Posts Tagged ‘thinking’

Is It Arrogant to Think for Yourself?

February 20th, 2012

When you are intellectually independent, there is an unspoken sense among many of those who hear you that you are arrogant. People have some fear of the true thinker, as though he or she is somehow a threat because he won’t “go along” with the group or with cultural ideas and expectations. But the arrogant man or woman is not the one who thinks; he is the one who imagines he has found the absolute right system of beliefs or guru to follow; the one who has abdicated his thinking to others.

Consider for a moment what it means to stop deciding what is true using your own mind. There will still be things you hold as true, but for what reason? Most likely for this reason: some important authority on Earth, present or past, has claimed certain things to be true, and you accept that authority as your guide. Now, since it is clear to all who pay attention that there are “authorities” of all types who will say all kinds of things, isn’t it also clear that it is YOU who decide which one to follow? You decide that this » Read more: Is It Arrogant to Think for Yourself?

The Thousand Mile Hole

January 17th, 2012

That’s the name of my newest book. Subtitled, “A Guide to Deep Thought,” it starts with a fall into a hole that is (you guessed it) a thousand miles deep. There is something different about a hole like that, when compared to other holes. Normally, if you fall off a cliff or into a deep hole, you die very quickly. Perhaps you have the proverbial “life flashing before your eyes,” but it has to flash quickly since you will hit bottom in mere seconds. But with a hole of a thousand miles, and the with humans reaching terminal velocity at around 125 miles per hour, you would fall for eight hours before certain death.

Or is death certain? That’s one of the many things I explore as I fall to my death all day long in Chapter One. This is an extended version of the classic “thought experiment” used by Albert Einstein and others. In Einstein’s case, he imagined things like running alongside a beam of light, or a man falling from a building. He used these exercises in imagination to change the face of modern physics.

In other chapters I look at many ways to think deeply and creatively about almost anything.

The book was really finished more than a year ago, but I got busy with many other projects. In order to get this one out there I finally decided to skip the paper version for now. The book  has been published only on Amazon Kindle. You can get a copy here:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B006U1OQ2Q

Fortunately, if you do not have a Kindle reader, it costs nothing to » Read more: The Thousand Mile Hole