Human Curiosity
How it Became the
Primal Force to Create and Drive the Modern World1
Daniel Greenberg
I.
I’d like to start by telling you how I got to this
subject, because this helps understand how I got to the conclusions I
drew. It all began in a history
seminar. We were discussing the
Industrial Revolution which, as is well known, basically started in the latter
half of the eighteenth century. As we
were talking about it, I began to ponder the question: Why did it happen in the
late 18th century? Why
didn’t it happen a lot earlier? After
all, the components of the Industrial Revolution had been in place since
ancient times. For example, the theory
of mechanical machines was something that had been thoroughly elaborated in
ancient physics. People knew how to
multiply effort. Also, there exists an
ancient Greek drawing of a rudimentary steam turbine engine from which it is
clear that the principles behind such a device were quite well known. Furthermore, there were factories in the
Roman empire where people produced large quantities of goods for distribution
and sale. All this made me wonder why
it took until the 18th century for the Industrial Revolution to get
launched. Clearly one needed more than
technology, which is widely considered the primary essential factor that drove
the Industrial Revolution. The question
was: what was that “more”? When I
finally realized what the answer was, I came up with a much deeper
understanding of the driving forces behind productivity and behind economic
activity in general.
So let me take you back to my initial probings on the
subject. The basic spur to making
anything, from the earliest time in human history, is to satisfy the physical
needs for survival. We don’t think
about this much because we in the developed world are way beyond the survival
mode of existence, but we all know that the three basic physical needs are
food, clothing and shelter. For most of
human history, for the overwhelming majority of people, meeting these three
basic needs even minimally was a lifetime project that absorbed all of their
energy. Indeed, the prehistoric
archeological record reveals a wealth of human ingenuity focused on creating
the means of satisfying these three basic needs, and on competition over
meeting those needs, mostly in the form of war.
Let’s just look at some examples of how far the ancients
got with their technology when it was focused specifically just on those three
needs. We know that they were
tremendously successful in finding ways to enhance food production. I remember how amazed I was when I first
learned about the incredible irrigation projects that were built all over the
ancient world. In the Mesopotamian
Valley, currently known as Iraq, there were huge irrigation projects spanning
the entire country. In Egypt, the waters
of the Nile were spread through ingenious systems of pumps and water wheels and
canals that were carefully maintained to provide water to large tracts of
land. There is the so-called “hydraulic
civilization”, which is prehistoric and which spanned southeast Asia, Indonesia
and even came up to the Arabian Peninsula.
Its name derives from the fact that we have virtually no other evidence
of its existence except for enormous waterworks that were created for
irrigation – dams, reservoirs, and pipelines that were built out of stone,
without mortar, and that were fitted so perfectly that they were leakproof.
We know that the ancients showed tremendous ingenuity in
making clothing. People learned how to
tan leather. I don’t know how many of
you have ever tanned leather, but let me assure you it’s quite a process. Cleaning the skins and devising the means to
make them last – I often ponder how anybody ever thought that up. Or how people invented yarn for
weaving. I could look at a sheep from
now until doomsday and it would never occur to me to do the things you have to
do to make yarn. Or linen: taking a
particular grass, soaking it in a river forever, and then pulling it out and
processing it.
I don’t have to elaborate on how technologically advanced
the ancients were in creating the tools of war. In that connection, they developed metallurgy to a high art
without really knowing very much about what we today
consider the basic chemistry
of metallurgy.2 Perhaps the
most interesting focus for a lot of creative ingenuity in pre-modern times was
in that key domain for survival, religion, because above all people
thought from the very earliest times that in order to maintain their survival
they had to have the blessings of the cosmic powers that ruled the earth. So they put a tremendous amount of effort
into trying to make sure that they were on the right side of those cosmic
powers.
The point I’m trying to make is that pre-modern times
achieved an immensely sophisticated technological state in all of these areas
that are directly connected with survival – but basically only up to the point
where survival was necessary. One never
really had to go beyond that. There was
no need to tinker with success if you could manage to feed your population so
they didn’t starve, if you could manage to have them clothed enough so they
didn’t freeze to death, and if you could manage to have them housed enough so
that they didn’t die from exposure.
Life was precarious anyway, and if you lived to the grand old age of
thirty or forty, you were really doing well.
