How do you get new ideas? You do it by analogy, and in most cases you often make a big mistake when using analogy. This is a wonderful game, looking back to the nonscientific era, seeing what is there, we are saying we have the same thing now, where is it? So I want to play this game. Tribal thinking If I am in a tribe and are sick, I will go to a witch doctor. The witch doctor said he knows how to heal. There is a spirit trying to escape into it. You have to dry them with eggs. He covered a serpent and took quinine from its skin. Works of Quinine. He did not know that he had the wrong theory of what happened. He knows it better than anyone. Saying to him that you do not know what you are doing, one day people will be able to investigate the problem, remove all his complex ideas, and learn better cure. I will tell you that he has not heard.
We saw the same thing in America in the 20th century. We remember now that the excellent middle class work after the war is abnormal. However, my friend Labor Organizer David Rolf often pointed out that "God did not work car workers." As a society we make choices to share productivity results more widely. We also chose to invest in the future. The Golden Age of postwar productivity is the result of a large investment in roads and bridges, general electricity, water supply, sanitation, communication. Louis Heyman, author of the book "Borrowing: The Way to American Debt", says that only 10% of American households in 1930 to 60% after 10 years need only use idle capital and human intelligence I point out. After the Second World War, we invested a lot of resources to rebuild the land destroyed during the war, but we also invested in basic research.
In our political dissatisfaction it is easy to remember the golden age of the 1940s. Our country united for good reasons and fought with common enemies. It is easy to imagine by reviewing that era It is easy to imagine that patriotism is only the face of the Nazi Know everyone is right, wrong, and who is not innocent. However, "third parties" and other movies produced during World War II and World War II remind us that there is nothing black and white.