The
ultimate goal in this world is simply to understand. We were sent to
this earth for a purpose, and it wasn’t just to live and then die.
We need to be seeking for total understanding of absolutely any and
all righteous subjects we desire. Ludwig Van Beethoven once said,
“Don’t only practice your art, but force your way into its
secrets. For it, and knowledge, can raise men to the divine.”
(Beethoven) There is no greater joy than understanding, and the
wisdom that comes with it. It takes a lifetime to understand
something, and only a moment to change that understanding. It is
something you must constantly be seeking for. It does not matter in
what area you choose, but try to fully understand something, for that
will open the doors to every single other area of knowledge that
exists. Every area of knowledge is connected together in a thick
network that is penetrable one thread at a time through diligence.
Becoming perfect and all-knowledgeable, such as God is, will not just
happen overnight when we get resurrected or anything. We will still
have to work for it, so we may as well get a head start on it right
now. Knowledge is the source of understanding; and understanding is
the source of wisdom. We must gain all three.
There is not much
more important in this world than obtaining an education. We have
great institutions set up for the continuous learning of studious
pupils, as well as great masses of books and other educational
writings available at our fingertips. Since we were young it has been
pounded into our heads the need to go to college and get a degree,
but why? I will touch on a few points, including what you should
study, why, and what you can do with the things you have learned.
Some of the world’s
greatest people have never obtained a formal education. Why do we
place such an emphasis on it then? Brilliant minds don’t just
happen; they must be nurtured and grown. Whether or not the education
was formal does not mean they never got one. Some of the best
education that has been reached has been informal. In Elder David A.
Bednar’s article titled “Learning to Love Learning”, he stated that “The type of learning I am attempting to describe is not
merely the accumulation of data and facts and frameworks; rather, it
is acquiring and applying knowledge for righteousness.” (Bednar 2) The extraordinary thing about learning is that it doesn’t matter
what you learn, as long as it is useful and interesting to you. In my
case, I am at a university obtaining an education with the hopes of
eventually getting a master’s degree. To me though, that college
degree is not the most important education that I am reaching for
right now. Although some might disagree, my training in the Martial
Arts is even more important to me. Some people have indignantly
contradicted me in my hopes for the future, but I know what’s
important to me. I love it, and that is what matters. Just because
someone, or everyone, might not see the usefulness of the particular
education you are obtaining, that doesn’t mean it is wrong. If it
is taking you down the right paths, giving you valuable knowledge,
and giving you a place to go, then there is nothing wrong with it.
Keep that in mind as you seek and set up the pieces of your future.
The
greatest ability that continuous knowledge gives us is the ability to
venture out on our own to seek and change the world to how we want it
to be. Until you learn to tie your own shoes and feed yourself, you
cannot break away from your parents and live life your own way. As
such, until you learn the things you need to, you cannot break away
from society as a whole and make your own paths. As you gain more
knowledge, more of the world opens up to you. Nobody wants to just be
part of the masses as they move. There is nothing substantial in
that, and quite often they are wrong or jumping off of figurative
cliffs without thinking first. Hitler had a good idea of how the
masses worked. Aldous Huxley described how Hitler thought of the
masses in his article titled “The Love of Learning.” He wrote
that “the masses are utterly contemptible. They are incapable of
abstract thinking and uninterested in any fact outside the circle of
their immediate experience. Their behavior is determined, not by
knowledge and reason, but by feelings and unconscious drives.”
(Huxley 3) We cannot break away from the masses until we have gained
sufficient knowledge to do so. Whatever education you strive for,
make it proficient enough that you will not be constantly led on by
those who wish you to just blindly believe. Granted, you will not be
able to obtain all the knowledge of the world in even fifty
lifetimes, but general education in all areas will give you enough to
get started.
Finally,
your overall purpose in learning should include a deep desire to give
back to the world the education that it gave you. Face it, learning
is fun. There is almost no greater joy to be found in this world. As
the generations pass, and we each learn, our new knowledge is
compounded with our experiences and the knowledge is deepened and
then passed on to those who come after us. Your knowledge came
partially from others before you, and so you must give back too. That
is the whole grand design behind learning. David Bednar also stated
that:
Perhaps
President Young was such a consummate learner precisely because he
was not constrained unduly by the arbitrary boundaries so often
imposed through the structures and processes of formal education. He
clearly learned to love learning. He clearly learned how to learn. He
ultimately became a powerful disciple and teacher precisely because
he first was an effective learner. (Bednar, 2)
As
you learn, you will become a teacher; you will become a guide to your
children, your friends, anyone around you. One leads to the other,
just as day follows night. Knowledge in the world then becomes a
great snowball that just keeps rolling, gaining more substance, and
gaining more momentum as the time goes on. That will only happen if
we allow our contributions to the world of knowledge to be made
known. Give back what has been given to you, with your own little
seasoning and extra, inspired ingredients added to it too. What you
find is yours to keep, but don’t be selfish by keeping it back from
either people too. As you share knowledge with each other, everyone
will grow and discover something new. Nobody can be totally
knowledgeable in everything, but everyone together can be totally
knowledgeable in everything. We need each other, and we need to all
help each other along.
![](https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/179564_3563657202938_1329393874_n.jpg)
Tara J. Howard
Copyright 2014
No comments:
Post a Comment
We love comments!! :)