Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
Bret L Bret L is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,145
Default What Only Amateurs Can Do

((This is one of those great things that relates to what this group
used to be in the purpose of, e.g., audio. Audio professionals did not
invent high fidelity. Determined amateurs did. Professionals invented
the TOOLS but amateurs made them do what was theretofore considered
both impossible and unnecessary. The high fidelity businesses were
founded by people who HAD BEEN amateurs, and became the new
professionals. Think about it. Bret.))

What Only Amateurs Can Do

Posted by Brian on June 12, 2009 at 12:19 pm
Filed Under Blasts from the Past, Coaching Session | 5 Comments

Posted by Bob on June 24, 20 at 1:01

"We have all heard the term “a ship of the line” from the days when Britain was in absolute command of the seas. The man who invented the “line ahead” formation that was so instrumental in giving Britannia true control over the waves has one especially interesting attribute. Not only did he never leave Britain, but he was never on a ship in his entire life, even in port.


The famous British redcoats got their uniform from Oliver Cromwell’s
New Model Army. Cromwell was in his middle age when he developed the
New Model Army, training his troops in the methods Gustavus Adolphus
had been using in the Thirty Years’ War before he was killed at, I
believe, Lützen. The New Model Army, from its first day in battle,
swept every opponent from the field. Cromwell always beat everybody.

Cromwell’s New Model was the basis of all British ground combat for
about two centuries.

As I said, Cromwell was a middle-aged man before he led his New Model
Army to its first victory. Before that, he had never been in the army,
he had never been in a battle, he had never even HEARD a hostile shot
fired.

One thing you are NOT going to see emphasized in a military history is
that, when the British Empire was at its height and Britannia rules
the waves, it might not have ruled anything without the techniques
developed by complete military amateurs.

So let’s ask a question. Please note that this is 1) a question with
so obvious an answer one feels silly asking it, and 2) a question
absolutely no one ever considers when they look at history or anything
else that doesn’t have the word “Advertisement” written all over it.
That question is, “Why wouldn’t a military academy textbook emphasize
that the developer of the line ahead formation and the New Model Army
were both amateurs?

The obvious answer, so obvious it seems silly to state it, is that
those who buy books for military academies want to emphasize how
PROFESSIONAL military men are the only ones who know how to run an
army or a navy.

This is rather obvious, but no one seems to take it into account. For
example, when I was young I always heard that absolutely everything
was created in the Cradle of Civilization, the Middle East. Even as a
teenager, when this belief was absolute, it struck me as unlikely. The
Middle East was made up of absolute, top to-bottom, rigid tyrannies.
All intellectual life was owned by the priests. How could such a rigid
tyranny invent NEW things?

It took me a while to realize WHY this doctrine ruled. It was taught
in schools where the ability to read and write and do arithmetic were
also taught. So history said that the societies that read and wrote
and followed rules were the places where everything began and the only
means by which truth triumphed over a mankind that was not better than
the apes.

This was not a conscious choice. But that was the history schools at
the time would obviously want so that was the history they got.

Isaac Asimov wrote his whole Foundation Trilogy in the early 1950s
based on the idea that only an Empire could produce original ideas.
After the Fall of Egypt or the Fall of Rome, history said, everything
became stagnant and brutal and filthy until a new Empire based on
scribes and bureaucracy came again. That is the absolute basis of the
Foundation Trilogy, and it is exactly what everybody took to be true
history in 1950.

The idea was that only a totally centralized bureaucratic state could
INVENT things. New ideas only came from a rigid, bureaucratized state.
It was assumed that the only argument against Communism, with
everybody reporting Soviet leaps and bounds in production with every
Five-Year Plan, was that it took away too much freedom.

No one doubted Communism was as successful as it claimed to be. It was
just too mean about it.

Of course, everybody was wrong on every single point.

But how could you PREDICT they were wrong, when every statistic and
historical instance and Future Inevitability they all the
professionals announced said they were right? The way to do it would
be to analyze each and every piece of information, each Theory of
History, each Future Inevitably by ONE criterion:

Does anybody have a reason to WANT this to be true?

Professional scholars wanted it to be true that only a society which
had a huge army of bureaucrats and scribes could accomplish anything.
Asimov took this to a laughable extreme, but only laughable TODAY. At
the time it was a sober analysis.

Intellectual life is an infomercial.

Treat it accordingly."

http://www.whitakeronline.org/blog/2...eurs-can-do-2/
Reply
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Amateurs web camchat [email protected] Car Audio 0 July 25th 08 11:25 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:43 PM.

Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 AudioBanter.com.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Audio and hi-fi"