memories2011Leave enough space to be open-minded.
January 1, 2011
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memories: Leave enough space to be open-minded.
author: by Ray Kurzweil
date: January 2011
memories |
An introduction.
I run across 2 types of people. I’ve been thinking about what distinguishes these groups, what causes somebody to be in one group or the other. And about my own life-long career inventing. Living into the future isn’t easy. Not just because you have to imagine, anticipate, and solve for problems that haven’t happened yet. But also because you have to build-up emotional resilience — for when your projects fail, when you can’t see the path clearly, for when people criticize you. There’s a personal flame within that keeps you going — it drive you to make something meaningful happen, and not give-up.
the 1st group.
One group accepts problems. Problems are just the way things are. We need to learn to accept problems. The purpose of life, for example, is to accept death, to become comfortable with it -— after all it’s the natural way.
This group is pessimistic about problems. They believe life will always get worse. They find a lot of evidence for this perspective. Now this view makes perfect sense, because they don’t plan to do anything about the problems anyway. And they don’t think they’ll succeed if they try — so why attempt it.
And if you do try to solve a problem, but your plan fails -— then it’s humiliating. As bad as the world is, you just made it worse by wasting time + resources.
the 2nd group.
Then there’s the other group. The second group does not accept problems. The goal of life is to conquer them, surmount limitations (natural or otherwise), defeat ignorance, overcome suffering — of people, animals, and the Earth.
This group is optimistic, and realizes that optimism isn’t an idle prediction about the future — but a self-fulfilling prophecy. They believe in the power of human ideas to create the world we want — virtual+ real ones.
This group isn’t afraid of failure. They believe in its value. It simply means experience, because failure is just success deferred. This group is patient with failure -— but impatient with problems + limitations.
So what accounts for whether a person is in the first group or the second group? I’ve really been thinking about this question, and haven’t got an answer. If you think of one, please let me know.
The value of an open-mind.
It probably has something to do with being open-minded to new ideas. Leaving enough space for new perspectives, not being overly attached to what you’ve learned — and to the common wisdom. And not being afraid of disapproval from other people. For example, the legendary physicist Albert Einstein PhD created thought experiments that defied both. But he stuck with the conclusions he reached, despite early ridicule.
I know where to find the second group — and that’s at the start-ups, schools, and organizations across the world that are moving horizons. Today’s diverse youth, entrepreneurs, thinkers, change-makers, and pioneers believe in the power of human thinking — and action — to overcome any challenge. That’s also my own point-of-view.
In my life, it’s been a thrill to meet some of these people: my readers, colleagues, and fans of all ages. Plus young dreamers + shakers, adventurous retired people, and teachers + students from today’s brave new projects. I hope to keep collaborating in the years ahead — making good things happen.
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webpages
platform: Wikipedia
profile ~ Albert Einstein PhD
profile ~ and his thought experiments.
profile ~ definition of a thought experiment.
— notes —
PhD = doctorate