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Perfect In The Autobiography By Benjamin Franklin

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Perfect (n.) 1. Conforming absolutely to the description or definition of an ideal type. 2. Excellent or complete beyond practical or theoretical improvement. 3. Entirely without any flaws, defects, or shortcomings. Perfection is something many urge to have, yet can never grasp. It is human nature to always want something superior. Bigger is reckoned as better, but how complex it is to achieve such moral values when we are granted with an animalistic mindset? In Benjamin Franklin’s “ The Autobiography,” Franklin observes his daily routine and writes about some of his successes that may help the reader improve their life using values of self-discipline and strong character morals. His examples of various assets he deems compulsory for an unflawed, …show more content…

The copious amounts of negativity cannot impact the people, or can they? Even the most stern can fall into pressures of society and the impressions of others, too afraid to stand out, even if he or she has a chance to turn their dull rock life into a diamond. For instance, an ingenious teenager can change his or her ways due to the high pressure of trying to blend in with the other students; fitting into the puzzle is more important to an individual than being a piece that completes its own masterpiece, simply alone. Franklin takes note of thirteen key virtues: temperance, silence, order, resolution, frugality, industry, sincerity, justice, moderation, cleanliness, tranquility, chastity, and humility. Franklin does not find is necessary to acquire all of these virtues but, “fix it on one of them at a time; and, when I should be the master of that, then to proceed to another, and so on.” (P142). Benjamin Franklin believes that if a person were to give importance to these factors one at a time, slowly but surely, he or she could improve as a …show more content…

He provides examples and reasoning behind his comments almost like his entire life is one large book; his writing is straightforward and clearly shows his reasoning behind this text. The way he writes proves his importance to the American history. His thoughts were practical; Franklin was an inventor or scientist. Being heuristic requires a thinker-type persona that Franklin definitely was, but not all his thoughts were practical and mathematically solved. The sophisticated thoughts not only contributed to Franklin’s success, but also gave a philosophical motivation that Americans, at the time, lacked. This insightful account of the way Franklin disciplined himself gives the reader moral values to think about that could affect society and their lives. Change is volatile, the outcomes are not always propitious, but no change at all, not even for the better… that is lethal; after all, a person does not have to be an inventor, like Franklin, to reinvent

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