Remarks on science and Christianity - two

Nov 25, 2008 20:37

There is a sense - and this is what I want to show in this article - that the two sides are talking past each other. ( Read more... )

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Most insightful thing I've read by you joetexx April 6 2011, 00:53:56 UTC
It follows that any scheme whatsoever to artificially foster and create genius is certain not only to fail but actually to achieve its opposite - a world of conformity, idle minds, and failed ideas. That is because nobody can envisage in advance the right combination of suitable talents with suited cultural and social circumstances; to do so would be to be able to forecast cultural and social trends a lifetime away. The minds that will be bred by such programs will be trained to deal with society and culture as they were when the program was first envisaged, or indeed when its inventors were children or young men, and therefore inevitably out of synch with the world as it will be when they bear fruit. What can be done is cultivate competence. Raise a thousand skilful musicians, and one of them may grow to be Beethoven, or at least Toscanini; try and raise a thousand musical geniuses, and you are certain to produce a thousand loquacious but rather
imperceptive newspaper music critics. So much for Darwin’s and social Darwinists’ obsession.

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