But there is a key additional factor that enters and muddies
the waters. That factor was first noted
explicitly by Aristotle, who starts his central book – the book on which all of
his thinking is based, his Metaphysics – with the remarkable statement
that “human beings are naturally curious.”
Now, that is a really odd statement to make because curiosity is
really counter-intuitive. Curiosity
is activity without a predetermined purpose.
Or, to put it in a different way: curiosity says, “If it ain’t broke,
fix it anyway.” It’s totally
bizarre. It means that people explore
the unknown by virtue of the fact that they are human. This is something that Aristotle claimed to
recognize as a universal human trait.
He understood that it meant looking for new experiences, searching for
the unknown; and of course when you’re searching for the unknown it means
taking risks. There’s a lot of talk
nowadays about how teenagers are risk-takers, because we look around us and see
teenagers doing that, but what Aristotle says is that all human beings are
risk-takers, not just teenagers. And
they’re doing it all the time for no other reason than that they’re human.
The other thing Aristotle said which was key to
understanding what happens later is that the opportunity for curiosity to
function freely and to be indulged in depends on the availability of leisure;
and because for Aristotle “culture” meant all human activity that was over and
above the basic bare bones of survival, what he was saying was that for people
to create culture, they have to have leisure.
Since in his day almost nobody had time to spare, the availability of
leisure was very limited.
Summarizing: leisure and curiosity and culture were three
factors that Aristotle saw as being intimately linked. That immediately opens a window into the
lives of the rich and famous in the ancient world and the middle ages. Throughout that time, there existed a small
group of people who were especially well-endowed with wealth. This elite had the power and ability to be
able to have leisure and be supported by the rest of the population. And they’re the ones who created culture,
all of it! It’s quite a list of
accomplishments, produced by a very thin veneer of society. Just think about it. They created art. I’m not talking about the fact that even busy people every now
and then can scribble on walls; I’m talking about really sophisticated
art. Great edifices. Great murals. Great mosaics. All
sponsored by people whose sole interest was to have something beautiful to look
at, something really delightful. People
who were never satisfied. No pharaoh
ever said, “Well, there are a lot of nice pyramids out there with all kinds of
pretty stuff; I don’t need to build another one.” Pharaohs built not just because they too wanted a place in
history, but because they wanted something new, something different. They wanted their workmen to make something
more interesting, something awe-inspiring.
They created literature.
It’s hard to think of anything that is more a “waste of time” than
literature. Especially in ancient
times, where you had to scribble everything out longhand and almost nobody
could read. Imagine a person who was
moved in ancient times to write a play.
Who did he write the play for?
Who’s going to read it? How
lucky we are that any of them survived because there were only a handful of
manuscripts of each one! In fact, most
of what was written in ancient times didn’t survive. The great repertory of ancient literature – the library of
Alexandria – went up in flames in the 8th century. With that, most of
the writing of the ancient world disappeared.
They had entertainment.
Not only theater, but games.
They had fun, they had parties.
If you have read the “Symposium” by Plato, which is nothing other than
the story of a really wild drunken party featuring Socrates and his buddies,
you’ll get an idea of how the elite caroused.
Cuisine. We have cookbooks from
ancient times, for the elite. Do you
think the average person looked at a cookbook?
Finally, the elite were the ones who engaged in science and philosophy, who went to little academies and listened to
the masters speak. Unfortunately, the
only extensive surviving record we have of this is Plato’s Dialogues,
which is a terrible shame because we know these academies existed all over the
place.3 Plato’s Dialogues provide a wonderful
picture of these small knots of people who had lots of time on their hands, who
obviously were very wealthy, and who chatted about all the important
philosophical questions that we still talk about today.
I have to tell you about just one such question, because
it has to do with curiosity, and it shows you how bold Aristotle was when he
talked about curiosity. There’s a
dialogue of Plato’s in which Socrates asks the question, “How can you ever look
for anything new?” – which is the essence of curiosity. The problem, as he saw it, was that if it’s
new, you don’t know that it’s there, so you can’t look for it; and if you’re
looking for it, then it’s not new, because you know it’s there. He tangles himself in his quest for an
answer page after page, until he comes up with the only answer he could figure
out, which is: you can’t ever seek something new; rather, everybody is born
with all the knowledge of everything within him, but they forget it at
birth. Thereafter, all of the search
for ostensibly new things involves trying to recollect what we once knew.
