About This Book
The essays argue that mature self-knowledge arises through disillusionment and adjustment, when a person sheds self-centered preconceptions and learns both capacities and limits. Growth comes from relations with others and from responsibility: unselfish service, love, and committed labor direct talent outward, enlarging character and producing satisfaction. Some attain this change early, others late or never; it may arrive abruptly or gradually. Power and opportunity yield fulfillment when used for others rather than self-aggrandizement. Ultimately the work traces psychological and moral pathways by which inward clarity turns private ability into public purpose and steady, purposeful living.
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