Uncommon Sense - MIAD CDIV Magazine
Uncommon Sense - MIAD CDIV Magazine
Uncommon Sense - MIAD CDIV Magazine
$5.00
Issue No.1
CONTENTS
Uncommon Findings:
Over the last century it can be seen that the behavior, language, attitudes, and desireseven
the physical appearanceof adults and children are becoming increasingly indistinguishable.
by HAYLEY EICHENM AN
by TACY TOBRIDGE
Uncommon Interview:
Maria Popova is the founder and editor of Brain Pickings, has written for a number
of high profile magazines. Read about her work, life and brain pickings here.
Invisible Networks is the ongoing project of Shuli Hallak, whose end goal is to showcase the
palpable parts of the net we otherwise never think about. And its pretty damn fascinating.
Uncommon Lessons:
n
o
i
t
c
n
i
t
x
The E
yChildhood
by HAYLEY EICHENBAUM
6
interpret it disappeared, and a condition
called craft literacy took over. Craft literacy
describes a circumstance where the art of
reading is restricted to a few who form a
privileged class. Its counter-condition is social
literacya state where most people can
and do read. It can be stated that the Roman
Church was not unaware of the benefits of
craft literacy as a means of keeping control
over a large and diverse population. Thus,
Europe returned to an instinctive condition
of human communication, dominated by
talk and reinforced by song (Aries 31).
This fateful transition directly leads to an
evaporation of childhood. As essayist
Neil Postman declares: Reading makes
it possible to enter a non-observed and
abstract world of knowledge; it creates a
split between those who cannot read and
those who can. Reading is the scourge of
childhood because, in a sense, it creates
adulthood. Literature of all kindsincluding
maps, charts, contracts, and deeds
collects and keeps valuable secrets.
Thus, in a literate world to be an adult
implies having access to cultural secrets
codified in unnatural symbols. In a literate
world children must become adults.
The idea of shame hinges on secrets, as
Quintilian knew. It was considered shameful
to reveal these secrets too indiscriminately. In
the modern world, as children move toward
adulthood these secrets are revealed to them
through education and experience. But such
an idea is possible only in an atmosphere
where there is a strong division between the
adult and the child, and where there are
institutions that articulate that distinction.
The medieval world made no such distinction
and had no such institutions. Where literacy
is valued there are schools, and where there
are schools the concept of childhood thrives.
The invention of the printing press in the 15th
century brought upon a shift in paradigms.
It created a new definition of adulthood
based on reading competence and, as a
result, a new ideation of childhood based
on reading incompetence. The resurgence
of learning and classical culture in the 13th
century had triggered a craving for books.
Additionally, the growth of commerce and
of the age of exploration generated a need
for printed materials. The printing press had
generated a knowledge explosion, and
craft literacy evolves into social literacy. To
be a fully functioning adult required one to
go beyond custom and memory into worlds
not previously contemplated. The Literate
Man had been established (Eisenstein 22).
As childhoods journey enters the 17th
and 18th centuries a heightened sense of
government responsibility for the welfare
e
h
t
s
i
g
n
i
d
Rea
ood
h
d
l
i
h
c
f
o
scourge
,
e
s
n
e
s
a
n
i
because,
.
d
o
o
h
t
l
u
d
a
it creates
of children arises. New legislations were
enacted to protect children and Europe
developed a more compassionate regard
of childhood: The child became an
object of respecta special creature with
a different nature and different needs,
which required separation and protection
from the adult world (Postman 37).
A major contributor to this shift was
the English philosopher and physician
John Locke. Locke saw the connections
between book learning and childhood.
He proposed a form of education that
treated the child as a precious resource
while still demanding attention to the childs
intellectual development and capacity
for self-control. Locke also promoted the
Tabula Rasa theory, which encompasses
the notion that at birth the mind is a blank
tabletthus, a heavy responsibility falls to
the parents, teachers, and government for
what is written on the mind (Postman 32).
This reintroduced the concepts of shame
and guilt in association to adult and child
obligations. Another influential figure in the
development of childhood was the Genevan
philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau. He
expressed that the psychology of a child
was fundamentally different from that of
adults. In a view that differed from Locke,
Rousseau suggested that a childs intellectual
and emotional life can be deadened by selfcontrol and shame; childhood is the stage
of life when man most closely relates to
the state of nature. According to Rousseau
the candor, understanding, curiosity, and
spontaneity of a child can be suppressed
by structure and education (Postman 60).
Locke and Rousseau shaped childhood in
the New World. The Protestant conception
of childhood, also known as the Lockean
belief, maintained that the child is an
unformed person who through literacy,
education, reason, self-control, and shame
may be made into a civilized adult. For
those who followed this concept, education
was viewed as an addition to self-quality.
