Standing On The Shoulders Of Giants
The recent flap over President Obama's statement in this speech in Virginia prompted one commenter to state "That's as ridiculous as saying that Bill Gates couldn't have built Microsoft without Tesla."
But there's a problem with that. Bill Gates couldn't have built Micro$oft without the work of Nikola Tesla. He was standing on the shoulders of Nikola Tesla, among others. He was, as are we all, standing on the shoulders of giants.
The fact is that no matter how "self made" a man might think he is, he is in fact standing on the shoulders of giants. And the giants on whose shoulders Bill Gates is standing involve more people than just Nikola Tesla. A lot more.
There is in fact a large list of giants on whose shoulders Bill Gates is standing, whether or not he, or anyone else, chooses to acknowledge that fact. Nikola Tesla is among them, but so are George Westinghouse, Thomas Edison, Charles Babbage, Ada Lovelace, Luigi Menabrea, Herman Hollerith, Samuel Morse, Alexander Graham Bell, William Preece, Walter H. Schottky, Lee de Forest, Heinrich Geissler, William Crookes, John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, Herbert Matare, Heinrich Welker, Jack Kilby, Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore, Federico Faggin, Ted Hoff, Stanley Mazor, Art Rock, Alan Archibald Campbell-Swinton, Philo Farnsworth, Karl Braun, and the list goes on and on.
Bill Gates stands on the shoulders of a veritable army of giants, and these are just the names of some of the individual people. He's also standing on the shoulders of the Apollo program, and the entire microelectronics industry which it spawned. And he's standing on the shoulders of all of the universities and institutions of higher learning that gave rise to the minds of all of these people, including Gates himself.
He is standing on the shoulders of all of the people who built the infrastructure, the legal system, the political system, the social system, and the financial system of a nation which allowed and encouraged him to prosper.
Most of all, he's standing on the shoulders of the the employees and contractors who did, and do the actual grunt-work of building Microsoft.
Ultimately, he is standing on the shoulders of countless millions of consumers who buy Microsoft products and services, and the entire system which allows that to happen.
We are, all of us, standing on the shoulders of giants in an unbroken pyramid that stretches back in time to the first protohuman to pick up a rock and bang it with another rock. And that is why, when President Obama said "you didn't do it alone" he was absolutely correct.
He makes his point and reinforces it. It's not "taking it out of context" to note this.
http://reason.com/.../how-you-didnt-build-that-became-he...
Yeah. That sounds like he's dissing intellect and hard work.
Nah, he's not dissing intellect and hard work. He's just saying they don't matter.
No comments:
Post a Comment