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>
> What I don't agree with is the rather invasive attitude that "there's too
> much knowledge out there, so I don't need to know any of it as long as I can
> look it up." I had a college journalism professor who said that Americans
> have a very surface-level knowledge. We deal with facts and experiences
> rather than going deeper into theories, ideas, and philosophies.
>
Reading your post, I suddenly conceived an argument for knowledge:
what is valuable is not the information itself, but the links that
your mind makes between the pieces of information. The more
information you've absorbed, the more connections you can make. The
more connections you can make, the more like you are to have an
insight, or an original or creative idea. So long as the information
is external, this process can't happen. Therefore, simply knowing
where to find the information is less valuable than actually
remembering it.
--
Bruce Byfield, Outlaw Communications
Contributing Editor, Maximum Linux
604.421.7189 bbyfield -at- axionet -dot- com
"The squire has a piece of paper that says he owns the land,
The bishop has a bible that says our souls are damned,
Mackenzie had a printing press, it's soaking in the bay,
And if Mackenzie comes again, there will be hell to pay."
-Dennis Lee, "Mackenzie"
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