So last semester I took a class called "The World Made Digital". It wasn't until I looked at my final grade that I realized that the class was actually called "The Word Made Digital", and all of a sudden the course made so much more sense. Anyways...
Here's an interesting question: As we grow older, why does it get harder to change or modify our perspectives on the world? As we experience more, see more, and do more, shouldn't we be able to view the world through more and more lenses? The answer might be pretty simple: As we grow older we build our own perspective, and we're less willing to let it go, and maybe we physically become less capable of appreciating new viewpoints as our brains mature and stop developing at the breakneck pace of adolescence. However, we might be conjecturing silly answers to the wrong question.
Does it actually become more difficult to change or modify our perspectives as we grow older, or is it a case of observational bias? That is, is it because we are aware of more viewpoints that we realize how rigid our own viewpoints are? But any high schooler would be able to tell you stories of overbearing, ultra-strict parents; but then one must ask, is this a case of the parents not seeing it from the high schooler's perspective, or the high schooler not seeing it from the parents' perspective?
I'm sure there have probably been a multitude of sociological studies carried out answering these questions, but quite frankly I'm not actually interested in the answer. The thing that interests me about perspective is that you can have a perspective on perspective, and that in itself will affect your perspective. It's impossible to try and step back from perspective to provide, well, a perspective on it without changing your own perspective in the process. But you probably already knew all of that. Anyways...
The academic study of humanities and social sciences (i.e. "liberal arts") often get a lot of flak for its perceived uselessness in technical applications. As an engineering major in an institute of engineers, it has been very easy for me to fall into that mindset. However, "The Word Made Digital" was offered as a joint course with graduate students who had been liberal arts majors during their undergraduate years, so a number of students in the class had an expansive literary background and, as I saw it, a completely different perspective on the works we saw than I had.
... And I found that I had a lot of difficulty seeing the works through their perspectives. Now I've done a lot of tutoring and technical communication, and people generally comment on how well I can convey ideas (at least when explaining things to small audiences that I think I have a thorough understanding of). I generally attribute this to my ability to switch perspectives and explain things from multiple angles not just in a technical sense, but in a more humanistic, intuitive understanding sense. Similarly, I can learn effectively from a variety of different teaching styles by thinking in the perspective of the 'student' that the lesson is targeting. Yet here I was, confronted by a perspective that I was unable to easily assimilate or imitate.
What was the lesson I took away from this? Perhaps I had become a little complacent with the box I lived in. It is easy to take a bit of cleverness and a bit of eccentricity and label it as "thinking outside of the box". However, (ignoring the fact that self-attributed eccentricity is almost always observational bias; of course everyone has their own unique set of quirks) more often then not all we are is moving the box. It doesn't take much effort to think outside of someone else's box; no two boxes are the same, after all. That's why teams with diversity in training, education, and viewpoints have been shown to produce strong, robust solutions to difficult open-ended problems. However, to think outside of your own box is not such a trivial matter.
Anyways, the true moral of this post is that for my class we made a number of individual projects to help us frame the work we were seeing in the context of work we did ourselves. I'd just like to share my final project, "A Reading Room". There also a couple of other projects I did that I'd like to share, but they aren't as suitable for web distribution and if I ever get around to porting them to some other language, I might release them. So without further ado, here is a link to A Reading Room. It's a Java Application with the two necessary files for it to run (level1.txt and terminal.png), as well as the source code in the form of an exported Eclipse project (requires vecmath). Have fun, use the wasd keys to move. Do whatever you want with it, as long as you don't change the authorship in the code without making significant revisions of your own and don't rehost the unmodified program anywhere. The .jar file should run out of the box, and it's a little computationally intensive due to a pretty unoptimized raytracer I built for lighting, but it should run on most modern computers.
First off, i would like to commend you on a great post. It raised a lot of good points while questioning the mindset of most, admittedly myself included, people. I find it is always important to take a step back, if only for a moment. And example of this would be our busy college lives. We are so wrapped up in the day to day hustle of lectures, research, and homework that we lose site of what life is. Very rarely do we find ourselves just laying in the grass, forgetting for just a moment all of our cares and just taking in the now. While this may only last for a moment, that moment is really true bliss. I find in doing this we, as you so aptly put, "think out side of our box." While this may not be to tackle a problem it does serve to shift our perspective outside of just ourselves and what we have to do for the immediate time to come. I highly encourage you or anyone for that matter to just try a take a few minutes to just sit back and let the world move past you instead of you always moving with it, for doing the latter you will surely lose site of what matters.
ReplyDeleteI do share similar opinions about the teaching example you gave. However i just have one point of different. I would not call that an example of a change or breath of perspective. Perspective carries with it a sense of judgment or bias. It seems that in the teaching example i would be more inclined to say its an understanding of the other student that allows just tailoring of the teaching and thus the effectiveness of the lessons. Despite this, i feel all this boils down to really one main concept that people miss more often then not. Respect. If you simply have respect for your common man, not a sense of superiority or any falsity that, in your mind of course, puts you above him, then you will want to try to see things his way and understand where he is coming from. Such as Everlast sung "Walk a mile in his shoes." Once we better ourselves to do that we will surely find our perspective changing whether by a conscious effort of habit or just a happen-chance of respect. Our perspective will slowly morph and encompass the perspectives that we meet. This is not to say that we much agree with them all, but that we have experienced them and then are much more successful in giving our impression of them. It is this holistic approach of our encounters with people that we should practice such that we may better ourselves and learn more about the different view around us.
More often then not i find an opposition to this being a combination of a feeling of betterment, not being bothered to, or really just not caring. I think any reason is just plain wrong, but alas i cannot change what other people think...yet. But to those who continue to hold the lid of the boxes firmly shut and perhaps even use duck tape to reinforce their ill conceived notions of the world around us, i only ask this: If you are not willing to learn, then please, i beg of you, dont go shoving your self absorbed opinions onto the world because you have a misguided sense of what is right and feel everyone else is wrong. All you are doing is making a fool of yourself, much to the enjoyment of some, but you are also hurting those whom you have a conflict with simply because their perspective does not fit into your very rigid and very small box.
Only through pursuit of understanding those around us will we in turn better ourselves and become more worldly. But take caution, nothing is more dangerous then an ignorant man who is convinced he is right and has a notion that he should change the world.
Thank you for the post, i quite enjoyed it.
Edgar