Knowing and learning

china

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Jul 30, 2006
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What do we mean by learning? Is there learning when you are merely accumulating knowledge, gathering information? That is one kind of learning, is it not? As a student of engineering, you study mathematics, and so on; you are learning, informing yourself about the subject. You are accumulating knowledge in order to use that knowledge in practical ways. Your learning is accumulative, additive. Now, when the mind is merely taking on, adding, acquiring, is it learning? Or is learning something entirely different? I say the additive process that we now call learning is not learning at all. It is merely a cultivation of memory, which becomes mechanical; and a mind that functions mechanically, like a machine, is not capable of learning. A machine is never capable of learning, except in the additive sense. Learning is something quite different, as I shall try to show you.

A mind that is learning never says, 'I know,' because knowledge is always partial, whereas learning is complete all the time. Learning does not mean starting with a certain amount of knowledge, and adding to it further knowledge. That is not learning at all; it is a purely mechanistic process. To me, learning is something entirely different. I am learning about myself from moment to moment, and the myself is extraordinarily vital; it is living, moving; it has no beginning and no end. When I say, 'I know myself,' learning has come to an end in accumulated knowledge. Learning is never cumulative; it is a movement of knowing which has no beginning and no end." J.K
 

Lieutenant Governor

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Aug 27, 2006
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"To me, learning is something entirely different. I am learning about myself from moment to moment, and the myself is extraordinarily vital; it is living, moving; it has no beginning and no end"

What exactly are you learning about yourself from moment to moment?
 

feronia

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Jul 19, 2006
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Are you asking the difference between book smarts and wisdom? Or common sense? If so I believe there's a huge difference. A genius can have all the knowledge in the world but may not have enough common sense to take care of himself in a hurricane situation where survival instincts are needed.
 

Dexter Sinister

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china said:
Is there learning when you are merely accumulating knowledge, gathering information? That is one kind of learning, is it not?
Yes.

Now, when the mind is merely taking on, adding, acquiring, is it learning?
Yes.

I say the additive process that we now call learning is not learning at all. It is merely a cultivation of memory, which becomes mechanical; and a mind that functions mechanically, like a machine, is not capable of learning.
False analogy, in my opinion. Machines are indeed capable of learning. They can change the way they respond to the information they get about what's going on around them, depending on the nature of the information. If that's not learning, I don't know what else you could call it. Quite apart from that, minds are not machines and don't function like machines. And how the Hell else can you learn except by adding to your stockpile of things you can remember?

A mind that is learning never says, 'I know,' because knowledge is always partial, whereas learning is complete all the time.
(emphasis mine) WHAT??!! What have you been smoking?

I am learning about myself from moment to moment, and the myself is extraordinarily vital; it is living, moving; it has no beginning and no end.
Uh... was there not a moment when a sperm met an egg to create you? Was there not a moment when you were born? Aren't those beginnings of some sort? Do you not expect to die some day? Isn't that an end of some sort?

I've read that post of yours a dozen times and have not a clue what you think learning means. Learning is the acquisition of knowledge and understanding; those aren't hard concepts to grasp. No offense intended here China, I've read enough of your posts to know you're not stupid or dull, but on this one you sound like people I knew in the 1960s who doped themselves up and thought their inanities were profundities. I think you need to clarify your thought processes.
 

Vereya

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Apr 20, 2006
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Learning is not simply the accumulation of information. It is also acquiring understanding of some facts or phenomena, of the way things work and of why they work in that particular way, and getting to use this understanding in your everyday life. That's the sense of learning somehing, in my opinion.
 

Dexter Sinister

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Vereya said:
Learning is not simply the accumulation of information. It is also acquiring understanding of some facts or phenomena...
Exactly; nicely put. You can pack your memory with facts all you want, but if you don't see that they make a pattern and point to certain conclusions, then you may know a whole lot but you haven't learned much, which is why I defined learning as the acquisition of knowledge and understanding.

I've known people who have lots of information at their fingertips, and they're devastating at games like Trivial Pursuit, but try to talk to them about what any of this information means and you'll get a response like "Uh... whut?" Lots of information, no comprehension (which I think is the real difference between machines and minds, at least so far...). You think that new person you just met must be really bright and perceptive and he turns out to be an idiot savant. Most irritating and disappointing.
 

feronia

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You think that new person you just met must be really bright and perceptive and he turns out to be an idiot savant. Most irritating and disappointing.

