Every man in this world is a critic. If a critic is dull-witted, he naturally exalts the value of the work of literature. He magnifies the value of work. In the same manner some glaikit people admire what wise men approve. A Critic must possess a vast knowledge of worldly affairs without which he cannot criticize. If we do not posses the necessary intellectual equipment we will not be able to estimate the true worth of anything. In order to make a true assessment of anything we should posses sense, wisdom and mental balance. So we should not plainly admire anything. We should probe on it to ensure if it is true to be admired. We should be able to see a thing as in itself it really is. There is the need for some sense and a set of values to measure the worth of anything. We should develop in ourselves, a practice of looking deep into matters, probing on it, trying to understand it without any flaw and then admire it if it is right or rise out your opinion on that if you feel that it doesn’t seem to be correct, instead of blind admiration. There is a good critic…
Friday, July 09, 2004
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2 comments:
Welcome to the blogging world, Ravi! You have a pretty nice blog - I'll try to visit it daily like you asked :-) You really don't have to visit my blog daily - I'm not that interesting a person :-)
Sriram
[http://www.dotnetjunkies.com/weblog/sriram]
Nice article
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