
This essay invites listeners into a quiet yet provocative investigation of how we think about time. It sketches two contrasting mental habits: one that leans on the past, treating the present as a mere continuation of what has already been, and another that constantly looks ahead, seeing today as raw material for tomorrow’s possibilities. By labeling the former “legal” or submissive and the latter “legislative” or creative, the author shows how these attitudes shape everything from personal choices to whole societies.
The discussion turns to the uneasy present, a period fraught with moral, aesthetic, religious, and political uncertainty. It suggests that much of this confusion arises when the two mindsets clash inside us without awareness, leading to inconsistent judgments. Listeners are encouraged to recognize which mode guides their thoughts and to consider the benefits of a more deliberate, future‑oriented outlook.
Language
en
Duration
~56 minutes (54K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2014-02-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1866–1946
Best known for imagining time travel, alien invasion, and invisible men, this pioneering English writer helped shape modern science fiction. His stories are thrilling on the surface, but they also question class, power, progress, and the future of humanity.
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