Value for Tuesday of Week 50 in the season of Harvest and Celebration

Knowing Self

To find our niche, we must know ourselves.

  • Knowing yourself is the beginning of all wisdom. [attributed to Aristotle]
  • There are three Things extremely hard: Steel, a Diamond, and to know one’s self. [Benjamin Franklin]
  • Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves. [attributed to Carl Jung]

The intellectual component of finding one’s best niche in the world is self-knowledge. This includes knowledge of one’s strengths and weaknesses, along with one’s interests and dislikes, and how well one might fit into a field of endeavor.

Understanding others is knowledge, understanding oneself is enlightenment”. Self-knowledge “represents not only one’s own standpoint but also the standpoint of others whose beliefs one is motivated to take into account.” “Two-year-old children are ready to understand others as intentional agents, but by age four, show the ability to read others’ minds skillfully enough to be able to look from others’ perspectives and understand that others can have beliefs different from their own . . .” “. . . compartmentalized individuals may experience difficulties in how they know the self, whereas individuals with integrative self-organization may display greater continuity and evaluative consistency across self-aspects, with easier access to evaluative self-knowledge.

Novel technological devices, applications, and algorithms can provide us with a vast amount of personal information about ourselves.” Medical researchers have identified several ways of gaining self-knowledge.

Real

True Narratives

Book narratives:

Technical and Analytical Readings

Photographs

Documentary and Educational Films

Imaginary

Fictional Narratives

Poetry

The time will come / when, with elation / you will greet yourself arriving / at your own door, in your own mirror / and each will smile at the other's welcome,
and say, sit here. Eat. / You will love again the stranger who was your self. / Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart / to itself, to the stranger who has loved you
all your life, whom you ignored / for another, who knows you by heart. / Take down the love letters from the bookshelf,
the photographs, the desperate notes, / peel your own image from the mirror. / Sit. Feast on your life.

[Derek Walcott, “Love After Love”]

That crazed girl improvising her music.
Her poetry, dancing upon the shore,

Her soul in division from itself
Climbing, falling She knew not where,
Hiding amid the cargo of a steamship,
Her knee-cap broken, that girl I declare
A beautiful lofty thing, or a thing
Heroically lost, heroically found.

No matter what disaster occurred
She stood in desperate music wound,
Wound, wound, and she made in her triumph
Where the bales and the baskets lay
No common intelligible sound
But sang, 'O sea-starved, hungry sea.'

[William Butler Yeats, “A Crazed Girl”]

Music: Composers, artists, and major works

Sometimes an artist captures himself in performance, as if to say “this is who I am.”

Pianist Dollar Brand Xahuri (Abdullah Ibrahim) has offered several albums that express his view of himself and his heritage:

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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The Work on the Meditations