On the other end of the spectrum was the
Romantic perception of childhood, also
p h o t o s by
E M I LY E B E R T
10
11
Describe your path to what youre
doing now as an editor and writer.
I started Brain Pickings when I was still
in college because I felt unstimulated by
the experience of higher education. The
enormous lecture classes of 400 people,
professors who didnt know students names,
reading off of PowerPoint presentations, and
assigning reading to be done at home
none of that was my idea of personal
growth and enrichment. I started learning
and reading about things on my own and
Brain Pickings was a record of that.
At the time, I was also paying my way
through school by working at a small ad
agency, in addition to three other part-time
jobs. I noticed that what the guys were
circulating around the office for inspiration
was stuff from within the ad industry.
I didnt believe that was how creativity
worked. I started sending out an email every
Friday including five things that had nothing
to do with advertising, but that I thought were
meaningful, interesting, or importantand
not just cool. I noticed that the guys were
forwarding those emails to other people and
I thought that maybe there was an intellectual
hunger for that sort of cross-disciplinary
curiosity and self-directed learning.
12
13
14
15
Oh, completely.
16
Why
CAN T
WE ALL
JUST
get
ALONG?
The Uncertain
Biological Basis
of Morality
by ROBERT WRIGHT
18
to say Isnt it crazy that youll dutifully kill a
guy by pulling a lever but refuse on principle
to give him a nudge that leads to the same
outcome? The first question is about selfhelp. The second is about something more.
How much more? To judge by Greenes new
book, a whole lot more. Its called Moral Tribes:
Emotion, Reason, and the Gap Between Us
and Themand, in case the title alone doesnt
convince you that the stakes are high, Greene
writes that his book is about the central tragedy
of modern life. Hes not alone in thinking this
is high-gravitas stuff. The Yale psychologist
Paul Bloom, who also studies the biological
basis of morality, has a new book called
Just Babies, about the emergence of moral
inclinations in infants and toddlers. Hes chosen
the subtitle The Origins of Good and Evil.
I have a fairly robust immune response to bookmarketing hype, but in this case its showing
no signs of activity. The well-documented
human knack for bigotry, conflict, and atrocity
must have something to do with the human
mind, and relevant parts of the mind are
indeed coming into focusnot just thanks
to the revolution in brain scanning, or even
advances in neuroscience more broadly, but
also thanks to clever psychology experiments
and a clearer understanding of the evolutionary
forces that shaped human nature. Maybe were
approaching a point where we can actually
harness this knowledge, make radical progress
in how we treat one another, and become
a species worthy of the title Homosapiens.
19
on both the domestic and international fronts,
bringing reason to discussions about abortion
and gay rights; calming tensions between
India and Pakistan, Israel and Palestine; and
so on. Greenes diagnosis is, at its foundation,
Darwinian: the impulses and inclinations that
shape moral discourse are legacies of natural
selection, rooted in our genes. Many of them
are with us today because they helped our
ancestors realize the benefits of cooperation.
As a result, people are pretty good at getting
along with one another, and supporting basic
ethical rules that keep societies humming.
Anyone who doubts that basic moral impulses
are innate will have Paul Blooms book to
contend with. He synthesizes researchmuch
of it done by him and his wife, Karen Wynn
demonstrating that an array of morally relevant
inclinations show up in infants and toddlers. His
list of natural moral endowments includes some
capacity to distinguish between kind and cruel
actions, as well as empathy and compassion
suffering at the pain of those around us and the
wish to make this pain go away. Blooms work
has also documented a rudimentary sense of
justicea desire to see good actions rewarded
and bad actions punished.
Different Perspectives
So if were such moral animals, why all the
strife? Joshua Greenes answer is appealingly
simple. He says the problem is that we were
designed to get along together in a particular
contextrelatively small hunter-gatherer
i l l u s t r a t i o n s by
MELISSA JOHNSON
Opposite Worlds
If real-world examples of our self-serving biases
seem hard to find, thats because theyre
supposed to be hard to find; the whole idea is
that were not aware of the information these
biases exclude. So, for example, if youre like
the average American, heres a fact you dont
know: in 1953, the United States sponsored
a coup in Iran, overthrowing a democratically
elected government and installing a brutally
repressive regime that ruled for decades.
Iranians, on the other hand, are very aware of
this, which helps explain why, to this day, many
of them are gravely suspicious of American
20
21
be impartial. When you combine judgment
thats naturally biased with the belief that
wrongdoers deserve to suffer, you wind up
with situations like two people sharing the
conviction that the other one deserves to suffer.
