Taran Rampersad wrote:

>Oliver Moran wrote:
>
>  
>
>>Taran Rampersad wrote:
>>
>> 
>>
>>    
>>
>>>"the era preceding Wikis lacked said influence"
>>>   
>>>
>>>      
>>>
>>... all 2 million years of them, Taran?  I'm picking on this point not just
>>to be a smart arse but to highlight what I believe Alfref meant by, "Every
>>new idea is seen by some as a solution."
>>
>>Oli
>> 
>>
>>    
>>
>Yes, the 2 million years preceding Wikis lacked the influence of Wikis.
>Do you think otherwise?
>  
>
OK, I realize that a few people might be missing something, so I'll toss
out an analogy and hope it helps. I'm in crunch mode right now, and so
my pace is higher than normal... forgive me if it's not as well written
as it could be, but I'm trying to convey something deeper than the
arguments for and against Wikis.

Consider the tree. The healthy deciduous tree has deep roots, strong
branches, green leaves in the spring and summer, and generally is
considered a good tree. It's a culmination of years of weathered
experience, and arbologists would tell you that each tree has a story to
tell. The branches are grown because of tropisms; the branches that were
strong enough are still there - survivors of heavy snows, high
winds,disease, and perhaps even earthquakes. The tree is a tribute to
adaptation. And so the present education system is; it's a tribute to
adaptation to previous effects.

But now, there are new effects which shake the very foundations of the
tree. Young saplings of this Tree of Education have dropped their roots,
and these roots compete with the elder tree. But these too are trees of
Education; they sprang from the fruits of Education just as the Wiki has
sprang from the fruits of Education. Wikis would not exist without
computers, without the internet - and most importantly, the knowledge
incorporated through Education - formal and otherwise. Remember, some of
the best fruits have not been formally educated. Einstein immediately
springs to mind.

So we have these new fruits, and they fall to the ground. These fleshy
fruits have seeds in them, and from these seeds lies the potential for
other Trees. You see, Trees serve purposes; they hold the earth still
where it may otherwise become a landslide; they provide vital gases to
other life forms. So these trees are somewhat important, but probably
the most important thing are the fruits. A lucky fruit will have seeds
that germinate and attack the rich soil below with it's roots, seeking
nutrients and stability. The unlucky fruit will not bear another tree.
Indeed, the unlucky fruit may be eaten by a passing primate, perhaps a
distant cousin of mankind that we wouldn't invite to dinner.

There are two ways to view the new trees - either as competition for the
elder tree, the parent, or as a continuance of the elder tree. Do we
look to our own children as competiton? But these new trees still have
to survive, and that means that less of these fruit will have truly been
'lucky'. The world is an unforgiving teacher; those that cannot survive
die. Those that are weak fall. Those that do not get enough light or
nutrients fail. Where the elder tree has gaps in the branches, the
younger trees will thrive because they get more light and water; they
fill the gap. It's an amazing thing to watch if you have an idle decade
to watch, but you can simply see where the young trees thrive to prove this.

To deny a fruit is to deny a potential tree. And to deny a fruit based
on the survival of the elder tree is to see a tree where there could be
a forest. So it is with the Wiki. The Wiki is fortunate; it's a fruit
which has been lucky and has begun to fill voids in the elder tree. It
too will produce fruit; indeed, the Wiki already has - such as the
Wikipedia (1 million+ articles, 100 languages isn't progress?). The Wiki
does not deny the Wikipedia. The Wiki does not deny it's own existence
by denying it came from a fruit which fell from a larger tree.

But there is competition between the fruit as well. Sometimes two fruit
fall too close together and are forced to compete; sometimes one wins,
sometimes both lose. Sometimes both survive and share the same space.

Now in this context, what is a Wiki but a continuance of the Tree of
Education? Indeed, where we speak of not seeing the forest for the
trees, we forget the roots of other fruit.

HTML was originally Hypertext, which was what Apple was intending to use
for books, and perhaps XEROX PARC before. That was the 1980s. Has HTML
not become an important educational tool? The websites we look at in our
web browsers are HTML, or generated HTML. HTML suffered the same
criticisms in the 1980s. That's almost 25 years ago, and look now. Look.
A discussion on this very list debated the usage of HTML in *email*. And
look at email! Is email not a tool that can be used for education?

Where some would criticize a fruit that has already become a sapling, I
look at the sapling. That sapling is the continuation of the original
tree, and indeed as it gets larger it may compete for the same
nutrients. I am wary of people with chainsaws who would cut down
saplings because they guard an elder tree. I would hope for a forest
instead of an elder tree surrounded by stumps so that people can sit on
them.

And the intelligent people? I would think that intelligent people could
discern a dead tree from a living one. And I certainly hope that the
intelligent people around the tree know which trees will grow. Perhaps
even kicking fruit into the right place such that they have a better
chance at growth.

2 million years is not an end. It's a beginning of the future, and
continuance is important.

-- 
Taran Rampersad

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.linuxgazette.com
http://www.a42.com
http://www.worldchanging.com
http://www.knowprose.com
http://www.easylum.net

"Criticize by creating." — Michelangelo


_______________________________________________
DIGITALDIVIDE mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.edc.org/mailman/listinfo/digitaldivide
To unsubscribe, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE 
in the body of the message.

Reply via email to