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comment by inphovore
inphovore  ·  4142 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Options Enable Consciousness

Explore what passed for literature in the seventeenth century, and show me today our Miltons, our Voltaires, Our Mexwells. Where we have gained breadth we lost depth. If you want to temporally un-isolate yourself, dive into William Durant's "The Story of Civilization" (or its like, though little will compare.)





b_b  ·  4141 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Every century has its prophets and its snake oil salesmen. Only pretension or a false sense of nostalgia can lead one to believe that writers of the distant past are any more worthy than writers of the recent past or present.

theadvancedapes  ·  4141 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Fantastic comment. Agree 100%.

thenewgreen  ·  4140 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I think the only difference is saturation. In the seventeenth century, having the ability to write, meaning to actually have the materials to do so, wasn't as ubiquitous as it is now. This privilege was reserved for those that were trained to write, had a proven knowledge for their subject etc. Today, anyone with a blog is a writer and therefore the talents of our "writers" seems diminished. However, my guess is that humanity has always and will always have with it fantastic writers, artists and great thinkers.

theadvancedapes  ·  4141 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    Explore what passed for literature in the seventeenth century, and show me today our Miltons, our Voltaires, Our Mexwells. Where we have gained breadth we lost depth.

This is an unfair statement. I do not judge intelligence by the number of works someone subjectively deems as classical. I am attempting to understand the nature of systems intelligence. A cybernetic approach to understanding how intelligence manifests itself. I believe individual intelligence to be - to some degree - an illusion.

    If you want to temporally un-isolate yourself

Don't presume you know what I have, or have not read.