Have you ever met someone who claimed to graduate from 'x' university or college but yet they lack the fundamental thinking capacity that should be readily apparent with someone of that level of education or even less? Common sense in the most basic of terms can be considered the ability to find solutions and/or make correct choices based on thinking things thru. Do you believe common sense can be learnt? If so, how? Should there be a class for it?
I have met too many people who were college educated but lacked simple common sense. I dont profess to be the epitome of common sense, but I dont think that it is something that can be learned. Either you have it or you dont. I do believe though that as people age, and go through more experiences in life, their common sense increases.
QUOTE (malexander @ 4-Aug 04, 8:54 PM) |
I have met too many people who were college educated but lacked simple common sense. |
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I do believe though that as people age, and go through more experiences in life, their common sense increases. |
I'm not a great supporter of professionalism.
I don't mean that in the behavourial sense (acting professionally = honourably/reliably), I mean it in the philosophical sense.
Professionalism is the teaching that you can't do certain things unless you are approved by a somewhat elite group who determine what the necessary standard is. This has two problems: firstly, it can ostracize those who they do not wish to recognise and it can create the problem of someone being given influence who, though they have the certificate, they have no real character qualities (such as common sense) to deal with it.
"Educated" is more about life and personal study than anything formal. Yes, we can take advantage of formal education but those who treat it as the be-and-end-all of education are, to my mind, not whole in their education by a long shot.
I believe people do have different levels of common sense, but common sense needs defining perhaps before more could be said?
Dubhdara.
I'm not so sure that it is learned throughout life. From what I've seen in life, those blessed with a very high intelligence seem to lack in the common sense department. Some seem to overcome this, and yet, I've witnessed several that have not. Examples include my older sister who was just in an accident that gave her a minor concussion. The cause of the accident, speeding and wearing high heels while driving. (a strap from her high heels got caught on the accelerator and she couldn't get her foot of the gas to brake). Very intelligent woman she's just gotten her PHD in pychology. However, she said she's learned her lesson and will watch her speeding from now on. She still wants to drive while wearing high heels. . . .
I meet a number of people like this, most of them I have found to be vocal and outspoken. Most times they announce their education / background and tend to do a lot of opinionated talking without fact finding. The main problem is that having a degree means you have been schooled in specific academic subjects, in other words you have not been endowed with all knowledge or knowing everything. The main thing here is pride and self-elevation above those who they believe are less educated or not as knowledgeable. I believe they have forgotten that the best of common sense is do less talking and more listening. Common sense is something you have to grasp from observation. Most people that do a lot of talking are not very observant and therefore miss half of life's lessons.