Character and Intelligence

Character and Intelligence

Genius and ingenuity. The two axes of clothing: one without the other, half-happiness. It is not enough what is understood, but what is great. Fool’s unhappiness: to miss vocation in state, employment, region, familiarity.

Baltasar Gracián

Aphorism #2, The Art of Worldly Wisdom

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Reflection

It is not enough to be smart. Intelligence is a tool at the service of the will. It is of little use to be intelligent if there is no will or character to govern and control that power. Power without control is as useless as control without power. Intelligence can lead to a lazy attitude. Why make an effort, the intelligent and spineless person may think, if with a minimum effort I can get there easily?

Intelligence is a gift, which should be put at the service of society. Knowing how to take advantage of the resources it provides, in the form of education, security and welfare, and taking pride in being able to return in due course the service rendered. It can be through all kinds of actions: innovating, creating, educating, seeking and generating the highest possible degree of happiness and well-being for the environment. An environment not only understood in human or social terms, but also in environmental terms.

You also have to be smart to know how to choose an environment that favors the ability to grow and develop as a person. You have to know when to get out of your comfort zone in order to grow, to move forward. Sometimes it’s dizzying, it’s not always easy. But no one can move forward without at least one foot off the ground. This last example may seem exaggerated, but it is not at all exaggerated for a person who has been bedridden for some time after a long illness. If we lose our ability to evolve and adapt to a changing environment, we will end up stuck in a static position. A crisis situation in life can also be a great opportunity to get out of that zone, to go outside. Change of vine. A vine that lost speed and left us always static, swinging on the same point. Grab another one to be able to move forward, with more strength.

Like the Roman chariot that illustrates this entry, the balance between these two vectors of movement will make the whole agile and powerful, so that we can successfully face any situation we may encounter in life.

For the youngest

Value your intelligence in its right measure, consider it a tool at the service of your will and to be tamed. How to train a foal. If you are lucky enough to have a powerful tool, learn how to use it and use it. Do not leave it in a drawer. But do not forget that it is with willpower and perseverance that the greatest achievements are made.

Learn to know yourself, observe your strengths and weaknesses, and choose well your vocation and your circle of friends. Reach out to those who can contribute something to you, those who can help you be the best version of yourself. But never put anyone down, or fail to be humble. Only in this way can you always maintain a receptive mind and a favorable environment that stimulates you day after day.

Information Management for Success: When to Show Your Cards

Information Management for Success: When to Show Your Cards

Carry your things with suspension. The admiration of the novelty is an estimation of the successes. Playing the game uncovered is neither useful nor tasteful. Not declaring oneself then suspends, and more so where the sublimity of the use gives object to universal expectation; it feigns mystery in everything, and with its very arcane nature provokes veneration. Even in making oneself understood, plainness must be avoided, just as in dealing with others one must not allow everyone to be interior. It is the demure sacred silence of sanity. The declared resolution has never been estimated; before it is allowed to censure, and if it comes out randomly, it will be twice unhappy.
Imitate, then, the divine procedure to make to be to the sight and to the wakefulness.

Baltasar Gracián

Aphorism #3, The Art of Worldly Wisdom

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Reflection

Gracián exploits in this aphorism the concept of the management and dosage of information, and he does so through apparently unconnected brushstrokes that revolve around this theme in a disorganized, even chaotic way. It seems as if he had been compiling them for some time and vomited them all into this text without much care for form or connection, something that we will see on multiple occasions in this work. We will go through and analyze each idea separately to get an idea of what he wants to communicate.

The successes acquire value through the admiration provoked by the novelty of the novelty.

Why does novelty provoke admiration? Indeed, the lack of precedents leads us to think that there has been continuity in the past, that it has always been successful, and therefore leads us to think that this will also be the case in the future. But be careful, because this is also the case in the pole position and can become a disadvantage. Novelty that errs is born moribund. It is therefore important to always put special emphasis and interest in the way a novelty is presented.

Showing the cards at the outset is neither pleasing nor useful

What is impressive when looking at an iceberg is not what is seen with the naked eye, but what is not seen beneath the surface, what is left to the imagination. Not giving too much detail and choosing the right level of information can be very useful in the tactical field; on the other hand, opening up too much and in the first instance it can be perceived as lack of content or lightness.

Not being discovered immediately produces curiosity, and if the position is an important one, general expectation arises.

On the contrary, waiting to be shown generates a genuine interest that keeps the interlocutor attentive and connected to the message. This expectation can easily spread and increase by itself if the visibility and relevance of the subject is such that it covers a wide and sufficiently communicated collective.

Mystery provokes veneration, by the mere fact of being secret

Secrecy attracts. It is enough to be told that it is a secret for our interest to increase, sometimes to an exacerbated degree. Who has ever resisted not wanting to know a secret? On the other hand, secrecy has been the honey that has attracted many societies, such as Freemasonry. Feeling that we know a secret makes us feel empowered, that we have more information than others and that we have the power to decide when and how to reveal it.

Even when making oneself understood, one must avoid frankness.

