Transcript
Introduction
An able man is a man who could do things and his ability to do things is dependent on what he has in him. What he has in him depends on what he started with and what he has done to increase and discipline it. An educated man is not one whose memory is trained to carry a few dates in history. He is one who can accomplish things. A man who cannot think is not an educated man, however many college degrees he may have acquired. Thinking is the hardest work anyone can do, which is probably the reason why we have so few thinkers. There are two extremes to be avoided. One is the attitude of contempt towards education. The other is the tragic snobbery of assuming that marching through an education system is a sure cure for ignorance and mediocrity. You cannot learn in any school what the world is going to do next year, but you can learn some of the things which the world has tried to do in former years, and where it failed and where it succeeded. If education consisted in warning the young student away from some of the false theories on which men have tried to build so that he may be saved the loss of the time in finding out by his own bitter experience, it's good would be unquestioned. A man's real education begins after he has left school. The true education is gained through the discipline of life.
That is an excerpt from the book that I'm going to talk to you about today, which was published a 100 years ago, and it's My Life and Work, the autobiography of Henry Ford. So back on episode 263 and that biography of Edwin Land, it's called Land's Polaroid: A Company and the man Who Invented It, in chapter three, it goes through all the different heroes and people that Edwin Land was studying, the great people that came before him that influenced his approach to building all of his work, really, his scientific work and the building of Polaroid. And so it's like people... There'll be one or two paragraphs, maybe a page or two on the people that he was studying as a young person. He's like 17 or maybe 19 at the time. And it's like, people like Michael Faraday, Thomas Edison, Alexander Graham Bell, Henry Ford is one of the people which is... I'll get to in a minute why I'm rereading his autobiography, and George Eastman.