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September 13, 2007

Back Again

Oh, Well...

 

To say I was exasperated with the world over the summer is putting it pretty mildly.  In these posts it should have been obvious I usually vote Republican, but I am a Republican of convenience.  That is to say the GOP is my party only so long as they stand with me and the values I recognize as a valid means of putting a society together and keeping it that way.  Most of those who vote with me feel the same way.  That means that, apparently unbeknownst to the so-called "leaders" of the party, Republicans are a fundamentally different kind of constituency than Democrats are.

The difference means that what, in the hands of Democratic candidates, is simple and nominal disrespect for a constituency they can reasonably expect to allow them to do their thinking for them is, in the hands of Republican candidates, fraud.  I and my Republican bretheren are tired of fraud.

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May 02, 2007

Culture, Marriage, and Sex for Fun

In my last entry I made a brief foray into a discussion of marriage.  After a discussion of the subject with my grown son on the same day it seems appropriate to expand on that a little.

You may recall I stated that marriage should not be considered a social environment for sexual relationships.  Well, this is news to a lot of people.

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April 30, 2007

The Purpose of Culture

We hear a lot these days about "sustainable" (fill in the blank).  I find this trend a matter of deep irony.  You see, all the things we talk about sustaining are things like the environment, economic development, and any other such issue that is amenable to the centralized control of an elite few.  In all the history of humankind no such enterprise has ever been sustainable for an extended period of time.  The best and brightest among us are just too bloody corrupt to do good well.

This is the very essence of why we have culture.  The dirty secret of culture is that it is not about what we are being told it is about.  We are being sold a culture that is about entertaining adults and empowering elites.  That is, by definition, an unsustainable development.

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April 14, 2007

Intelligent Evolution

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Albert Einstein was famous for his use of mind experiments, little mental models and scenarios set up to explore ideas.  Let's try one here.

Imagine that you are a benign sentient microbe.  You and a social network of your friends live in a human brain, each of you able to observe the actions of at most fifteen or twenty neurons.  As individuals you would be able to observe the firing of these neurons.  As a group you might be able to ascertain that there is an order to the "universe" of the vast organism comprised of your, and their, neurons.  Would you, or all of you together, be able to detect the intelligence of the larger organism?

No.  Undoubtedly you would not.

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April 10, 2007

The Spirit of the Game

Lee Emmerich Jamison



A friend let me borrow a book on baseball written by philosophers.  It is remarkable how fascinating thinking people find the game of baseball.   In one chapter in particular a philosopher addressed the issue of the "spirit of the game" as it applied to umpiring.  He then implied a connection to the philosophy of law.  

Upon some reflection there is good reason why we should not want philosophers deciding how judges umpire the game of life.

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March 23, 2007

The Dismal Science

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Mark Twain said that there were..."lies, damned lies, and statistics." Oh, that his wit could have been applied to some of the modern world's notions of the sciences. When I was a student at Centenary College of Louisiana Economics was "the dismal science". "Political Science" was a punch line. Both statements remain true today. Unfortunately society has since been indoctrinated to speaking these course names with a straight face.

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March 19, 2007

Conception Precedes Comprehension

Lee Emmerich jamison

Go to: http://aimath.org/E8/

Here is described in the sort of unrevealing lay terms we can at least begin to grasp difficult ideas in the results of a pioneering study of very abstract multidimensional spaces in mathematics. 
This is important because one must have an idea what one is looking at before one can really SEE it.

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February 27, 2007

Ownership and God

On Friday we were able to go out to see a production of Archibald MacLeish's "J.B.", a modernized version of the story contained in the biblical Book of Job.  With due consideration given to the fact that the production was put on by Huntsville's First Christian Church it was quite good.  There was nothing amateurish about the effort and it was possible for us to think about the really radical message that comes to us from one of the oldest books in the Bible.

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February 21, 2007

Art, Awareness, and Self-Awareness

Human beings are self-aware.  We not only ponder subjects such as our own existence and the nature of our finitude, we ponder our consideration of those subjects. To come to grips with the nature of these explorations we establish concepts to help us bridge the gaps between what is ponderable and what is knowable.

Such mental work starts with our earliest experiences, even with experience prior to birth.  We have experiences.  We seek to orient our minds to those experiences.  To do so we develop cognitive structures that allow us to order our responses to sensory experience.  Because we are social creatures some of these response/cognition structures are adapted to communication.  We can share our adaptations to novelty and help others to develop cognitive structures analogous to those we have created for ourselves.  Two major communication processes function to do this, the highly fragmented, symbolic, linguistic method, and the more fluid, but less tangible, inductive-artistic method.

