Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I think you are confusing intelligence with knowledge and experience. After we learn a fact or procedure we tend to slowly lose the memory of the learning process. When my two year old son starts to learn new things, he first relates it to what he knows already which results in some hilarious (stupid?) questions and statements. At his first sight of a cow, he called it a dog. Makes perfect sense from his perspective: four legs, tail, head and does not meow; must be a dog. I try not to judge a person's intelligence by their first questions or statements on a subject they are unfamiliar with. They will always use phrases and analogies from their (unfamiliar to us) experience. Naturally this confuses us as we do not understand where the heck fire that (stupid?) question or statement came from. Perhaps our own sometimes arrogant replies illustrate our lack of intelligence; definitely our lack of compassion. John Collier > From: "Birkey, Duane" <dbirkey@hcjb.org.ec> > > > I've experienced enough as a photographer that I think I can hold an > intelligent conversation with just about anyone and ask intelligent > questions. I don't know any other person who has experinced the broad > variety that I have. But there are other photographers on this list who > have probably experienced as much and probably more... But there are other > photographers who only shoot weddings and portraits...... Just as there are > lawyers, dentists and doctors who can't figure out on their own how to open > the camera back or press the rewind button. >