Evil in the World Today
The virtue of selfishness presupposes the existence of a self. Julian Jaynes posited that the development of writing enable the creation of interior "voice." In the _Iliad_ warriors spoke to each other of being told by gods or spirits to act. But in the Odyssey, our hero is called "clever" because he is a "liar" who keeps his true motives to himself. As late at the 15th century CE, Joan of Arc thought that she "heard voices" never identifying her motivation as internal. Even today, millions of people have no voice in their heads. They routinize actions from imitation, but have no internal motivation. They have no internal experience.
(Reuters) - So you say all you want to do is to take a few minutes to sit down and think without anyone or anything bugging you? Maybe that is true. But you might be in the minority.
A U.S. study published on Thursday showed that most volunteers who were asked to spend no more than 15 minutes alone in a room doing nothing but sitting and thinking found the task onerous.
"Many people find it difficult to use their own minds to entertain themselves, at least when asked to do it on the spot," said University of Virginia psychology professor Timothy Wilson, who led the study appearing in the journal Science.
Researchers then had adult and college student volunteers do the same thing in their homes, and got the same results. In addition, a third of volunteers cheated by doing things like using a cellphone or listening to music.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/0...
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA report on the study here:
http://news.virginia.edu/content/doing-s...
(Reuters) - So you say all you want to do is to take a few minutes to sit down and think without anyone or anything bugging you? Maybe that is true. But you might be in the minority.
A U.S. study published on Thursday showed that most volunteers who were asked to spend no more than 15 minutes alone in a room doing nothing but sitting and thinking found the task onerous.
"Many people find it difficult to use their own minds to entertain themselves, at least when asked to do it on the spot," said University of Virginia psychology professor Timothy Wilson, who led the study appearing in the journal Science.
Researchers then had adult and college student volunteers do the same thing in their homes, and got the same results. In addition, a third of volunteers cheated by doing things like using a cellphone or listening to music.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/0...
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA report on the study here:
http://news.virginia.edu/content/doing-s...
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You want me to _try_ reading Montessori? Do you think that she might be too difficult? Should I read a translation or the original Italian? I ask because in Italian, they say, "tradurre e tradire" - to translate is to betray. Which did you read, the original or the betrayal?
Read your reply to Rich at the top of these comments! You opined "that imagination can be and should be taught." By whom? How?
Try reading Maria Montessori's The Secret of Childhood. It is the best explanation of the child's developing mind I've ever read.
You are right, of course. Every era has had and will have its distractions.
Buddha wants us to achieve Nirvana, which as far as I can tell, is a state of nothingness where the self as the self ceases to exist. Now that scares the crap out of me. I prefer the reincarnation part and never achieve becoming a Brahman.
Today, children are encouraged to socialize every hour of the day, never be alone, bond endlessly with peers, and don't think. Being alone is impossible with cell phones, Facebook, TV and video games. Being alone and just thinking is a foreign concept.
I happen to think that being alone is fine, necessary, and calming. To relate to nature does not take a group to share the experience. Even now, I recharge by walking the property quietly, being in nature. Thoughts and ideas grown from such time.
Not only did I see Kirk Douglas as Ulysses, I watched Armand Asanti as Odysseus before I finally read both books in dual language Greek/English from the Loeb Classics Library. But as a child, in the community swimming pool, on my back, I was a trireme and my arms were oars. Imagination works with whatever material it is given.
Technically, evil imagines that it is being wronged and there is some sort of score that needs to be evened.
That's why political correctness and all of these "wishes" that have taken the guise of "rights" are so detrimental to our society. Literally, we are watching evil take over our country.
Napolean Hill contends that a "burning desire" to accomplish something supercharges the mind. This causes the subconscious mind to work a problem 24/7. Then in that quiet time, when you least expect it, a thought comes to mind that you had never considered before. He claims that Edison discover the light bulb this way, Carnegie perfected his steel process this way, W. Clement Stone built a $6B insurance conglomerate using these principals.
I would guess a cynic would call this hokum. We have to be taught how to think by our schools. As a mature observer of American life, I would argue we have had 100 years of our youth being taught how to think by our public schools. Much of the result is a generation of young people holding degrees without promise, student loans that demand payment, basement accommodations at Mom's place, and no hope of ever eclipsing what the prior generations have done.
So, for me, I will set down at the kitchen table, early in the morning in a quiet house. At the top of a yellow pad I will write a question. Something like, "how can I solve the problem of collecting accounts receivable?" I will concentrate on that question alone. If my mind drifts, I will redirect it. Some of the answers are worthless, but I write them down. Some of the answers are spot on, I write them down too. If I pursue this for a few days, in a week I'll have a page full of ideas to evaluate and try. With all of this prodding of my mind, once in a while, while doing some menial task like mowing the lawn, an idea will flash into my head. I take care to handle that idea in a special way. It is my experience that is my "muse" or "better self" giving guidance.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_...
and the more complete presentation from the Metropolitan Museum of Art here:
http://metmuseum.org/toah/hd/wrtg/hd_wrt...
Writing likely began with NUMERACY. Keeping track of things led to the invention of "big" numbers such as 5, 6, 7... Neither Fred Flintstone nor Ayla could not count to ten. The method was via clay tokens. Pictographic images of clay tokens became cuneiform writing.
See the works of University of Texas art historian, Denise Schmandt-Besserat.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denise_Schm...
and
http://blogs.utexas.edu/dsb/
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