And maybe "rightly" so sometimes. From the perspective of a system, it's probably needed sometimes to keep things in check or to keep things balanced. Maybe you'll shoot me down for saying this. But I don't think I care anymore.
Rich people are bad, spoilt/spoiled and dumb (especially the ones born into wealth). Poor people are good and noble. A beautiful woman can't be intelligent. LOL. It's a wee bit pathetic. Kinda like some of those unattractive women who run around town bitching about beautiful women because deep down they know that it's harder for them to get men (I don't intend to be sexist, the same thing or similar things can be said with the genders reversed). When some people can't be as good as some others, they try to pull them down.
We're all ego-driven. Me included.
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I doubt there's any such thing as a truly self-made man. Even in the most poverty stricken areas, only some people have what it takes to channel their hardwork into something fruitful via a genetic gift of intelligence. Lots of people work hard. If hardwork and physical discomfort were the only criteria for appreciation/success in this world and fairness in this universe, all those labo(u)rers in 3rd world countries who work for less than 1US$ a day would be among the most appreciated and rich people. Again, this depends on whom you consider a "self-made" man. Someone who utilises whatever potential/resources he/she has to be able to take care of himself/herself perhaps.
A lot depends on where you were born, when you were born, your genetic make-up etc. Even the first letter of your name can influence outcomes, not in some weird astrological sense but in a statistical sense (for instance, when you fill a form and get allotted something on an alphabetical basis).
We tend to appreciate people on the basis of how they're useful to us. Someone who works his/her way out of poverty is intellectually useful for everyone because he/she brings hope. Scientists, musicians etc. are useful to us in a more obvious sense.
I'm not saying that people should not be appreciated. No, certainly not. I think everyone irrespective of who they are or where they come from should be appreciated just the right amount considering everything that they've been through because it motivates them to do well. Too little appreciation can depress people and too much of it can inflate their heads.
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There was this interesting neuroscience experiment a certain neuroscientist talked about in an interview (interviewed by Roger Bingham of The Science Network). I can't remember his name. But I can check it out later and tell you (edit: the name's Rodolfo Llinas). They did this little experiment where he was made to wear something called a transcranial magnetic stimulator. So, first his colleague asked him to move his leg outwards and he did. He asked him to do this a couple of times. Then he asked him to move his leg outwards but he stimulated the parts of his brain responsible for moving his leg inwards and surely enough, his leg moved inwards. When he asked the neuroscientist who was the subject of the experiment, "Why did you move your leg inwards?", the neuroscientist said, "I changed my mind. I had a thought that I had to move it inwards". Interesting. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6T3ovN7JHPo (the experiment stuff starts from 36:00 and it's just a few minutes long).
Of course, this was the opinion of one neuroscientist. I can't make any judgements about "free will" (which is an incredibly complex topic) or whatever based on that. I neither believe nor disbelieve in "free will", "intentionality" etc. I just don't know enough.
Rich people are bad, spoilt/spoiled and dumb (especially the ones born into wealth). Poor people are good and noble. A beautiful woman can't be intelligent. LOL. It's a wee bit pathetic. Kinda like some of those unattractive women who run around town bitching about beautiful women because deep down they know that it's harder for them to get men (I don't intend to be sexist, the same thing or similar things can be said with the genders reversed). When some people can't be as good as some others, they try to pull them down.
We're all ego-driven. Me included.
-----------------------------------------------
I doubt there's any such thing as a truly self-made man. Even in the most poverty stricken areas, only some people have what it takes to channel their hardwork into something fruitful via a genetic gift of intelligence. Lots of people work hard. If hardwork and physical discomfort were the only criteria for appreciation/success in this world and fairness in this universe, all those labo(u)rers in 3rd world countries who work for less than 1US$ a day would be among the most appreciated and rich people. Again, this depends on whom you consider a "self-made" man. Someone who utilises whatever potential/resources he/she has to be able to take care of himself/herself perhaps.
A lot depends on where you were born, when you were born, your genetic make-up etc. Even the first letter of your name can influence outcomes, not in some weird astrological sense but in a statistical sense (for instance, when you fill a form and get allotted something on an alphabetical basis).
We tend to appreciate people on the basis of how they're useful to us. Someone who works his/her way out of poverty is intellectually useful for everyone because he/she brings hope. Scientists, musicians etc. are useful to us in a more obvious sense.
I'm not saying that people should not be appreciated. No, certainly not. I think everyone irrespective of who they are or where they come from should be appreciated just the right amount considering everything that they've been through because it motivates them to do well. Too little appreciation can depress people and too much of it can inflate their heads.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
There was this interesting neuroscience experiment a certain neuroscientist talked about in an interview (interviewed by Roger Bingham of The Science Network). I can't remember his name. But I can check it out later and tell you (edit: the name's Rodolfo Llinas). They did this little experiment where he was made to wear something called a transcranial magnetic stimulator. So, first his colleague asked him to move his leg outwards and he did. He asked him to do this a couple of times. Then he asked him to move his leg outwards but he stimulated the parts of his brain responsible for moving his leg inwards and surely enough, his leg moved inwards. When he asked the neuroscientist who was the subject of the experiment, "Why did you move your leg inwards?", the neuroscientist said, "I changed my mind. I had a thought that I had to move it inwards". Interesting. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6T3ovN7JHPo (the experiment stuff starts from 36:00 and it's just a few minutes long).
Of course, this was the opinion of one neuroscientist. I can't make any judgements about "free will" (which is an incredibly complex topic) or whatever based on that. I neither believe nor disbelieve in "free will", "intentionality" etc. I just don't know enough.
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