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On Fri, 04 Sep 2009 06:33:08 -0400, H the K
wrote: Tom Francis - SWSports wrote: I've always been of the opinion that "education" is really curiosity and that formal education is merely a process by which information is presented in ways that provide some order to the process and is not essential for one to be "educated". Some of the smartest people I've ever dealt with have high school educations, but are well and widely read, have sound knowledge of basic mathematics (arithmetic, geometry and trigonometry) and an insatiable curiosity about the world the surrounds them and what goes on in it. A good formal education is an indicator for many of intellectual curiosity. It is much more than "merely a process." While no one can deny the intellectual and worldly success of the self-taught in many fields, the fact is that a college degree is at the very least a rough indicator that its "owner" had enough self-discipline to stick with a course of study, and satisfy the intellectual requirements and standards for graduation. At its best, a good formal liberal arts education forces you to think way outside the box, and exposes you to ideas and people whose backgrounds and thoughts are very different from yours. If you are self-taught, *you* are the individual in charge of determining what you expose yourself to during the process of learning. If you go the formal route, there are many who can guide you, as teachers, as colleagues, as fellow students, as group experiences. As you said, learning the wide scope of different world/cultural experience, which is always formatted into a liberal arts curriculum to some degree, is the important aspect. What any individual derives from such an education it is highly individual and varied. My view is that if you can't widely analogize in the end, it's somewhat of a failure. The ultimate goal is to come to an understanding of a universal consciousness, if only momentarily. It is not forgotten. This always involves what we can call a Zen element, as an easily and fairly widely "understood" term for that type of understanding. Though some allowances can be made for one's physical appearance and verbal skills, a good measure of success in your liberal arts education is how well you can apply what you've learned toward scoring with hot smart chicks. Of course if you forego the education, money works just as well. --Vic |
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