Aristotle didn’t buy that at all. He was much more practical. He said, in effect, that people by nature
look for new things all the time. They
have no idea what they’re looking for; they’re just looking, pretty much at
random.
One thing Aristotle missed that is a major contributor to
cultural development is communication.
Communication pushes the boundaries of what you can explore. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel if you
can communicate with people and find out what they’ve already found out. So a tremendously important piece of the
curiosity factor in human development is being able not just to grope around
the world on your own, but to engage in some kind of exchange with other
people, to call upon the collective experience of the group, in order to learn
more about where you’re headed.
Remember, virtually all communication in early times was oral. People developed the talent for memorizing
huge quantities of information. In
fact, much of the literature that has survived from the ancient world was
transmitted from one generation to another by memorization before it was
committed to writing. There were
professionals who specialized in this.
Then writing came into play, and made it easier. Writing, as we all know, is one of the great
cultural breakthroughs, even though not a lot of people wrote and not a lot of
people could read, and everything had to be passed around hand-to-hand in
manuscript form. Still, if you compare
the situation before writing and after writing, you realize that writing made
possible the availability of a lot more base-line knowledge from which
curiosity could take off and advance into new territories instead of starting
from scratch.
Let’s summarize the human condition in pre-modern
times. Briefly, the overwhelming
majority of people struggled for existence.
They were satisfied if they could meet their basic needs. They didn’t have time or energy to deal with
the broader culture. There was a small elite that had the leisure to create and
transmit culture from generation to generation. The rate of cultural development was limited by the small number
of people who belonged to the elite; by barriers to communication, due to the
lack of mobility which made face-to-face contact between people who lived far
apart rare; and by the difficulty of diffusing information through the written
word. But I want to add a key point: the
curiosity-driven culture of the elite was a consumer-driven culture. It was the elite that demanded new
experiences, and led to the creation of all of the cultural treasures that we
now treasure so much. They wanted
novelty, innovation. They were never
satisfied with what they had. They were
never satisfied with what existed. They
always wanted more. They always wanted
prettier. They always wanted
variety. And they created all
that. We can see some of the results in
the museums we go to today, where we can enjoy the products of this ancient,
elite, consumer-driven culture.
II.
Now we can return to our original question: what about
the Industrial Revolution? How did it
come about, and how is it related to all the groundwork I’ve been laying? The tie-in occurs in what I like to think of
as history’s first “big bang” – the explosive early modern era. The time between the 15th and 18th
centuries is a really tiny span of time historically, just three centuries
compared to the hundreds of thousands of years that human beings existed, the
tens of thousands of years that urban civilizations existed, and the thousands
of years that writing existed. During
these 300 years there was a series of upheavals that occurred particularly in
the Western world. Each one was largely
accidental, and their concurrence was equally accidental. All in all, they constituted a set of
historical coincidences of staggering proportions, which led to unintended and
entirely unanticipated consequences.
We’re all aware of them individually, but it’s only when you put them
together against the background that I’ve just outlined that you get a sense of
the explosive impact they had on Western culture. I will discuss them no particular order, because they didn’t take place in any special
order.
The invention of movable type printing. That was basically invented as a way to save
on money for scribes. Scribes were
expensive, they got sick, they were a bother to deal with. Gutenberg figured out a way to save on
scribal time by assembling movable type and making replications of it. At the time, no one realized the incredible
fallout that would follow from that little invention. I don’t know how many of you ever saw early printing
presses. They were incredibly difficult
to operate. The letters had to be
individually carved out of wood or cast out of metal. Then they had to be set line by line, after which they had to be
laid out on a page and held together firmly.
Then somebody came over with a huge ink roller and rolled it along the
top of the type, after which a huge sheet of paper was laid on top and pressed
against the type. Have you seen
pictures of presses? There’s a large
screw with a big block of wood on its end.
As you lower the screw, the wood gets lowered onto the paper, then it is
raised, the paper extracted and hung up to dry, and the process is repeated for
each sheet. The point I’m trying to
make is this: as tedious as this process is, it still enables you to replicate
hundreds of times in a day. Can you
imagine how long it took to write that sheet longhand – if you could find a
scribe? And how expensive it was? All of a sudden, literacy becomes something
worthwhile. It didn’t make any sense to
read before. What was the point of
reading? There were hardly any
books. Now there’s something to
read. Human beings are naturally
curious. They thirst for new
information. The availability of books
fosters independent research – and thinking – for everybody who could lay their
hands on a book and mull over its contents.
