Philosophical oddments
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- Mind Sports Olympiad
The first "Mind Olympiad" took place in London recently, attracting
2000 competitors from 58 countries. But how would present Olympians
compete with the greats of the past? According to Tony Buzan and Raymond
Keene, the organisers, the most intelligent person who ever lived was
Leonardo da Vinci, with a storming IQ of 220, with Goethe (215) and
Shakespeare (210) in silver and bronze positions. The best Greeks are
Archimedes and Aristotle, in equal 8th position on 190. No Romans get
as far as 180, which is the score of the top-rated woman (George Eliot).
[New Statesman 29 August 1997]
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- Pythagoras' Chums
The Ancient World mocked the philosopher Pythagoras, because he (allegedly)
believed that the humble bean had a soul, and was thus, like himself, eligible
for reincarnation. Obviously this was because beans seem, when hosted
by a human, to produce their own breath, wind, flatulence - very much
a life of their own. Now a British Scientist at Cambridge has genetically
engineered the world's first fart-free bean. It has been christened
the "prim" bean in token of its guarantee not to cause social embarrassment.
Pythagoreans are aghast. Mr Bean intends to sue.[Guardian August 5 1997]
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Plato's Socialist Republic?
Revelations about attempts to purify the race by enforced sterilisations
in Scandinavia - a program that endured in Sweden until as recently
as 1976 - have prompted research into British socialist thinkers' ideas
on Eugenics. Many make Plato's proposals look extremely tame: Shaw favored
"selective breeding"; Bertrand Russell suggested the issue of color-coded
"procreation tickets" to avoid contamination of the race - anyone breeding
with a holder of the wrong-color ticket would face a hefty fine; HG
Wells was enthusiastic about the removal of "detrimental types and characteristics".
Even many reformers were motivated by Eugenic rather than humanitarian
motives: the Webbs wanted free milk for the future working class because
of the kicking it had received in the Boer War. Marie Stopes' birth-control
was not about female emancipation, but to reduce the numbers of the
proletariat. JM Keynes was keen to enforce it on the workers who were
"too drunken and ignorant" to control their own numbers. [Guardian 30 August 1997]
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Cicero was right about old age!
Cicero's recomendations for a long and healthy life have been confirmed
in a book published in UK this week. American doctor Dharma Singh Khalsa
- without admitting any debt to the first century BC pop philosopher
- claims that a simple diet, mental activity (reasoning and memory exercises
and no TV), plus regular reading or writing will stave off the dreaded
Alzheimer's disease. Cicero in De Senectute recommends
mental activity (learn something new - like Greek!), exercise, moderation
in diet. In fact his work seems very much in tune with the modern idea
of "dying young as late as possible". [Brain Longevity published by Century]