我生于一个边疆小城——内蒙古海拉尔(今呼伦贝尔市),那是一个美丽的草原城市。我出生在20世纪70年代,此后不久,我所生活的这个国家就开始了一场大的变革,这场变革无论从中国自己的历史还是从世界其他类似变革的角度来衡量,都是一场大的历史变革。这显然不仅仅是一场简单的改革,而是一场文明的超越,因为它不仅仅是在中国自己传统思想之内的调整,而是中国对自己2200年(自公元前221年至公元1979年)的历史和世界近500年(自公元1492年至公元1979年)历史的比较、总结和大思考——思考中国过去的成功与失败、辉煌与羞辱、强盛与衰落,自以为是与国家失落、忍辱负重与歇斯底里、从嘲笑亚当与夏娃到把离婚当家常便饭、从解读剩余价值到聆听格林斯潘的弦外之音……...
自我意识与人的确证 —易中天主持人:会当凌绝顶,一览众山小,凤凰卫视世纪大讲堂。首先欢迎易教授作客我们的节目。刚才片子里说易教授他是怎么怎么样的人,他的学术特色是什么,大家可能还不能了解很充分,因为这个小片子写的不具体,我们具体一下。在正式讲演之前呢,我们先听一听易教授,我给他摘出来两篇文章里的两段话。第一篇文章叫做《春来不是读书天》,里面有这样一段话,他说,“春来不是读书天。春天里的诱惑太多,天街小雨润如酥,草色遥看近却无……,”我后面打了删节号,中间删了一些话。他接着说,“春天里应该去远足、去踏青,当然最应该的还是谈恋爱。就连小动物都知道,春天是恋爱的季节。所以,春天即使要读书,也只该读情书”,这是教授说的话,不是一个少年说的话。下面一段文字来自易教授写的《书生意气》,易教授这样写道,他说“有句老话叫男怕选错行,女怕嫁错郎”,后面是易教授自己说的话了,“当...
知情者出面作证,人们总是希望他所说的都是真话,不掺任何水分。首先,有一种观点说,如果谁试图把他所知道的有关中国人的特性如实地转述给其他人,那么他将白费力气。1857至1858年期间,伦敦《泰晤士报》的乔治·温格罗夫·库克先生,是一位专门采访中国的记者,他可以像当时所有到中国去的作家一样,有机会观察各种环境下的中国人,并且能够借助那些德高望重的人的观察,获得对中国人全面、正确的理解。然而,库克先生在他书信集的前言中,对他描述中国人特性的失败表示了歉意。“在这些书信里,有一个重大的疏忽,就是关于中国人特性的文章,我写得不够精彩。没有一个题目能有这样的诱惑力,没有一个题目能有这样让人施展才华的机会;精巧的假设,深刻的概括,自信的断言,都可以在其中充分展示。所有的批评家,肯定会断然地蔑视我,因为我没能利用这样的机会,总结出任何有价值的东西。事实上,我写过几位中华民族中很出色的人...
现在,到了我们彻底改变企业思维的时候了。企业的任何计划都必须回答如下3个问题:我们所参与的游戏的性质是什么?它在朝着哪个方向发展?我们在这场游戏中如何赚钱?这些问题是企业存在的核心,是商务思维的根本。但是,不可思议的是,在如今的许多企业中,这些问题却很少有人提起,更不用说得到充分的回答了。要想获得答案,就必须抱有坚定的实事求是的态度。但是,在确定企业宗旨、规划企业未来方面,人们现在通常采用的方法却着实地偏离了实事求是的态度。如今,许多商界人士深深地陷入了歧途和误区,他们遮蔽现实,而不是揭示真相。虽然说,很多人过去已经取得了成功。不过在未来,取胜的人将会减少,因为我们很快就会发现,商务环境远不如过去那么宽容,可以让人们再犯错误了。...
