In my opinion, the greatest single failure of American
            education is that students come away unable to distinguish
        between a symbol and the thing the symbol stands for.
        
        Introduction
        
          It is no accident that modern education doesn't teach the
            distinction between symbol and thing
          
          — if it did, education as we know it would fall apart.
          After that, after education reshaped itself to provide
          actual knowledge instead of the symbolic representation of
          knowledge, the society around us would be transformed.
          
          
          But in the meantime, most "educated" people cannot tell the
          difference between a fact and an idea, the most common
          confusion of symbol and thing. Most believe if they collect
          enough facts, this will compensate for their inability to
          grasp the ideas behind those facts. And, because of this
          "poverty of ideas," most cannot work out the simplest
          conceptual questions, such as "why is the sky dark at
          night?" (unless you are in a small minority, the actual
          reason is not what you think — see more
          
here
          ).
          
          
          As a result of this educational deficit, our individually
          inspired sense of well-being, our direct participation in
          those actions that assure our continued survival, our sense
          that we must create our own reasons for living, have been
          replaced by a kind of conceptual totalitarianism,
          
            which has as its cornerstone a deliberate blurring of
            symbol and thing
          
          . This totalitarianism has several parts:
        
 
        Commerce
        
          
            Originally a convenient way to trade what you have for what
            you don't have, commerce has been elevated to the status of
            a moral principle.
          
          People who could be grappling with more fundamental issues
          are instead imitating Willy Loman, Arthur Miller's
          character from
          
            Death of a Salesman
          
          , who personified the replacement of substance with symbol.
          
          
          I am sure there are many definitions for the term "consumerism," here is mine:
          
            consumerism is the voluntary suspension of disbelief in the value of material
            goods
          
          . In the grip of consumerism, we respond to advertisements for products
          without once asking "if this product is so valuable, why do they pay to
          advertise it?" This is an everyday statement of a well-established principle in
          advertising — things of real worth are generally not advertised. Sometimes an
          advertisement is designed to persuade you to switch between one worthwhile
          thing and another (or one worthless thing and another), but no one pays simply
          to make you aware of a worthwhile thing. What's the point? You already know
          there are cans of oil, coat-hangers, Pez dispensers. No one needs to tell you
          this.
          
          
          But those caught up in consumerism lose this perception. They actually think
          responding to advertising makes them better people. In this way, consumerism is
          a confusion of symbols and things raised to a higher power — we respond to an
          advertisement for a symbol, then the symbol (the product) turns out not to
          represent the thing (value). Then the entire process repeats.
          
          
          For people possessed of common sense, the cure for consumerism is simple:
          overexposure. The more you do it, the quicker you recognize that consumer
          products are symbols masquerading as things. But for those not endowed with
          common sense, consumerism can be addicting, in the same way that marriage,
          government and religion can be.
          
          
          For a more complete treatment of this subject, read
          
Consumer Angst
          .
          
         
        Marriage
        
          
            Early in our history, marriage simply didn't exist, in fact
            it is a relatively recent development
          
          (by "recent" I mean after the dinosaurs died and before
          the Beatles appeared on the Ed Sullivan show). Marriage was
          originally conceived (no pun intended) as a way to signal
          the presence of a special bond between two people. At that
          time, marriage had no special significance itself, it was
          merely a social signaling device, and to some extent it
          also represented a contract with mutual obligations
          
            . In those times marriage stood as a mere symbol for
            something of actual substance — a relationship between
            people that would have existed whether or not the symbol of
            marriage was also present
          
          .
          
          
          Today marriage (the symbol) has become a thing in its own
          right, in some cases (and in some minds) replacing the
          thing it once only represented. It has become a
          multi-billion dollar industry, and only the most perceptive
          individuals remember that it was supposed to have
          symbolized something more important, more fundamental than
          itself — a particular kind of human relationship. This
          reversal of symbol and thing has become so profound that
          one commonly hears a remark like "Marriage is what I really
          want!" as though marriage were anything more than a weather
          forecast or a road sign.
          
          
          Naturally enough, this confusion of empty symbols and
          actual things has led to a rather well-documented
          disenchantment with that institution, even though the
          disenchantment is based on an error in perception. The
          reality of a human relationship between people (usually) of
          opposite sexes is quite different from the packaged
          perception called up by the word "marriage," to the degree
          that people often forget that they will have to build the
          thing (a human relationship) after achieving the symbol for
          the thing (marriage).
          
