{"id":3705,"date":"1962-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1962-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1962-vol-43-no-1l-on-having-a-sense-of-values\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:37:16","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:37:16","slug":"december-1962-vol-43-no-1l-on-having-a-sense-of-values","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1962-vol-43-no-1l-on-having-a-sense-of-values\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1962 &#8211; VOL. 43 NO. 1l &#8211; On Having a Sense of Values"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p>A sense of values is needed in private life as well as in                     the market place. All our lives we are exercising choices,                     preferring this to that, deciding between better and worse.<\/p>\n<p>Life would be uninteresting and drab if we did not set for                     ourselves certain goals and commit ourselves to some method                     for keeping score.<\/p>\n<p>The things we want take many forms. Professor E. J. Urwick,                     who was from 1925 to 1937 on the staff of the University of                     Toronto, wrote about some of them in <em>The Values of Life<\/em>,                     a book in which he discussed values related to ideals, friendship,                     wealth, progress, knowledge, labour, simplicity and other                     desirable things.<\/p>\n<p>As a result of the massive accretion of knowledge in the                     past hundred years, many men and women, even those who are                     well-educated, are compelled to admit: &#8220;I don&#8217;t know                     what to think.&#8221; Living in a democracy, we cannot ask that                     a committee of philosophers shall meet behind closed doors                     to decide for all of us the moral and aesthetic values that                     are to guide our hopes and dictate our actions. We have to                     face the questions personally, because what we are deciding                     upon is the kind of life we individually would like to live.<\/p>\n<p>We have been relieved of the economic and social pressures                     which plagued our forefathers; now we need to stand on guard                     against being satisfied with shoddy and sham experiences.                     Our lives, like history, turn upon small hinges. Our day-to-day                     decisions about the things which we shall allow to matter                     add up to the value or worthlessness of our existence.<\/p>\n<p>These are years when we are exposed to apathy and cynicism.                     Some critics are uneasy because they detect a lack of purpose                     in the things we do, a trend toward conformity, passive comfort                     and unintelligent pursuit of ease. They fear that even young                     people have lost the fondness for adventure which was once                     the symbol of youth.<\/p>\n<p>It was not toward an age of submissive easiness, growing                     a fatty tissue around values, that men struggled through the                     ages, but rather toward broadening horizons. This is a time                     of exciting achievements, but its great events and great promise                     can be seen only by those who stand on a level with them.<\/p>\n<p>The things we value today are built upon the wisdom and                     work of many centuries. There has been little change in us                     physically &#8211; the handle of a Bronze Age sword fits our hand                     as well as it did the hand of its original owner. And even                     though our social environment has altered a great deal, the                     conservative structures and functions that were so useful                     in the past are the framework around which new social order                     is built.<\/p>\n<p>Everything that exists is in a constant state of becoming                     something else. Human life is like a journey on which every                     step brings us to a different view. We are part of a stream                     flowing from the first germ to the remote and unknown future.                     Our sense of values will enable us to make sure that it is                     a flow from minus to plus, from mediocrity to distinction.<\/p>\n<p>Change of thought or activity or direction is not naturally                     acceptable to all people. Those who do not expect change are                     frightened by it. Wise people make allowance for it. Alfred                     North Whitehead gave sound advice to newspapermen, advice                     which is applicable to all of us: &#8220;You can append notes at                     the bottom of your leading articles explaining that this is                     what looks true today, but that tomorrow it may be something                     quite different.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A good sense of values does not keep company with a hardened                     sense of consistency. Thinking must be an active process if                     it is to keep up with a world that is moving, and enable us                     to cope with the fact that the inconceivable of one age becomes                     the commonplace of the next.<\/p>\n<h3>Increase in knowledge<\/h3>\n<p>Look at the record of the increase in knowledge during the                     past century. A hundred years ago the Smithsonian Institution,                     probably the world&#8217;s largest museum, catalogued 46,000 objects;                     in 1952 it had 33,184,494. In 1850 the British Museum added                     14,266 books; a hundred years later the comparable figure                     was 51,419.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, we cannot be as sure as we were once that all                     change is progress. We are quite right to modify the ideas                     in our minds, just as we replace the furniture in our offices                     and homes, but we ought not to throw out ideas merely because                     they are old. A hundred firmly-held concepts about nature                     were altered by the experiments and expeditions of International                     Geophysical Year, but when a man fell and broke his leg near                     the South Pole the geophysicists did not try to change the                     law of gravity.<\/p>\n<p>Every business man knows that change in values is one of                     the components of commerce. An editorial in the <em>Harvard                     Business Review <\/em>said: &#8220;The executive must be continually                     and instinctively making order and relation out of unrelated                     ideas. Meanings are the executive&#8217;s stock in trade. The most                     important aspect of his job is to operate in terms of values.