AverageJoe said:
Sir, if you ever met me you would know right off the bat I am no romanticist. Saying that I'm assuming something when you yourself are doing the same thing is outright hypocritical. You don't know me nor ever will and I don't know you so I'm not going to tell you that you know or don't know crap. I am truly offended by the smugness in your post.
I am not assuming anything, it doesn't matter to this discussion if genius is derived from nurture or nature. What matters is that some people are just better than others at what they do. This threads topic is about discussing the most prolific attributes of the high profile geniuses through our times.
AverageJoe said:
I didn't say squat about any fictitious "natural path" at all, that stuff is a bunch of malarkey.
So, what is this then about? "Sure
most everybody is a master in their field. If they aren't good at something, then they obviously haven't found their field, they are just piddling around in somebody else's.". You are stating that most people have at least one field you can call "their field", and you need to find this field of yours to succeed. This is definitely romanticism and I don't really understand how this fits with your position in this post that:
AverageJoe said:
I said that you are a product of your environment.
AverageJoe said:
What education is available to you GREATLY determines how effective you are performing that trade whatever it may be. Nor did I say that being a master at something makes you a genius, a genius is someone who has mastered their trade and develops a lot of insight which is directly related to how hard you try to think of new things, and that makes only those who have the drive to really make a difference a genius, it's no damn birthright. Thinking that being born a genius is absolutely out of touch with reality. The concept of the natural genius fictitious. Nobody pops out of their mom knowing everything while inventing many new concepts, this is just the delight of movies and the delusional. I dare you to go up to Edward Witten and Stephen Hawking and tell them they don't work damn hard at what they do.
None implied that geniuses didn't have to work or that they didn't need education. My personal position is that most can't get to the point these people got to no matter how hard they work, but as I said that is still not really a part of this thread. The difference between Einstein's approach and Gauss's is not trivial, that is what is important.
AverageJoe said:
AND on top of all of that I didn't say that people are unfunded masters at exclusively one thing. This too is simply preposterous.
Well, this statement still isn't far from giving the impression that this is what you think, even though I agree that it doesn't require that we got exactly one field each:
"Sure most everybody is a master in their field. If they aren't good at something, then they obviously haven't found their field, they are just piddling around in somebody else's.
It's like that ridiculous "gorillas should be football players" discussion going on. We're all just animals who excel at something tremendously, but the majority of us haven't found out what that is."
By the way, rereading your first post it looks like you totally misunderstood the topic creator. He didn't want the attributes required to be a genius, he wanted your opinion on "in what way are the geniuses different from each other".