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February 20, 2007

Art Theology vs. Art Theory

Perspective is all-important in understanding a new approach to an old, but intractable, problem.  It is well to remember the lesson of Gallileo's education of the Pope.  From his own perspective it was so obvious he was correct that in writing his "Dialogue" on the motion of the planets he made out the character supporting the Ptolemaic position to be an obvious fool.  This didn't play well with the Church and earned the scholar a life of house arrest.  It probably also meant his ideas waited an extra generation to be accepted.

If one is going to be right it is a good idea to be civil about it.

 

 

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February 19, 2007

Art's Origins

From time to time I commit a terrible error and actually read someone's theory of art.  What is amazing to me is how undisicplined such thought can be even among minds which presumably have some of the training in the keys to understanding.  If you wish you can take a little time to see a case in point in the writings of a young philosopher named Micah Sparacio:

http://astro.temple.edu/~sparacio/artcore.html

These are the musings of a graduate student in Philosophy at a very good school on the nature of art.  Given the other areas of his philosophical study, philosophy of the mind and artificial intelligence, he should have the foundations of understanding.  He is, none the less, clueless.  This is not to his discredit.  His teachers and the whole philosophical world, as far as I can see, are likewise clueless.

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February 17, 2007

Thinking of Being

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Descartes said "I think, therefore I am." Well, he said it in French but that's what he meant. How we deal with the singular way humans are that is different from the way we see every other animal being is really quite remarkable. We do seem very different. It’s an important enough point to us one might think we were a little insecure about it. The fact of the matter is, though, that a lot of our behaviors are modeled pretty well in a number of other animals, particularly in chimpanzees. The behavior of small human tribes, or small groups in large tribes (you might call them "cities") is really remarkably like that observed in chimps. These animals and some others, such as dogs and horses, may lead solitary lives but they usually do not. As a matter of fact they seem to derive a tremendous sense of purpose from the communal context of their existence. So, indeed, do we. Is thinking really the essence of being, or is there something to the jostling we experience among these inconvenient other humans that is important to being? Smart as Descartes was, and believe me he gets a lot of credit in that area, was he right?

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February 16, 2007

Mastering the Mind's Eye

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Very early in my career, when I was still teaching in Shreveport, one of my students caught me off guard with a question. "You can do so many things." she said, "Why did you choose to be an artist?"

I recall being uncomfortable at trying to answer, and taking a moment to understand myself. My reply was unsatisfactory. Indeed I have struggled with it ever since.

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February 14, 2007

G.E.B. A lesson in Humility

Lee Emmerich Jamison

It is frustrating to be human.

Let me tell you, briefly, a story about humility.

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February 09, 2007

Of Dinosaurs and other Institutions: part 1

Yesterday I probed again the idea of the foundations of government in once-criminal activities.  That brought to mind how mafias (or today's gangs like M-13) actually compete with governments for primacy in environments where governments fail to effectively maintain good order.  Look carefully and you will see imbedded in that observation an evolutionary process.

This is why I've made a point over the years of playing up evolutionary themes.  The environments in which structures of any kind function favor certain manners of organizing such structures.  This fact leads some structures to perceive threats and to attempt to manipulate their environments.  One way for an organism to do that is to get big.  From the genetic standpoint there is a payoff in stability.  As long as the macro-environment, that larger world over which the organism has no control, remains stable organisms will tend to get bigger.

Bet you can see where this is going...

Continue reading "Of Dinosaurs and other Institutions: part 1" »

February 08, 2007

Government: The REAL Basics

Lee Emmerich Jamison

When we discuss government we think we know what we're talking about.  That is one of the problems of the human mind.  What we really know is a narrowly drawn conception we accept with little examination from our culture.  It is a paradigm, a sort of thinking on rails.

I'm going to toss out a redrawing of the concept of human governance.  Let's see what you think of it.

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February 05, 2007

Omnipotent God

In view of the previous entry it seemed a good moment to repeat an article written about two years ago about the nature of faith for those willing to let God be God. Read on-

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January 31, 2007

Reality

Lee Emmerich Jamison

 

Yesterday I wrote of a world led with prejudice and the danger of being outside the dominant mindset.  This is an important issue because of a simple fact, crucial to understanding how politics and culture are shaped. 

Nobody, well, no human being, lives in the "real" world.

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January 30, 2007

The "N.Q."

Lee Emmerich Jamison

When a group is outside of society's philosophical "comfort zone" they need to be very cautious about seeming to have a high N.Q.  What is that?, you may ask.

