Sikander
I know they didn't use the theoretical approach to things, but that increases my respect. Theory is a shortcut for practice; theory would help reject a hundred bad ideas you'd have to go through if you didn't know it. Real, formal, theory didn't even begin until Newton started his work, and this is why progress was so greatly increased after this. It doesn't mean they had any less need of the brains they had than we do, though. Pattern-matching, noticing coincidences and discovering similarities are all demanding intellectual tasks, especially when you're starting out with very limited experience/knowledge.
Look at how many great scientists have lived in the last 350 years. I could rattle off a hundred names that made real, original contributions to science and technology. How many great scientists can you name from before 1500? Yet there is 40 000 years of advance made before this by tens of billions of physiologically modern humans. These people were no less intelligent than we, but because they had no foundation to work from their progress was slow and painstaking, trial-and-error. The human mind was stretched to its limits to achieve what we look back on and perceive as minor advancements in flint tools and the like.
I know they didn't use the theoretical approach to things, but that increases my respect. Theory is a shortcut for practice; theory would help reject a hundred bad ideas you'd have to go through if you didn't know it. Real, formal, theory didn't even begin until Newton started his work, and this is why progress was so greatly increased after this. It doesn't mean they had any less need of the brains they had than we do, though. Pattern-matching, noticing coincidences and discovering similarities are all demanding intellectual tasks, especially when you're starting out with very limited experience/knowledge.
Look at how many great scientists have lived in the last 350 years. I could rattle off a hundred names that made real, original contributions to science and technology. How many great scientists can you name from before 1500? Yet there is 40 000 years of advance made before this by tens of billions of physiologically modern humans. These people were no less intelligent than we, but because they had no foundation to work from their progress was slow and painstaking, trial-and-error. The human mind was stretched to its limits to achieve what we look back on and perceive as minor advancements in flint tools and the like.
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