Sharon TateFair Use 17 USC 107Who was Sharon Tate as a Pe...

Who was Sharon Tate as a Person?
An excerpt from the book Sharon Tate Campaign Plan MMXX © 2018 Michael A. Walker
"One of the first attempts at a more comprehensive Sharon Tate biography for the general public occurred in May of 2000. In Greg King’s book – which is at times venerable and at times apologetically exploitative – he mentions[1] that Sharon Tate usually carried with her a copy of Will Durant’s book The Story of Philosophy: The Lives and Opinions of the Greater Philosophers[2]when going on long voyages abroad. Durant’s brief introduction includes the following related philosophical concept that Secretary Donald Rumsfeld would later amplify regarding how the formal planning process begins to tackle wicked problems: 'Philosophy is a hypothetical interpretation of the unknown or of the inexactly known in the front trench in the siege of truth.' What we can say from this biographical detail about Sharon is that she was a self-disciplined reader well able to navigate abstract, conceptual subjects with her introspective intellect. Images of Sharon seem to almost exude this introspective personality of hers. The ability to differentiate between the known and unknown with increased fidelity leads to the development of assumptions that allow the planning process to go forward."
[1] King, G. (2000). Sharon Tate and the Manson Murders. Barricade Books Inc. Fort Lee, New Jersey, United States. ISBN: 978-1569801574.[2] Durant, W. (1961). The Story of Philosophy: The Lives and Opinions of the Greater Philosophers. Simon and Schuster, New York, New York, United States. ISBN: 978-1299781481.
Published on February 14, 2019 01:47
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