Openness can be gratuitous at times. It is not necessary to give all kinds of details unnecessarily, and this does not mean that you are lying or not telling the truth. Knowing how to dose information and limit it to what is strictly necessary is usually the best strategy as a general rule.

Neither in the treatment, intimate thoughts should be shown to everyone.

Intimacy should be reserved for a small circle. Being light-hearted about revealing intimacies to the first person who passes by can be seen as self-deprecating and even rude and vulgar.

Demure silence is the refuge of sanity

The popular saying is full of examples that reinforce this statement. Sayings like… There is no better word than the unspoken, they are well known and widely used, but to what extent are they correct? Again, it is about playing not to reveal your cards, deciding what portion of information you are going to put into play and what is going to be left to the imagination of others. It may be more effective in certain circumstances for others to complement the message by adding the missing piece, thus not only saving money but also adapting the response to each specific interlocutor. But it is necessary to choose the right moments and not to abuse this by system. Sometimes, not giving the right answer at the right time can be counterproductive and contrary to individual interests, as well as encouraging unnecessary misunderstandings.

A decision is not appreciated if it is made public, and when exposed to criticism, if it is negative, the bad luck will be double.

Giving public explanations of why a decision is made may be unwise if it is not strictly necessary. It is not possible to expect everyone to participate in decisions if they do not concern them, at the risk of encouraging unproductive criticism, which, moreover, usually feeds back in an unbridled manner, generating a snowball effect that is difficult to reverse or control.

It is better to imitate the divine power to keep men attentive and vigilant.

Here Baltasar Gracián makes clear his Jesuit condition and invokes an inaccessible Divinity that generates mystery and expectation, but at the same time adoration and fierce loyalty, at least for the believer like him.

For the youngest

Honest yes, but not always transparent. Knowing how to choose when to offer more or less information is an art that must be mastered. It is essential, in many areas but especially in the workplace, to learn to be brief. Any engineer, especially in the software field, knows that if it is possible to design something with fewer elements (or lines of code) without prejudice to the purpose for which it is intended, it is better to keep it simple. This will significantly reduce the chances of failure and increase robustness and reliability.

This is even more important in a job interview. Always show knowledge and confidence, but make sure that the message sticks to what is being asked in the interview. It is not because you want to show that you know a lot that you will get better results. Brevity and conciseness in the answer are essential elements for a good interview. Interviewers are often bosses who have no time to spare, and need to have as much information available in as little time as possible. Think about it.

 

On the Shoulders of Giants

On the Shoulders of Giants

Everything is already in its point, and being a person in the greatest. More is required today for one wise man than in former times for seven; and more is needed to deal with one man in these times than with a whole people in former times.

Baltasar Gracián

Aphorism #1, The Art of Worldly Wisdom

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Reflection

This aphorism is even more relevant today than when Gracián wrote it three hundred and fifty years ago.

It makes us realize how people are increasingly (un)educated and this makes it more and more difficult for the “wise” to reach what we call the frontier or limits of knowledge. And it is much more difficult to be able to go beyond those limits and push that invisible frontier, to widen the limits of knowledge.

Still, information today is more accessible than ever. It has never been so easy to consult data and all kinds of studies. Wikipedia, the great encyclopedia of our days, has far surpassed the Enlightenment breakthrough that was Diderot’s Encyclopédie. Not even Issac Asimov, in his Foundation saga, would have dreamed of an Encyclopedia Galactica like today’s Wikipedia. With it, as an exponent of what Web 2.0 has meant, it can be said that humanity has taken a giant step towards the new era of Knowledge and Information in which we are immersed. But none of this appears to be without risk. Moreover, new ones are appearing for which there are no precedents.

Yes, there is much more information available. But you have to know how to look for it and, even more important, to question it and pass it through the sieve of reason. Read with an open but rigorous critical spirit. Be aware that today the power of former governments and censors has been replaced (not eliminated) by other factual powers such as Google, Facebook, etc…. The information is there, at the click of a button. But not all sources reach us in a fair equitable way. It is weighted and filtered according to algorithms designed by partial agents, who do not seek general knowledge but fundamentally different criteria, most of the time purely for profit.

To conclude, and returning to Gracián’s aphorism, I rescue a very ancient metaphor, popularized by the famous quotation of Sir Isaac Newton that he wrote in a letter to Robert Hooke, only a few years after the publication of this aphorism, and which must be a maxim for anyone who aspires to advance and widen the limits of knowledge to which I referred earlier,

“If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.”

Sir Isaac Newton, letter to R. Hooke 1675

For the youngest

This aphorism makes us reflect on the importance of the classics, of the study of those who marked the thought and managed to advance in knowledge until today. If humanity is to advance, you, the “wise men” of tomorrow, must not lose sight of all that precedes you. The work is enormous, much more than it was for our ancestors, but the information you have is enormous. All you need is a guide, a model, a good mentor or teacher who can give you a roadmap to discover them in a structured way. Come closer to those who know more and, with critical spirit and humility, climb on their shoulders to see the distant horizon of knowledge, where the sun never sets.