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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: IV. Itambkin’s (Sssajj on
On
Success:
Its Causes And Results Difficulty of in approaching a problem of subject s nature, witli all its anomalies and analogues, we are at once struck by the difficulty of conditioning any accurate estimate of the factors of the solution of the .difficulty which is latent in the very terms of the above question. We shall do well perhaps, however, to clearly differentiate from its fellows the proposition we have to deal with, and similarly as an inception of our analusis to permanently fix the definitions and'terms we shall be talking of, with, and by. ,,… r Success may be defined as the Definition of success Successful Consummation of an Attempt or more shortly as the Realisation of an imagined Good, and as it implies Desire or the Wish for a thing, and at the same time action or the attempt to get at a thing, we might look at Success from yet another point of view and say that Success is the realisation of Desire through action. Indeed this last definition seems on the whole to be the best; but it is evident that in this, as in all other matters, it is impossible to arrive at perfection, and our safest definition will be that which is found to be on the whole most approximately the average meant of many hundreds that might be virtually constructed to more or less accurately express the idea we have undertaken to do. So far then it is evident that while we may have a fairly definite subjective visual concept of what Success is, we shall never be able to convey to others in so many words exactly what our idea may be. What am I? An infant crying for the light That has no language but a cry
Lambkin resolutely refused to define Happiness when pressed to do so by a pupil in June, 1881: in fact, his…
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: IV. Itambkin’s (Sssajj on
On
Success:
Its Causes And Results Difficulty of in approaching a problem of subject s nature, witli all its anomalies and analogues, we are at once struck by the difficulty of conditioning any accurate estimate of the factors of the solution of the .difficulty which is latent in the very terms of the above question. We shall do well perhaps, however, to clearly differentiate from its fellows the proposition we have to deal with, and similarly as an inception of our analusis to permanently fix the definitions and'terms we shall be talking of, with, and by. ,,… r Success may be defined as the Definition of success Successful Consummation of an Attempt or more shortly as the Realisation of an imagined Good, and as it implies Desire or the Wish for a thing, and at the same time action or the attempt to get at a thing, we might look at Success from yet another point of view and say that Success is the realisation of Desire through action. Indeed this last definition seems on the whole to be the best; but it is evident that in this, as in all other matters, it is impossible to arrive at perfection, and our safest definition will be that which is found to be on the whole most approximately the average meant of many hundreds that might be virtually constructed to more or less accurately express the idea we have undertaken to do. So far then it is evident that while we may have a fairly definite subjective visual concept of what Success is, we shall never be able to convey to others in so many words exactly what our idea may be. What am I? An infant crying for the light That has no language but a cry
Lambkin resolutely refused to define Happiness when pressed to do so by a pupil in June, 1881: in fact, his…