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Yoshida Shoin

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To consider oneself different from ordinary men is wrong, but it is right to hope that one will not remain like ordinary men.
--
Vol. II

 
Yoshida Shoin

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The typical reaction of liberal intellectuals is to seize on the contradiction here: How can something be both wrong and right, or at least both wrong and OK, at the same time? What liberal intellectuals fail to see is that this so-called contradiction expresses the quintessence of the Machiavellian and therefore the modern, a quintessence that has been thoroughly absorbed by the man in the street. The world is ruled by necessity, says the man in the street, not by some abstract moral code. We have to do what we have to do.
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