“The greatest minds, as they are capable of the highest excellences, are open likewise to the greatest aberrations; and those who travel very slowly may yet make far greater progress, provided they keep always to the straight road, than those who, while they run, forsake it.” – Discourse on the Method of Rightly Conducting One’s Reason and of Seeking Truth by René Descartes
“The truth, however shocking or uncomfortable, in the end leads to liberation.” – Gervasis
M: On Academia and Free Thinking
Academia poses a huge danger to true intellect. In university, students consume information, process it, memorize it, and take it as absolute truth. If humans in the past did this, we would perhaps still think we are the center of the universe. If Einstein did this, we would never have calculus. we are in danger today of brain-death. People are susceptible to believing everything they read if it is printed in a book, if a professor teaches it in a classroom.
We fail to realize that nothing is absolute, nothing is final. this is why academia is a danger to true intellect. Students get in to the habit of blind acceptance, for they are taught to trust and worship every word that slips from the mouths of their professors. students aren’t asked to question or to challenge what they read and hear, but process it, compare it, rewrite it–rather than invent something of their own, something critical and examined.
And this habit, of reprocessing, of letting others do the real thinking, leaks out in to their daily lives. They define love by the spectacles and exhibitions that Hollywood produces, through emulating television stars, they develop loose morals and lack principles, they desensualize and devalue sex, they degrade the value of relationships-romantic and platonic. Academia needs to shift before it destroys our minds.
“To see the things of the present moment is to see all that is now, all that has been since time began, and all that shall be until the world’s end; for all things are of one kind and one form.” – Marcus Aurelius, Book Six, 37.
M: Living ‘for’ the Moment
Everyone tells you “Life is too short” or perhaps to “Live in the moment”, but I doubt that with how much, in our lives, is dominated by the shadows of our past and the notions of our future that we can or that we know what that actually is. Maybe its all about learning to move and negotiate with those parameters to learn what the moment actually brings.
“For the moment,” thats the challenge.
“Thoughtful conversation is the best way to examine life and make it worth living.” – Socrates
Your past gains value through your present actions and resolutions.
“Freedom isn’t the act of shedding our attachments, but the practical capacity to work on them,to move around in their space, to form or dissolve them.” – The Invisible Committee, The Coming Insurrection
“Reflect on three things each day: who you are, what you know, and what you want.” – Saint Augustine
from the book Confessions