CONVERSATION;
INTELLECTUAL STIMULATION
Our intellectual activities in the order of their importance may be graded this way: first, cogitation; second, observation; third, reading.
I wish I could include conversation in this short list. One would naturally suppose that verbal intercourse with congenial friends should be one of the most profitable of all mental activities; and it may have been so once but no more. It is now quite possible to talk for hours with civilized men and women and gain absolutely nothing from it. Conversation today is almost wholly sterile. Should the talk start on a fairly high level, it is sure within a few minutes to degenerate into cheap gossip, shoptalk, banter, weak humor, stale jokes, puns and secondhand quips. So we shall omit conversation from our list of useful intellectual activities, at least until there has been a radical reformation in the art of social discourse.
Romans 14:17–19; Ephesians 4:29; Colossians 3:16–18
Man: The Dwelling Place of God, 161, 162.