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Every business decision requires judgment based upon a deliberate                     choice between values. For example, if a man doesn&#8217;t know                     the relative strength of varying values he cannot compute                     the process and effects of advertising and selling.<\/p>\n<p>There are two sorts of value in economics: value in use,                     which is utility, and value in exchange, which is what one                     gets for what one has to dispose of. Commodities such as bread,                     air, and water, which have the greatest value in use, have                     often the lowest value in exchange. Commodities which have                     the highest value in exchange, such as diamonds, curiosities                     and pictures, appear to have the lowest utility.<\/p>\n<p>Most of the science of economics seems to be made up of                     attempts to reach a satisfactory balance between desirable                     ends and the price to be paid for them. In all other regions                     of life, too, men show their order of values by what they                     are willing to pay for what they consider the greater good.                     To many men, for example, wealth is not worth the price, because                     sometimes fine things must be sacrificed in getting rich.<\/p>\n<h3>What are values?<\/h3>\n<p>Our individual values have been formed little by little,                     like a coral reef. In childhood our values are dictated by                     our parents; in youth we learn what teachers and leaders think                     is good for us; in our adult lives we are subject to the pressure                     of public people, the writers of newspapers and magazines,                     the selectors of the &#8220;best&#8221; books. Without tests of value                     of our own we are at the mercy of every wind that blows.<\/p>\n<p>We need the courage to ask and answer the question: &#8220;What                     are <em>my <\/em>values?&#8221; An anthropologist has said that the                     two most productive areas for investigation of the history                     of man are his garbage dumps and his burials: in the first                     we find what our ancestors discarded as useless, in the other                     their choicest and most characteristic offerings.<\/p>\n<p>A poll revealed that these are among the principal things                     believed to be of value today: new experiences, recognition,                     security, health, something to do, a sense of gladness, peace                     of mind, a centre of gravity, friends, satisfaction in work                     done, zest. A writer put some of these together and suggested                     four essential values: to feel happy and at peace with the                     world; to feel worthy and noble; to feel effective and equal                     to events; to feel significant as a co-worker in the                     great ongoing processes of life.<\/p>\n<p>It is essential that the values we adopt and hold should                     allow for expansion. What matters in the history of the human                     race is essentially a progress to higher values. It is by                     this standard that we judge our forefathers, and, when the                     time comes, that our age shall be judged.<\/p>\n<p>We need, then, to keep asking questions about our values                     until we arrive at rock bottom. Building a set of values demands                     that we go behind the slogans and the easy phrases of quack                     reformers and look at ourselves as we are and not as we wish                     we were. Learning the truth will not destroy or impair values                     that are worth investigating.<\/p>\n<p>If the task of developing our sense of values appears to                     be at times tiresome or irksome, we may remind ourselves that                     we are in quest of something momentous, something beside which                     all other quests seem small, but something which, when found,                     will make all other quests significant.<\/p>\n<h3>Not absolutes<\/h3>\n<p>This is not to say that we should become intense about the                     task. Look at the paintings of the Masters, who often found                     themselves under the necessity to put a window or an open                     doorway in the background of their pictures. A true sense                     of values will give its possessor the ability to avoid imprisoning                     his life within blank walls.<\/p>\n<p>Our search for values is not a search for absolutes, which                     are unattainable. Nobody should expect to be perfect, or unduly                     troubled by the fact that he is not. It is true that our tradition                     calls upon us to measure ourselves by a standard which far                     exceeds our powers to fulfil in life, but perfection would                     be a completion, without possibility of growth.<\/p>\n<p>Vague people sprinkle their conversations with absolutes:                     &#8220;I want 100 per cent of the best; I am a 100 per cent Canadian.&#8221;                     But as Sidney Hook wrote in his survey of <em>The Hero in History<\/em>:                     &#8220;There is no such thing as absolute health, absolute wisdom,                     absolute democracy, an absolutely honest man &#8211; or an absolutely                     fat one.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that our values should not be set high,                     but that our ideals must be adjusted to the capacities of                     our human nature. It is a dangerous ardour which, urging us                     to the absolute heights of perfection, carries us also to                     the brink of precipices. There was a saying in ancient Rome:                     &#8220;It is not far from the Capitoline Hill (where consuls took                     their vows) to the Tarpeian Rock (from which criminals were                     thrown to their death.)&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>We should not neglect a value because we despair of attaining                     its highest degree. After all, we do not play a sonata in                     order to reach the final chord, but to enjoy the music along                     the way.<\/p>\n<p>Harmonious balance enters into every sense of values: balance                     of thought and spontaneity, balance of the aspirations and                     qualities that constitute an all-round man.<\/p>\n<h3>The value in happiness<\/h3>\n<p>Does good value consist of happiness? The answer must be                     that happiness is a real value only when it is made up of                     things indisputably good.<\/p>\n<p>People who live on the surface place their happiness in                     things external to them, in property, rank, society and the                     like. Their centre of gravity is not in themselves, but is                     constantly changing its place with every whim and desire.