Alan Kay, '05 Columbia College Commencement
From Viewpoints Intelligent Archive
it
is my pleasure to present to you LMK the
degree Doctor of Letters honoris causa with all
the rights and privileges appertaining here to
thank you so much now
honorary degrees are nice but the real ones
that you've earned today are much nicer so let me congratulate you
commencement
talks are usually full of advice but
there is such a wide diversity of human styles that
each person really needs something special there's
a great scene in the movie city slickers where Billy
Crystal plays a guy in a midlife crisis
who goes on a cattle drive to find himself
Jack Palance is the old cowboy who says you
city folks just don't get it the
secret of life is just one thing
and billy crystal says what is it what is it
the old cowboy said that's what you
have to find out so I'm going to avoid giving
advice in this talk
there are even jokes about commencement
Doonesbury did a Sunday comic about it
President Bush thought it would be funny to point
out that one can go far in the US with a sea average
in
a commencement a few weeks ago he said literally
look what I've accomplished with my fluency and language
and grammar
what a role model
but
mr. books Bush's remarks do point up
the enormous distinction between just getting
a degree and getting a real education
the shocking start of
real education happens when you realize that
you not only don't know very much
compared to the good stuff that's known but
what you do know is known in a very weak way and
the problem with starting
on this path of education this this doesn't change
as you get better educated the
more you learn the more you realize you don't know and
the more you realize you understand it in a week
way people say but
I want to know everything and
I want to be absolutely sure of it a
lot of people do this by
living inside their heads with stories they choose to
believe in but it uses an
ancient version of know that really means
the same as believe and it misses most of
the important ideas about
400 years ago a new
way of living outside of our heads a little bit
was invented science
changed the meaning of know so drastically that
it would have been better
if a new word had been coined we
still used no science
fiction writer Robert Heinlein gave us a Martian
word for this new way of knowing called it grok
in part grok
understand things in a way that minimizes
our human genetic and cultural biases
this is known a long time ago
the talmud says we see things not as they
are but as we are rock
means to try to see things
not as we are but from stronger points
of view the most critical
ideas of humanity have happened when somebody
is realized that the world is not as it seems that
most of the important stuff is quite invisible
to our nervous system and belief structures
this
is something you know about because making the invisible a little more visible
is what artists have always tried to do
and grokking
became the newest of the Arts
was one of the great art forms
of the last century
another early part of this new way
of thinking happened when democratic
Republic's like ours were invented that tried to
take into account our biases and prejudices
in 18th century America
the title of Tom
Paine's Common Sense was a play
on words because it was really
an argument against common-sense ideas about
governments for example having a king in those
days seemed quite natural it
was a natural extension of having a father be
the head of a family but pain said
and let instead of having the King be the law
let us have the law be the king and
he meant that people can invent a form
of government that is better for
most people than what seems natural Tom Paine
really meant uncommon sense
Thomas Jefferson at a letter in
1820 said I know of no safe depository
of the ultimate powers of
the society but the people themselves and
if we think them not enlightened
enough to exercise
their control with a wholesome discretion the
remedy is not to take it from them but
to inform their discretion by education this
is what education in America really means
inform their discretion by
education means not helping Americans learn a job
or facts but helping them
learn to grok few
years back my wife Bonnie mcbird who
incidentally was the original writer of the movie
Tron that's how we met
she
had a nice argument with Vice President Al
Gore over the haves and have-nots
he was worried about the digital divide
in the United States but she pointed
out that most of the important knowledge of
the world was still in books and available
in free public libraries she
said that the real haves and have-nots are those
who have or have not the discretion to make
use of these free resources the
real start of education is to gain that discretion
a survey a few years ago indicated
that only about twenty percent of american adults today
can read and understand the
simply written pamphlet common sense by
tom paine this includes many college
graduates so the safe repository
of the ultimate powers of society is not
so safe these days our
main job as adults now usually
that I found that the most popular advice in a
commencement talk was to follow your
bliss or do what you really
love and so forth and that is actually good
advice but it's it's to individual
it's two
in cognizant of the
fact that we live in a society it's our main job as
adults especially as college graduates
is to try to help all of the children of
the world grow up to think better meaning
grok better than we do and
we were involved in the new
media can make a big difference here that's
you Nicholas Negroponte and
I Nicholas is the founder of the Media Lab at
MIT he and I are involved in
a serious project underway right now
to make and distribute an under
$100 laptop
for all of the children in the world that has
multiple billions of children
this is possible to do
mcluhan pointed out that we shape media
but then the media turn around and reshape
us so what kind of content will
you make for this new medium
Nicholas and I are making the machine but
it's up to you to make the content what kind of content will you
make for the children of the world
30 years ago
I attended a conference on mind and body
held at the Zen Center in California
the monks would often
clasp their hands together and pause
for a moment
eventually worked up the courage to ask them why
they did this they said
Buddhists believe that the world of the
senses is an illusion which most of
the time we have to pretend is real like when
of we're walking into a path of a bus
maybe an illusion but we better get out of the way
but during the day there are occasions
at a meal
starting to do work at a ceremony
like this where we pause for a moment to
reflect that we are incredibly finite and limited
beings and reality
is much larger than we can take in at
any one time I think this is a wonderful practice
to pause several times a day and
think for a second about all
the things we aren't thinking about
so congratulations again and
thank you very much for pausing
to grok the real significance of this
"