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by lelanthran
874 days ago
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> additionally, books and written word doesn’t always equate to having saved knowledge. think about the tribe and kin concepts in many indigenous languages. entire ways of life can be lost. we know a lot from our europe’s ancestral indo-europeans lived from the reconstructions of proto-indo-european by way of the modern languages and written history but there is so much we do not know that is just lost. Sure, things are lost, but were they valuable other than to students of history? |
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I detest this line of thinking because it assigns more worth to things that yield immediate results, or places a low importance on the impact of history.
Were Fermat's theorems valuable only to students of Mathematics, or did they inspire some of the greatest minds to later push the envelope in many unrelated fields?