It was worth pursuing even if they only had a few minutes of spare time,
because books became relatively cheap and plentiful now.
Printing, books, and literacy constituted a time bomb for
religion. The first book ever printed
was the Bible. Virtually nobody ever
actually read the Bible. How did people
find out what was in the Bible? The
preacher told them, and the preacher in turn was told by his teacher in the
seminary. The preacher probably never
read the Bible either. Now all of a
sudden Gutenberg printed Bibles and anybody could read them. The result: many people were motivated to
learn how to read, and when they did they often discovered that it didn’t jibe
with what they had been told. Before
you could turn around, 1500 years of Roman Catholic monopoly on religion in
Europe was shot to smithereens, and it was never restored. All because of human curiosity, all because
people wanted to know what was actually in that holy book. Did they have to read the Bible? After all, life was rolling along as it had
for centuries. The preacher told them
what to do, how to go to heaven, what would get them sent to hell, and all that
important stuff. Life had gone on that
way for 1500 years – what was the problem?
And now, all of a sudden, they had an opportunity to see for
themselves. Why did they bother to
read? It just created problems for
them. It was risky to read. They did it anyway.
Let’s look at another event: the European discovery
of the New World. Now if there
was ever an accident, that was it. The
story behind this is fascinating. We
all know that Columbus went to open a trade route to China. No problem; the earth is round. Everybody intelligent knew the earth was
round. All this business about the
earth being considered flat is a fairy tale.
Aristotle clearly explains that the earth is a sphere, and that
knowledge was part and parcel of ancient science. In fact, the ancient Greek scientist Eratosthenes measured the
diameter of the earth and got it pretty right.
The result showed that the earth was a huge sphere – too big to navigate
sailing West from Europe. Columbus,
however, thought the radius of the globe was much smaller than what
Eratosthenes had determined. He had
reasons to think so, which Thor Heyerdahl outlined in a brilliant tour de
force4.
Columbus also had good reason to seek a route to the Far
East by sailing West. You see, European
trade with the Far East had been monopolized by the Italians for
centuries. The Italians, just like the
Romans in ancient times, controlled the Mediterranean, so they controlled the
flow of goods from the Far East via Asia and the Near East. To be sure, the trade was directed at the
wealthy elite, but the demand was considerable, which made the Portuguese want
to get a piece of the action. So the
Portuguese figured that since they can’t go through the Mediterranean, they
might be able to sail around Africa.
After many brave journeys, they made their way around the Cape of Good
Hope and they found themselves in India, and hence in possession of a good
chunk of the Far Eastern trade. This, in turn, left the poor Spanish king in
the dust. They couldn’t go around
Africa, because that would precipitate a war with Portugal, and they couldn’t
go through the Mediterranean, because the Italians controlled that route. So here comes this eccentric Italian
navigator, Columbus, who says to the Spanish court, “I’ll get you into the
Chinese trade. We’ll go due West.” And he made his case and got the necessary
funds. So in effect it was an accident
of history that the Spanish were forced to seek a different route if they had
any hope of reaching the Far East by avoiding the Italian and Portuguese
monopolies.
They didn’t find China; they found the New World
instead. The irony is that in no time
flat, it became clear that they had found something even better than
China. They found a bunch of people in
the New World who had amassed gold and silver.
Talk about accidents of history!
And what does a good, healthy European do when he sees somebody with
gold and silver? He takes it. So, they took the gold and silver –
shiploads and shiploads of it.
Here once again we encounter another accident of
history. Did you ever stop to think of
why anybody gives a damn about gold or silver?
Actually the Native Americans who mined it didn’t use it as money. For them it was something decorative. In the beginning, when Columbus met them on
his first journeys, they wanted his decorative stuff. As a kid I was taught that the Europeans
initially conned the natives by giving them beads for gold, and our teacher
would say, “That’s a terrible thing. They
really took the natives for a ride.”
But that wasn’t the way that the Native Americans saw it. It’s another example of human curiosity at
work. They had lots of gold, but look
at these beautiful beads! Take our
gold, give us some beads in exchange.
The point is that its’s another accident of history that gold and silver
are Europeans’ mediums of exchange.
What happens as a result of all this?