第一部分 人有时候真是古怪的东西。或者微观而具体地说,我自己有时候真不是个东西。总想把恶劣彻底地推给他人。总想要把良好的与恶劣一向毫不沾边儿的自我感觉留作自己的专利。并且自己一旦怀疑自己的时候,总希望寻找到证明自己那一份儿自我感觉的根据和旁证。表弟(1) A大学,我是永远不想再去了。 什么“文学与人生”的对话之类,于我,其实是不善拒绝的性格之弱点的自蹈罢了。文学的确曾养育过我的灵魂。大着点儿胆子说也的确养育过“我们”的灵魂。“我们”——一小撮?这是一种历史的事实。倘彻底地否认,细想想,总有些负心于时代的内疚。但却是当年的文学。当年的“我们”。和那种样的,小学生即使捡到了一分钱,都很虔诚地交给警察叔叔的当年。如今人民币贬值,“一分钱精神”怎么着似乎都“精神”不起来了。...
The University of Hard Knocksby Ralph ParletteThe School That Completes Our Education"He that overcometh shall inherit all things; and I will be his God, and he shall be my son"Revelation 21:7."Sweet are the uses of adversity; Which, like the toad, ugly and venomous, Wears yet a precious jewel in his head; And thus our life, exempt from public haunt, Finds tongues in trees, books in running brooks Sermons in stones, and good in everything."ShakespeareWhy It Is Printed...
Cabin Feverby B. M. BowerCONTENTSCHAPTERI THE FEVER MANIFESTS ITSELFII TWO MAKE A QUARRELIII TEN DOLLARS AND A JOB FOR BUDIV HEAD SOUTH AND KEEP GOINGV BUD CANNOT PERFORM MIRACLESVI BUD TAKES TO THE HILLSVII INTO THE DESERTVIII MANY BARREN MONTHS AND MILESIX THE BITE OF MEMORYX EMOTIONS ARE TRICKY THINGSXI THE FIRST STAGESXII MARIE TAKES A DESPERATE CHANCEXIII CABIN FEVER IN ITS WORST FORMXIV CASH GETS A SHOCK...
Confessions of an English Opium-Eaterby Thomas De QuinceyBEING AN EXTRACT FROM THE LIFE OF A SCHOLAR. From the "London Magazine" for September 1821.TO THE READERI here present you, courteous reader, with the record of a remarkable period in my life: according to my application of it, I trust that it will prove not merely an interesting record, but in a considerable degree useful and instructive. In THAT hope it is that I have drawn it up; and THAT must be my apology for breaking through that
Short Logicby HegelI: Introduction§ 1. Objects of Philosophy§ 2. Reflective Thought§ 3. The Content of Philosophy§ 4. Popular Modes of Thought§ 5. Reason§ 6. All that is Rational is Real§ 7. Beginning to Reflect§ 8. Empirical Knowledge§ 9. Speculative Logic§ 10. The Critical Philosophy§ 11. Conditions for the existence of Philosophy§ 12. The Rise of Philosophy§ 13. The History of Philosophy§ 14. The System of Philosophy...
Joan of Naples1343-1382By ALEXANDER DUMAS, PERECHAPTER IIn the night of the 15th of January 1343, while the inhabitants of Naples lay wrapped in peaceful slumber, they were suddenly awakened by the bells of the three hundred churches that this thrice blessed capital contains. In the midst of the disturbance caused by so rude a call the first bought in the mind of all was that the town was on fire, or that the army of some enemy had mysteriously landed under cover of night and could put the cit
Vailima Lettersby Robert Louis StevensonCHAPTER IIN THE MOUNTAIN, APIA, SAMOA,MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2ND, 1890MY DEAR COLVIN, - This is a hard and interesting andbeautiful life that we lead now. Our place is in a deepcleft of Vaea Mountain, some six hundred feet above the sea,embowered in forest, which is our strangling enemy, and whichwe combat with axes and dollars. I went crazy over outdoorwork, and had at last to confine myself to the house, or...
Sons of the Soilby Honore de BalzacTranslated by Katharine Prescott WormeleyDEDICATIONTo Monsieur P. S. B. Gavault.Jean-Jacques Rousseau wrote these words at the beginning of hisNouvelle Heloise: "I have seen the morals of my time and I publishthese letters." May I not say to you, in imitation of that greatwriter, "I have studied the march of my epoch and I publish thiswork"?The object of this particular studystartling in its truth so...