          
          Then, after people waste precious time seeking "marriage"
          and discovering that marriage is nothing by itself, they
          complain they have been failed by "marriage." This is
          advanced puppetry, and no one seems willing to follow the
          strings.
          
          
          But marriage itself (as it is practiced in modern times),
          by virtue of having taken on a life of its own, is in its
          turn a symbol for something more basic:
          
            We live in a time where symbols for things have largely
            replaced the things themselves
          
          , and this tendency exists in direct proportion to people's
          inability to distinguish between symbols and things.
        
        Government
        
          
            Modern people may have a hard time remembering that
            government was originally conceived as a method for
            accomplishing as a group what individuals could not
            accomplish alone.
          
          In this hypothetical model, groups formed to achieve
          specific goals, they learned how to work together, they
          succeeded or failed
          
            , but then the group dissolved and the individuals returned
            to their natural lives
          
          . In the modern version, just as with marriage, what had
          originally been a symbol for a thing now seems more
          important than the thing it originally represented.
          
          
          Modern governments are to the efficient solution of common
          problems as modern marriage is to natural human
          relationships — in both cases, there is only a superficial
          resemblance, and in both cases, what was once a symbol has
          become a thing. Government has become so much a thing unto
          itself that it is now essentially separate from human
          society, to the degree that governments regularly pass laws
          and collect taxes in the interest of, and for the
          furtherance of, government itself — laws and expenditures
          having nothing to do with the interest of the people the
          governments were originally designed to serve.
          
          
          One might think, reading my harsh indictment of government,
          that I must side with those who blow up government
          buildings. Nothing could be further from the truth — in
          fact
          
            , every fruitcake that blows up a government building
            thereby assures an increase in governmental power
          
          . This is because government's effects are mostly out of
          sight (and mind), and to an average person those effects
          are benign compared to the wholesale slaughter of innocents
          whose only mistake was to be near (or in) that day's
          randomly selected building. This is a fundamental truth
          that Mahatma Gandhi recognized, but that we have largely
          forgotten — violent opposition is the bread and butter on
          big government's table.
          
          
          The real solution to excessive governmental power is
          education. People must learn the difference between a
          symbol (government) and a thing (effective group action),
          and they must come to believe in themselves and the natural
          value of individual experience. If people educate
          themselves to the point that they realize their own power
          and capabilities, huge governments will lose their
          audience. And make no mistake about it — big government
          isn't just like show business, it
          
            is
          
          show business: no audience, no show.
          
          
          In a "natural system," an idea or a group must justify
          itself or dissolve — it cannot simply enforce its
          continued existence without proving its value. If this
          natural law were to be broken, if an idea or group was
          allowed to exist without continually showing its worth,
          then nature herself would step in and extinguish that group
          — or, if necessary, the species to which that group
          belonged. This would happen because a natural system is
          defined by constant scarcity and fierce competition between
          individuals, groups, ideas, and methods.
          
          
          Some will argue that the natural system I describe is
          brutal and unnecessary — it has little to do with modern
          times, and going on about it constitutes worship of the
          primitive. But I maintain that we must study natural
          systems and apply what we learn, because no matter how
          "advanced" we become, we will always be ruled by nature.
          
          
          How do I mean this? After all, we in America appear to be
          completely divorced from the requirements of nature. We
          have more than we need, we don't have to struggle to
          survive (even though we go on endlessly about our
          "struggle," usually to get more of what is already enough).
          But we do this by setting up a special, unnatural
          relationship with nature — instead of experiencing nature
          directly, we have created a hierarchy of experience. Those
          at the "top" of the hierarchy of experience see nature on
          television (and on the Internet). In particular, we see
          natural laws played out in the lives of the modern
          proletarians, people whose job it is to create a cheap
          labor pool and then die quietly, gracefully, without
          objection.
          
          
          The modern proletarians, both in America and elsewhere,
          represent the "bottom" of the hierarchy of experience (as
          Americans see it, anyway). They experience the modern
          version of a natural food chain, with (for example)
          blue-green algae at the "bottom" and humpback whales at the
          "top." And this is how nature reasserts herself in the most
          modern context — a technical "food chain" in which many at
          the "bottom" are allowed to assemble circuit boards for
          computers "consumed" by those few at the "top."
          
