On Facebook, writer Jose Y Dalisay Jr has come out with “The Freedom Of Intelligence[1]” (published 3 years earlier, on 22 October 2018). Wikipedia says, “He has won numerous awards and prizes for fiction, poetry, drama, non-fiction and screenwriting, including 16 Palanca Awards[2].”) He was UP Vice President for Public Affairs when he delivered that piece at the “39th Anniversary of Health Sciences Center Autonomy and the 36th UP Manila Day.”
I’m very glad to be
here in UP Manila, which I consider to be UP’s historic home, the cradle of its
spirit, of its ideals and traditions. In keeping with that spirit, I’ll speak
today about the freedom to think, to speak, to study, and to teach – things
which we in UP tend to take for granted, but shouldn’t, and I’ll tell you why.
I am a UP graduate, BSA major in Ag Edu, 1965, weighted
average 2.36 and yes, I can vouch that at UP, we have the freedom to think, to
speak, to study and to teach.
It’s no big secret
that rebellion and resistance are coded into UP’s DNA, because we have always
encouraged critical thinking, which in turn encourages – at least for a while,
until complacency sets in – an attitude of dissidence, of anti-authoritarianism,
of rejection of the status quo. That’s how knowledge happens, that’s how it
begins, as every scientist since Galileo has affirmed.
At UP, Mr Dalisay says, “We have always encouraged critical
thinking.” That is correct – and that’s exactly
what’s wrong with UP! My alma mater encourages mostly critical thinking – when it should be
encouraging mostly creative thinking. The
UP Oblation offers all of himself to
critical thinking!
Galileo
is nobody. UP has never learned from Einstein,
critical mind plus creative genius. He did not argue himself into his Theory of Relativity, E=MC2 –
he intuited it first. You create
first so that you have something to defend. Otherwise, you defend the status
quo, and you will never get out of that rut.
In the sciences, education & law, UP does not teach creativity. At UP Los Baños,
they teach scientific thinking, which is logical thinking, critical thinking.
They do not teach how one may arrive
at a scientific theory where there was none before – they do not teach the dual
genius of Einstein.
I learned my creative thinking on my own, starting in high
school at my hometown Asingan, Pangasinan, in the library of Rizal Junior College where I voraciously
gobbled the Reader's Digest, among
other digestible matters. In 1974, my Pacifica copywriter friend Orlino A Ochosa gifted me his copy of Mechanism Of Mind by Edward De Bono, published 1969 – that opened
my mind to unbelievable creativity that, as the above inset text says, since
2000, I “have blogged neatly composed 7,000+ essays: 7M+ words.” Which explains
my intellectual tease: “How about a Nobel Peace Prize for Non-Fiction Writer
Online? Wake up, Digital Nobel!”
My
unsolicited advice to my alma mater UP Los Baños: “Cultivate minds even as you
cultivate soils!”@517
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