Who should be pampered?

Margarita 2022-04-21 09:01:16

Progress is mostly driven by talented people, and it is often the geniuses who open the sky to the world and take us to new places. In the world of genius, it is difficult for the world to understand, and most people treat it with the mentality of being suppressed by non-me races. Don't you see the geniuses such as Newton, Einstein, von Neumann, etc., you are still herding cattle and farming.
Geniuses tend to be gregarious, but those who do not fit in are not necessarily geniuses. Charlie Munger said: If the prophet told me where I would die, I would never go there. Of course no prophet will tell you that people who don't fit in are geniuses, so my question is what to do with such people? It is to give freedom with an inclusive mentality. As long as those who do not fit in do not harm the society, they should not be persecuted. Only in this way will the society progress in a more harmonious and faster way. Don’t keep squeezing geniuses when they are born like in the film. To gain more of his talents, and to honor him in the temple after his death, what's the use?
Also "heterogeneous" a freedom.

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Extended Reading

The Imitation Game quotes

  • Joan Clarke: [to a convalescing Alan] Why don't we do a crossword puzzle? It'll only take us five minutes. Or in your case, six.

  • Title Card: After a year of government-mandated hormonal therapy, Alan Turing committed suicide on June 7th 1954.

    Title Card: He was 41 years old.

    Title Card: Between 1885 and 1967, approximately 49,000 homosexual men were convicted of gross indecency under British law.

    Title Card: In 2013, Queen Elizabeth II granted Turing a posthumous royal pardon, honouring his unprecedented achievements.

    Title Card: Historians estimate that breaking Enigma shortened the war by more than two years, saving over 14 million lives.

    Title Card: It remained a government-held secret for more than 50 years.

    Title Card: Turing's work inspired generations of research into what scientists called "Turing Machines".

    Title Card: Today, we call them computers.