Why must we constantly volunteer our thoughts like an overeager kindergartner, raising his hand ever higher and waving it ever more earnestly to attract the teacher's attention?
Well, the human desire for recognition may be unavoidable. As George Santayana once observed, “[t]he highest form of vanity is love of fame,” a passion “easy to deride” but “impossible to eradicate.”
So, how might writers recognize and avoid the tendency toward exaggeration, competition, and extremism?
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“[T]hese,” John Stuart Mill declared in 1836, “are the inevitable fruits of immense competition; of a state of society where any voice, not pitched in an exaggerated key, is lost in the hubbub.” Success “in so crowded a field, depends not upon what a person is, but upon what he seems.” Who are we when we write? And, are we saying something or just screaming?
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