Yes it is irritating when people don't live up to your expectations.


Learning is not simply the accumulation of information. It is also acquiring understanding of some facts or phenomena, of the way things work and of why they work in that particular way, and getting to use this understanding in your everyday life. That's the sense of learning somehing, in my opinion.

Vereya your way of expressing yourself is refreshing. I totally agree that knowledge is more than facts it also requires a verb to be knowledge. There's a doing incorporated in knowing.
 

china

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Suppose you had never read a book, religious or psychological, and you had to find the meaning, the significance of life. How would you set about it? Suppose there were no Masters, no religious organizations, no Buddha, no Christ, and you had to begin from the beginning. How would you set about it? First, you would have to understand your process of thinking, would you not? - and not project yourself, your thoughts, into the future and create a God who pleases you; that would be too childish. So first you would have to understand the process of your thinking. That is the only way to discover anything new . When I say that learning or knowledge is an impediment, a hindrance, I am not including technical knowledge - how to drive a car, how to run machinery - or the efficiency that such knowledge brings. I have in mind quite a different thing: that sense of creative happiness that no amount of knowledge or learning will bring. To be creative in the truest sense of that word is to be free of the past from moment to moment, because it is the past that is continually shadowing the present. Merely to cling to information, to the experiences of others, to what someone has said, however great, and try to approximate your action to that - all that is knowledge .But to discover anything new you must start on your own; you must start on a journey completely denuded, especially of knowledge, because it is very easy, through knowledge and belief, to have experiences; but these experiences are merely the products of self-projection and therefore utterly unreal, false." JK.


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Vereya

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Apr 20, 2006
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Very true. If you live in a vacuum, and have a world of your own to create and its laws to invent. In that case you can easily cast aside all the knowledge and experience that humanity has accumulated, look inside yourself and start on your own. But I don't think that you live in a vacuum. You live in a world, that develops according to some definite rules and laws. They exist, and they work, regardless of you. And that is an objective fact. So, instead of discarding all knowledge of these laws, it would probably be better to get to know them better? And to get to know the world you have to observe it, to study it, and to make your conclusions. It is not an act of training your memory, it is an act of training your brain, in fact.
And creative happiness cannot, in my opinion, be compared to learning and understanding something that already exists. I mean, these are not opposing notions, like black and white or good or bad. These are totally different categories. Creative happiness is a great thing to experience, that is true. But you don't have to exclude learning from you life to create something. After all, you have to learn to draw before you create a great picture.
 

humanbeing

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Jul 21, 2006
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Vereya and China...

What exactly do you folks mean by creative happiness?

I suppose could guess on my own...

China, I would guess that by creative happiness, you mean being creative for whatever ends you would personally desire and/or undertake of your own accord, rather than being forced into doing something else by a person or an institution. So maybe listening to a teacher in an educational institution could be considered somewhat akin to acting as an audio recorder (though not necessarily always).

Perhaps, as Richard Dawkins put it (I'm not going to quote him on it exactly, because my memory will prove to be way off the mark from what he actually wrote), when you are first taught to do math, let us say addition or multiplication or whatever, you figure out that 6 x 2 = 12, because that is what the adults told you it would equal. It is only after time, when you have really wrapped your mind around it yourself (that is, when you have applied your own creativity to the whole process), that you gain an appreciation and understanding for why 6 x 2 = 12.

Basically, in that sense, from here we may find somewhat of a difference between learning and 'learning', as you wondered initially. It is sort of the conclusion that others have already come to in this thread.
 

humanbeing

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Jul 21, 2006
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After all, you have to learn to draw before you create a great picture

Leaving aside what it is that creates a great picture in someone's mind...

One can be taught all sorts of things in a classroom about shading and perspective, but it still boils down to that person taking the time to draw over and over again, getting better at it and learning, using their degree of mastery to limit the amount of mistakes that occur (this is art, essentially - and I would argue it covers any sort of action that is undertaken on one's own accord).

You can replicate a process (say copying a certain picture) over and over, but that in itself does not make you an artist, nor is it certain to make you better at similar or different actions - so it is perhaps not learning in the same sense as that which an artist undergoes, as it might offer less room for creativity.

