On Being a Real Person |
Contents
Shouldering Responsibility for Ourselves I | 1 |
What Being a Real Person Means | 27 |
The Principle of SelfAcceptance | 52 |
Copyright | |
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accept achieve actual alibi anxiety basic become cause character chronic coherence commonly concerning confront conscience conscious cure dealing depression desire despondency dread effect egocentricity emotional drives environment escape ethical evil experience face fact factor failure fear feel friends Gunga Din habitually handling happiness Harry Emerson Fosdick heredity human nature ideals imagination impulses individual inferiority inner integration involves irreligion J. A. Hadfield Jesus John Joseph Wood Krutch life's living man's matter meaning ment mind minister misuse modern moods moral morbid mother motives ness never obsessive one's oneself organized ourselves personal counselor personal response physical possible problem psychiatrist psychological pugnacity Ralph Waldo Emerson real person realm religion Robert Louis Stevenson says self-acceptance self-blame sense situation social sonality soul spiritual sublimated tion tive trouble trying volition whole William William Aldis Wright William Ernest Hocking William George Clark William Shakespeare woman worth-while York