- Sincerity
Sincerity is the
virtue of one who speaks truly about his or her own feelings, thoughts, desires. Sincere expression carries risks to the speaker, since the ordinary screens used in everyday life are opened to the outside world. At the same time, we expect our friends, our lovers, our leaders "to be sincere".incerity in Western societies
Sincerity has not been consistently regarded as a
virtue in Western culture.Fact|date=April 2008 First discussed byAristotle in his "", it resurfaced to become an ideal (virtue ) inEurope andNorth America in the 17th century; and it gained considerable momentum during theRomantic movement , when sincerity was first celebrated as anartistic and social ideal. Indeed, in mid- to late-nineteenth century America, sincerity was an idea reflected in mannerisms, hairstyles, women's dress, and the literature of the time.More recently, sincerity has been under assault by several modern developments such as
psychoanalysis andpostmodern developments such asdeconstruction .Fact|date=March 2007 Some scholars view sincerity as aconstruct rather than a moral virtue—although any virtue can be construed as a 'mere construct' rather than an actual phenomenon.Literary critic
Lionel Trilling dealt with the subject of sincerity, its roots, its evolution, its moral quotient, and its relationship toauthenticity in a series of lectures published under the title "Sincerity and Authenticity ".Aristotle's views on sincerity
"perseus|Aristot.|Nic.+Eth.|1127b3"
According to Aristotle "
truthfulness or sincerity is a desirable mean state between the deficiency ofirony orself-deprecation and the excess ofboast fulness." [ [http://www.sparknotes.com/philosophy/ethics/section4.rhtml Sparknotes.com, Ethics, Section 4. Last visited, April 25, 2008.] ] [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=Bwq6k-MunOAC&pg=PA103&lpg=PA103&dq=nicomachean+ethics+and+sincerity&source=web&ots=60d52vT2aj&sig=EppbqkTveUFX6TKx2l0eHMhZwgI&hl=en Google Books Nicomachean Ethics, Book 4, p. 103, 1127b3-31 by Aristotle] ]incerity in Confucian societies
Beyond the Western culture, sincerity is notably developed as a virtue in
Confucian societies (China ,Korea , andJapan ). The concept of "chéng" (誠) as expounded in two of the Confucian classics, the "Da Xue" and the "Zhong Yong" is generally translated as "sincerity". As in the west, the term implies a congruence of avowal and inner feeling, but inner feeling is in turn ideally responsive to ritual propriety andsocial hierarchy . Thus, even today, a powerful leader will praise leaders of other realms as "sincere" to the extent that they "know their place". In Japanese the character for "cheng" may be pronounced "makoto", and carries still more strongly the sense of loyal avowal and belief.Etymology
The
Oxford English Dictionary and most scholars state that "sincerity" from "sincere" is derived from the Latin "sincerus" meaning "clean, pure, sound" (1525–35). "Sincerus" may have once meant "one growth" (not mixed), from "sin-" (one) and "crescere" (to grow). "Crescere" derives from "Ceres," the goddess of grain, as in"cereal."ROB KYFF. "THE WHOLE BALL OF FACTS ABOUT WAX."Hartford Courant (Connecticut). LIFE; Pg. D2. April 17, 2002.] BOB EDWARDS. "ORIGIN OF THE WORD CEREAL."National Public Radio (NPR). SHOW: MORNING EDITION (11:00 AM on ET) October 21, 1999.]According to the
American Heritage Dictionary [ [http://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE223.html Bartleby.com] ] , the Latin word "sincerus" is derived from the Indo-European root "*sm̥kēros", itself derived from the zero-grade of "*sem" ("one") and the suffixed, lengthened e-grade of "*ker" ("grow"), generating the underlying meaning "of one growth", hence "pure, clean."Controversy
An often repeated folk etymology proposes that "sincere" is derived from the Latin "sine" = "without", "cera" = "wax". According to one popular explanation, dishonest sculptors in
Rome orGreece would cover flaws in their work with wax to deceive the viewer; therefore, a sculpture "without wax" would mean honesty in its perfection. Another explanation is that "without wax" etimology "is derived from a Greeks-bearing-gifts story of deceit and betrayal. For the feat of victory, the Romans demanded the handing over of obligatory tributes. Following bad advice, the Greeks resorted to some faux-marble statues made of wax, which they offered up as tribute. These promptly melted in the warm Greek sun." [Ruth Wajnryb. " [http://www.smh.com.au/news/words/if-you-hear-buzzing-get-the-wax-out-of-your-ears/2006/11/16/1163266707150.html If you hear buzzing, get the wax out of your ears] "; WORDS.Sydney Morning Herald (Australia). SPECTRUM; Books; Pg. 32. November 18, 2006. ]The
Oxford English Dictionary states, however, that "There is no probability in the old explanation from sine cera 'without wax'". Also note the entry on "sincere" in [http://books.google.com/books?id=OHkKAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA555&dq=sincerus+origin&lr "An Etymological Dictionary of the English Language"] by Walter William Skeat (p. 555) and [http://books.google.com/books?id=eXZRfqgU3QoC&pg=PA145&dq=sincerus+origin&lr=&sig=O_i9vL1avM4gaJicsFlnH8_a5yc#PPA145,M1 "Storied Words: The Writer's Vocabulary and Its Origins"] By Jeff Jeske (p. 145). The "without wax" etymology is popular enough to be a minor subplot inDan Brown 'sDigital Fortress , though Brown attributes it to theSpanish language , not Latin.References
ee also
*
Congruence
*Honesty
*Sincerely
*A 1912 novel by Warwick Deeping is also called "Sincerity".
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