This post reminds me of the kids in the Ender's Game series who all were blessed with supremely keen intellects from birth. They spoke multiple languages, had a deep understand of global politics and wartime strategy, and even moved through the ranks and quirks of society with ease (so-called street smarts).
But although they were all gifted with intelligence, it was easy to see that without the proper relationship to their default "genius," they couldn't even be considered special. When I break them down a few characteristics shine through, skill-building, goals, and competition.
And perhaps if we nurse those characteristics we really can train ourselves to be geniuses. (On a sidenote, for some reason I find the term "genius" ringing with cold-war connotation.) Those three characteristics I listed above really all fit together (see:
how to become dedicated) They all encompass personal drive. So maybe that's all it means to be a genius, to fully employ what it means to be dedicated. In that case, it's not that we're choosing to be geniuses, but rather, we're choosing to employ our inherent genius.
I
don't even think the word genius is fair. More-so than the word smart,
it signifies something superior, almost foreign.In the Ender series, Bean is a great representation for the alien-like stigma attached to being a genius. Bean is introduced as the cream of the crop of all the kid geniuses. He is easily smarter than them at all and is more like a computer in the way he processes information. Throughout his alternative side book series, he is constantly tackling the notion that his intellect makes him non-human.
I think you're right though Dalal, that the true genius is the foreign like mass in our head we call a brain. Everyone has one, and everyone can hone their own genius in whichever way they see fit. The historic image of a great scholar and thinker is just one manifestation of the genius of mankind.
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On a side, Ender's Game is a great science fiction book worth reading. There are about a dozen books to the entire series and I've read a few, but nothing has compared to the idea and great story of the first one. Kind of like a Chocolate War set in a future space school.
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