How can we find that resonant synchronization?

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Reply Thu 30 Apr, 2009 03:42 am
How can we find that resonant synchronization?

I am of the opinion that we all have a number of personal resonances (talents?) that if discovered give great emphasis to our life's satisfaction. Those individuals who discover and exploit such a personal resonance can find great self-satisfaction. If that particular resonance strikes a social resonance then the accompanying social display of appreciation can add to the personal satisfaction to the individual.

I think a successful artist is a good example of what I speak. The singing artist who happens not only to discover a particular musical talent and, if that talent is in accord with a public musical taste, that individual would reap great personal and economic satisfaction. The actor or painter, or any of many possible talents that are appreciated by the public would serve as examples of what I mean by resonance.

Few individuals discover and display a talent, a personal resonance that can truly excite public appreciation. Those who do display such a resonance are truly rewarded. However, I am not particularly interested in those few but I am interested in considering all the rest of us who have resonances (talents?) and especially all those that remain undiscovered by ourselves.

It seems that society and all its institutions are focused upon making everyone of us efficient producers and consumers. Nothing prepares us for self-discovery when such discovery is not supportive of a drive to produce and consume. I think that most social pressure from birth to death is directed at the drive to make us effective producers and consumers.

I chose to use the word "resonance" rather than talent because I think our sense of the meaning of the word "talent" will distort the point I wish to make. "Talent" is such a 'produce and consume' word. In fact we have little vocabulary available when discussing what I mean.

At mid-life when our career ambitions dim and our family are cared for is the time that is available to us to begin to de-emphasize the world of 'production and consumption' and begin exploring the world of the intellect directed as an end-in-itself'. Our intellects have been so totally directed as a means to an end that we will have some difficulty thinking of knowledge and understanding that is considered as an end-in-itself.

Our first encounter with resonance, as the word is normally used, might have been when we first discovered on the playground swing that a little energy directed in synchronization with the swing's resonant frequency would produce outstanding movement. What a marvelous discovery. We might make similar marvelous discoveries if we decide, against all that we have learned in the past, that the intellect can be used as an end-in-it-self.

I also think that if a person reaches mid-life without having begun an intellectual life that person will be unlikely to begin such a life. It appears to me that if we do not start such an effort before mid-life we will never have an intellectual life. After our school daze are over it might be wise for a person to begin the cultivation of intellectual curiosity even though there may not be a lot of time available for that hobby.

Get a life-get an intellectual life!
 
Dave Allen
 
Reply Thu 30 Apr, 2009 09:41 am
@coberst phil,
Have you seen this?

FORA.tv - Sir Ken Robinson: A New View of Human Capacity

Talks about how educational facilities might better help individuals discover their talent without stigmatising certain traditional views of which talents are more or less valued.
 
Catchabula
 
Reply Thu 30 Apr, 2009 10:43 am
@coberst phil,
I agree completely. Actually I had a wonderful moment of "resonance" this very afternoon. It seems that in my best moments I'm an excellent orator. One of our library employees was getting pensioned and during the usual reception the dean gave a speech. He continuously alluded to the speech that I had to give as her boss and expectations were great. It seems weird but I felt completely relaxed, though I hardly had prepared a thing, but I did had a few glasses of wine during dinner and some good conversation. I remember the short silence in the beginning, a few words of what increasingly seemed to myself like a lot of bull ("a mother to us all", "the help that was her wisdom"...) and the thundering applause in the end. The lady cried when I hugged her. This was indeed a wonderful moment for both of us. Seems I have my way with words...
 
coberst phil
 
Reply Thu 30 Apr, 2009 01:49 pm
@coberst phil,
Dave

Interesting talk by Robinson
 
Dave Allen
 
Reply Fri 1 May, 2009 01:24 pm
@coberst phil,
Not to turn this into the Ken Robinson thread, but I think this talk is also very good, on a similar line of enquiry.

YouTube - Sir Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity?

It also has better jokes.
 
 

 
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