It's the "Nut Quotient".

Continue reading "The "N.Q."" »

January 29, 2007

Folly in Folly's Antidote

A history professor friend of mine gave me a copy of Arthur Schlesinger's recent article entitled "Folly's Antidote".  (Read it at:  http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/01/opinion/01schlesinger.html?ex=1325307600&en=6b776670589dd67b&ei=5089&partner=rssyahoo&emc=rss  You may have to deal with an automatic line break due to the format of this blog.)

History is a passion of mine.  As an artist I've had the privilege of studying it from angles most students of history don't get to see.  For example, art history is not exactly the same creature political history is.  It is a survey, in part, of the mind of mankind and the efforts of the powerful to use the pull of mythology over the collective mind of man to enhance their influence.  I've also, in historical painting, had to deal with a paucity of information about how a range of cultural strata lived and thought.  What people wore in their daily lives and what the implications of what they were thinking as they decorated their homes, for example, has sometimes mistakenly been thought to be not quite worthy of serious historical study.  People who make this error misunderstand the true field of history's study.

In Folly's Antidote Schlesinger has made just such an error.

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January 25, 2007

The Mammonites

Lee Emmerich Jamison

 

Re:  http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070124/bs_afp/useconomybudget_070124203818

 

The report referenced above shows the budget deficit narrowing dramatically in spite of huge increases in Federal spending and what the Democratic Party once referred to as catastrophic reductions in revenues (i.e., tax cuts).  How does this happen?  It's not hard to understand, really. 

People who worship false idols can't comprehend reality.  Now, there is a perfectly rational explanation for their picture of the world.  One can trace all the dots and make the picture come out the same way every time.  If the founding premise of their world view is false, however, the whole structure will be wrong.  No matter how compellingly logical it may seem.

 

The false idol of the Democratic Party is money.  If you can pass out money you have something.  If you can take money home from some organization, government program, job, or criminal enterprise you have self respect.  Listen between the lines and you will hear this idol being extolled left and right by Democrats.

Soon you will be hearing of the efforts of Democrats to raise taxes on "the rich" to "increase government revenues".  When they are successful at raising taxes there will be a short term increase in revenues soon offset by slowdowns in the economy- which will be blamed on "the rich".

 

Continue reading "The Mammonites" »

January 23, 2007

Dichomaton

Lee Emmerich Jamison

 

I have been poring over a group of articles in the most recent Time magazine on the confluence of mind and brain.  This has been an area of particular interest for me for all of my life, starting when I was less than eight years old.  Life-long interest can sharpen the mind on many issues and this is one of them.  Over the next several weeks I will be addressing this growing interest in the mind, how it illuminates who and what we are, and how in some areas it is seriously flawed.  First, though, the reader should understand the foundation of my insight into the one mind and brain I know best, the one in which I reside.

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January 22, 2007

Why Hard Choices?

By Lee Emmerich Jamison

 

The Texas legislature is back at it again, trying to find a way to finance a bloated, top heavy, inefficient educational system.  Also, I recently stumbled on a discussion group on environmental issues and human safety.  Think of the confluence of authoritarian control and effectiveness.  In almost no area of American life do the common people have less control than they have over their children’s education, and in no area of American life do we fail more miserably or consistently in relation to the rest of the world.  At the same time, however, many want America to concede its environmental future to an authoritarian outside system, without any serious look at what has become of peoples who permitted such controls elsewhere.

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Transparent Government

We have heard much about “transparency” lately in reference to the behavior of corporations.  As important as this is in corporations it is far more so in government.  Nowhere is this more crucial than in the courts.  We are a nation ruled by laws, or so it is said.  Over the last several years, though, dozens of President Bush’s nominees to be federal judges were held up by the Democratic Senate leadership not because they opaquely intended to do strange things in secret but because they have shown they will do what the Constitution of the United States of America says they must do.  This is, according to Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, a Democrat, a step backward!  Many of us believe judges must not make law.  To permit, let alone encourage, such a thing makes judges into kings.  We believe the people’s representatives, and only they, may make laws.  When judges take that burden from them legislators are free to pretend they are doing the people’s business and then profess powerlessness at unpopular decisions of the courts, regardless of the position of their party.  Those life-tenured judges are terribly important.  If they become law makers nothing you do as a voter means anything.  To an "activist" Supreme Court, that is to say a court which believes itself to have the power to make law, even a Constitutional amendment would mean nothing. 

