Humility Essays

  • Humility Among the Kung!

    693 Words  | 2 Pages

    Humility is a valuable attribute in the character of an individual, in society and in a culture. Cultivating this value in can be learned through psychological exercise, misfortune, costly mistakes, and various other methods. Such was the case with Ontah, the anthropologist in the story, “Eating Christmas in the Kalahari.” As an expression of gratitude towards the !Kung Bushmen and there families for there cooperation, Ontah purchased the largest meatiest ox he could find for the Christmas festivities

  • Putting the Human in Humility

    1642 Words  | 4 Pages

    People define humility as weakness, timidity, or lack of leadership, yet no one is right all the time. America thrives off of individuality. The freedom to be my own person or focus on my dreams is what draws people in; however, the lack of meekness is what my downfall becomes because my parents told me to focus on myself and not others. I worked hard on who I want to be, and in high school my teacher ingrained the concept of standing up for what I believe. Now that I am in college, all the professors

  • Humility By John Wilkinson Summary

    752 Words  | 2 Pages

    describe the importance of humility for contemporary life, love, and leadership and to outline it's real benefits (Dickson,19). He goes on to points us to why he feels it is important to analyze the subject of humility from this historical perspective. He says, " The reader of history is the ultimate pollster, canvassing the opinion of the entire human family" (Dickson, 18). He makes a simple thesis statement: the most influential and inspiring people are often marked by humility (Dickson, 19). He then

  • Personal Narrative- Living a Life of Humility

    1110 Words  | 3 Pages

    Personal Narrative- Living a Life of Humility For the only thing we have to shame is shame itself. Perhaps the name of Amy Tan’s mother will never be remembered like that of FDR, but the truth behind her words rings just as loud. To be different is an aspect of human nature that we are to be proud of, regardless of whether it’s socially hip or socially degrading. To be proud of something is to consider it worthy of honor, and that’s precisely what we must do- honor our individuality by becoming

  • Comparing the Humility of Kings in Shakespeare's Richard II through Henry V

    2383 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Humility of Kings in Richard II through Henry V Though Shakespeare was a conservative, he believed in the humility of Kings. The plays Richard II through Henry V assert Shakespeare's idea that a King must understand the common man to be a good ruler. These four plays chronicle the history of three Kings' ability to recognize, relate to, and be part of the humanity he rules. Shakespeare advocates his belief with the falling of Richard II, who could not or would not understand his subjects;

  • Jessica Tracey: The Power Of Pride

    1541 Words  | 4 Pages

    from pride as well. Time and time again we hear the story of Icarus, the boy who became entranced with his own pride and flew too close to the sun. However, there is another story of pride we hear less often, the person who takes pride in their own humility. Rather than take pride in typical things such as wealth, prestige, or even appearance, these people take pride in their modesty and virtue. In this

  • Beholding the Beauty of Christ: A Blessed Paradox

    1379 Words  | 3 Pages

    has a glory in Himself that has a combing of attributes that would seem impossible in one person. He is unique, one of a kind. There is no one and nothing we could compare Him to. He is “Incomparable because in Him meet infinite glory and lowest humility, infinite majesty and transcendent meekness, deepest reverence toward God and equality with God, infinite worthiness of good and greatest patience to suffer evil, supreme dominion and exceeding obedience, divine self-sufficiency and childlike trust

  • The Contrasting Themes and Structure of William Faulkner's The Bear

    2664 Words  | 6 Pages

    decline of the wilderness, while the other half (chapter 4) is also self sufficient in its plot, depending only on the other half for introducing the main characters. The first half of the story tells a bittersweet tale of a boy who wished to learn humility and pride in order to become skillful and worthy in the woods but... ... middle of paper ... ...the wilderness, but abandoned it along with the wilderness. Faulkner illustrates these differences with representative parts in the story and communicates

  • Odyssey, Learning About Himself

    1116 Words  | 3 Pages

    Odysseus learned a lot about himself and what he had to do to become a better overall human. The adventures he goes on, I think, opens his eyes to a world in which he thought he was invincible. With the Odyssey, Odysseus learned a big lesson in humility. The greatest example of this is in the last five books or so within the story. He has to dress, act, and live like a beggar in order to regain everything he had lost. While he was a beggar, the suitors treated him horribly. Antinous, leader of the

  • Antigone - The Tragic Flaw

    2227 Words  | 5 Pages

    of tragic drama, in particular, and that the voice of the poet was the voice of morality and wisdom as well as of  beauty” (23). In Antigone the new king, Creon, brings down the wrath of the gods because he does not possess the virtues of humility and respect for the gods. Supporting this view is Herbert J. Muller, who in his essay “How Sophocles Viewed and Portrayed the Gods,” maintains that Sophocles in his tragedies condemns selfish or tyrannical pride as the tragic flaw in his heroes:

