How Ignorant We Are

Here’s a question for you: In 1950, would it have been possible for anyone to know all of the goods and services that we would have at our disposal 50 years later? For example, who would have thought that we’d have cellphones, Bluetooth technology, small powerful computers, LASIK and airplanes with 525-passenger seating capacity? This list could be extended to include thousands of goods and services that could not have been thought of in 1950. In the face of this gross human ignorance, who should be in control of precursor goods and services? Seeing as it’s impossible for anyone to predict the future, any kind of governmental regulation should be extremely light-handed, so as not to sabotage technological advancement.

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Compounding our ignorance is the fact that much of what we think we know is not true. Scientometrics is the study of measuring and analyzing science, technology and innovation. It holds that many of the “facts” you know have a half-life of about 50 years. Let’s look at a few examples.

You probably learned that Pluto is a planet. But since August 2006, Pluto has been considered a dwarf planet. It’s just another object in the Kuiper belt.

Because dinosaurs were seen as members of the class Reptilia, they were thought to be coldblooded. But recent research suggests that dinosaurs were fast-metabolizing endotherms whose activities were unconstrained by temperature.

Years ago, experts argued that increased K-12 spending and lower pupil-teacher ratios would boost students’ academic performance. It turned out that some of the worst academic performance has been at schools spending the most money and having the smallest class sizes. Washington, D.C., spends more than $29,000 per student every year, and the teacher-student ratio is 1-to-13; however, its students are among the nation’s poorest-performing pupils.

At one time, astronomers considered the size limit for a star to be 150 times the mass of our sun. But recently, a star (R136a1) was discovered that is 265 times the mass of our sun and had a birth weight that was 320 times that of our sun.

If you graduated from medical school in 1950, about half of what you learned is either wrong or outdated. For an interesting story on all this, check out Reason magazine.

Ignorance can be devastating. Say that you recently purchased a house. Was it the best deal you could have gotten? Was there some other house within your budget that would have needed fewer extensive repairs 10 years later and had more likable neighbors and a better and safer environment for your children? What about the person you married? Was there another person available to you who would have made for a more pleasing and compatible spouse? Though these are important questions, the most intelligent answer you can give to all of them is: “I don’t know.” If you don’t know, who should be in charge of making those decisions? Would you delegate the responsibility to Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, Donald Trump, Ben Carson or some other national or state official?

You might say, “Stop it, Williams! Congressmen and other public officials are not making such monumental decisions affecting my life.” Try this. Suppose you are a 22-year-old healthy person. Rather than be forced to spend $3,000 a year for health insurance and have $7,000 deducted from your salary for Social Security, you’d prefer investing that money to buy equipment to start a landscaping business. Which would be the best use of the $10,000 you earned — purchasing health insurance and paying into Social Security or starting up a landscaping business? More importantly, who would be better able to make that decision — you or members of the United States Congress?

The bottom line is that ignorance is omnipresent. The worst kind of ignorance is not knowing just how ignorant we are. That leads to the devastating pretense of knowledge that’s part and parcel of the vision of intellectual elites and politicians.

 

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15 Comments
BSHJ
BSHJ
March 28, 2018 2:55 pm

One could make an argument AGAINST a lot of the techno ‘advancements’ that have been made…..I think many of them help make us less capable as individuals and dumber as a society

Wip
Wip
  BSHJ
March 28, 2018 3:38 pm

We are devolving.

Gilnut
Gilnut
  Wip
March 29, 2018 8:46 am

Wip,
I think this is more accurate than you may have intended. Take a look at science, many of the base theories are those that were developed decades or even 100’s of years ago. We may have invented some new ‘neat’ gadgets, but no real fundamentally NEW science has come along in quite some time, and any ‘new’ science that does raise it’s head is quickly beat down by the ‘establishment’.

There’s a lot of research now going on that evolutionary ‘jumps’ may have been driven by cosmic rays altering DNA. Those ‘jumps’ can go both ways.

Gloriously Deplorable Paul
Gloriously Deplorable Paul
  BSHJ
March 29, 2018 12:57 am

BSHJ- Absolutely right. The current trendmania in automotive design makes all drivers dumber and less capable. If people can’t be alert, focused and engaged when behind the wheel then take the friggin’ bus.

rhs jr
rhs jr
March 28, 2018 3:09 pm

We presently have the bottom of the barrel academically teaching our children; that’s how ignorant we are and we will stay until we demand School Choice and break free of the public school dumb down leftist indoctrination system.