These are some of the differences in creativity and learning that I think China was trying to get at.

of course, I could be wrong.
 

china

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What is the mind? When I put that question, please don't wait for a reply from me. Look at your own mind; observe the ways of your own thought. What I describe is only an indication; just like in the previous posts , it is not the reality. The reality you must experience for yourself. The word, the description, the symbol, is not the actual thing. The word door is obviously not the door. The word love is not the feeling, the extraordinary quality that the word indicates. So do not let us confuse the word, the name, the symbol, with the fact. If you merely remain on the verbal level and discuss what the mind is, you are lost, for then you will never feel the quality of this astonishing thing called the mind.
So, what is the mind? Obviously, the mind is our total awareness or consciousness; it is the total way of our existence, the whole process of our thinking. The mind is the result of the brain. The brain produces the mind. Without the brain there is no mind, but the mind is separate from the brain. It is the child of the brain. If the brain is limited, damaged, the mind is also damaged. The brain, which records every sensation, every feeling of pleasure or pain, the brain with all its tissues, with all its responses, creates what we call the mind, although the mind is independent of the brain.
You don't have to accept this. You can experiment with it and see for yourself." JK
 

humanbeing

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Jul 21, 2006
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If you are referring to the end of creativity pretty much being human nature, then there is a chance I might agree.

But I want to know what you mean by creative happiness, as best as you can explain it using words.
 

humanbeing

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By the way, I won't be experimenting with that particular aspect of the brain/mind that you mention. Won't see me damaging my brain to see what kind of effects it has on my mind.
 

tamarin

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Jun 12, 2006
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I thought this type of thread went out of fashion in the 70's. It's like arguing over the specific gravity of rocks.
 

humanbeing

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I'm honestly just trying to figure out what is going on, tamarin. Maybe it went out of fashion for a good reason.

All I know is, I asked a question about whatever creative happiness is supposed to mean, and I got a response about the mind and having to experience things for myself (assuming China was talking to me).

I dunno...
 

china

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You and I have intrinsically the capacity to be happy, to be creative, to be in touch with something that is beyond the clutches of time. Creative happiness is not a gift reserved for the few; and why is it that the vast majority do not know that happiness? Why do some seem to keep in touch with the profound in spite of circumstances and accidents, while others are destroyed by them? Why are some resilient, pliable, while others remain unyielding and are destroyed? In spite of knowledge, some keep the door open to that which no person and no book can offer, while others are smothered by technique and authority. Why? It is fairly clear that the mind wants to be caught and made certain in some kind of activity, disregarding wider and deeper issues, for it is then on safer ground; so its education, its exercises, its activities are encouraged and sustained on that level, and excuses are found for not going beyond it.
Before they are contaminated by so-called education, many children are in touch with the unknown; they show this in so many ways. But environment soon begins to close around them, and after a certain age they lose that light, that beauty which is not found in any book or school. Why? Do not say that life is too much for them, that they have to face hard realities, that it is their karma, that it is their fathers’ sin; this is all nonsense. Creative happiness is for all and not for the few alone. You may express it in one way and I in another, but it is for all. Creative happiness has no value on the market; it is not a commodity to be sold to the highest bidder, but it is the one thing that can be for all.
Is creative happiness realizable? That is, can the mind keep in touch with that which is the source of all happiness? Can this openness be sustained in spite of knowledge and technique, in spite of education and the crowding in of life? It can be, but only when the educator is educated to this reality, only when he who teaches is himself in touch with the source of creative happiness. So our problem is not the pupil, the child, but the teacher and the parent. Education is a vicious circle only when we do not see the importance, the essential necessity above all else, of this supreme happiness. After all, to be open to the source of all happiness is the highest religion; but to realize this happiness, you must give right attention to it, as you do to business. The teacher’s profession is not a mere routine job, but the expression of beauty and joy, which cannot be measured in terms of achievement and success.
The light of reality and its bliss are destroyed when the mind, which is the seat of self, assumes control. Self-knowledge is the beginning of wisdom; without self-knowledge, learning leads to ignorance, strife and sorrow.
JK
 

humanbeing

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Jul 21, 2006
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I agree that we all have the capacity to be happy and creative, obviously... but that other part about being in touch with something that is beyond the clutches of time. I'm not too sure about that one. Maybe I am just fooling myself if I think I am in touch with something that is beyond the clutches of time?