Yesterday, a friend was lamenting the value of knowing is not all it’s cracked up to be.  This got me thinking on just what is the intrinsic value of knowledge.

There is some knowledge for which we can spend our entire lives searching. The value in the answers inevitably is the direct result of the question asked. Some how in the first few years of our life we tend to move past the first questions of “who am I? What is my place, and am I loved?”

I’m not sure the rest of life’s questions mean much in comparison, but I would argue against your premise when it comes to knowing the answers to those questions. To know the answers to those questions, and I mean to know them to the core of one’s soul, may be not just great. I imagine it as the single “greatest.”

Knowledge of that magnitude is far more important than knowing the atomic structure of the ink used in an ink jet printer…yet on the sliding scale of value, I suspect we spend more conscious time gathering knowledge closer to “atomic structure of ink” level of importance than the “place in the universe” level.

Still back in regular life mode, I can understand the frustration of studying for a test only to have nothing on the test match what was studied.  I think most of us have been there.  I know it is to be prepared and still ambushed by the unexpected.  I’ve seen that show in both private and work life.  Still, I think we have to keep in mind why we studied or researched.  Was it to answer an important question?  Do we know more now than we once did?  Can we go back and learn more once the questions we should be answering have been better defined for us?  Is our real goal the “A” or the knowledge the “A” implies?  I suspect those for whom the answer is the latter will be the long term person for whom we all search when we have a problem needing assistance.

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Thought on Plato

Some random thoughts I’ve had in the past few weeks which I’ve meant to get up here:

I was thinking about Plato’s Allegory of the Cave in terms of what it means to be a parent. What if all of parenthood when boiled down to its essence is little more than an attempt to build a better mirror rather than a wall thus allowing our kids a “better” vision of the world and their place with in it. After all, the one who has been out in the world can’t drag the rest of the cave dwelling people out, so what can they do? Maybe “better” is one that lets them see more truly the nature of the world around their existence so that the people may more truly see their surroundings. Maybe “better” is a mirror thinning them down or building them up as their esteem needs. Personally, I think “better” may be summed up simply as “able to make a better mirror that the next may see more clearly.”

Of course this is how I define progress. It’s not just how much have I done, seen or learned. If I am unable to allow anybody else to share in the experience, who cares? If I take 3 steps forward, and my family and friends take only 2 which is the greater accomplishment, which measure is best used to define me? I tend to be more proud of our family taking 2 steps, and it’s upon that scale I’d prefer to be judged.

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This Lemmings Explanation for Miracles
A deranged miracle said unto the Universe
“I is what I is
and I be what I be
so leave I to were alone.”

The Universe notes,
“I see now why miracles don’t travel in packs.
Good thing.
Makes keeping order far easier.”

To which Alternate Universe replied,
“True, even lemmings who would choose to follow
would constantly have to check their bearings
forever questioning what it means to ‘are.'”

Universe ponders aloud,
“Change him back and undo all he has wrought?”

Alternate Universe:
“Leave it to me.”

This Lemming longs to know,
“What are my reality?”

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Our Family's Stories of Growing Up

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