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  4. Gandhi! [modified]

Gandhi! [modified]

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  • H HimanshuJoshi

    Ilíon wrote:

    The Ghandi no one knows[^]

    If you can't spell his last name correctly (It is Gandhi, not Ghandi); you have no rights to comment on him :mad:

    I Offline
    I Offline
    Ilion
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    :laugh: Where did I comment about Great Soul? Are you a hyper-sentitive Hindu? Or are you merely a fool?

    modified on Wednesday, November 25, 2009 12:03 AM

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    • H HimanshuJoshi

      Ilíon wrote:

      The Ghandi no one knows[^]

      If you can't spell his last name correctly (It is Gandhi, not Ghandi); you have no rights to comment on him :mad:

      I Offline
      I Offline
      Ilion
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      What's your opinion on what's recounted here?[^]

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      • I Ilion

        The Gandhi no one knows[^]

        modified on Tuesday, November 24, 2009 11:52 PM

        L Offline
        L Offline
        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        Ilíon wrote:

        The Gandhi no one knows

        The Gandhi Nobody Knows? How presumptuous of Mr Richard Grenier. But what else would one expect from an elitist intellectual? However, snarkiness aside, I have to thank you for posting it, as it is an interesting read (still reading), and all antidotes to 'greatness' are welcome.

        Bob Emmett

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        • L Lost User

          Ilíon wrote:

          The Gandhi no one knows

          The Gandhi Nobody Knows? How presumptuous of Mr Richard Grenier. But what else would one expect from an elitist intellectual? However, snarkiness aside, I have to thank you for posting it, as it is an interesting read (still reading), and all antidotes to 'greatness' are welcome.

          Bob Emmett

          D Offline
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          Distind
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          Simply put, anyone who someone labels great, is generally someone they only know half the story about. Some people do great things, but I know of very few great people.

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          • D Distind

            Simply put, anyone who someone labels great, is generally someone they only know half the story about. Some people do great things, but I know of very few great people.

            W Offline
            W Offline
            wolfbinary
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            How do you separate great deeds from a great person? Or, in other words, the deed from the character?

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            • L Lost User

              Ilíon wrote:

              The Gandhi no one knows

              The Gandhi Nobody Knows? How presumptuous of Mr Richard Grenier. But what else would one expect from an elitist intellectual? However, snarkiness aside, I have to thank you for posting it, as it is an interesting read (still reading), and all antidotes to 'greatness' are welcome.

              Bob Emmett

              I Offline
              I Offline
              Ilion
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              I try to avoid using the word 'nobody' (except for effect) -- it has always struck me as the word kindergartners, and ill-educated adults, use in place of 'no one.'

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              • W wolfbinary

                How do you separate great deeds from a great person? Or, in other words, the deed from the character?

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                Ilion
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                Stalin and Hitler and Mao also did great deeds; they had great impacts upon history and upon the lives of many individual human beaings. They were, definitionally, "Great Men."

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                • W wolfbinary

                  How do you separate great deeds from a great person? Or, in other words, the deed from the character?

                  D Offline
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                  Distind
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  The deed is the legacy, the character is who they actually were. These are generally fairly different things, and I generally require someone be a decent person before I consider them to be great. Some maniacal backstabbing money hungry idiot may manage to create a corporate empire, do something great, but at the end of the day they aren't even a decent person.

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                  • I Ilion

                    I try to avoid using the word 'nobody' (except for effect) -- it has always struck me as the word kindergartners, and ill-educated adults, use in place of 'no one.'

                    L Offline
                    L Offline
                    Lost User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    Ilíon wrote:

                    I try to avoid using the word 'nobody' (except for effect) -- it has always struck me as the word kindergartners, and ill-educated adults, use in place of 'no one.'

                    Title: The Gandhi Nobody Knows Author: Richard Grenier Hardcover: 118 pages Publisher: Thomas Nelson Publishers (Jul 1983) ISBN-10: 0840753799 ISBN-13: 978-0840753793 I was merely quoting the title of your link, which is also the title of the published work. The word was emphasised because I thought it presumptuous of him to assume that nobody or no one, other than he, knew these details.

                    Bob Emmett Objectives: Total Domination of the World (postponed until 2018).

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                    • L Lost User

                      Ilíon wrote:

                      I try to avoid using the word 'nobody' (except for effect) -- it has always struck me as the word kindergartners, and ill-educated adults, use in place of 'no one.'

                      Title: The Gandhi Nobody Knows Author: Richard Grenier Hardcover: 118 pages Publisher: Thomas Nelson Publishers (Jul 1983) ISBN-10: 0840753799 ISBN-13: 978-0840753793 I was merely quoting the title of your link, which is also the title of the published work. The word was emphasised because I thought it presumptuous of him to assume that nobody or no one, other than he, knew these details.

                      Bob Emmett Objectives: Total Domination of the World (postponed until 2018).

                      I Offline
                      I Offline
                      Ilion
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #12

                      Bob Emmett wrote:

                      The word was emphasised because I thought it presumptuous of him to assume that nobody or no one, other than he, knew these details.

                      Please! it's a common trope to use "nobody" or "no one" in this manner ... he's contrasting (what he claims to be) the truth with "what everyone knows" (and which happens to be a pious myth).

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                      • I Ilion

                        Bob Emmett wrote:

                        The word was emphasised because I thought it presumptuous of him to assume that nobody or no one, other than he, knew these details.

                        Please! it's a common trope to use "nobody" or "no one" in this manner ... he's contrasting (what he claims to be) the truth with "what everyone knows" (and which happens to be a pious myth).

                        L Offline
                        L Offline
                        Lost User
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        Ilíon wrote:

                        it's a common trope to use "nobody" or "no one" in this manner

                        True, probably the choice of his publisher, then. I am surprised the well educated Mr G permitted 'nobody' in the title.

                        Bob Emmett

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