          
          The reason natural food chains don't break down is because
          the creatures that make it up have no mobility — try
          teaching calculus to blue-green algae, or, for that matter,
          to a humpback whale. The reason technological "food chains"
          don't break down is because in the same moment that an
          individual realizes his position at the bottom of the "food
          chain," he also realizes he can scramble to the top
          (speaking as someone who did). George Bernard Shaw once
          described religion as "what keeps the poor from killing the
          rich" — our realization of upward mobility is the modern
          equivalent, except that it has more intrinsic truth than
          does religion.
        
        Religion
        
          
            The reason religion seems so appropriate a repository of
            dreams compared to, for example, a used car lot, is only
            because religions have been practicing longer.
          
          The crude methods of the used car salesman, the appearance
          of chrome and freshly washed metal icons, flags, balloons,
          cannot compare with the sophisticated, "uptown"
          presentation of a modern church. In a Western church you
          see actual images of deities, some frozen in advanced
          stages of suffering. Compared to this, a vintage Mustang, a
          classic Ford Coupe, mere metal and oil, cannot compete.
          
          
          Modern religion is not a concept, it is a process. You
          don't evolve or sit in repose, you proceed. From the moment
          you encounter religion, you are in motion toward a goal.
          There is no rest for the wicked, because rest is itself
          wicked. But if you accomplish everything that religion
          places before you, expecting to be left alone at the end of
          the process, you instead discover you must go out and
          persuade other people to join up and commence their own
          process.
          
          
          This is something religion has in common with Alcoholics
          Anonymous — after you are in remission, you must go out
          and find other alcoholics and "bring them in." For AA, the
          real reason for this is because, without that secondary
          goal, the members might slip into drinking again (as
          recounted in a well-known, possibly mythical story). In the
          same way, for the religious person, without the secondary
          goal of proselytizing, he might lose interest in what is,
          after all, a rather shallow belief system.
          
          
          I would like to report that religion (the symbol) once
          served the purpose of introducing people to a natural quest
          for meaning in life (the thing), only later to become
          distorted, but this would be disingenuous — so far as I
          can see, religion has always been a diversion from the
          actual quest, fed at times by personal selfishness, at
          times by a desire for power, but only coincidentally by a
          desire to provide a context for individual spiritual
          experience.
          
          
          Most western religions begin their indoctrination by
          asserting the basic evil of individual experience and the
          absolute necessity of the religion itself. This is simply a
          convenient way to accelerate a process that replaces the
          thing (spirituality) with the symbol (religion).
          
          
          This assertion, this statement that individual experience
          doesn't count or is actually bad for you, is the most basic
          assertion of western religious experience. It conceals (not
          very well) a belief that individual experience is secondary
          to group experience. Thus, to the degree that it influences
          modern people, it is a totalitarian belief system. One
          person is in charge — the person who can most convincingly
          assert his connection with a deity.
          
          
          But religion in all its manifestations can never do more
          than symbolize the reality of individual religious and
          spiritual experience. Western religions are much more
          worldly than many others, having debased even the symbol
          they are responsible for. Instructively, the sad present
          state of Western religion can be summed up by saying
          "Television is better."
          
          
          That's an interesting test. Why not evaluate your most
          prized belief — by comparing it to television? In the case
          of Western religion, the experience is such that people
          prefer television. I hope you see the connection — both
          television (as it is embodied in America) and Western
          religion (ditto) promise something they can't possibly
          deliver: an enriching experience. The only difference is
          that television provides so many colorful images so quickly
          that the average person finds he prefers the empty promise
          of television to the empty promise of religion.
          
          
          The negative side is that television and religion entrain
          people to trust external value systems, to rely on a
          fraudulent report of their own needs. And in this way
          television is worse than religion. Why — because it has no
          moral compass? No — it is only because television has a
          larger audience. Religion has no moral compass either,
          contrary to common belief. Or, to be more specific,
          religion has had the same moral compass all along, but the
          moral landscape's magnetic poles have reversed, leading
          religion's travelers astray. What was sinful is now
          virtuous and vice versa (to use the hackneyed language of
          religion).
          
