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The Idea
Emporium - innerwear for those who dare
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
come one and all
for stimulating ware
not outerwear
innerwear
for those who dare
or even delight
to think
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
for those who take fright
at unthought
at unthinking
those who shrink from
mental blandness
mental blankness
mental blinkers barriers
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
come one, come all,
come all who love to wallow
in thought, in ideas
in thinking, in feeling
in aliveness, in life
instead of swallowing ideas
without tasting -
shallow living
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
hawks its wares
says beware of inner walls
of inner stalls
of blocks and barriers
of don't you dare think that
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
The Idea Emporium
a spa for the mind
a place to find
ideas
one's own mind
thinking
minding
finding
trying
innerwear that dares
The Idea Emporium
for innerwear that dares
The Idea Emporium
innerwear for those who dare
The Idea Emporium
Elsa
January 28, 2007
copyright © Elsa Schieder 2007 - all rights reserved
publishing house - FlufferDuff Impressions 2007
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of page
Click
here for Give Peace a Chance,
another idea piece.
For
a "favorite" stupid opinion, click here for Stupid Opinion
#One.
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The Idea Emporium.
For all who love to wallow in thought,
in ideas, in thinking, in feeling,
in aliveness, in life.
Instead of swallowing ideas without tasting.
Instead of shallow living. Fun poem.
Idea
Emporium - why and what
One of my lifelong concerns has
been trying to make sense of reality. What is happening? Why is this
happening? And with that I come to ideas - ideas about reality, ideas
that need to be checked against reality, not just believed in like the
tooth fairy is accepted by a child. But how does one check them? What
qualifies as proof, as evidence?
And why, so often, is evidence
of no interest to people? We have masses of evidence of how good many
people are at denying evidence when it goes against what they believe.
Millions have denied, and continue to deny the equality of women and
men, of Jews and nonJews, of atheists and Muslims, gays and heterosexuals.
People are incredible experts at denying reality - what is seen, experienced.
Of course we need to interpret reality - we do not know it "pure"
but through our limited senses, our limited memory, our limited ability
to perceive and make sense of the amazing array of information that does
gets perceived.
Still, it boggles the even slightly
rational mind - how can so many people be so utterly blind to, let's
say, findings about nutrition? It amazed me to find out, when I was growing
up, that there was evidence for the health benefits of whole grains over
refined products - because masses of people stuck with white flour, white
rice, white sugar. How could they be so closed to evidence? Somehow they
had a wall against the evidence.
The ideas I want to explore are
those that go with, not against, the evidence, that try to make sense
of evidence.
So, Idea Emporium - a place
for ideas.
- a place where ideas are explored.
- a place where ideas are entertained, played with, looked at from many angles.
- a place where ideas are evaluated.
What is an idea, by the way. I
hadn't thought of that when I chose the name of Idea Emporium. It
just seemed the obviously right name. It was months before I realized
I had a hard time putting into words what I meant by idea. I began to
think about the word. Sentences with the word, idea, floated into my
mind. Like, "I have an idea. Why don't we order pizza?" That
was an eye-opener for me.
My guess is that most of us use
the word without knowing exactly what it means. "I have an idea
of what we might do. Maybe we could go out for Chinese food. But It's
just an idea" - meaning this need not come to pass, but we think
it might be fun. That is obviously not what I meant by idea.
"I have an idea. Maybe you left your hat in the car." Again,
no
""My idea is that we go in together and talk to her." No.
These are all legitimate uses of the term, idea, but it's not what I
meant when I came to name this space. And I'm sure it's not what
people might expect if they click on The Idea Emporium - because it's
not what most people mean by the word "idea."
Word has a built-in dictionary. This is what it says:
Idea -
a personal opinion or belief;
a thought to be presented as a suggestion;
an impression or knowledge of something;
a realization of a possible way of doing something or of something to
be done;
the aim or purpose of a plan or project;
the gist or précis of something such as a book, report, project
or plan;
a thought about or mental picture of something such as a future or possible
event;
a concept that exists in the mind only;
a mental image that reflects reality.
The last is what I'm most interested in - ideas that reflect reality
as well as possible. But I've decided that I like it that idea is such
a wide term.
