Search Results
7/19/2025, 2:03:10 AM
>>12414597
Henrik Ibsen wrote about the paralysis of working life in his play, Enemy of the People.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Enemy_of_the_People#
>In An Enemy of the People, speaking the language of comic exaggeration through the mouth of his spokesman, the idealist Doctor Thomas Stockmann, Ibsen puts into very literal terms the theme of the play: It is true that ideas grow stale and platitudinous, but one may go one step further and say flatly that truths die.
In this we can understand Ibsen's preference for currency in truth. Truth value matters, but if left untended to for too long, a truth is liable to die. What was once true, may be replaced with several other truths if neglected long enough. For example, a job could provide a family, but if that perspective is indebted to tragedy, it might maintain remiss applications in everyday life.
Your fortune: You will meet a dark handsome stranger
Henrik Ibsen wrote about the paralysis of working life in his play, Enemy of the People.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Enemy_of_the_People#
>In An Enemy of the People, speaking the language of comic exaggeration through the mouth of his spokesman, the idealist Doctor Thomas Stockmann, Ibsen puts into very literal terms the theme of the play: It is true that ideas grow stale and platitudinous, but one may go one step further and say flatly that truths die.
In this we can understand Ibsen's preference for currency in truth. Truth value matters, but if left untended to for too long, a truth is liable to die. What was once true, may be replaced with several other truths if neglected long enough. For example, a job could provide a family, but if that perspective is indebted to tragedy, it might maintain remiss applications in everyday life.
Your fortune: You will meet a dark handsome stranger
Page 1