1– Joseph Addison, 3 Elements of Happiness

2– Douglas Bader, Handicaps

3– Charles A. Beard, Man's Purpose

4– John Bogle , Investing

5– Bertolt Brecht, Initiative

6– Robert Browning , Making the Effort

7– Giordano Bruno, Conviction

8– Edmund Burke, Doing the Right Thing

9– Albert Camus, Hope

10– Thomas Carlyle, Making a Difference

11– Dale Carnegie, Showing Appreciation

12– Winston Churchill, Courage and Listening

13– Marcus Tullius Cicero, Suspicions

14– Arthur Compton, Advantages of Modern Life

15– Kevin Costner, Staying True to Yourself

16– Bette Davis, Creativity and Money

17– Jefferson Davis, Subservience and Pride

18– Charles Dickens, The Ends Don't Justify the Means

19– George Eliot, Regrets

20– Ralph Waldo Emerson, Actions Speak Louder Than Words

21– Epictetus, Becoming Your Best Self

22– Malcolm Forbes, Character

23– Harrison Ford, Success and Individuality

24– Benjamin Franklin, Self-esteem vs. Popularity

25– Thomas Fuller, Hope

26– Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Happiness and Harmony

27– Romain Gary, Humor and Dignity

28– Douglas Haig, No Surrender

29– Ernest Hemingway, Pressure

30– Victor Hugo, Obscure Struggles

31– Zora Neale Hurston, Making the Effort

32– Washington Irving, Women and Adversity

33– William James, Attitude

34– Thomas Jefferson, Style Vs Principle

35– Helen Keller, Changing the World

36– Robert F. Kennedy, Effort

37– Martin Luther King, Jr., Pride in Work

38– Charles Kingsley, Value of Work

39– Abraham Lincoln, Daily Life

40– Vince Lombardi, Resilience

41– George Leigh Mallory, Challenge

42– Abraham Maslow, Fulfillment Through Work

43– David McKay, Challenge

44– Friedrich Nietzsche, Self-Respect

45– Louis Nizer, Religion

46– Thomas Paine, Profiting from Adversity

47– Louis Pasteur, Ideals

48– Alexander Pope, Admitting Mistakes

49– Christopher Reeve, Dreams

50– Eleanor Roosevelt, Confronting Fear

51– Franklin D. Roosevelt, Happiness and Achievement

52– Theodore Roosevelt, No Excuses

53– E. Merrill Root, Work and Happiness

54– John Ruskin, Learning from Others

55– George Santayana, Lovers and Philosophers

56– William Shakespeare, Be Yourself

57– George Bernard Shaw, Creating Opportunity

58– John Steinbeck, Leadership

59– Robert Louis Stevenson, Potential

60– Thomas Szasz, Finding Yourself

61– Leo Tolstoy, What is Art?

62– Anthony Trollope, Against the Odds

63– Wang Yang-ming, Mistakes

64– Booker T. Washington, Rising Above Hatred

65– Hugh White, Focus on the Future

 
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Learning from Others
John Ruskin

 
     
 
  “In every person who comes near you look for what is good and strong; honor that; try to imitate it, and your faults will drop off like dead leaves when their time comes.”
   
  John Ruskin (1819 - 1900), English Art Critic
 
     
     
  As a critic of art and architecture, and society in general, Ruskin attacked the Industrial Revolution and preached the virtues of the Gothic Era. He and other Romantics were afraid that the Industrial Revolution would eliminate handcrafted goods, thus diminishing the spiritual level of society. He was the first to apply the tenets of Romanticism to art criticism. His two most important books were “The Seven Lamps of Architecture”, which posited seven moral rules to guide architects, and “The Stones of Venice”, which encouraged the revival in Gothic architecture and, more broadly, the general idea of historic preservation. Above all, Ruskin was a skilled prose writer, and his writing helped to introduce the new English middle classes to the possibility of enjoying and collecting art that was not directly religious in terms of subject matter. But he strongly believed that art had a moral and spiritual purpose. The overall theme of Ruskin’s work is a reaction against the trends of his time: industrial capitalism, mass production, utilitarianism, and secularism.

Ruskin was born into a wealthy family; his father was a Scottish wine merchant who had moved to London and made a fortune in the sherry trade. An only child, he was educated at home. His artistic sensibilities were stimulated by his art-collecting father, while his religious sensibilities were stimulated by his pious Protestant mother. He spent five years at the University of Oxford, where he won a poetry prize. His serious amateur interests in poetry, as well as drawing, painting, geology, botany, and meteorology, helped to prepare him for his professional pursuits. Ruskin began his career defending the work of the landscape painter J.M.W. Turner; he would eventually act as the artistic executor of Turner’s estate.

The first volume of Ruskin’s first major book, “Modern Painters”, was published in 1843; eventually there would be five volumes. “Seven Lamps” was published in 1849, when Ruskin was 30, followed by “The Stones of Venice” in two volumes (1851 and 1853). In 1856 he published the third and fourth volumes of “Modern Painters”. Influenced by fellow Romantic reactionary Thomas Carlyle, Ruskin’s work began to take a broader approach in the late 1850s and 1860s as he began attacking the general values of a society that was being transformed by the Industrial Revolution. In 1870 was appointed to a professorship at Oxford; he also began to show traits of hereditary mental instability. In 1878 James Whistler, incensed by Ruskin’s critique of his painting “Nocturne”, brought his famous libel action, damaging Ruskin’s reputation. The court case marked the decline of Ruskin’s influence as a critic: he was increasingly seen as an enemy of modern art who was out of step with changing tastes that were increasingly embracing art that had only esthetic, not moral, value.