Monday, 23 November 2009
On The Acquisition Of Knowledge 1/2
The road to the acquisition of knowledge is a well-established path: we've always been supposed to get our knowledge from other people. Parents, teachers, preachers, masters, gurus, and the like, they are the intended intermediaries for us
Before the invention of writing information was handed down through people, from one to the other. The one possessing the information determined who would receive it, and who wouldn't. As such, it was a very effective way to control people
Even millennia after that, information used to be scarce. By 1424, Cambridge University library owned only 122 books. In 1440 the printing press was invented that sped up the speed of printing thus reducing the cost of books
Nonetheless, it wasn't until last century that people could actually get a book and have access to the source itself, first via libraries and later via buying them
But, before, during and after, your parents determined the knowledge you would acquire. After that, the teacher(s) would. The ministers and priests would. In the 60's and 70's people would travel all across the globe to India and other countries, only to search for a master or guru that would fulfill the same role: close or disclose their information stream to you
All these millennia of relying on people for acquiring knowledge have had great impact: we look at people to value the information they have. Whatever your parents say, is true. Whatever your teachers tell you, is true. Whatever ministers and priests tell you, is not only true, but also right, and good. It's the way we were taught and imprinted, and only since the growing availability of information does all that become increasingly challenged
Now, we have information everywhere on the web. Free information, accessible to all. Over 25% of the 6.7 billion people on the face of this earth have access to Internet. That means all those people can make up their own mind. Right?
Wrong. We still divide the world into people we like and dislike. We accept information from people we like as knowledge, and people we don't like or even dislike can say all they want. We're not going to listen to it anyway, let alone think about it
I read a nice blog post about kill your idols the other day. I couldn't agree more with the last sentence:
Think for yourself
This blog post is about what to do with the information you get. My next blog post will be about how to get information
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