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January 20, 2007

Crime and Government

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Many, well make that nearly all, of you do not know that from about the year 800 A.D. to about the year 1150A.D. the Earth was warmer than it is today. Yes, warmer even than today.  There were vineyards growing wine grapes north of London in that time, something done nowhere on the British Isles today.  Someone with a keen ear to the ground of history will note something else about that period that has been poorly taught  from the English-speaking perspective.  It was a time during which a people disciplined into efficiency by a harsh environment were permitted by a period of unaccustomed plenty to impose that skill on their neighbors.  In doing so they revolutionized European government.  They also provided for us an object lesson in what government really always threatens to become- the only formally sanctioned criminal activity.

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January 18, 2007

In the News- Murray on Intelligence and Responsibility

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Re: http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110009541

 

In prior comments on Charles Murray's series of articles about education and intelligence  on the opinion pages of the Wall Street Journal one could easily have assumed I simply have it in for Murray and everything he has to say.  Not so.  Today's article (the last in a series of three) is a case in point. 

Murray states that the very intelligent should be held up as having particular responsibility in the world, noting that people with I.Q.s in excess of 120 dominate the processes that shape our culture.  This group represents the top ten percent of the distribution of intelligence in the population.  Furthermore he holds that this group, because they CAN learn more, should have more challenging educations.  They should, at least sometimes, be set apart, gifted schooled with gifted.  They should be required, Murray says, to take coursework in which they are pushed beyond their capacities, and, thus, forced to see as few of them do, the limits of their gifts.

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January 17, 2007

In the News- Murray on Vocational School

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Re: http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110009535

 

Yesterday's post dealt with concerns over Charles Murray's column in the opinion section of the Wall Street Journal which stated, in essence, that we are excessively obsessed as a culture with the difficulty of educating people he believes to be unable to fully benefit from such education.  In today's column, the second of a three-part series, Murray goes on to make an argument with what I consider more merit, but one that still bears a troublingly elitist stamp.

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January 16, 2007

In the News- Intelligence and Education

Lee Emmerich Jamison

Re:  http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110009531

 

Today's Wall Street Journal editorial page contains an article by Charles Murray (part one of a three-part series to be concluded on Thursday) which should be of note to everyone interested in education and opportunity, not merely in America, but in the whole world.  Murray will be remembered as one of the authors of "The Bell Curve" which, thirteen years ago, ignited a firestorm of debate over the subject of Intelligence and the educability of the masses.  Today's article takes up the gauntlet once more with arguments that, on the face of them seem both well reasoned and scientifically supported.

Such is the danger of misapplied science.

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January 15, 2007

Parallel Cultures

The Parallel Cultures

by Lee Emmerich Jamison

As a woman friend and I were walking around the Piney Woods Quilt Guild's display on Huntsville's downtown square one Saturday last May the discussion drifted to the depth of intentionality in the heritage of the traditional quilt. This is close to asking the sort of questions we see in Evolutionary studies. Is the design called "Storm at Sea" an accident? Did it just sort of happen? Is "Log Cabin" the product of an environment preserving a fortuitous happenstance? Assuming we decided it was could one then also say the same thing about something like, oh, the banking system or American government?

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January 11, 2007

Author's Disclaimer

The following column (hereinafter referred to as "The Column") may contain elements of humor and/or serious commentary. The reader is under no obligation to read this product. As a voluntary user of this product the reader is advised that he/she proceeds at his/her own risk. No warranty is made or implied as to the universal appeal of elements intended as humor, or those intended as serious commentary, nor is any warranty made or implied as to distinct divisions between elements intended as humor and elements intended as commentary. Failure on the part of the reader to detect disernable differences between humorous and serious passages and/or elements shall not be deemed a defect in this product for legal purposes. Nor shall such failure be deemed to imply a defect in the reader.

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January 10, 2007

Connecting Political Dots

 Lee Emmerich Jamison

A friend of mine and I have had an email exchange going on for a while. We live on opposite sides of the political divide, which provides more than a little food for thought, given that on almost every fundamental concept we share the same values. Pointing this out in a message some time ago I posed a number of issues where I find the positions of so-called liberals curious. Her reply told me a lot about the liberal world view.

The first of two major points to catch my eye was my friend's response to curiosity over why liberals seem so eager to trust government and to fear private industry. Do people become better people when they are cloaked in the immunity and power of a government than they would be if they actually had to produce a result generally pleasing to their constituency to survive? The second was her response to my noting that, though most liberals would profess to be "little 'd' democrats", they have no objection to our Supreme Court being possessed of a power to overthrow the people's will and even invent law.

Both points speak to the power of many individuals working together to affect the decisions of those charged with serving them.

