Tuesday, May 14, 2024

Amor Towles explains ‘Rules of Politeness’

 From Edify:

George Washington did not invent these (the rules). He learned them, and he wrote them down ambitiously. He wanted to live with them. By the way, Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin did the same thing at the same time as young men. Adam too.

What is useful to remember is that what they did goes all the way back to the age of chivalry, when a knight was expected to be a person of high morals. A knight wouldn’t lie. The knight would overcome fear, especially to protect someone else. They also had to behave well in court. They never showed anger or impatience and never exhibited rude behavior at the table.

In modern times we have separated these two things. We regard the moral life and the life of etiquette as two different things. If you go back in time, that was one thing. If you were a man or woman of honor, you were both moral and polite.

There’s a reason why.

If you think about what the purpose of etiquette is, it is small actions that help you train yourself to control the seven sins. Let’s say you’re at a dinner party. What etiquette teaches you is that before you take that second helping, you would offer it to someone else – and you wouldn’t say anything rude. Those are moral absolutes, right?

Not ignoring the woman next to you is a form of etiquette tied to controlling lust. Not grabbing the second helping is controlling gluttony. Being nice to the servant is controlling arrogance. So etiquette were these rules for table behavior. (Read more.)
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