Europe is flooded with money, and there is a tremendous increase in the
leisure class. That’s what we’ve been
talking about all along. Leisure
suddenly becomes available to an extent that it never, ever had been
before. It’s as if everybody won the
lottery! Money just flows in. It enriches the nobility, and creates a
non-noble elite as well, later called the “middle class” or the “upper
class.” The elite want to indulge their
curiosity. They want the kind of pretty
clothes that the king has, because that looks really nice. So they hire a tradesman to make clothes,
and now he’s got a pile of gold, which he in turn wants to use. This is the “multiplication factor”
economists talk about, and with its help, within a hundred or so years, what
you get is a tremendously rich Western Europe, by accident – totally by
accident. That’s factor number two.
Factor number three that happens at the same time: the
discovery of the cosmos. You
might think that people knew it was out there; they weren’t blind. But up until the 16th century,
people had common sense. Common sense
dictates that when you look up at the sky, you know that you’re sitting here on
solid ground and the heavens are rotating around you with unperturbed
regularity. The sensible thing to
conclude is that the heavenly bodies, which rotate in unison, are stuck on some
sort of rotating celestial sphere.
Aristotle had scientific theories about it, religions had religious
explanations for it. The most important
conclusion about heavenly matter was that it wasn’t like anything on
earth. Earthly matter falls; if the
stuff of which the heavens are made was anything like the earth, it would have
all fallen down a long time ago and there wouldn’t be anything left up there.
Now, optical lenses were common from the Middle Ages
on. They were sold in markets; in fact,
eyeglasses were sold all over Europe just like we sell them in drug
stores. At some point, people playing
around with lenses put a couple of them together, and figured out how to turn
them into a telescope. Galileo was the
first person to become famous for using one, because he made a big fuss about
what he saw when he looked at the moon.
He announced to the world that he could distinguish rivers, lakes, hills
and valleys, just like the earth! And
Mars – Mars has canals! People thought
he was totally crazy. After all, if the
moon was like the earth, it would have fallen down a long time ago. Anyway, how can anyone trust a
telescope? Science is based on hard
knowledge. The first thing you notice
about a lens is that it distorts. A
lens is a distortion machine. Here’s
this crazy fellow Galileo putting two distortion machines together,
looking at the moon, and saying, “I see hills and valleys.”
Give the Catholic Church credit for saying he was a
nut. In context of their time, they had
it right. But in a very short length of
time lots of other people were reaching the same conclusion, and this is
tremendously significant from the point of view of human aspirations. There is a qualitative difference when you
feel that you can reach out to a cosmos that is identical in nature to our own
planet, and that there is an endless variety of worlds to study and discover
out there. Suddenly, the human spirit
soars. You see it in the literature of
the time. Writers are drunk with excitement
about experiencing the universe.
The fourth thing that happened then – and this is related
to the others although it doesn’t follow from the others – was that organizations
were created to foster creativity and promote the creation of culture:
clubs, societies, salons, places where people got together over a meal or for
an evening. Conversations were recorded
and circulated to friends. Suddenly – I
say “suddenly” because we’re talking about a span of less than a hundred years,
a blink of an eye in history – all kinds of societies were set up all over
Europe: scientific societies, artistic societies, musical societies, cultural
societies, salons, for purposes of collaboration and dissemination. That has a
tremendous feedback effect; the more people do it, the more people want
it. It becomes a buzz.
Finally, we have the invention of the financial
infrastructure for modern trade, something absolutely essential for
what happens in the Industrial Revolution.
We can be curious, we can be inventive, but we aren’t going to get
anywhere if we can’t do something with what he have created. That poses a problem: how do you conduct
trade? If you start thinking about the
basic things you need to create an environment in which people can produce in
abundance, then you realize that there’s a whole bunch of things we take for
granted that didn’t exist until just about that period of time; for example,
the idea of a corporation. What an
ingenious idea! What a tremendous boon
to creativity! It enables you to create
a persona that is not a person
at all, that can take risks, raise and lose money, and never put you in
debtor’s prison (which was a highly populated place in those days). And reliable banks – or at least banks that
are semi-reliable. Just the concept of
a bank is impressive. We give somebody
our money to hold. What’s to keep them
from running off? How do you create an
institution that keeps that money relatively safe and yet enables the banker to
lend it to other people so that they can create other institutions?
These are very pedestrian things I’m talking about, but
every one of them had to be in place in order to have the infrastructure to
support increased production. The
industrial revolution is not about millions of people in cottage industries
sitting and knitting at home and selling sweaters. It’s about big companies producing large amounts of things, and
you needed those infrastructures to do it.