          
          As just one example, having a large family used to be a
          virtue, now it is no longer so, and it is about to become
          "morally wrong," if that expression can have any meaning in
          the minds of intelligent people. In the real world, very
          soon, to bear one child will guarantee the death of another
          child — that is nature's math, not mine. Unfortunately,
          religion is using the same moral compass in the modern
          world that guided it through ancient times, but under
          nature's law there is no permanent solution to life's
          problems — we must change how we act in life, because life
          itself changes.
          
          
          In a larger sense, religion's power to conceal this fact
          (overpopulation) shows the power of symbols to
          
            conceal the very things they are meant to reveal
          
          . And, once again, it shows the inability of people (the
          symbol's recipients) to see the difference between symbol
          and reality.
          
          
          None of this is to say that spiritual experiences are
          fraudulent. That is a question I am not competent to answer
          one way or another (except for myself). Answering this
          question about religion is much easier — religion has
          validity only to the degree that we are all identical, can
          have meaningful spiritual experiences inside a building,
          listening to the rantings of someone who pretends
          attachment to a deity, and who needs us more than we need
          him.
          
          
          To a person capable of original thought, religion as a
          belief system represents as much of an obstacle as does
          government — a rigid system of facts, no ideas, no
          openness. But the biggest threat to religion and government
          (as practiced in modern times) are the laws of nature, a
          place where constant change is more than just a fact of
          life — it is a requirement.
        
        Science
        
          
            Science is by far the most misunderstood modern human
            activity, and the one whose essence is most poorly conveyed
            to students.
          
          And yet, in order to comprehend the modern world, one must
          also comprehend science. We are surrounded by the fruits of
          scientific thought, but we don't understand the process by
          which these things are created, and more importantly, we
          don't understand the limitations of science. And, as with
          so many other parts of the modern world, we have replaced
          the reality of science with a symbol that is more a
          caricature than a reflection.
          
          
          The myths Americans believe about science and scientists
          are almost too numerous to list — I will touch on just a
          few.
          
          
          
            
              Science myth #1 — The purpose of science is to discover
              truth.
              
            
          
          
          Science, unlike law and religion, does not even pretend to
          be a source of absolute truth — and this is one of
          science's great strengths. The highest product of science
          is not truth, it is theory — the best theory we can devise.
          
          
          When practiced correctly, science is a paradoxical mixture
          of discipline and free-wheeling imagination. A productive
          scientist begins by developing a new insight into an old
          problem (or by posing a new question never before asked) by
          imaginatively creating alternatives to existing theory,
          then the scientist presents his findings in a way that pays
          respect to all the things that can go wrong when we express
          a new idea.
          
          
          Instead of presenting a new idea by saying "I think this is
          true," as one might expect, a scientist analyzes the
          available data and shows how well his theory corresponds to
          that data. And, perhaps more important, in most studies a
          scientist includes a number that represents the probability
          that his result came about by chance.
          
          
          To those untrained in science, this might seem like bending
          over backward with skepticism, but it is actually a very
          efficient way to separate good theories from bad (or
          meaningless) ones. Here is an example. Jerry flips a coin
          eight times and all eight times the coin comes up heads.
          Jerry, who is not trained in science, says "The coin came
          up heads eight times out of eight, therefore it will always
          come up heads. I have discovered a new truth about this
          particular coin."
          
          
          Jerry's friend Susan, trained in science, says "I have
          examined the coin, and it seems normal. Therefore it is
          most likely that the coin has provided a statistically
          improbable result. The probability of getting eight heads
          in eight flips is 1/256, which is unlikely but not
          impossible."
          
          
          Jerry scratches his head. "I studied some math in school —
          does your result mean that if I flip the coin again, the
          chance that it will come up heads in that toss is 1/512?"
          Susan responds "That's called the 'gambler's fallacy' —
          actually the chance you will get heads in any single coin
          flip is always 1/2. But the chance you will get
          
            all heads in a  series of nine tosses
          
          is 1/512."
          
          
          This everyday situation is one reason why many people
          believe in extrasensory perception (as just one example).
          Someone will announce "I successfully predicted 12 coin
          tosses in a row, therefore I am psychic." A scientist, by
          contrast, will ask a few questions and (as likely as not)
          discover either deception or a result that can be explained
          by everyday statistics. In the case of the psychic,
          typically he might discover that the person carried out
          thousands of experimental runs to achieve the reported
          result, and will then explain that if one sat through 4096
          such tests, the probability of achieving 12 correct
          predictions in a row in one of those tests
          
            solely by chance
          
          would be equal to 1/2 (in everyday language, an "even
          chance").
          
