Monday, October 1, 2012

Brilliance and Human Development


Are we as smart as we were?  Or has this still fairly new century found the human race on the downside of the learning curve? 

Is the world a better place than it was four years ago, ten years ago, 20 years ago?

I’ll admit my first tendency is to offer a resounding “no”.

How do you measure for the answer to either question?

I only observe. 

A myriad of wonderful technology developed by smart people helps us live life easier, longer, safer, and happier if we so desire.  That same technology can make a person miserable; can put them in danger.  (The cell phone is an example.)  I think the truth is the quality of our lives is based upon the choices we make; the personal standards we set and follow.   Who or what influences our actions.  Technology alone will not improve the condition of the human race.

I’m actually unhappy realizing I’m inclined to think brilliance among us is smothered by the insane popularity of mediocrity.  

This is about television.  Yes, my cable company gets the credit for bothering my mind with these confounding thoughts.

Optimum is requiring each TV set to have a cable box or it will not get any cable service at all.  We’ll be left with only a snowy screen.

As I write this, I have so many TV’s my entire home is a ‘media room’.  I need never be out of sight and sound of a television program I’m interested in. However, only two of the TV’s in my home had the premium service that required a cable box.  The service from the others was just fine, i.e., limited channel options with great picture quality. 

I guess, to help customers ease into this new and expensive requirement, Optimum is giving us the additional cable box hook-ups free for a year.   After that I understand the cost will be close to seven dollars a month for each TV.  Ouch!

For sure, I’ve taken advantage of the ‘free for the year’ opportunity.  My two TVs with premium cable box service have grown to become six TVs with premium cable box service.  Two others I’ll ignore for the time being.  My responsibility now is to use this ‘free year’ to seriously research my TV watching preferences and do a cost/needs analysis.  In less than a week of this research, I’m surprised to note how infrequently I watch TV – for good reason.

There is a lot of silly stuff on television.  Or it’s violent.  Or it’s totally discouraging.  Or it’s people yelling over each other.   Or it’s self-serving personalities helping advance the careers of other personalities.  Or its news and information interspersed with an overabundance of advertising.

TV programming today does little to evidence the results of the brilliance of mankind among us today.   I’m talking about the kind of brilliance that improves an individual’s concept of self as well as the community of man.  Well, last night I did see a great documentary about a brilliant man, Carl Sandburg.  But, he is one of the many from the 20th Century.  

Are we as smart as we were or is the human race on the downside of a learning curve? 

I welcome your commentary to my questions.

2 comments:

  1. Deep. Gotta think a while. For sure tv is a waste of time. I can't believe we have to pay so much just to watch it. But does anyone realize how wealthy a few people got from developing cable television? It's too late for us to get in on that ground floor though. I'll have to think about the brilliance.

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  2. Yes, TV is a waste of time if we make it so. And one of my underlying thoughts is technology advances individual wealth (corporate also) at several levels but does the condition of man realize commensurate benefit. Health issues and the Increasing numbers of poor people world-wide and a growing lack of decent paying jobs continent to continent begs me to think, where is the brilliance to solve those issues? However, the Bill Gates Foundation is certainly applying brilliant thought and action, read about the new toilet that will improve dire health problems, in India, I believe. Cable TV, I'm thinking I should not rework my budget for more of that. But I've got a year to act. Thanks for the comment.

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