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Oh,
What a Blow That Phantom Gave Me! by Edmund Carpenter
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THE
MEANINGFUL EXPERIENCE
The
case is not isolated. It was a favorite joke, in many parts of the world,
to fire a cannon next to an unsuspecting native. If there were crowds,
there was generally consternation. But with single individuals, again
& again we have reports of men totally unmoved. Dr.
Jean Itard's famous account of a "wild" boy found in the forests
of Aveyran in southern France, in 1799, tells how, when a door was suddenly
slammed, the boy didn't move. For a time it was thought he must be deaf,
until one day he was observed listening to the sound of a mouse in the
leaves. A
child, sleeping in a pram, may ignore the roar of a diesel truck, but
respond to its mother's whisper. We respond only to what we recognize, to what holds meaning for us. |
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Oh, What a Blow That Phantom Gave Me! by Edmund Carpenter Holt, Rinehart and Winston - New York, Chicago, San Francisco Copyright 1972, 1973 by Edmund Carpenter translated to hypermedia and edited by Michael Wesch 2002 |