          
          Or the psychic might say "Well, there was a negative result
          in the middle of the 12 correct answers, but I didn't count
          that — I wasn't feeling psychic just then anyway." This is
          one of the ways by which science differs from ordinary
          human behavior — in science, you count all the events, and
          you don't offer silly explanations when the data don't meet
          your expectations.
          
          
          This example doesn't mean that psychic ability does not
          exist, or that scientists as a class don't believe in
          psychic phenomena. It only means that scientists have not
          succeeded in producing reliable evidence for psychic
          effects. No self-respecting scientist would say "Psychic
          events are always false," instead he would say "Show me the
          evidence."
          
          
          
            
              Science myth #2 — the best science comes from addressing a
              specific problem.
              
            
          
          
          When science addresses a particular problem, it is called
          "applied research." When scientists are free to work on
          anything they care to, it is called "pure research." And,
          contrary to popular belief, pure research is the source of
          most important scientific results.
          
          
          Scientists love pure research, but politicians hate it.
          Pure research costs the same amount of money as applied
          research, but yields fewer short-term results. In the long
          run, however, pure research creates new fields of science
          and technology, while applied research can only add to an
          existing body of knowledge.
          
          
          The laser, the computer, the transistor and integrated
          circuit which make the modern computer possible,
          television, rocketry, our present understanding of the
          universe, all these resulted from scientists being given
          permission (or giving themselves permission) to think about
          anything they cared to, to be "undisciplined."
          
          
          But the majority of research funds come from government and
          corporations, and those funding sources almost always
          expect short-term results — applied science. This might
          explain why, in spite of the fact that there are more
          scientists living and working today than have existed in
          all of human history, there are fewer fundamental
          discoveries being made than, say, 50 years ago.
          
          
          Someone might say "That's because everything has been
          discovered already" but this is certainly not the reason —
          there are many fundamental unanswered questions, questions
          waiting for creative minds. As just one example, we can
          describe gravity, but we can't explain it. We can predict
          gravity's effects well enough to launch a spacecraft to
          Mars so that it will arrive when and where we expect, but
          we have yet to produce a meaningful explanation for gravity
          and add it to our understanding of the universe. Gravity is
          only one of many questions modern science could address,
          except that no one will pay for the work — it's too
          "theoretical." So, instead of exploring nature's secrets,
          we pay to find (as one $65,000 study discovered) that
          people who are young, rich and healthy are happier than
          those who are old, poor and sick.
          
          
          
            
              Science myth #3 — science can only be practiced by
              scientists
              
            
          
          
          Contrary to this commonly held belief, science is the moral
          property of all thinking people — it is an indispensable
          tool for sorting out reality. Practically any activity can
          benefit from the application of scientific reasoning
          skills. Even automobile mechanics regularly apply a kind of
          science to their work — they replace one part, then
          replace another, but never two at once, so that a
          particular result can be traced to a single cause.
          
          
          Scientific reasoning can also protect us from some of the
          outright stupidity of modern times. For example, let's say
          an advertisement appears on TV that says "Use my $39 secret
          method and make a million dollars in only a few months!" A
          scientifically trained person will take this description of
          reality and place it next to several other descriptions,
          one of which is "If his method can make a million dollars,
          why is he selling it for $39?"
          
          
          Here's another good application of scientific reasoning —
          you see a book that tells the stories of 40 successful
          stock investors, all multimillionaires. The book promises
          to reveal their investment secrets (there are any number of
          such books available). But, trained in science, you
          consider all possibilities, not just one. You quickly
          realize that, if there are millions of people who invest in
          stocks, hundreds of them will become multimillionaires
          
            by chance alone
          
          (and hundreds of others will go broke by chance alone).
          You realize you can program a computer to model a stock
          market and investors, and, even though each portfolio is
          randomly traded and the computer "market" goes up and down
          randomly (without gradually increasing in value over time
          as the real market does), the program will churn out a
          certain number of wildly "successful" investors. You see
          that, in spite of the mechanical nature of the computer
          model (no system, no secrets, random trades), a certain
          number of "investors" will increase their holdings ten
          times over (this computer experiment can be easily
          performed).
          
