Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Beautiful Messes

In class we talked about the advantages and disadvantages of compartmentalizing. Aristotle was known as the great compartmentalizer of all time. Some look at this quality and see a really smart guy. I do agree that Aristotle was far ahead of his time, but I don't want to automatically label him a genius here. If Aristotle were such a genius, then I think he would have realized all of the things that he was missing when he placed everything into it's own little compartment, never to be heard from again. When it comes to pure science, it is nice to have everything in its proper place. It would be nearly impossible to learn Biology without compartmentalization. When it comes to humanity, however, I think that we have to be very careful how we go about filing information.
Humans are a vast and complicated species. There are too many kinds of people in the world for us all to fit into neat little slots. It is easy to say that humans break down into groups such as gender, national identity, ethnic identity, and even cultural subgroups built into ethnic identity. Even the most sub-sub-sub group of classification, however, is bound to leave somebody out. There are always things about us that are not shared with individuals of our own "group" that may be shared with someone from a different group. So, then, I think that it's important to realize how much we lose when we just throw people into compartments to be sorted. We miss the subtle nuances of one another through classification.
Also, compartmentalizing places or periods of our lives can be dangerous. We're in college. It's time to grow up, cut the cord, learn to stand on our own two feet. But does that have to happen just because we are in college. What does furthering our education have to do with distancing yourself from the relationship that you had with the family? I think it is more a natural inclination to say that when we each, on a personal level, feel the need to leave home and start our own lives then we should do just that. The act of doing so shouldn't be compartmentalized by simply saying that you're in college. Also, just because one leaves the home does not (and should not) have to mean that one leaves behind one's family. There is a way to have one foot in both worlds.


My question is: Can you think of a time when people gain more than we lose through compartmentalization?

1 comment:

  1. Hey!

    I responded to your question in my blog just so you know. :)

    ReplyDelete