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coberst
20th-October-2009, 07:52 PM
Can we create a New Age of Enlightenment?

If one half of one percent of the population acquires the hobby that I call the ‘intellectual life’ such a group could be the foundation for a new Age of Enlightenment.

The original Age of Enlightenment occurred in Europe during the eighteenth century. “The men of the Enlightenment united on a vastly ambitious program, a program of secularism, humanity, cosmopolitanism, and freedom, above all, freedom in its many forms—freedom from arbitrary power, freedom of speech, freedom of trade, freedom to realize one’s talents, freedom of aesthetic response, freedom, in a word, of moral man to make his own way in the world.”

It appears to me that following the completion of our schooling the normal inclination is to pack up our yearbook and our intellect into a large trunk and store it in the attic. Occasionally one might go up to the attic and reminisce about the old days.

What I propose is that following the end of our school days we begin a gradual process of self-actualizing self-learning.

This period of our life is generally filled with our duties to family and career so that not a great deal of time is available for extraneous matters. However, time is always available for important things and the important thing is to ‘keep curiosity alive’.

I suspect that if one does not engage in non job related intellectual efforts for the twenty years between the end of schooling and mid-life that the curiosity with which we started life will have dried up and blown away.

What are non job related intellectual activities? Such activities are what I consider to be intellectualism. Intellectualism is active engagement with ‘disinterested knowledge’.

There is in industry the concept of ‘applied research’, which is research looking for a good way to build a new mouse trap; there is also a concept called ‘pure research’, which is a search for truth that may or may not lead to an enhancement of the ‘bottom line’.

Interested knowledge is knowledge we acquire because there is money in it. Disinterested knowledge is that knowledge we seek because we care about understanding something even though there is no money in it.


The goal of intellectual life is similar to the goal of the artist "the artist chooses the media and the goal of every artist is to become fluent enough with the media to transcend it. At some point you pass from playing the piano to playing music."

I think it is possible for a significant portion of the population of every nation to become intellectuals. What do you think?

Quotes from [i]The Enlightenment: The Rise of Modern Paganism by Peter Gay

Negative Space
22nd-October-2009, 03:28 PM
I agree for the most part. Implementation and organization would be the greatest challenges to what you propose. Of course, one could argue that is what we are aready doing, albiet in forums online....

Yellow
22nd-October-2009, 07:02 PM
Coberst, while your proposal sounds absolutely wonderful, I do not think its possible for a significant portion of the population to become intellectual. Most people simply aren't interested in the pursuit of knowledge. We seek knowledge and logical arguments because it's hard-wired into our personalities, our character and values are built upon it. Others do not seek knowledge for those very same reasons and therefore do not have the drive to become intellectuals.

There is only one strategy I can think of, which may change these proportions. IF personality has some heritable qualities, then one could try to convince intellectual, rational people to make tons of babies. Just encourage every forumite and enery intellectual you meet to mate like crazy and hope to tip the ratios in our favor. Like Mao Tse-Tung, without the communism, but perhaps sharing the goal of world domination through sheer numbers. However, I fear there is a flaw somewhere in this plan...

coberst
22nd-October-2009, 08:12 PM
Coberst, while your proposal sounds absolutely wonderful, I do not think its possible for a significant portion of the population to become intellectual. Most people simply aren't interested in the pursuit of knowledge. We seek knowledge and logical arguments because it's hard-wired into our personalities, our character and values are built upon it. Others do not seek knowledge for those very same reasons and therefore do not have the drive to become intellectuals.

There is only one strategy I can think of, which may change these proportions. IF personality has some heritable qualities, then one could try to convince intellectual, rational people to make tons of babies. Just encourage every forumite and enery intellectual you meet to mate like crazy and hope to tip the ratios in our favor. Like Mao Tse-Tung, without the communism, but perhaps sharing the goal of world domination through sheer numbers. However, I fear there is a flaw somewhere in this plan...


Our (American) educational system has left us with many learning handicaps. It has damaged our curiosity, our desire to learn, and our self-reliance. If we were to try we could overcome these handicaps. The solution is just around the corner if only we had the courage to challenge our tradition of anti-intellectualism.