          
          This is not to say that a successful system for investing
          is impossible in principle, only that most have
          common-sense explanations, and that consistent success in
          the market is more likely the result of chance than genius.
          Also, common sense tells us if there really was a sure-fire
          method to win in the market, the creator of the method
          would be reluctant to reveal it, because most methods fail
          if they are widely practiced. In general, if you see a book
          filled with sure-fire methods (even just one), it is most
          likely that the author's secret sure-fire get-rich-quick
          method is to sell a million copies of his book.
          
          
          The general rule for a scientific thinker is to consider
          all explanations for an effect, not just the one that first
          springs into view. This works for everyone, not just
          professional scientists. A professional does this to
          protect his scientific reputation — normal people do it to
          protect their life savings.
        
        Education
        
          
            "If a foreign government had imposed this system of
            education on the United States, we would rightly consider
            it an act of war." — Nobel Prizewinner Glenn T. Seaborg
          
          
          
          In the first paragraph of this article, I asserted that
          education could reshape itself "to provide actual knowledge
          instead of the symbolic representation of knowledge." In
          this section I will provide the meaning behind these words.
          
          
          Modern education could serve to clarify the difference
          between symbol and thing, except that much of modern
          education depends on just that confusion — you aren't in
          school to acquire knowledge, you are there to get a degree.
          And
          
            mistaking a degree holder for an educated person is
            possibly the commonest confusion of symbol and thing in
            modern times
          
          . Do you need proof? Okay — Dan Quayle not only went to
          college,
          
            he graduated
          
          .
          
          
          The true goal of modern education, stripped of all
          pretense, is to provide
          
            a reasonable outward appearance of scholarship
          
          — this is an easy task, it can be done on a small budget,
          and virtually anyone can be shaped to fit into the costume.
          As a result, we have "educated" people who know there are
          three branches to the American system of government, but
          can't explain why. We have "educated" people who know what
          inflation is, but can't explain what causes it (more on
          this below).
          
          
          A more direct example. Please answer this question: How
          many colors are there in a rainbow?
          
          
          
          The correct answer is that
          
            the question is meaningless,
          
          because a rainbow is a continuum of colors beyond
          counting, including invisible "colors" called infrared and
          ultraviolet beyond the red and violet ends of the band.
          Nevertheless, questions like this are part of the present
          school curriculum, and a question like this one is included
          in the science category of the Trivial Pursuit game cards,
          a game supposedly designed for adults.
          
          
          But even meaningful questions of this kind carry a hidden
          false message —
          
            education means knowing the right answers.
          
          If we have answers for all questions, we believe we are
          educated. We fail to realize that
          
            correct answers are only symbols that represent knowledge,
            they are not themselves knowledge
          
          .
          
          
          In a recent interview, a corporate recruiter said "We need
          people who can
          
            deal with ambiguity
          
          ... Schools must produce students with higher-order
          thinking skills, and this must be done for all students,
          not only for the elites."
          
          
          Corporate and business leaders complain more and more about
          their younger workers' inability to deal with the ambiguity
          of real-world situations, and it renders young people
          unable to compete once they leave the classroom.
          
          
          This problem arises from the determinism of the present
          educational system — we are teaching people
          
            what to think
          
          instead of
          
            how to think
          
          .
          
          
          Entertainer Steve Allen recently said, "We need a fourth R
          to go along with the traditional three R's of education —
          Reading, Writing, 'Rithmetic, and Reason." But such an
          educational change would be revolutionary rather than
          evolutionary, because schools have
          
            never
          
          trained students to think for themselves.
          
          
          The cornerstone of reasoning ability is a grasp of the
          foundations of academic subjects, the ideas that lie behind
          the "answers." In our next example, it is not enough to
          know that the energy in a moving object is proportional to
          its mass times the square of its velocity. Memorizing this
          formula is only symbolic education, but knowing what it
          means in the everyday world can be useful — or lifesaving.
          
          
          
            Fact 1: "The energy in a moving object is proportional to
            its mass times the square of its velocity."
            
            
            Fact 2: "If a car going 20 miles per hour requires 20 feet
            to stop, that same car going 40 miles per hour will take 80
            (not 40) feet to stop."
            
