What’s the home page of your browser? Whatever it is, that window is a subtle window to your accumulated interests or your way to get the news and, by a long shot, maybe even your appreciation for a faster load time.
Those interests we’ve amassed, the collective memory and general knowledge bank, have been developed and delivered from the top down. Facts used to be taught in school by rote. If someone deemed something important, it was important.
Now, the Internet is killing general knowledge. Why memorize state capitals and stanzas when you can look them up?
OK, I lie. I don’t think the Internet is killing general knowledge. I do think that there is a balance between the skills to look up a fact and knowing the fact itself.
Strive for that balance because general knowledge and the collective memory constantly change. Once cultural references are relegated to cultural relics.
Take, for example, Minerva ““ no, not Professor Minerva McGonagall or the Half-Life 2 mod ““ Minerva, the Roman goddess of wisdom who is, coincidentally, on our state’s seal. Minerva was born fully grown from the brain of Jupiter, similar to how California moved quickly from independence to annexation by the United States.
In contrast, we all have a long history, including Minerva and California, which we have to objectively view in its entirety to determine and develop our own beliefs.
I was listening to “This I Believe,” a broadcast on National Public Radio based on Edward R. Murrow’s radio show by the same name in the 1950s. Naturally, I wondered what it was that I believed.
When we were young, it was easy to have convictions. The sky was blue. Rocks were hard. In contrast to the absolute way we thought about people, events and ideas when we were younger, everything is more nuanced now ““ nuanced by our different backgrounds, interests and circumstances.
I believe in change ““ not of the Barack Obama variety, just change.
We are perpetually depositing a coin in our knowledge bank every day. Learning facts is not a means to an end; it’s a continuous cycle. It’s a lifelong accumulation of experiences, the people you’ve met and, of course, things you were taught.
The inclination to scapegoat the Internet for the dumbing down of society is easy. When the Egyptian god Thoth invented writing and offered it as a gift to the king of Egypt, the king said the “invention will produce forgetfulness” and “(equip) your pupils with only a semblance of (wisdom), not with truth.” When Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press, the same cries were heard.
Now, just as Thoth and Gutenberg had before, the Internet has dissolved and democratized the whole structure of knowledge.
The fountain of information has exploded ““ take advantage of it. We have the power to change how we digest knowledge, how we get the news and what news we get. We are no longer vassals ingesting information fed to us.
I had a humbling conversation with a columnist the other day. While deliberating on a column idea, I hastily suggested he write about the search for knowledge in the study of philosophy, to which he retorted, “OK, that’s weaksauce. The search for knowledge is an imperative of every major.”
So, my modest advice to you:
– Read a newspaper everyday, preferably this one because it’s free and it’s about you.
– Question everything and think critically. Don’t just passively absorb everything you’re taught ““ not because what you’re reading or hearing is wrong, but because you will stand to gain more by knowing why or why not.
– Talk to everyone, but listen more.
– Be curious. Always.
Knowledge is important because you cannot think critically and creatively without knowing a wide range of basic facts. How we connect and manipulate those facts are the foundations of thinking ““ and that’s what we’re here to learn.
You have the power to achieve that balance between knowledge and skill. You can change the home page of your browser.
And if you must know, my home page is blank ““ I appreciate the faster load time.
Tran is the 2009-2010 Viewpoint editor. E-mail her at mtran@media.ucla.edu. Send general comments to viewpoint@media.ucla.edu.