tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6725670771198605827.post2898118293689476752..comments2024-03-27T12:43:55.135+05:30Comments on The Silent Cartographer: Propitiationsannidhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00773954038768544212noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6725670771198605827.post-70765939326204010102011-06-29T07:19:16.608+05:302011-06-29T07:19:16.608+05:30A perfect harmony among thoughts, words, and actio...A perfect harmony among thoughts, words, and actions. Be it a relative or an absolute truth, it's existence is unqualified. (easier said than done!) Kind of concur with you on the idealism, perhaps even in the post itself. Ibsen again had gone short and it was quantified by counter-idealism for his time and he had also quoted "The spectacles of experience; through them you will see clearly a second time". Perhaps they too reflect an innate idealism.sannidhhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00773954038768544212noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6725670771198605827.post-78440552612244919352011-06-28T22:13:38.745+05:302011-06-28T22:13:38.745+05:30This was long due anyways.
How do you define integ...This was long due anyways.<br />How do you define integrity as an absolute quality? Being moral(again relative) or abiding by self-made principles (irrespective of their nature). Life without principles is perhaps a ship without rudder but rigid ideals often become the nilhilists'(one who purposefully denies the objectivity of life) consort. And as a certain Ibsen had quoted "Do not use that foreign word "ideals." We have that excellent native word "lies."Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com