"Conformity is the jailer of freedom and the enemy of growth." President John F. Kennedy
It is a curious fact that the man who propounded the idea of
utilitarian ism, his body “Auto-icon” sits in the University College of London
as a stark reminder of “The Greatest Happiness Principle.” The Principle stems
from “the greatest happiness of the greatest number that is the measure of
right and wrong.” Seems that utilitarianism
is good and anything but is wrong. This utilitarian concept is steeped in the
ideals of conformity and brings with it the kinds of vapors that mute the
innovative spirit. But close to his death even Jeremy Bentham was all but
utilitarian in thought. Planning his “Auto icon” was a creative gesture that
breaks with the utilitarian concept of conformity. After all it brought Jeremy
the greatest creative pleasure to realize that his mummified head and his
skeleton stuffed with hay would become his greatest pleasure before his death
and a lasting presence.
Does conformity bring in the best out of human beings? That
question is being answered tongue in cheek by conformity seeking experts all
over the globe. It seems that these conformity-seekers might have misplaced the
term collaboration with conformity. Since collaboration is the new buzz-word in
business, it does not seem to fall too far from conformity. Consequently the
merger has evolved over time into what is now known as “Group think.” That a
universally accepted view should drown out outliers and become the defining
thought for all. So the answer seems to be yes.
"The opposite of courage is not cowardice but conformity." - Jim Hightower
Society continues to evolve along those lines of
redistributive purposing, whether it is wealth, property or ideas. The symptom
complex of this conformity model is laid out in the education system where a
universalization of the curriculum is in play. The current education system is nothing
more than a format of conformity. Every child is taught the same stuff by the
teachers who are taught the same stuff. Pretty soon if one extends the thought
further this concept leads to a marginalized human intellect, or more
appropriately termed a state of constant mediocrity.
A similar view is being forced down the medical care throat.
This concept is governed by the “Guidelines” that are now reaching the tipping
point of becoming mandates. A quote from the recent article in Scientific American caught my eye: "At best, these guidelines are recommendations based on scientific studies with results that pertain to the average among us. They do not adequately incorporate the personal differences and preferences of each of us as individuals. Furthermore, while these recommendations are based on clinical science, rarely is the science complete or incontrovertible. Hence, the recommendations are consensus statements reflecting the perspectives of those charged with the production of the guideline." Let us do a thought experiment here for a moment;
If all maladies are governed through the auspices of guidelines then where is
the magic of Art in medicine and where is the individuality of the patient
being treated. A guideline form of medical care ultimately draws out and
macerates any wisdom of finding a better way, a quicker way, a better treatment
model or a more compassionate form of healing the sick. If all humans were
equal in their physical states (as in robots) then a grease job here and an oil
can there would work perfectly. Given the push and the tug today the Bentham’s
“Greatest Happiness Principle” is being applied to all forms and norms of
society. The codification of thought is being pursued at breakneck speed to
usher in the era of a utilitarian medicine in a box that is made to resonate
with the increasingly distracted populace. But John Rawl’s “Difference
Principle,” which advocated that high productivity of some, gain advantages for
all even the most disadvantaged, is thrown to the wind.
Conformity harkens the murky nature of a uniformity of
thought and action. Compliance with conformity is the single biggest arbiter of
modern day thinking and brings with it the torrents of “group-think.” It
marginalizes and in some cases punishes a minority opinion. It suppresses
excellence. Conformity brings in a mediocrity governed by the few. Conformity
does not bring with it the “Ideal Splash” that Worthington so idealized.
It brings in carefully picked and chosen ideal splashes only to promote the point of view. These conformity seekers fail to recognize that the imperfections, which assimilate within the human genome may not be imperfections after all but the genesis of greatness; the creative sparks and the innovative fuel that have always defined real progress in world history.
It brings in carefully picked and chosen ideal splashes only to promote the point of view. These conformity seekers fail to recognize that the imperfections, which assimilate within the human genome may not be imperfections after all but the genesis of greatness; the creative sparks and the innovative fuel that have always defined real progress in world history.
"Diversity: The art of thinking independently together." - Malcolm Forbes
Yet in clear contrast to conformity, all the voiced
viewpoints of the conformity advocates continue to express the benefits of
diversity, unfortunately only in words. Those two points of view therefore become blatantly at odds with each other.
Although they claim that seeking diversity of thought is a good goal, yet the
formalization of conformity as the underlying principle of current thought and
action virtually destroys the diversity argument.
Diversity is not just about color, culture or religion but is the grand dame of innovation, creativity and
intellect.
It brings with it the varied opinions and from those a few will
shine the brightest light. To look this in the eye, one only has to see that men
like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos and others were all
dropouts from the formalized education system who created and pursued a reality
from a vision of their own. Had they been forced to conform, we might not have
had an Apple, a Microsoft, a Facebook or Amazon today and the millions of
people employed by these great companies.
These explicit confrontational set of
facts weigh heavily on the implied particularity that seems to have a defective
paradigm. Imagine if you will that the teachers were to force the prodigy by the
name of Mozart to learn concepts of engineering or for that matter dance or
Newton to learn how to sing and play a piano, what might have been? If the
force du jour was directed away from the inner voice of these prodigies where
would we be? How would they have coped? Would they have abandoned their future
life’s work that advanced civilization?
Something to think about!
The deepest cut of all against the diversity of thought
comes in the form of a pill. Today millions of children have been subjugated in
their creative desires and in their expression of the inner intellect through
the omnipresent diagnosis of ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder).
A curious child
with a wild type intellect whose intelligence does not want to be confined to
the ridicule of “Common Core” type subjects is put on Ritalin rather than
evaluated for his or her genius in a particular field is a travesty. It is too
easy to subjugate the wandering irritable “trouble-maker” mind of a brilliant child
with pharmaceuticals rather than assess his or her needs and wants. Albert
Einstein comes to mind who was considered a troubled student “who would amount
to little.” History differs! This muzzling effort works for the busy parent
and also for the hassled teacher. Neither wants disruptive influence in the home
or school.
Let us look at our children and their needs rather than what
pleases and serves us as adults. Let us look at our patients rather than what
pleases the insurers. Let us think diversity of thought rather than expression
of “group-think.”
http://youtu.be/wX78iKhInsc
Let us think critically for a moment!
Let us think for ourselves for a change!
The future is ripe for the making!
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