<\/p>\n<p>The ancient Greeks found happiness to be what they could                     put into life and not what they could loot out of it. Socrates                     exclaimed, when he saw articles of luxury laid out for sale:                     &#8220;How much there is in the world that I do not want!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Those who base their happiness on work, interests, friendships,                     the pursuit of an ideal, and health, are in position to anticipate                     the simplest pleasures with passionate expectation. They have                     an honest purpose in life, a just estimate of themselves and                     others, and they obey rules they know to be right.<\/p>\n<p>Such men and women have learned the art of renouncing some                     things in order to possess more securely and fully the things                     they value. They know their powers and limitations, and find                     satisfaction in a line of activity which they can do well.                     They know that values are not in things, but in their thoughts                     about things. When life seems to have lost its meaning it                     is because something has happened in the valuer, because values                     result from valuing.<\/p>\n<p>Ambition can be treacherous to the man pursuing happiness.                     It may demand some deviation from the basic standards of value;                     it may cause sorrow, if he has not realized that some achievements                     bring with them a load of care. If his ambitions are too embracing,                     he will suffer confusion, as if someone had got into a department                     store and mixed up the price tags.<\/p>\n<p>It is easy to be led aside after trifles. The ambition of                     a man with true values is not satisfied by granting audiences,                     being invited to receptions, or being elected to boards. Many                     novels remain unwritten and many business deals fall through                     while men make the round of visits designed to curry favour                     with critics and executives.<\/p>\n<p>Trifles are relative. An Einstein could pass an entire lifetime                     without bending his powerful mind to the problem of making                     his bank book balance against his cheque stubs, because in                     his world, where E =mc2, a personal budget =0, but a man contemplating                     business expansion or the buying of a house must pay attention                     to the figures in his bank account.<\/p>\n<h3>What is needed?<\/h3>\n<p>These things are needed by the person seeking a good sense                     of values: health, education, some idealism, a set of principles,                     to think things over, and patience.<\/p>\n<p>It is with good reason that we ask after his health when                     we meet a friend, for good health is fundamental to the enjoyment                     of life. When you are suffering from a toothache or seasickness                     a profit on the stock-market is no more important than                     getting a seat on a bus.<\/p>\n<p>Education should instil in us an active faith in the vital                     values which make our lives worth living. Choice of values                     is narrowed by ignorance and closed mindedness.<\/p>\n<p>There is today a mountain of knowledge which did not exist                     when our grandparents sat at school desks. Out of all this                     knowledge we must extract the values that have most relevance                     to our lives. It is the task of education to improve our judgment                     about values, so that we keep the useful ore and throw away                     the slag.<\/p>\n<p>Education tells us how human and social problems were solved                     in other ages. Upon this knowledge we may base our working                     out of the solution of personal and social problems which                     are new only in the modern costumes they wear. It is saddening                     to see how many persons, mature in age, lay aside their books                     just at a time when they are best qualified to read them with                     alert judgment and polished taste.<\/p>\n<p>When one becomes able to deal with facts and ideas thoughtfully                     and reasonably, then one becomes greater than one was before.                     This may be thought of as being idealistic, but we must have                     values that are somewhat idealistic or our thoughts tend to                     become earthbound, caught up and entangled in material things.                     Materialism leads a person to try to explain one of Tchaikovsky&#8217;s                     symphonies by tracing the pedigree of the catgut in the violins.<\/p>\n<p>It is true that imagination and idealism serve no useful                     purpose unless they are bridled and guided by common sense.                     But we cannot establish values for ourselves unless we look                     outside the mundane practicalities of life.<\/p>\n<h3>Values are like a compass<\/h3>\n<p>A sense of values enters into, or becomes, a life philosophy,                     something that gives stature, something greatly needed in                     these days, when many people have thrown over the old standards                     without acquiring new ones. They come up against crises new                     to their experience and have no set of values and no habits                     of thought suited to the new situations. Instead of getting                     what they like, they are compelled to like what they get.<\/p>\n<p>That is one great virtue in having a sense of values: you                     have a compass you can trust. When Francis Chichester crossed                     the Atlantic in mid-1962 he was alone in his 28-foot                     sailboat, and all around him the sea met the sky in an unmarked                     horizon. But he was not lost. He had a compass; his course                     was charted; the stars were overhead.<\/p>\n<p>No two days start alike or are exact counterparts, but with                     a compass of values one knows in which direction to sail in                     order to reach the desired port. The compass is a principle,                     made up of underlying ideas and controlling concepts. As Sophocles                     put it: &#8220;Not of today nor yesterday, but from all eternity,                     these truths endure.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Principles are not gathered from the thin air, nor are they                     wrought out by the sweat of daily chores. A value-seeking                     person must allow himself time for spells of solitude in which                     to mull over in personal reflection what his mind has gathered.                     