Difference between revisions of "Affability"

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[[File:Dale Carnegie.jpg|thumbnail|right|175px|[[Dale Carnegie]] authored the best-selling book ''How to win Friends and Influence People''. The book recommended showing a genuine interest in other people.  ]]
 
[[File:Dale Carnegie.jpg|thumbnail|right|175px|[[Dale Carnegie]] authored the best-selling book ''How to win Friends and Influence People''. The book recommended showing a genuine interest in other people.  ]]
'''Affability''' is the "quality of being pleasantly easy to approach and talk to; [[friendship|friendliness or warm [[politeness]]".<ref>[https://www.dictionary.com/browse/affability Affability]</ref>
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'''Affability''' is the "quality of being pleasantly easy to approach and talk to; [[friendship|friendliness]] or warm [[politeness]]".<ref>[https://www.dictionary.com/browse/affability Affability]</ref>
  
 
== Affability as a virtue ==
 
== Affability as a virtue ==

Revision as of 23:16, May 17, 2024

Dale Carnegie authored the best-selling book How to win Friends and Influence People. The book recommended showing a genuine interest in other people.

Affability is the "quality of being pleasantly easy to approach and talk to; friendliness or warm politeness".[1]

Affability as a virtue

The Dominican Friars website article The Friendliness Called Affability indicates:

It seems a certain nastiness is becoming increasingly common in the way we deal with those who are not our closest friends. From public figures whose words and actions are broadcast on television, to squabbles in comment sections of online posts, to even the face-to-face interactions of social life, we see more and more records of hostility, anger, violence, and vitriol. Our consciences naturally recoil from this vice – as well they should – but what exactly is the virtue that opposes it?

In the Summa Theologica, Part II-II, Question 114, St. Thomas Aquinas speaks of a certain virtue which is commonly translated as “the friendliness which is called affability.” This friendliness, he notes, governs relationships between people because “it behooves man to be maintained in a becoming order towards other men as regards their mutual relations with one another, in point of both deeds and words, so that they behave towards one another in a becoming manner.” It does not only govern those relationships which are intimate or proximate; rather “Every man is naturally every man's friend by a certain general love; even so it is written (Ecclesiasticus 13:19) that ‘every beast loveth its like.’” This does not mean that everyone must be treated with equal intimacy – some people are connected to us by a closer bond than others – but that there is a minimum affability or common decency which is owed to all persons.[2]

The Chesterton Academy of the Holy Family article Affability is a Virtue indicates:

We are bound together, we human beings.

Everyone belongs, but not everyone knows it. “We are naturally every man’s friend.” (Aquinas)

One fellow’s bad day can suddenly be everyone’s bad day. But if just one person is smiling in the hallway… most often, everyone else follows suit. In fact, studies show that the effect on the brain of seeing one person smiling at you is equivalent to that of finding a free million dollars on the street. The brain’s automatic response is to smile in return. You’d have to make a conscious effort to not smile!

Affability – the virtue of friendliness or agreeability. It is a kind of “mutual well-wishing” that binds a city together. It’s not quite friendship. It doesn’t have to involve any affection at all really. It’s the middle ground between being overly agreeable (flattery – being a ‘yes’ man) and being the sort to always pick a fight, even when no one wants to (quarrelsomeness). It’s when you conform yourself to those around you, to their likes, their interests, their needs, and what they want to talk about.

Sirach 4:7 commands one to “make yourself affable”. Chesterton himself tells us that God’s great secret is His mirth, which every saint intuitively knows.

And if we are the Chesterton Saints, then we ought to listen carefully to St. Teresa of Avila who prays that the Lord “save me from sour-faced saints”. Aristotle says, “No one could abide a day with the sad, nor with the joyless.” We don’t need any more bored, gloomy, mediocre people. We need interested, lively, joyful saints! And when we fall in the ‘awkward conversation’ mud beside the road, let us look to heaven and laugh with the same Teresa, “If this is how you treat your friends, no wonder you have so few.” Mother Teresa said, “A smile is the beginning of love.” So, let’s smile at whatever he sends our way this Saturday.[3]

See also

External links

References

  1. Affability
  2. The Friendliness Called Affability, Dominican Friars
  3. Affability is a Virtue, Chesterton Academy of the Holy Family