A century ago, T S Eliot wrote about the hollowness of his countrymen in a poem titled The Hollow Men . The World War I had led to a lot of disillusionment with the collapse of powerful empires and the savagery of the war itself which unleashed barbaric slaughter. The generation that survived was known as the “Lost Generation.” Before the war, Western civilisation was sustained by certain values and principles given by religion, the Enlightenment, and Victorian morality. The war showed that science and technology, which could improve life, had actually produced machine guns, gas warfare, and mass death. Religion became hollow. People became hollow. “We are the hollow men,” Eliot’s poem began. The civilisation looked sophisticated from outside, but it was empty inside. There is a lot of religion today in the world. My country has allegedly become so religious that it decides what you will eat, wear, which god you will pray to, and even the language for communication. The ultimat...
Pretty interesting actually :)
ReplyDeleteLife makes us interesting :)
DeleteDerivative of minima and maxima gives zero values, and interestingly the region where you lie in has a constant value for the derivative.
ReplyDeleteYour place has a significant value and not the priests' and politicians' 😁
Honestly, I have an ego that's huge enough to consider me superior to the priest and the politician :) It's a cardinal sin in my religion and hence my place in hell is assured.
DeleteInteresting barb at the politicians
ReplyDeleteThanks. Glad to see you here after quite a while.
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