliant man that wrote this is a Harvard professor. He graduated from Harvard and Princeton. I find him to be a fascinating and intriguing man, and a lot of wisdom. His name is Cornel West. He talks about a variety of things.. like faith, family, courage, philosophy, and much more. I'll give you a few paragraph that he wrote in the chapter Courage.
It takes courage to interrogate yourself.
It takes courage to look in the mirror and see past your reflection to who you really are when you take off the mask, when you're not performing the same old routines and social roles. It takes courage to ask -- how did I become so well-adjusted to injustice?
It takes courage to cut againt the grain and become nonconformist. It takes courage to wake up and stay awake instead of engaging in complacent slumber. It takes courage to shatter comformity and cowardice. The courage to love truth is one of the preconditions to thinking critically.
Thinking of oneself is based on a particular kind of courage in which you hold truth, wisdom, and honesty in high esteem.
I'm not done with this book yet, but what I have read is inspiring to me.
1 comment:
He sounded so familiar I looked him up and see that Hope on a Tightrope , is an array of "meditations" and that West is indirectly challenging Obama to prove that the “Audacity of Hope” is more than a campaign slogan.
Interesting.
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