Prince Philip put it this way: &#8220;I have had the opportunity                     of wandering over the hills and also of doing some fishing.                     These pursuits, with the moments of solitude and reflection                     which they give, are invaluable to any man who is trying to                     keep a balanced outlook in the midst of the furious activity                     of modern life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It is probably necessary for everyone, prince or workman,                     to spend a little time once in a while reassessing his life                     and the values by which he lives it. We should not forget                     that a photograph plate, passive in itself, can find &#8211; with                     its face turned in the right direction &#8211; stars which no telescope                     can see.<\/p>\n<p>Meditation may be a re-energizer, too. When we withdraw                     into ourselves to think things over we often gather our energies                     into a tight coil, ready to be unleashed in self-expression.<\/p>\n<p>The person who takes time to meditate may not comprehend                     everything fully, but he will enjoy the thrill of reaching                     the point where there seems to be only a thin veil between                     him and the reality he is seeking. His choice of values made                     on the mountain will serve him well when he returns to the                     valley.<\/p>\n<p>This state is not reached overnight. Besides courage to                     face the issues there is needed patience to work out the answers.                     Patience is a very great word, because it includes maturity                     of thought, mental health, and the refinement of judgment                     which takes account of the consequences of actions.<\/p>\n<p>In a world in which there are so many good people and institutions                     and nations fighting not for something but against something                     there is great need for the dignity of being positive. To                     take up simply the attitude of defending something holds out                     no hope of improvement, but if we make a habit of seeing the                     positive possibilities in every situation we shall gain zest                     for doing significant things.<\/p>\n<p>There is room within this positiveness for the opinions                     of other people. While we must commit ourselves, believing                     strongly in our values and judgment, our sense of chivalry                     should lead us toward open-mindedness. This will give                     us moderation in our thoughts and actions. We will recognize                     the undoubted fact that no opinion is completely right and                     none is completely wrong. Our world is full of middle roads.<\/p>\n<h3>Living effectively<\/h3>\n<p>How effectively we live is the expression of our sense of                     values. Every man is worth just so much as the things are                     worth with which he busies himself.<\/p>\n<p>We should expose ourselves to a context of values in which                     high performance is encouraged. It was said sadly in the report                     of a special study by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund Inc.:                     &#8220;If we ask what our society inspires in the way of high performance                     we are led to the conclusion that we may have, to a startling                     degree, lost the gift for demanding high performance of ourselves.                     It is a point worth exploring.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This carries our thoughts back to the inscription on the                     temple wall at Delphi: &#8220;Know Thyself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The cultivation of excellence, the pursuit of achievement                     for its own sake, is a latent force in nearly everyone. Bringing                     his sense of values out into the open part of his mind is                     one way to make the latent urge effective in action.<\/p>\n<p>Test tubes and text books have not yet made life something                     to be taken like a doctor&#8217;s prescription, a mere following                     of instructions. Everyone has individual talent, but he can                     give expression to it only through initiative, enterprise,                     energy, and invincible optimism. He must come out of his emotional                     shell if he is to satisfy the something within him which is                     unappeased, if he is to be himself and not a pale reflection                     of other people.<\/p>\n<p>This self-fulfilment is not selfishness. To say that                     we should seek within ourselves for the values that will give                     us happiness is not to say that we should descend to self-centredness                     in an animal sort of way. Part of our sense of values must                     express itself in making our contribution to society. We cannot                     realize high values if we are content to exist as nonparticipating                     spectators.<\/p>\n<p>Values are lived, not talked about. A good actor does not                     pause in the middle of a scene to describe the mental agony                     of Hamlet or the jealousy of Othello, but simply conveys it.<\/p>\n<p>This brings us to a crucial point in the discussion of a                     sense of values. There is a time for meditation, but there                     is also a time for action. We must attend to the job in hand                     and work at it calmly, vigorously, without distraction.<\/p>\n<p>We may be affronted by the reception given our sense of                     values, or disappointed by our failure to realize our values                     immediately, but these worries and burned fingers and disappointments                     are trivial in view of our goal. Our real business in life                     is to find something that is true for us, and to live by it.                     Our scale of values provides us with a bench mark from which                     to measure our progress, and a point to which we can return                     for fresh starts.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[42],"class_list":["post-3705","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-42"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1962 - VOL. 43 NO. 1l - On Having a Sense of Values - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1962-vol-43-no-1l-on-having-a-sense-of-values\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1962 - VOL. 43 NO. 1l - On Having a Sense of Values - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"A sense of values is needed in private life as well as in the market place. 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All our lives we are exercising choices, preferring this to that, deciding between better and worse. 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