  • Philosophy

    619 Words  | 2 Pages

    "foundation" of individuals possessing positive attitudes and characteristics that the "end goal" may be achieved. Tae Kwon Do strives to develop the positive aspects of an individual's personality: Respect, Courtesy, Goodness, Trustworthiness, Loyalty, Humility, Courage, Patience, Integrity, Perseverance, Self-control, an Indomitable Spirit and a sense of responsibility to help and respect all forms of life. This takes a great deal of hard training and many do not reach far enough to achieve perfection

  • Comparing Beliefs and Vaules of the Renaissance and Middle Ages

    740 Words  | 2 Pages

    looked upon as a journey. The focus of life was on the afterlife because there were no guarantees in the present life. The life of highest value was the contemplative life, one devoted to God. The passive virtues such as compassion, suffering, and humility were highly regarded. God was the center of man's world during the Middle Ages. On the Great Chain of Being, man was below God and the angels and above the animals, plants, and inanimate objects. In sharp contrast, man's purpose during the Renaissance

  • Pride Essay

    555 Words  | 2 Pages

    that pride gives an encouraging feeling of confidence, this self-assurance is generated by your impression of superiority. When this feeling is exaggerated, it leads to arrogance and excessive pomposity, which can cause an individual to experience humility once they recognize they are not as superior as they imagined. The benign confidence that I possess today is an outcome of my pride. I have always had a substantial amount of insecurity, for my fears have consistently haunted me: fear of embarrassment

  • Everything That Rises Must Converge

    1081 Words  | 3 Pages

    but yet places them in a very physiologically vulnerable position and claiming that they are ungrateful for the grace around them. Her stories also surrounds strongly around a shredding of falsehood in a form of accepting, and embracing defeat, or humility; but she also gives no chance of a redemption for the by ending most of the stories with the characters cornered into a state of complete breakdown. The stories also contain a many heavily enforced Christian ideology and morals, and with the brutality

  • In John Donne's 'Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions'

    934 Words  | 2 Pages

    Every human being of this world values a set of virtues. One of these virtues is humility, which is a modest or low view of one’s own importance, not believing one person is better than another. To develop the virtue of humility, a person must be open minded to the world around him, put others before himself, and be aware of his actions in order to better himself. One way a person can display humility is through being aware of their world and surroundings. John Donne, author of Devotions Upon

  • The Themes in Oedipus Rex

    2786 Words  | 6 Pages

    the gods. . . . When [the characters] are finally forced to see the truth, we know that the gods have prevailed and that men must accept their own insignificance. In short, for Bowra, the essence of each play of Sophocles is a message urging humility and piety (45). Van Nortwick, seemingly in support of Bowra, describes Oedipus’ tragic flaw as something equivalent to the lack of modesty before the gods which Bowra refers to: As ruler, he is a father to Thebes and its citizens, and

  • Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown – Conflict, Climax, Resolution

    2070 Words  | 5 Pages

    will examine Nathaniel Hawthorne’s “Young Goodman Brown” to determine the conflict, climax and resolution. The conflict between pride and humility is the direction that Clarice Swisher in “Nathaniel Hawthorne: a Biography” tends: Hawthorne himself was preoccupied with the problems of evil, the nature of sin, the conflict between pride and humility” (13). There is little doubt about the pride of the protagonist as he scolds his wife for not fully trusting him: "’My love and my Faith,’ replied

  • Subtlety and Psychology in "The Screwtape Letters" by C.S. Lewis

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    encouraging sin that does not appear to be sin. Screwtape shows effective psychology in encouraging the patient to displace intellect and will in prayer with imagination and emotion, and he shows subtlety in encouraging gluttony of delicacy, pride in humility, and superiority in being part of an elite Christian social circle. Screwtape uses psychology to manipulate the patient into replacing the intellect and will in prayer with imagination and emotion. To remind the patient of his childhood prayers

  • Free Essays on Invisible Man: Defining Oneself

    1885 Words  | 4 Pages

    tragedy and loss does he realize the truth, that his perceptions of himself and of how others perceived him had been backwards his entire life. The story opens with the narrator participating in a "battle royal" prior to delivering a speech on humility, and on the progress of the Black people. These are the days during which he is still a hopeful scholar, defining himself as a "potential Booker T. Washington." At this point he is living the life that others have told him that he should live, and

  • Theme of Forgiveness in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter

    1260 Words  | 3 Pages

    appeal is made, as despots love to have it made entirely to it's generosity." The Scarlet Letter (156) One of themes that Hawthorne conveys in The Scarlet Letter is that society is more willing to forgive people who ask for forgiveness with humility and generosity than those who demanded it as a right. This theme was conveys using Hester Prynne, a young women who committed adultery. This was considered to be one of the worst crime someone could commit in the Puritan society during the eighteen