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Economics and the Value of Death

This is written from Huntsville, Texas.  To much of the world we have one, and only one local distinction.  Unfortunately it is not the largest statue of and American hero (Sam Houston).  It is because in this city Texas performs more executions than in any other place in the free world.  

Because human beings are uniquely economic-minded creatures I'll point out why this is important.

It is preposterous to call execution the "death penalty".  It is preposterous because if you accept that term you have lost your case for civility up front. The point of punishment is the achievement of penitence, hence the term "penitentiary". This term is indicative of a societal desire to induce among those who have done great harm a sense of remorse so they would turn from their dark path to a path of light. Penitence and remorse are absolutes, spiritual qualities religious in nature. They are irrelevant in corpses. If you base your argument for the "death penalty" in religious principles you lose. Period.

But, in fact, what we call punishment actually serves an economic purpose difficult to achieve in the nominal marketplace of human transactions. The economic purpose of crime is to gain the product of work without the cost of work. One of those products is power- the leverage to gain at will the product of the labor of others, and to sense that one's own value is greater than that of others as well.  This is a particularly important point in light of the recent execution of Saddam Hussein.  Societies that fail to place a damper on this sort of activity suffer something equivalent to a short-circuit in an electrical device. A great deal of potential is used up not doing useful work. Economically, punishment works like the insulator coating electric wire, placing a high cost on what perpetrators desire to be a low cost short-circuit, in the hope that they will choose to labor more productively.

For a moment let's go back to that notion about value- that one can gain from one's crime a sense of one's value in relation to the value of another. Human beings place a great deal of stock in dominance. It is a bequest from our animal nature. We will pay a high price for the appearance of dominance. The question is- will society play along? If society acknowledges that the value of the life of an innocent human being is worth only a number of years of confinement for that person's killer society has played along. The killer's combination of audacity and viciousness is rewarded by the killer being valued more highly than the inoffensive or the innocent.

In Texas, though, we have chosen to place a logical high value on the innocent. Like an auto lost to a car wreck or a house lost to a fire, a human life should have a lasting latent value. That value, logically, is redeemable only in a coin of like value. 

One can actually use worldly money as a means of balancing losses of things less than a whole life, and that has a corollary in time lost to imprisonment, but a life itself is an infinity to that one person who loses it. To value it in an earthly coin or in time demeans innocence, honest living, and life itself, and rewards viciousness with easy extra value. In Texas we demand that a life be worth a life. Here your daring to kill me does not automatically make you worth more than I am worth as it does in much of the Western world.

Sounds a little dry, doesn't it? Not very transcendent. Be that as it may killers are basically stupid as regards airy thoughts like spirituality and transcendence. On the other hand if they think a life costs them twenty years in a place full of tough guys that's different from thinking a life costs them a LIFE, something of which most stupid people know they only have one.

One might also ask about "forgiveness". First, it is a blatantly religious principle, extremely subjective, and as such is an easy mark for manipulation. Because of that it is also, secondly, a violation of the certainty that keeps us from, at a whim, attempting to violate laws of nature. People don't have the sneaking suspicion that they can escape the consequences of gravity, so even the vast majority of teenagers are not foolish enough to try. Enough of them die when they do try that the rest are suitably chastened. (So far the Supreme Court has not yet overruled God on this point.) Even teenagers see a high cost to doing nothing more than violating nature’s order. Most are unwilling to risk that unescapable price.

In our society we are quick to talk about the "value" of life, but slow to be clear what we mean by that term. An eye need not be worth an eye. But its value should be crystal clear. Then, as with gravity or the price tag at Wal Mart, the cost of a violation will stare the potential perpetrator in the face.

It is pretty simple economics that no person should be worth more than another person in the eyes of the law. There is no substitute for life. Nor should there be a discount on the extinction of one person when we get around to redeeming that person’s latent value on someone who sought to steal their life for free.

Expertocracy

The expert: Our culture’s institutionalization of self-perceived genius.

The expert is born of a literary tradition. In literature it is simply impossible for one author to show the entire ebb and flow of the process of ideation as it happens across whole cultures in the grand sweep of time. In literature, to solve this problem of the limitations of the human author, we have the hero, the personification of a grand idea bringing victory to his people. It is an intoxicating idea.

Yours truly is not immune to this idea. Harbored in this mind has always been the secret longing that its efforts would some day be labeled "genius". Can’t you see the heroic pose, face to the warm glow of the sun, wind in the hair? There he is; the indispensable expert.

What do you mean- "What hair?"

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