06-28-2014, 01:57 PM
^^^ I don't know. Life to me (and I think to most) is a back and forth between simplicity and complexity. Almost every great scientist I've read echoes this thought. Look at the Beatles. Why were they so great? Most of all, it's because they created so many simple melodies that stuck in people's hearts and minds. You can hum such melodies and people will remember them. So many pop artists try and try and try to create just one that will stick in people's minds. They created 70-80.
Yet I don't think people would accuse the Beatles of lacking in complexity in their career as artists.
Maybe that's a poor example...
As an educator, the learning process itself is one of opening oneself to the unknown, fostering that sense of disequilibrium in oneself. Over time, you mature your thought processes, you come to certain realizations, moments of clarity and simplicity. Pretty normal part of the learning process.
Anyway...
Yet I don't think people would accuse the Beatles of lacking in complexity in their career as artists.
Maybe that's a poor example...
As an educator, the learning process itself is one of opening oneself to the unknown, fostering that sense of disequilibrium in oneself. Over time, you mature your thought processes, you come to certain realizations, moments of clarity and simplicity. Pretty normal part of the learning process.
Anyway...
You can't hate me more than I hate myself. I win.
"When the spirit of justice eloped on the wings
Of a quivering vibrato's bittersweet sting."
"When the spirit of justice eloped on the wings
Of a quivering vibrato's bittersweet sting."

