I'm enjoying Eric Weiner's Ben & Me: In Search of a Founder's Formula for a Long and Useful Life.
He writes that old Ben Franklin was not (as I and others, including *AI, have believed) an early proto-pragmatist but rather "what neuroscientist David Eagleman calls a 'possibilian' [who] asks [not] what can we do about this now [but] imagines what might be done in the future, no matter how improbable. The possibilian is infinitely patient. The possibilian always perseveres, and never sighs."
Well, I think he was both. I know I am, though I do often sigh these days and my patience is definitely not infinite. But it's a useful reminder that desired practical results are not always delivered promptly. Nonetheless, we must persevere if we intend that we and our successors in the great parade of humanity are to continue to live long and prosper.
Anyway, it's nice to have a new perspective from Esoteric Eric on the Founder who winks.
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*Yes, Benjamin Franklin was a pragmatist, and his pragmatic spirit was a key part of his success: [1, 2, 3]
Practical results
Franklin believed that what mattered was the practical results of improving himself and making others happy. [3]
Experimental approach
Franklin's pragmatism included an experimental approach and an orientation toward human progress. [1]
Resistance to dogma
Franklin's philosophy was unique in its resistance to dogma. [2]
Championed virtues
Franklin championed virtues like industriousness, frugality, and common sense, and believed they were foundational to a prosperous society. [2]
Understood virtues as habits
Franklin believed that virtues were habits or skills that could be improved through practice. [4]
Franklin's biographer Walter Isaacson claims that Franklin laid the foundation for American pragmatism. Franklin's pragmatic spirit was closely tied to his life experiences, including growing up in a poor family in Boston and dropping out of school at age 10 to work in the family trade business. [3, 5]
Generative AI is experimental.
[1] https://ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/ells/article/view/49522
[2] http://mastersinvest.com/newblog/2024/5/9/the-munger-series-learning-from-benjamin-franklin
[3] https://ccsenet.org/journal/index.php/ells/article/download/49522/26690
[5] https://muse.jhu.edu/article/467713/summary
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