One other thing about infrastructure: a stable system of laws and a fair
judicial system to enforce them is extremely important for stable economic
activity. If you cannot have
clear rules of the game and the ability to enforce agreements, you won’t have a
thriving economy. Indeed, that is
considered one of the main factors holding back large parts of the world today
from reaching their full potential for prosperity.
I’ve listed five different major areas in which things
happened during a relatively short stretch of time. In light of these, it becomes a little clearer why the industrial
revolution happened when it did. You
get a growing middle class, and with it a tremendous expansion of demand for
innovation and exciting new experiences.
People all over want stuff. That
means they want lots of stuff produced and they want it produced fast and they
want it produced in variety. That kind
of demand was an open invitation to people to produce, to try to satisfy that
need. Historically, there was never
that level of demand before because you never had that big a leisure class
thirsting for new experiences. Also
there’s an incessant demand for improvement in all kinds of communication,
which is another hallmark of the industrial revolution. Railroads, shipping, telegraph, all are
outcomes of people’s demands to get hold of products, to know what they are and
where they’re located, to be able to send them anywhere, to be able to market
them, to produce them, to ship them.
This explosive growth of trade is the heart of the industrial
revolution.
III.
Let me move on briefly to the second “big bang”of history
– the Information Age. The invention of
computers led to staggering growth in a number of specific areas with which we
are all familiar. I just want to review
them rather quickly.
First of all, the information revolution led to the
ability to produce in much larger quantities and with much higher quality. We’re able now to control production in a way
that couldn’t even be dreamt of fifty years ago. The information revolution has enabled us to micro-manage
production so that we can satisfy individualized demand. That’s really important when you have a
leisure class that is looking for new experiences, because the more people look
for new experiences, the less they want to duplicate the experience that other
people have. They not only want more
clothes, they want more and different clothes. And they don’t want exactly the same cars; everyone wants their
own unique thing. With every passing
year, the ability to micro-manage production has increased demand because the
more variety you’re able to introduce, the more people want of variety –
because people are curious.
Today, you’re able to disseminate information to a huge
pool of recipients. You can put stuff
out there and everybody can access it.
Earlier, writing had made it possible not to have to reinvent the wheel,
because people could share experiences.
Now, you can pinpoint the target audience with whom you wish to share
experiences. You can find the handful
of people in the world who care about the stuff you care about. In a short time you can unearth them, you
can talk to them, you can exchange information with them. The result is a potential for an unending
flow of creativity.
All of these factors in the Information Age give a
tremendous boost to curiosity, which in turn makes everybody have more leisure
and enables them to be more creative.
There is an enormous upward spiral of demand driven by leisure5
and curiosity. In this sense, the
Information Age really turns out to be an extension of the Industrial Age. The same kinds of things are happening from
a socioeconomic point of view that happened in the Industrial Age, except
they’re happening on a much bigger scale because now all the things we could do
in the Industrial Age we can now do
that much better, that much more quickly, and with that much more variety.
I cannot emphasize enough that what’s involved is curiosity
driving human beings as consumers – the very thing that so many people
decry. The consumer in people is not a
person who for some base reason is looking to accumulate material things. It’s a person who is looking to generate
new, exciting experiences. That’s human
nature. You cannot stop it. It has only peripherally to do with money,
or the accumulation of goods, or showing off.
The key factor is: “I want something new and exciting. I want better video games. I want better TVs. I want better movies. I
want lots of different kinds of movies.
I want to create my own movies.
I want to create my own animation.
I want to be able to make my own music.
I want to put together my own CDs.”
A desire for new experiences and creative activity that is driven by
curiosity.
Because Western culture, as I’ve now described it, is so
tied into this fundamental trait of human nature that Aristotle first described
– curiosity – it has not only been successful, but it has become a source of
emulation for other cultures over and over again that come into contact with
it. That should come as no
surprise. It has nothing to do with
natives in the middle of the Amazon abandoning their splendid culture in order
to follow the base influence of American rock music. It has to do with the members of these other cultures suddenly
discovering that there’s a whole lot of exciting stuff out there that they have
never experienced, and that they want to know.
Any culture that tries to block this process by setting up barriers and
walls is destined to fight a losing battle.
