This has been sitting on my computer's desk top waiting for me to return and rewrite, but the fact is, I am no longer as interested as when I started writing it ... and it's too long ... and who, including me, reads long these days ... and the short version is here ... and I want to 'get rid of it' so ....
INTELLECTUAL COURAGE
Aldous Huxley once wrote, "If the intellectual travels
long enough and far enough, he will return to the same point from which the
non-intellectual has never started."
For the rough purposes of rumination, I would define
intellectual courage as the willingness to stop keeping things at bay. And as
far as I can see, intellectual courage is exceptionally rare because the
desire/need to be right is so viscerally alluring. As a result, the chances of
returning "to the same point" are pretty damned slim.
But I sometimes wonder if the same result might be observed
in those who simply get old enough.
Intellectual acquisitions, whether for alligator hunter or
bedecked academic, are pretty much the acquisitions that will define the
present or past and pray like a Pentacostal to ward off dangers in the future.
They shape and ease and form a relatively calm pool in what can be raging seas.
But perhaps they are also acquisitions that fit on a limited
number of book shelves. It makes some good common sense to be well informed
about what has happened or is happening. An ill-informed alligator hunter can
get his hand bit off and a poorly-informed academic runs the risk of being left
in the scholarly dust if he doesn't "keep up." So the rule of thumb,
socially or professionally, is to add more acquisitions to the acquisitions
already in hand. More and more and more.
But, like stretching a rubber band, there is a point when
the tension asserts its power and when, either by understanding or simple
lethargy, things seem to reverse course. How many more acquisitions can anyone
stuff on an already-overstuffed set of book shelves? More to the point, do the reasons
for stuffing those bookshelves any longer obtain?
"Keeping up?" "Potential danger?" "Fear
of failure?" "Culturally astute?" The on-set of age is as good
as the rare-as-hen's-teeth intellectual courage in blurring the impetus and
desire. Will the world fall apart if I don't inform myself about the latest
developments of my environment? What's so bad about failure? And precisely whom
do I really need to keep up with? At a certain point the rubber band asserts
its ways ... I know enough to know that I have the capacity to find out ... or
not ... and that the universe is unlikely to purr with delight or suffer
collapse either way.
Sociology, history, alligator hunting, psychology,
philosophy, religion, astro-physics, sprinting, debating, politics, war, romance,
iron-mongering, barrel-making, torture, fine art, literature, Hollywood,
Nigerian scams, breast augmentation, pecker enhancement, language,
cliff-climbing, shark fishing, poker, joke-telling, drug addiction, gold
medals, Internet savvy ... and on and on and on and on ... how many books,
little and large, will fit on the shelf and how great is the impetus to fit
them there?
Lacking intellectual courage is OK, I imagine. Age will
probably teach the same lessons:
A little love, a little decency, a little effort -- that's
probably enough. And if it's not, well, life will let you know soon enough.
Great effort, great intellectual collections tend to take a waning throne when
the body and mind set themselves on a downward course. No one ever stops learning,
but those who suggest that learning is something anyone should do is just jerking off in the breeze.
No one can return to "the same point."
"The same point" is no more.
Can "now" be more "now" than now?
But I imagine you get the point.
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