Greene and Bloom, and lots of other
scholars, believe the sense of justice to be a
legacy of natural selection, and the logic is
straightforward. For starters, though extracting
the benefits of cooperation involves things
like making overtures to help someone (since
maybe that person will help you down the
road), it also means following up selectively
reciprocating kindnesses extended to you
but not continuing to help those who dont
help you. It may even mean punishing those
who have abused your trust by, say, feigning
friendship only to desert you once theyve
reaped the benefits of your generosity. So the
impulses governing cooperation range from the
gratitude that cements friendships to the sort
of righteous indignation that fuels violence.
Zero-Sum
When youre in zero-sum mode and
derogating your rival group, any of its values
that seem different from yours may share
in the derogation. Meanwhile, youll point
to your own tribes distinctive, and clearly
superior, values as a way of shoring up its
solidarity. So outsiders may assume theres
a big argument over values. But that doesnt
mean values are the root of the problem.
The question of how large a role differing
value systems play in human conflict hovers
over some of the worlds most salient tensions.
Many Americans see Muslim terrorists as
motivated by an alien jihadist ideology that
compels militants to either kill infidels or bring
them under the banner of Islam. But what the
jihadists actually say when justifying their
attacks has pretty much nothing to do with
bringing Sharia law to America. Its about the
perception that America is at war with Islam.
Just look at the best-known terrorist bombers and
would-be terrorist bombers who have targeted
the United States since 9/11: the Boston
Marathon bombers, the would-be underwear
bomber, the would-be Times Square bomber,
and the would-be New York subway bombers.
All have explicitly cited as their motivating
grievance one or more of the following: the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, drone strikes
in various Muslim countries, and American
support for Israeli policies toward Palestinians.
Theres no big difference over ethical principle
here. Americans and jihadists agree that
if youre attacked, retaliation is justified (an
extension of the sense of justice, and a belief
for which you could mount a plausible utilitarian
rationale, if forced). The disagreement is over
the facts of the casewhether America has
launched a war on Islam. And so it is with most
of the worlds gravest conflicts. The problem isnt
the lack of, as Greene puts it, a moral language
that members of all tribes can speak. Retributive
justice, for better or worse, is a moral language
spoken around the worldbut it is paired with
a stubborn and lethal bias about who should
be on the receiving end of the retribution.
None of this is to deny the existence of
genuine disputes over values, or to say that
such disputes never matter. Certainly domestic
politics features explicit debates over values,
and herein the realm of abortion and gay
rightsGreenes argument may hold more
water. Im sure there would be less homophobia
if people were driven more by pure reason
not just because they would sidestep scriptural
injunctions, but also because they would
transcend gut reactions against forms of sex
that they themselves dont find enticing.
But even in the domestic arena, the fact that
22
23
Uncommon Findings
BARRIERS TO
CREATIVITY
IN EDUCATION
Exclusive Adobe study reveals
education system is stifling creativity.
Top 3 most
important
steps to
promote
and foster
creativity in
education:
United States
86
30%
18
24%
Reducing mandates
that hinder creativity
UK, Australia,
Germany
23%
Improving curriculum
22%
Providing tools to
educators that enable
creativity more effectively
21
Source: Adobe Barriers to Creativity in Education: Educators and Parents Grade the System Study. Study
based on interviews with 4,000 adults, including 2,000 educators of students in K through higher education
and 2,000 parents of children in K through higher education.
The top 3
barriers
to teaching
creativity
according to
parents and
educators:
United States
1. System too reliant
on testing
2. Educators restricted
from straying outside
the curriculum
3. Lack of resources
International Combined
1. Current education
curriculum
2. Misunderstanding of the
importance of creativity
in education
3. Lack of resources and
restriction from straying
outside the curriculum (tied)
24
25
Uncommon Interview
SHULI
HALLAK:
INVISIBLE
NETWORKS
Gayomali: So a cargo
ship, huh? What were the
accommodations like?
26
27
Uncommon Lessons
20 THINGS
IVE LEARNED
An SEO CEO shares tips on living a
purposeful, prosperous, and happier life.
by DEV BASU
7
1 Never accept anyone
2 Focus on possibilities
instead of problems.
4 Create more
Expect nothing in
return for the things
you do for others.
13
Strive for
happiness
and nothing
but happiness.
10
Spend a few
moments with
yourself alone,
every day.
Failure is a reflection
of an event, not a person.
When you fail learn from the experience.
Life is full of chances (whether you create
opportunities or chance upon them) and
learning from your failures will help you
shape into a better person.
11
12
Learn
something
new every day.
Spend your downtime
learning new things that
can enrich your life. I
learned how to pitch
better on my daily drive
into work by listening to
audio books back when
i was around 19-21.
16
14
15
18
19
Pick the
something you
love and be
amongst the best
in the world at it.
17
Let go of your
anger and jealousy.
20