Tarxien

 

 


 

David P. Prescott, J.D.
Over the years, I have learned that
"fruitfulness" is to be desired over "productivity." Productivity is a mechanical concept. Machines are productive: they do the same job over and over. Fruitfulness is the blossoming of an inherent capacity1. Apple trees, when nurtured properly, are fruitful. Human beings are designed to be "fruitful," not "productive." Fruitfulness comes from….. (read on)

 

 

Theodore G. Ryan, Ph.D.
I recently asked my university Ethics of Leadership class this question:
"What is the ethical significance of never having discovered what you could have become?" I never ask my classes a question I haven't asked of myself and addressed in my life. My own answer is: It is simply too costly not to discover what one could have become. (read on)

 

 
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