          
          
          Memorizing Fact 1 (and many others like it) will get you a
          diploma. But if you don't understand the idea behind the
          fact, you will not be aware of Fact 2, which could kill you.
          
          
          And guess how many Americans know their cars take four
          times more distance to stop when they double their speed
          (disregarding reaction time)? Virtually none.
          
            It might as well be an atomic secret
          
          .
          
          
          What conclusion should be drawn from this example?
          
          
          
            - 
              Fact 2 should be included along with Fact 1 in the
              education of American students.
            
 
- 
              Students should be educated in such a way that they
              understand
              
                why
              
              fact 1 is true, and therefore any number of other
              dependent facts (such as Fact 2) will become obvious.
            
 
          This is true about education in general, and experience in
          general
          
            : For each fact there is an underlying idea, and it is the
            idea that creates scholarship, not the fact
          
          . A fact only symbolizes a particular example of an idea.
          But this distinction has been lost — in modern education,
          we have replaced idea-based training with fact-based
          training.
          
          
          One more example. Why is the nighttime sky dark? I want to
          emphasize that the correct answer to this question is known
          (within the uncertainty of well-established scientific
          theory), but practically no one outside certain narrow
          specialties knows that answer, including science students.
          This is (once again) because students are provided only
          with facts, and no one attempts to knit those facts into a
          coherent whole, neither students nor professors.
          
          
          Here are some possible answers to the question "why is the
          nighttime sky dark?" (they are not correct):
          
          
          
            - 
              Because stars other than the sun are too far away to light
              up our sky.
            
 
- 
              Because dust clouds out in space block the light from
              other stars.
            
 
          The problem with answer number 1 is that there are a great
          number of stars in every direction, more than enough to
          provide full coverage of the night sky, so wherever one
          directs one's gaze, the surface of a star should be lying
          in that direction. So, barring any other considerations,
          the entire night sky should blaze with the brightness of
          the combined surfaces of all those stars.
          
          
          The problem with answer number 2 is that, over a long
          period of time, the energy from the stars should heat the
          dust clouds to the same temperature as the stars themselves
          (a well-established physical principle), so that after
          billions of years, no matter where one looked, one would
          either see the surface of a star or a dust cloud heated to
          the temperature of a star, in every direction, including
          the direction of our own sun.
          
          
          The correct answer, according to current theory, is that
          the universe is expanding. There are a great but finite
          number of stars in an ever-increasing volume of space, thus
          preventing the average temperature from rising very far. In
          fact
          
            , for centuries the dark night sky provided the answer to a
            question no one knew how to ask
          
          .
          
Click here for a full explanation
          
          
          But, once again, even though specialists now know why the
          night sky is dark, virtually no individuals can provide
          this answer. We are unable to answer this or many other
          questions of a similarly obvious kind, we are unable to
          apply fundamental principles to specific everyday questions
          
            for the reason that we do not understand those fundamental
            principles
          
          . We suffer from a poverty of ideas.
          
          
          Most Americans are educated in name only — we do not have
          the comprehension of ideas that would be required to think
          for ourselves, and we also are not trained or encouraged to
          do this. Not only are we unable to think creatively, we
          don't even possess this expectation,
          
            and this is not an accident
          
          .
          
          
          There are many vested interests that prefer us as we are —
          in government, religion and in corporate America. Think how
          much more trouble we would be if we could think for
          ourselves. Not only would we be much more difficult to
          govern (to the degree that politicians would have to
          explain their actions), we would be much more alert to the
          public stupidity that so often surrounds us.
          
          
          Here's an example — former President Gerald Ford actually
          persuaded many Americans to wear a button reading "whip
          inflation now!" Imagine this happening in a society of
          educated people — the immediate reaction would have been a
          nationwide call on government to stop printing dollars not
          represented by goods and services (the real cause of that
          inflation) and then someone would have added "those buttons
          you are printing — 'whip inflation now' — tell the lie
          that inflation is the fault of the private sector.
          Therefore, because the buttons tell a lie and are printed
          at public expense,
          
            they are themselves inflationary
          
          , because they expend public resources and create no new
          wealth."
          
          
          But, as it happened, no one said anything. The people in
          government were certain the rest of us would swallow the
          lie that we were responsible for inflation, and government
          was right — we did. This is why inflation can continue at
          the whim of government
          
            — virtually no one realizes that governmental policy is
            the most frequent cause of inflation
          
          .
          
          
          Inflation is really quite simple — it is a measure of how
          many goods and services a dollar can buy, and how that
          changes with time. When the relationship between dollars
          and goods and services changes, so that a dollar buys fewer
          goods and services, the result is called inflation.
          
          
          In most cases, inflation is caused by a governmental
          decision to print more dollars than there are goods and
          services — this is a calculated bet that the extra dollars
          will create a psychological effect and actually increase
          the size of the economy, thus making the dollars actually
          stand for something. But very frequently this money
          printing only causes private value to flow into the hands
          of the government (through one of several methods) or it
          simply causes people to lose trust in paper money.
          
          
          For this and other reasons, if a change takes place so that
          we are motivated to learn creative thinking skills, we
          should not expect any help from government (although to
          refuse earnest help would be equally stupid). We should
          anticipate a lot of resistance from many quarters. But in
          the long run, after all the emotional reactions have
          expired, we will be more productive, more effective, and
          less prone to follow charlatans both inside and outside
          government. Most important, we will finally deserve the
          label "educated."
          
          
          And we will know why the sky is dark at night.
        
 
        Conclusion
        
          
            Most of us are unable to sort out reality — we can't
            distinguish between a thing and a symbol for that thing
          
          . This springs from several causes. One cause is that we
          are isolated from the natural world, where the distinction
          between a thing and a symbol is more obvious. Another cause
          is our educational system, which simply reflects the
          intellectual laziness of the society in which it is
          embedded. A third cause is resistance on the part of vested
          interests — if we could think creatively, we would be
          difficult to govern, and advertisers would have to appeal
          to reason instead of emotion.
          
          
          We see the effects of this confusion of symbol and thing
          all around us:
          
          
          
            - 
              We seek "marriage" as though that quasi-legal institution
              were the same thing as a worthwhile human relationship.
            
 
            - 
              We seek "education" as though knowledge could be injected
              into us like a vaccine without any investment on our part.
              Failing at this, we then trust the statements of people who
              possess white, rectangular sporting event trophies called
              "diplomas."
            
 
            - 
              We seek "religion" as though any worthwhile answers to
              fundamental spiritual questions could be delivered in
              encapsulated form, outside the direct experience of nature.
            
 
            - 
              We trust the findings of "science" as though science's
              principal value could be meaningfully delivered to people
              who don't understand science (it cannot).
            
 
            - 
              We trust the wisdom of "government" as though, without
              direct participation by all of us, government could be
              anything but a dumping ground for aging juvenile
              delinquents.
            
 
          There are many other examples. The solution to the problem
          is to cast away a basic precept of modern times — that
          wisdom can be bought and sold as though it were a toaster
          
            . It can't be bought — it must be acquired through
            personal experience.
          
          
          
          As to the question of training people for meaningful,
          skilled lives in the modern world, educators must begin to
          impart thinking skills. This means training students to
          know facts,
          
            but also to know the ideas behind those facts
          
          . To say it another way, educators must stop teaching
          
            what
          
          to think and start teaching
          
            how
          
          to think. This means forming a partnership with students,
          so the latter realize they are the most important part of
          the process.
          
          
          There is another way of saying this, a somewhat darker way.
          As a species, if we decide that facts are good enough, if
          we abandon our pursuit of ideas, we thereby replace the
          human intellectual adventure with a system of fixed
          beliefs, and all human progress will cease. Eventually
          nature will deal with us as she deals with all inflexible
          species — we will vanish from the earth.
          
          
          As an individual, relying only on facts assures that you
          will be marginalized — and left behind. If you think the
          world is just fine the way it is, then you may become a
          "fact consumer" and no one will notice. If, instead, you
          want to make a personal mark on the modern world, you must
          have ideas —
          
            ideas are the fuel of modern times
          
          .
          
          
          When it comes to a choice about personal values, "the
          meaning of life," the acquisition of wisdom, no one is an
          expert (which means everyone is, which means you are).
          There is no simple scientific, technical, or religious
          solution to the problem of shaping an individual human
          being — all an honest teacher can do is make a list of
          obviously flawed methods, say "these don't work," and then
          silently point toward the horizon of all known experience.
          Our past and present lie about us in comical repose, and
          our future lies beyond that horizon.
        
 
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