The implication of all this for education is clear. You want children to grow up in an
environment in which they can have their native curiosity unleashed. That’s what the Information Age is
about. Kids who are good at following
their curiosity are ready to step into the modern world and lead a satisfactory
life. It’s inconceivable that anybody
with his head screwed on right would take kids today and put them in an
environment which says: “Don’t ask questions.”
That leads to the final thing I want to say. In general, “institutions of learning”, so
to speak, are devoted to preserving and transmitting the culture that
exists. Their job is to take what’s known
and to make sure it doesn’t get lost.
Academicians are always worried that if they don’t do this, the culture
will get lost. If we don’t teach kids
Shakespeare, they’re not going to read him and he will be lost; and
Shakespeare, they are quite sure, is central to our culture. In general, if we don’t teach A, B, C and D,
they feel we will have lost the ability to maintain our culture. Within that view is embedded a semi-static
view of culture that is perfectly suitable to most of history, up to modern
times. As long as culture didn’t change
very fast, it was adequate to know what exists. But in the era of rapid change that began several hundred years
ago and is now moving at full throttle, there is no such thing as “a culture”
to be transmitted. The culture is not a
stable entity. It’s an open-ended
search by all of humanity into whole new areas that have never been touched
before. What they are transmitting in
their academies is a corpse. Now, if
pieces of that corpse are worth dissecting and maintaining in some kind of a
laboratory, so be it. There will always
be people who are interested in pathology.
It’s a great subject. “Let’s
dissect the corpse. What made it
tick?” But I wouldn’t make it an
obligatory subject for everyone!
Let’s step back for a minute and think about this issue.
There was tons of culture in the ancient world: poems, plays, laws, religious
tracts, philosophy, in Babylonia, Assyria, Persia, the Hittite Kingdom, Egypt,
and elsewhere. These were all advanced
cultures. Where are they? Why aren’t they here? The thing is that the grand sweep of history
enables the human race to filter out the things that they seek to perpetuate –
not because somebody has made them do it.
There’s lots in our culture that I’m sure is worthy of survival but I
don’t know what it is. I’m not the
person who decides. Time, and the
culture itself, decide. If enough
people like Shakespeare, they’re going to read Shakespeare. If enough people don’t like Shakespeare, we
can shove it down their throats from now until doomsday – a hundred years from
now nobody is going to read it, just like we don’t read the Egyptian
Shakespeare (and don’t even know if he existed). We have to accept this.
Over time, what different people in the leisure classes – who have the
time to deal with culture – decide is
worth keeping is what survives. All it
takes is a few devotees to guarantee survival. The point is that as long as
people are interested in something, they’ll keep it alive. Otherwise, it will die.
I leave you with the thought that Aristotle had it right:
human curiosity triumphs first, last, and always. Nothing can stop it.
We’re lucky to be living in an era when its free exercise benefits both
the individual and society as never before.
1. This article is based on a talk presented at the school in March 2003.
2. Let’s put it this way: we can read some ancient text about metallurgy and chuckle about it because they had it so wrong. I can imagine what people are going to think a thousand years from now when they read our “modern” chemistry texts.
3. Some scholars think that most of Aristotle’s works are lecture notes taken by Aristotle’s students in his Academy. Whether or not this is true, they lack the feel of direct personal contact that one has in Plato’s works.
4. “Columbus and the Vikings,” Chapter 5 in Early Man and the Ocean: A Search for the Beginnings of Navigation and Seaborne Civilizations (Vintage Books; New York, 1980), p.127.
5. It’s important to keep in mind that Aristotle’s definition of leisure is whatever time is left over after that devoted to basic survival. We need water to drink, food to eat, one set of clothes, and some shelter. When I first started working at Barnard College there was a young philosopher, scion of a very wealthy family, who had completely renounced his inheritance, and lived secretly in a room at the college. He had precious few clothes and he ate potatoes and onions that he boiled on a little gas stove in the room. That’s all he ate. (Actually, it’s amazing he never got caught, because I could smell it the minute I walked into the building in the morning.) He stayed for a year, happily writing his papers and books; and he subsisted on $1,000 a year. My point isn’t that we should all be happy with $1,000 a year and a diet of potatoes and onions, but that we should recognize that the things that we feel today are not “extras” but are “really” the necessities of life are necessities in the sense that they satisfy that need that we have that I’ve been talking about – that need to have a rich life. Indeed, the richness consists of all the myriad things that we feel are essential.
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