Plutarch's Morals

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality, Philosophy
Cover of the book Plutarch's Morals by Plutarch, Plutarch
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Plutarch ISBN: 9788822850966
Publisher: Plutarch Publication: September 29, 2016
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Plutarch
ISBN: 9788822850966
Publisher: Plutarch
Publication: September 29, 2016
Imprint:
Language: English

Some of the things that grow on the earth are in their nature wild and barren and injurious to the growth of seeds and plants, yet those who till the ground consider them indications not of a bad soil but of a rich and fat one;637 so also there are passions of the soul that are not good, yet are as it were offshoots of a good disposition, and one likely to improve with good advice. Among these I class shyness, no bad sign in itself, though it affords occasion to vice. For the modest oftentimes plunge into the same excesses as the shameless, but then they are pained and grieved at them, and not pleased like the others. For the shameless person is quite apathetic at what is disgraceful, while the modest person is easily affected even at the very appearance of it. Shyness is in fact an excess of modesty. And thus it is called shamefacedness, because the face exhibits the changes of the mind. For as dejection is defined to be the grief that makes people look on the ground, so shamefacedness is that shyness that cannot look people in the face.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Some of the things that grow on the earth are in their nature wild and barren and injurious to the growth of seeds and plants, yet those who till the ground consider them indications not of a bad soil but of a rich and fat one;637 so also there are passions of the soul that are not good, yet are as it were offshoots of a good disposition, and one likely to improve with good advice. Among these I class shyness, no bad sign in itself, though it affords occasion to vice. For the modest oftentimes plunge into the same excesses as the shameless, but then they are pained and grieved at them, and not pleased like the others. For the shameless person is quite apathetic at what is disgraceful, while the modest person is easily affected even at the very appearance of it. Shyness is in fact an excess of modesty. And thus it is called shamefacedness, because the face exhibits the changes of the mind. For as dejection is defined to be the grief that makes people look on the ground, so shamefacedness is that shyness that cannot look people in the face.

More books from Philosophy

Cover of the book On the Good Life by Plutarch
Cover of the book Why Good People Do Bad Things by Plutarch
Cover of the book Shakti and shakta by Plutarch
Cover of the book Carta abierta de Woody Allen a Platón by Plutarch
Cover of the book 南部修太郎作品集/全集 by Plutarch
Cover of the book Simplification of Life by Plutarch
Cover of the book Was ist eine gerechte Gesellschaft? by Plutarch
Cover of the book Samurai Strategies by Plutarch
Cover of the book The Language of the Consciousness Soul: A Guide to Rudolf Steiner's "Leading Thoughts" by Plutarch
Cover of the book Los Amores y el Remedio del Amor by Plutarch
Cover of the book Causation by Plutarch
Cover of the book The Meaning of Marxism by Plutarch
Cover of the book Căderea în timp by Plutarch
Cover of the book A Critical Introduction to the Philosophy of Gottlob Frege by Plutarch
Cover of the book Les Huit Circuits de conscience by Plutarch
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy