Thursday, May 25, 2017
Capacities
When I heard
about a recent Ted talk that got “thunderous applause” and a standing ovation
what made it especially thrilling was that the talk was about the fact that we
could give a guaranteed income to all the poor of this country for a quarter of
the defense budget.
This reminded me of a quote from a previous president,
General Dwight D. Eisenhauer.
“Every gun that is
made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense,
a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not
clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It’s spending the
sweat of its laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its
children.”
The current
president’s proposed budget takes from the people who need it most to give to
those who have plenty already, a blatant dismissal of the actual needs of the
country’s population in favor of already bloated defense spending. This wastes
the potential of so many who won’t be properly nourished and educated and thus
never have an opportunity to offer contributions based on their own
capabilities.
We find out who we
are by finding out what we can do, what we’re capable of, what we love most, which
open up abilities we didn’t know were there. To eliminate fear of poverty or
being in a position where humiliation is part of the price of a paycheck, people’s
own inclinations could begin to assert their presence. The idle TV and facebook
time is because people are so tired. Their happiness and well-being are not
built into the equation of modern success. Even if they achieve the advertised
result of wealth and status, it’s no safeguard from sadness and disappointment.
The limited goals
and avenues presented as the road forward often lead away from the untapped
resources that all humans have within themselves. Instead of mimicking the
indulgent rich, discovering a world of what they like to do develops an
original person with a unique contribution. Pursuing many interests builds a
brain of many circuits filled with skills and observed patterns for future
analogy. The nuclear accumbens, often called the pleasure center because of its
role increasing dopamine, has many inputs from the prefrontal cortex, location
of our most evolved capacities, areas of imagination and problem solving,
analysis and planning, putting words on the undescribable. Taking interest in
something and action in relation to it stimulates more dopamine, giving greater
focus and concentration. It’s a system that rewards personal development.
Who knows what problems could be solved,
innovations discovered and culture advanced if we treated human beings as our
greatest resource. The work of Martha Nussbaum argues that quality of life in a
country is not shown by GDP but by opportunity to find “what each person can do
and be” In her book “Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach” she
presents an evolved model that focuses on respect for everyone’s ability to
define themselves through their own capacities. She writes ,“The Stoics taught
that every single human being, just by being human, has dignity and is worthy
of reverence”.
Verbal fluency has
dominated history and created a mindset that separated out things from the
whole and pinned them down with labels. Visual intelligence embeds everything
in context. Everyone has a perspective to offer on a big picture built from their
accumulated visual experience. This is a unique set of understandings at the
base of a unique visual mind that each has to offer. Economic growth without
human development does not tap the potential of the majority and is an enormous
waste of the resources of a country.
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