English, asked by dondee4349, 6 months ago

An essay on humility versus vanity

Answers

Answered by Bharat1309
0

Answer:

your answer is here.....

please mark me brainliest!

Explanation:

In his Autobiography, Franklin challenges the traditional idea that vanity is a vice. As he says, “Most People dislike Vanity in others whatever Share they have of it themselves, but I give it fair Quarter wherever I meet with it…” Vanity is something “productive of Good to the Possesor & to others that are within his Sphere of Action” for Franklin, so, accordingly, he lists it as something he hopes to gratify by writing his Autobiography.

Naturally, with his many personal, civic, and scientific achievements, Benjamin Franklin might have more than the average person to be vain about, so it is important for his project of self-improvement that he gratify his vanity without seeming vain. Thus, when he lists Humility as one of the thirteen virtues he aspires to bring to perfection in himself, his instructions are to “be like Jesus and Socrates”—two historical figures who, while maintaining an air of humility, achieved incredible fame.

Franklin considers Pride and Vanity to be the natural passions most difficult for a man or woman to subdue. So, he advises his reader, there will be quite a bit of both in what he calls his “History.” “For,” he says, “even if I could conceive that I had completely overcome [vanity], I Should probably be proud of my Humility.”

Similar questions