Quite some time ago, I was asked a question about the term “world outlook”. Having answered it I let it go, but have since had a lingering thought that this is a question worthy of a column – if I could collect some good media examples.
Happily, I came upon one such example yesterday, in a Guardian story about Barack Obama’s first day in office. The story (Whirlwind hits Washington as President Obama starts work, January 22, 2009) says, among other things:
President Barack Obama yesterday devoted his first full day in office to ditching one discredited Bush administration policy after another - proposing the closure of the Guantánamo Bay prison and offering a new relationship to Iran.... He also phoned world leaders to emphasize that a new president is in charge, with a completely different agenda and world outlook.
Now, definitions.
The word outlook refers to a view. You look out the window from your room for example and you will see a view and that view is an outlook in its fundamental sense.
You may argue that your room doesn’t have a view. By that you will be speaking figuratively, or philosophically meaning that it doesn’t have a good view, a pleasant view. I recall E.M. Forester’s beautifully written book, A Room with a View, began with an exact discussion about the view, or the lacks thereof, from a hotel room in Italy.
Obviously all rooms must have a view – if, that is, they have windows at all to look out of. But what constitutes a view – a good view – is quite another matter. Different people see views differently, as they view everything else differently. Why?
Because they have different outlooks, different ideas about what is good or evil, or, on smaller matters, what is pleasing and what is, er, repulsing.
And that general outlook on things, on the world as a whole and on life in general is called one’s world outlook, or world view.
Not surprisingly, Obama and his predecessor George W. Bush don’t share exactly the same world view, even if Obama is doing what was Bush’s job before Wednesday. Obama is black for starters, and to my own outlook on history, capitalism and colonization are the roots of all evils in the world today. Bush is from a family that’s always been a member of the elite while from the humble-most roots comes Obama, “whose father less than 60 years ago might not have been served at a local restaurant”, as he said in his inauguration speech.
This is among reasons why the Guardian describes the new American President as having a “completely different agenda and world outlook”.
Now, with the Chinese New Year coming up, I want to ask you, my dear reader, what’s your outlook on 2009?
In other words, do you want to make merry, or just make dough?
If I can have it my way and if you can afford it, I wish you would focus on making merry, and let the dough business take care of itself.
And according to my world view, the dough business will more or less take care of itself if you let it – only if you will let it.
Anyways, Happy Chinese New Year!
The future of English 未来的英语语言变化
Would you let your baby sleep in a box? 你愿意让自己的宝宝在盒子里睡觉吗?
Reunion? Count me out! 重聚? 别算上我!
Bye bye Big Ben's bongs 与大本钟的钟声暂时告别
Hangry 饥饿成怒
The good of gardening 园艺疗法益心养神
Until I'm blue in the face 任凭你磨破嘴皮
Mobiles at the movies 在电影院里玩手机
White / blue-collar worker 白领,蓝领
A cashless society 无现金社会
Barefaced 厚颜无耻的
Is a game just a game? 游戏只是游戏吗?
Lights! Camera! English! 灯光,摄像机,英语!
Bored at work? Sue the boss! 工作无聊怪老板?
To turn something upside down 把……翻个底朝天
One good turn deserves another 以德报德,礼尚往来
How to become a billionaire 如何成为亿万富翁
In defence of shyness 为害羞的人辩护
Clean up your act 改邪归正
The daily commute 每天上下班
To fall at the first hurdle 跌倒在第一关
Apple’s headphone headache? 令人头疼的新款苹果耳机
Are you a team player? 你是一名具有团队精神的人吗?
Wardrobe dilemma 面对衣橱的困惑
Closing the doors on paradise 为生态修复关闭旅游天堂岛屿
The last/final straw 忍无可忍,使人最终崩溃的一击
Bust a gut 拼了命地工作
Why do we laugh? 为什么我们会笑?
Off the hook 脱身
Are you addicted to your phone? 你是不是玩手机上瘾了?