| The Columbia World of Quotations. 1996. |
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| NUMBER: | 61799 |
| QUOTATION: | America is a much newer experiment in human living, one with moral concerns at its core. In this respect it differs from Europe, which has preferred sophistication and worldly wisdom to righteousness, and resembles China, which saw the universe itself as essentially a moral order. However materialistic Americans may be in their economic pursuits, their ceremonies emphasize the material far less than European societies have. America has imposing official architecture. Washington, D.C., boasts a radial baroque stateliness. Yet one of its most important buildings, the White House, is a modest dwelling, its scale far smaller than that of the palaces of Europe and Asia. |
| ATTRIBUTION: | Yi-Fu Tuan (b. 1930), U.S. geographer, educator. Shadows and Light, epilogue, Passing Strange and Wonderful: Aesthetics, Nature, and Culture, Island Press (1993). |
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| | | The Columbia World of Quotations. Copyright © 1996 Columbia University Press. |
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