THE ILLUSION OF KNOWLEDGE
“The
greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance,
it’s
the illusion of knowledge.”
Daniel
J. Boorstin
I really
admire people who give me an impression, that they are very ‘informed’ people…
which means, they are well-read, well-travelled and knowledgeable. Actually, it’s
not their encyclopedic mind that I am impressed with, it’s their eloquent
speech – the fine gift of gab. These are the Shashi Tharoors around us… They
can hop from one subject to another, just like the grasshopper hops from one blade
of grass to another… You wonder: What a mind! What a Man!
So, do I envy Shashi Tharoors
around me?
Yes, I do.
Am I lying?
No Sir… Seriously, I envy them.
“But, why should you envy
anyone, who even though knows the entire brahmand and even though can
present his knowledge with the grace of Brahma Himself?
I don’t know why… But, I, most
certainly, get a complex when it goes on around me…
“You are an idiot,” said a near
one, today, when I expressed before him my atmasankat, “Your
assumptions are your windows on the world,” he quoted Isaac Asimov, “Scrub them
off every once in a while, or the light won’t come in.”
I was quite relived… Isaac
Asimov’s advice applies both – to ones like me, who suffer from a complex, and the
Shashi Tharoors around me, who are accused of giving such a complex!
This much said, let me make it
clear: This Post is not about curing the minds of Shashi Tharoors around me; it’s
about curing the minds like mine.
Let me also set the record straight:
I, truly, admire Shashi Tharoor immensely for both his vast knowledge and amazing
eloquence. But, I do not feel jealous of him at all. I dragged him in this
Post, just in a lighter vein… No offence, Tharoor Sir… It’s nothing to do with
you.
This Post is about our own
illusion of knowledge… Yes, as Daniel Boorstin says, “The greatest enemy of knowledge
is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge.”
No matter how much I know, I,
also, better know, that I haven’t been able to ‘touch’ even the surface of the brahmand,
leave alone scratching it. It’s like the proverbial one-eyed king in the
kingdom of the blind!
So, when I know this truth,
why should I feel bad at all when someone around me – even unintentionally –
gives me an impression, that he or she is a ‘walking encyclopedia’? And, even
if he can convey his knowledge with the eloquence of Brahma?
Why can’t I simply relish it,
and feel good for him or her? Why can’t I simply express my appreciation? And,
this: Why can’t I simply go about my life doing what I am supposed to do here
on this earth, with whatever time handed to me?
Theodore Roosevelt said, “People
don’t care how much you know, until they know how much you care.”
Is there anything more to the brahmand?
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic’s: Pixels/ 1. Mohan Reddy 2. Artem Beliaikin
Video: Dare to do Motivation
Comments
Love this line! Such a nice video too!
Keep writing sir, brings a smile on my face always :)
-Dolphin