Better Conversations Newsletter
"Raising the Standard of Conversation in Life"
Dr. Loren EkrothLoren Ekroth, Ph.D.
 
aka "Dr.Conversation" 
Prepare to Be Spontaneous
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Today's Contents
Pay Your Dues for Free
Conversation Quotation
Jest Words
La Triviata Quiz
Words of Inspiration
Barbed Ire
Ben Franklin's Brilliant Conversation Group
Today's La Triviata Answer
Quick Links
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This Week's Issue:
April 14, 2011

Hello again, subscriber friend!

 

Today: We can all learn from Ben Franklin.
  
Read on.

Loren Ekroth, publisher

loren@conversationmatters.com

Today's Contents

Words this issue: 982   Est. Read Time:  3.5 minutes 

 

1.   How to Pay Your Dues for Free

2.   Conversation Quotation

3.   Barbed Ire

4.   Jest Words

5.   La Triviata Quiz

6.   Words of Inspiration

7.   This Week's Article: Ben Franklin's Brilliant Conversation Group

8.   Today's La Triviata Answer

 

1.   How to Pay Your Dues for Free 

As you know, I don't ask money for your subscription to "Better Conversations."  What I ask is a few minutes of your time to recommend my newsletter to friends.  That helps me accomplish my mission, "Raising the standard of conversation in life."  Yes, viral marketing.  Easy to do when receiving any issue, online.  Even better, Tweet my website and newsletter.  Share with friends on Facebook.

If -- as I hope -- you get value from "Better Conversations," please spread the word and you'll have "paid your dues."  Many thanks.

 

2. Conversation Quotation     

"Speak when you are angry and you will make the best speech you will ever regret." 

--Ambrose Bierce

3.   Jest Words 

"At the age of eleven or thereabouts women acquire a poise and an ability to handle difficult situations which a man, if he is lucky, manages to achieve somewhere in the later seventies."

        --P.G. Wodehouse

4.  La Triviata Quiz

Remember these lines from a high school English class?

"In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed."

a.   Alfred Lord Tennyson  b.  William Ernest Henley 

c. John Crowe Ransom  d.  Walter de la Mare.

(Check your answer at the end of today's article.)

5.   Words of Inspiration

 

"Loosen up.  Relax.  Except for rare life-and-death matters, nothing is as important as it first seems."

--H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

 

6. Barbed Ire

(Sharp comments about life and other people.)

 

Atheist, n. One who does not believe in God but is still holier than thou.   --L.A. Rollins

 

7.  Ben Franklin's Brilliant Conversation Group

(A reprise of this popular article)

 

In the fall of 1727 Ben Franklin organized a group of men into a club whose primary purpose was inquiry into a variety of questions. This club thrived for nearly four decades and was known as the Junto, also as "the leather apron club." (This group eventually evolved into the American Philosophical Society.) With few exceptions, the members of the group, like Franklin, were practical men: entrepreneurs, tradesmen, merchants. Only a few had much formal education.    

 

 What they did bring to the group was curiosity, a variety of backgrounds and interests, and the willingness to help one another and the community.  To become a member, initiates had to answer four questions:    

 

 "Do you have disrespect for any current member?" (No)  "Do you love mankind in general regardless of religion or profession?" (Yes). "Do you feel people should ever be punished because of their opinions or mode of worship?" (No)  "Do you love and pursue truth for its own sake?" (Yes)    

 

 Franklin set an earnest and yet convivial tone for these meetings, which regularly met on Friday evenings. He preferred a gentle, Socratic method of inquiry, and discussions were to be conducted "without fondness for dispute or desire of victory."    

 

 Members breaking the rules of civility were actually fined to draw attention to their lapses. In a newspaper piece he published shortly after he formed the Junto, Franklin catalogued some of the most common conversation sins, which included "to talk overmuch," speaking too much about your own life, prying for personal secrets, and telling long and pointless stories. Civility and genuine interest in the ideas of others were key. In addition to general topics of debate, Franklin listed 24 topics of conversation through which members could best contribute. Among them were these practical questions:    

 

 "Have you lately heard of any citizen's thriving well, and by what means?"  "Do you know of any fellow citizen who has lately done a worthy action deserving praise and imitation?"  "Have you lately observed any encroachments on the just liberties of the people?"  "Is there any man whose friendship you want and which the Junto or any of them can procure for you?"    

The Junto was both an inquiry group and a mutual aid society through which members could borrow books and money and get support for various enterprises. Mutual respect and support were foundational values. No member was allowed to be merely a "taker." All were required to contribute.  Although the membership could easily have grown large - many wanted to join, Franklin limited the group size and suggested instead that interested persons form their own like-minded groups. He recognized that a certain level of intimacy was required, true friendship, for the Junto to have both comraderie and intellectual honesty.    

In his Autobiography, Franklin describes his own approach to inquiry and disputation, an approach he followed throughout his life and with consummate  success as a politician and diplomat:    

"[I had] the habit of expressing myself in terms of modest diffidence, never using, when I advanced anything that may possibly be disputed, the words certainly, undoubtedly, or any others that give the air of positiveness to an opinion, but rather say, I conceive or apprehend a thing to be so and so; it appears to me or I should think it so and so, for such and such reasons; or I imagine it to be so; or it is so, if I am not mistaken." (Bantam Books (1982) 11-17.)    

"Gentle Ben," as he was often referred to, was a consummate networker, a self-educated philosopher, scientist, and inventor. Ben Franklin was a genius at structuring the tone and rules for honest group inquiry. He was signator of all the major documents in the founding of our country. "The First American."  

 

8.  Today's La Triviata Answer

"In the fell clutch of circumstance
I have not winced nor cried aloud.
Under the bludgeonings of chance
My head is bloody, but unbowed."

Answer:  William Ernest Henley 

Loren Ekroth ©2011, all rights reserved


Loren Ekroth, Ph.D. is a specialist in human communication and a national expert on conversation for business and social life. 


Contact at Loren@conversationmatters.com