Here I am taking idea to mean (and
I think this is what most of us think of when we think of the meaning
of the word, idea) some thought one has about something. "I have
an idea" - meaning, I am not sure this concept fits reality, but
it is a hypothesis I have formed.
I also think that, when I named
this space and included the word, idea, I was blurring words together in my mind - idea, concept,
conception, understanding, hypothesis.
The Idea Emporium - a place for
all these things.
This is not the same as people
having "an idee fixe" - meaning, a fixed idea, a rigid belief
that something is one way or another.
The sooner people get rid of such ideas, the better. The Idea Emporium
is not a place to set out rock-hard beliefs and stone people with them,
hurling them like missiles at all and any that come within striking range.
That is not The Idea Emporium.
What is it? A place to
present and explore ideas - for now, my ideas.
That does not mean the idea need
to be timidly set forth, all hemming and hawing, tentative even when
the evidence is strong.
The goal
is smart opinions, critical thought, perception, good analysis.
Smart opinions
- meaning, drawing on every resource possible, rather than "it's
my opinion, that's why I believe it, and it's as good as yours any day.
Who are you to say blacks can do math, women can learn to read, Jews
deserve to live. I have every right to my opinion." Personally,
I'd rather do my best to think well, but many others are clearly proud
of their avowed right to be thoughtless.
That doesn't belong in this space.
What belongs? Critical thought
- that means we do our best to think well, to apply logic, information,
all our capacities.
What else belongs? Good analysis.
Again, that means we try to ensure that we use valid arguments - not, "because
it's my opinion," "because I say so"
"because I know that's right" "because my god says so" "because
everyone knows that's right" . We both draw conclusions from evidence
(so there may be evidence showing patterns and tendencies in certain
groups (for instance, I've done lots of research on the impact of rights
movements on those who get involved, and have found lots of evidence
for patterns of response) - and at the same time we are careful not to
generalize, to draw conclusions beyond what we have evidence for, and
even contradicting the evidence ("Women are ..." "Muslims
believe ..." "everyone this happens to ..." "Jews
are..."
"Gays are ..."
And what else belongs? Perception.
Not easy to perceive. We each do it through a filter of experience, memory,
assumptions, and so on. We have all learned not to perceive many things
- denial - and to magnify other things. The goal
(and this should be the goal everywhere) is to be as perceptive - taking
in as much information - as possible.
i could go on
and on. But this is enough for a start. More important now to put it
into action - because it's ideas came first, surging inside me, wanting
to find a place to be heard.
I'm (among other things) a college
teacher, so my teaching gives me one outlet for my ideas, to express
them, modify them, listen to other ideas, test the evidence, the power
(or lack thereof) of different arguments.
But that hasn't been enough for
me. One small class at a time.
I have a sense that I have some
ideas that could be valuable to many people - ideas many people don't
have (many have very different ideas), ideas where my ideas may help
other people struggling with some of the same concerns, and so on. I
think these ideas could help make some kind of positive difference in
the world, reach people who are reachable, maybe even break through some
shells many people live inside, shells that stop them from perceiving
things.
There will be space for the ideas
of others as well. Right now I am starting with a few ideas of mine.
But I envisage that The Idea Emporium is a place that will grow, enriching
both others and also myself - that I and my ideas will grow from some
of what comes back.
Elsa
July 30, 2006
copyright © Elsa Schieder 2006
publishing house - FlufferDuff Impressions 2006

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more ...
THE IDEA EMPORIUM
A CELEBRATION OF GOOD THINKING
THE IDEA EMPORIUM
NO HOLDS BARRED THINKING
THE IDEA EMPORIUM
LOOK AT ANYTHING, ASK ANYTHING
LOOK ANYWHERE
PLUS, LOOK AT THE JOURNEY
"It is a fact readily acknowledged,
that for humans,
an idea is much more powerful
than a fact."
WHEN I HEARD THAT,
I HAD A EUREKA MOMENT.
YES, I HAD SEEN THAT SO OFTEN.
SOME OF US ALREADY LOVE GOOD THINKING.
BUT GOOD THINKING IS POSSIBLE
FOR ALMOST ALL OF US,
JUST LIKE EVEN A COUCH POTATO
CAN GET INTO SHAPE!
SO, FOR THE THINKERS
AND THE POTENTIAL THINKERS
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