Anna Ravenscroft wrote: > Interestingly enough, the quote of the day from Google on this email was: > > Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can > change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has. > Margaret Mead
Commitment. Some individuals do the actual changes but others have to commit to make these changes effective. I've no indication in human history that groups are innovative or that they produce anything compelling new. Sometimes they support ventilation or being busy with "conservative innovation" or other oxymoronic activities. They serve a critical function but are most of the time uncritical to themselves and critical to everything and everyone else who is not using their own code(s). Identifying the enemy is still the prime function of the political and politics is all about groups. In this simple social scheme the "hero" indicates the border. The hero acts outside of the order of the group/society but the society uses the hero to indicate its own interior in some kind of hegelian twist: the hero is the otherness defining the self. The hero is the radical other supporting the groups identify. At best the hero becomes the prince/souvereign of the group and the group identifies itself as its knights. So the whole truth about "changing the world" might be just slightly more complex. Never thought having a small philosophical conversion with Margaret Mead beyond time and space. So many thanks to great Google and its devotees. Kay -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list