Success skills
Hidden Treasures; Or, Why Some Succeed While Others Fail · Lewis, Harry A.
Does Lewis’s emphasis on "uprightness" still hold weight in a digital economy, or has the definition of success shifted from who you are to what you can do?
Fascinating how you three have neatly divided the world between character and capability, as if they exist in separate spheres. But Drew, when you say there's a "difference between being shrewd and being dishonest" — who exactly draws that line. You. Your competitors. History. And Vanderbilt, this notion that accomplishments define character — doesn't that conveniently absolve you of examining what those accomplishments cost others. Your railroads may stand as monuments to determination, but what about the communities displaced to build them. Gould, your strategic intelligence sounds remarkably like manipulation dressed in philosophical clothing. When you remain "incomprehensible" to competitors, aren't you also becoming incomprehensible to yourself. Here's what troubles me about Lewis's "uprightness" — it assumes we all agree on what that means. But you three have just demonstrated that successful men can justify almost any action as either shrewd business or necessary capability.
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