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Notes and Commentary

On Choosing Not to See

James V. Schall, S.J.

I.

One of the most instructive passages I have ever read is found in C. S. Lewis' The Abolition of Man, about the textbook writers and the waterfalls. The story goes that the English poet Coleridge records the reaction of two ordinary tourists on first seeing a particularly lovely waterfall. One of these tourists called it "pretty," while the other called it "sublime." Coleridge, of course, thought the tourist calling it "sublime" was correct, while the one calling it merely "pretty" was lacking in some perception or appreciation of the reality before him. There was a note of "culpability" in...







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