Value for Thursday of Week 19 in the season of Growth

Being Careful, Prudent and Cautious

Care, prudence, and caution are fundamental aspects of worldly obligation.

  • While you are proclaiming peace with your lips, be careful to have it even more fully in your heart. [Francis of Assisi]
  • If we continue to develop our technology without wisdom or prudence, our servant may prove to be our executioner. [attributed to Omar N. Bradley]
  • If you wish to succeed in life, make perseverance your bosom friend, experience your wise counselor, caution your elder brother, and hope your guardian genius. [attributed to Joseph Addison]
  • Be careful about reading health books. You may die of a misprint. [attributed to Mark Twain]
  • You’ve got to be very careful if you don’t know where you are going, because you might not get there. [attributed to Yogi Berra]

To be cautious is to be careful – to exercise care. We might contrast caution with being careless, or with being daring or bold. Caution motivated by fear probably is less useful than caution underlain by confidence. The extent to which someone is cautious is related to the subject of risk-taking. Of course, context is essential in evaluating the quality of caution. These observations illustrate the imprecise nature of values distinctions, particularly this one.

Prudence, we might say, is reasoned caution – considered and careful caution, we might say. Prudence and caution are served with at least a taste of humility.

Real

True Narratives

The United States' response to the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001, offers a cautionary tale about being cautious.

Profiles in caution, for good and/or ill:

From the dark side:

Technical and Analytical Readings

Photographs

Documentary and Educational Films

Imaginary

Fictional Narratives

"While we hesitated, among the black bushes behind us, and dim against their blackness, I saw three crouching figures. There was scrub and long grass all about us, and I did not feel safe from their insidious approach. The forest, I calculated, was rather less than a mile across. If we could get through it to the bare hillside, there as it seemed to me, was an altogether safer resting-place; I thought that with my matches and my camphor I could contrive to keep my path illuminated through the woods. Yet it was evident that if I was to flourish matches with my hands I should have to abandon my firewood; so, rather reluctantly, I put it down. And then it came into my head that I would amaze our friends behind by lighting it. I was to discover the atrocious folly of this proceeding, but it came to my mind as an ingenious move for covering our retreat." [H.G. Wells, “The Time Machine” (1895).]

Novels:

Poetry

Not only sands and gravels
Were once more on their travels,

But gulping muddy gallons
Great boulders off their balance
Bumped heads together dully
And started down the gully.
Whole capes caked off in slices.
I felt my standpoint shaken
In the universal crisis.
But with one step backward taken
I saved myself from going.
A world torn loose went by me.
Then the rain stopped and the blowing,
And the sun came out to dry me.

[Robert Frost, “One Step Backward Taken”]

What did we say to each other
that now we are as the deer
who walk in single file
with heads high
with ears forward
with eyes watchful
with hooves always placed on firm ground
in whose limbs there is latent flight

[Navarre Scott Momaday, “A Simile”]

Music: Composers, artists, and major works

Classical pianist Josef Hofmann’s motto was “an aristocrat never hurries”. He was referring to the importance of careful preparation. Here is a link to his playlists. 

A German composer of the seventeenth century, Heinrich Schütz hewed close to musical traditions, and composed music suitable for church. In those two pervasive respects, this precursor of Bach could be called music’s patron saint of caution, or prudence. His genius was in applying those conservative ideas and attitudes to produce beautiful and creative works that bear prolonged listening. A chief exponent of his music, on disc, is Dresdner Barockorchester.

Johann Pachelbel composed volumes of carefully constructed, deliberate keyboard works. Antoine Bouchard has ostensibly recorded all of them. Other performers include Matthew Owens: Volume 1 (2021) (71’); Simone Stella [Volume 1 (2018) (132’); Volume 2 (2018) (196’); Volume 3 (2018) (226’)]; and Márton Borsányi [Volume 1 (2017) (64’); Volume 2 (2019) (72’)].

Other compositions:

Albums:

Music: songs and other short pieces

Visual Arts

Film and Stage

This Is Our Story

A religion of values and Ethics, driven by love and compassion, informed by science and reason.

PART ONE: OUR STORY

First ingredient: Distinctions. What is the core and essence of being human? What is contentment, or kindliness, or Love? What is gentleness, or service, or enthusiasm, or courage? If you follow the links, you see at a glance what these concepts mean.

PART TWO: ANALYSIS

This site would be incomplete without an analytical framework. After you have digested a few of the examples, feel free to explore the ideas behind the model. I would be remiss if I did not give credit to my inspiration for this work: the Human Faith Project of Calvin Chatlos, M.D. His demonstration of a model for Human Faith began my exploration of this subject matter.

A RELIGION OF VALUES

A baby first begins to learn about the world by experiencing it. A room may be warm or cool. The baby learns that distinction. As a toddler, the child may strike her head with a rag doll, and see that it is soft; then strike her head with a wooden block, and see that it is hard. Love is a distinction: she loves me, or she doesn’t love me. This is true of every human value:

justice, humility, wisdom, courage . . . every single one of them.

This site is dedicated to exploring those distinctions. It is based on a model of values that you can read about on the “About” page. However, the best way to learn about what is in here is the same as the baby’s way of learning about the world: open the pages, and see what happens.

ants organic action machines

Octavio Ocampo, Forever Always

Jacek Yerka, House over the Waterfall

Norman Rockwell, Carefree Days Ahead

WHAT YOU WILL SEE HERE

When you open tiostest.wpengine.com, you will see a human value identified at the top of the page. The value changes daily. These values are designed to follow the seasons of the year.

You will also see an overview of the value, or subject for the day, and then two columns of materials.

The left-side column presents true narratives, which include biographies, memoirs, histories, documentary films and the like; and also technical and analytical writings.

The right-side columns presents the work of the human imagination: fictional novels and stories, music, visual art, poetry and fictional film.

Each entry is presented to help identify the value. Open some of the links and experience our human story, again. It belongs to us all, and each of us is a part of it.

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