MarshRabbit
MarshRabbit
  rhs jr
March 28, 2018 3:24 pm

What do you mean by “school choice”? Where I live there is an abundance of non-public school options. I suspect you want public funds to private institutions. Which I’ll support if they don’t discriminate. For example, if a kid moves into a public school district, that school has to accept him. If this will be the policy for the publiclly funded private schools, well then we have a deal.

rhs jr
rhs jr
  MarshRabbit
March 29, 2018 2:09 am

Yes, funds should go to any school that achieves the standardized tests provided they are not teaching anything illegal; if the parents send them there, then the state should have to prove some reason to deny them funds. I think any school should be allowed to establish objective academic and behavior standards for entry and continuation (no race or religion discrimination; if so, such schools could not receive state funds). If you are worried about some bad kids getting left out or kicked out, the Somerset Charter School is a private business that took over our failed Jefferson County public system; it is keeping and working with students that even the old Principal and Superintendent would have expelled, they told me so. The Somerset personnel are really great hand picked higher paid professionals; they run a really tight ship. It’s the way to go, I’m telling you straight.

BB
BB
March 28, 2018 3:56 pm

Rabbit , you’re being a lawyer again!

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 28, 2018 5:18 pm

In the early 50’s I was looking forward to flying cars, anti-gravity belts, and wrist radios.

Mad as Hell
Mad as Hell
March 28, 2018 6:19 pm

Folks, this guy is dead on. Just one set of examples. MOST of the technology that we are using today, thought of as so ADVANCED was actually invented between 1940 and 1980 in several places called Bell Laboratories, DARPA and others. The amount of communications patents at Bell Labs during that period averaged out alone to about 1 patent every week for 30 years. Think LASERs, Microwave technology, Fiber Optic cable, communication satellites, the transistor etc. Don’t believe me, look it up. Then we broke up “the Bell System” in 1983. Since then, can you think of ONE organization, private or public that has churned out this much in the way of truly useful technology? Facebook, Google…..oh please…..Say what you will about Ma Bell, but what have we accomplished in communications in the years after their breakup besides just building on the EXISTING tech they already invented. VOIP, basically the same system just over Ethernet. Big deal.
This is not to bemoan the breakup of the Bell System, this is to prove that at one time, before too much government, the activist free money Fed, idiot liberals, 1000 channels of crap, Facebook, TBTF banks (supposedly the best and brightest) and the other “innovations” that these asshole politicians are always squawking about that we would not have if not for them, and their globalist donors, we actually had an intelligent, competent, and well paid workforce that invented REAL things, that REAL people actually wanted. Other nations looked at us in awe. Now we think an innovator is some libtard billionaire that uses a massive rocket (invented BTW during the same time period above) to launch his ridiculous toy for his 1% brethren in to space to show off just how stupid we are to any nearby space aliens that thought of maybe communicating. Guess that thought left their minds. How many billions in taxpayer money did Musk use for that endeavor. And how many peoples lives will that ego launch in to outer space improve? Self driving cars? What problem are we solving there? oh ya, Uber having to pay a human a living wage to be a cab driver…….the stupid, it burns /rant over

Abraham
Abraham
March 28, 2018 8:37 pm

He Who Controls The US Military Controls The World

rhs jr
rhs jr
  Abraham
March 29, 2018 9:37 am

Not for long. It’s the Economy, stupid. And the Economy is being blown on Welfare. But we have the fattest and dumbest FSA in the whole World for now if that is any consolation.

Vodka
Vodka
March 28, 2018 9:19 pm

“The worst kind of ignorance is not knowing how ignorant we are”. That’s the money-shot of this piece.

We don’t even know how many more dwarf planets like Pluto might be orbiting our own sun. Or how many that exist in just our own galaxy that orbit other suns. And there are an uncountable number of galaxies. When you look at a faint star through a telescope you see that it is not a “star”, but that it is actually billions of stars that constitute another galaxy. If that doesn’t humble you, what would??

But, somehow, the Big Brains in science think themselves qualified to posit theories like ‘the Big Bang’. How absurd.

“There is no God”. – Stephen Hawking, 2011.

“There is no Stephen Hawking”. – God, 2018.

BL
BL
  Vodka
March 29, 2018 12:27 am

I was surprised how many here were aware of the joke that was Stephen Hawking, it gave me a smidge of hope that there are some thinkers/non-sheep left in the world.