I'm very well travelled (moved around to lots of different countries as a kid due to my dad's job), I read a lot, I watch a lot of documentaries, I actively seek knowledge on things, I feel a need to know both sides of an argument before I form an opinion on it, I am non-biased in my interests (no specific political or religious ideology).
I think it's very important to have a broad knowledge and understanding. We're all part of the world, and knowing about it has got to be partially beneficial. It enables you to hold a conversation with various different people with various different interests or backgrounds.
On the other hand, it can be depressing and make you cynical. Maybe ignorance is bliss after all.
2006-07-14 05:23:42
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answer #1
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answered by Entwined 5
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I think knowledge comes from learning and observing. I got a lot of my knowledge from reading when I was young but I really started to be able to apply knowledge and understand things better after living abroad. I love to read (I'm a Library Tech) but I think travel has given me more knowledge as well as wisdom. While reading is great, there is nothing like seeing something first had. You can read all the books about Afghanistan you want but until you go there and see it you really can understand all those facts you read or concider yourself knowledgable about it with any authority. At the same time I don't think people who travel with out reading or learning about the place they are going will get near as much out of the experience as someone who has. I think knowledge is best obtained by information and understanding of the context of that information.
Did I make sense??
2006-07-14 05:29:04
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answer #2
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answered by Constant_Traveler 5
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Well traveled within my country, yes. Well read-yes. Source of my knowledge, experience, friends of all ages and a voracious appetite for knowledge and reading.
Yes, it is important-it makes us more well rounded individuals. Knowledge is power-if you are afraid of something or don't understand it, equip yourself with knowledge about it.
The longer I live, the less I know.
2006-07-14 05:18:47
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answer #3
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answered by curiositycat 6
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McGospel, you're SO incorrect about Darwin. sure, he received't have finished his "degree" at Cambridge, yet he became the perfect scientist that ought to were probably chosen for the 5 365 days voyage of the HMS Beagle. Darwin served as a geologist, botanist, zoologist, and everyday guy of technological information, in the time of that 5 365 days voyage and made an truly good many discoveries in the time of that element. His geological discoveries blanketed an truly good many paleolithic exhibits consisting of many of the whole dinosaurs of South u.s., besides as he became waiting to ensure the speed of sedimentation of the historic seabed on Argentina and Chile. His artwork with the coral reefs of the south Pacific region remains the classic for cutting-area ongoing analyze. His charts of the wave kinds are nevertheless in use by technique of present day navigators contained in the south Pacific, as are his many charts of the reefs and coastlines of many of the South Pacific Islands. the guy no longer only discovered an vast kind of animals yet is likewise credited with learning thousands of previously unclassified flora and herbs. So, a scientist is someone who DOES technological information, in spite of what it ought to or received't say on somewhat of paper. For someone who had NO degree, he became one heck of a astounding scientist. A scientist that many folk who DO have a PhD may aspire to change into. He should be the only maximum ideal organic historian that ever existed on the face of the planet, purely in words of significant discoveries contained in the parts of Geology, Botany, and Zoology. no matter if we ignore about his "foundation of the Species" artwork. Brightest advantages, Raji the fairway Witch
2016-12-01 06:46:15
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answer #4
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answered by leija 3
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The earth is incredibly huge in relative size comparison with a human being.The surface area of the earth is huge,so huge that our little body's can't traverse the whole earth in one lifetime.So in turn my goal,before i die,is to see as much of the earths surface as possible.If one day i have a family,they will go along for the rides...tom science
2006-07-14 05:24:55
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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If you are born American than 85% chances are that you don't know anything outside of USA.
Knowlegde is very important tool and makes you a Educated human being. You can then talk about things instead of just saying "yeah.. is it.. oh. really"
2006-07-14 05:24:33
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answer #6
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answered by desiredKay 2
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