daaaaaaamn that’s a good post. sums up exactly the way i feel about things. i’m not a scientist, but i do engage in observation, more as a poet than anything else in terms of what i end up doing or creating with that observation. the things i believe are the things i’ve observed. it wasn’t always that way for me, but it is now.
i recently sat and listened to robert bly read lots of poetry. he talked a bit in an offhand way about writing poetry, and what he said was, if the last line you just wrote makes sense to you, cross it out.
somehow poets go straight to worship, if they are really operating at top form. but this worship poets engage in is not irresponsible, not if it is good. it might be hard to figure out which poetry hits this mark, but i have a sneaky suspicion that a rationalist in top form would be well suited to see it happening, perhaps moreso than many poets.
i can’t help but see a few interesting ironies in this post.
the “mutants” in the world of the x-men are people who all have one and only one common “genetic” mutation. and that mutation is the ability to mutate, as you put it, “in one generation”. that is itself the essential mutation that is common to all “mutants”. the fact that they can move from normal human to super powered mutant in the space of one generation (their own lifetime) is exactly the point.
in other words, “control over lightning” is not the metaphor. shooting laser beams out of the eyes, or teleporting or flying or… whatever, none of those things are the metaphor. the metaphor is the ability to mutate in the space of one lifetime. and the stories they spin from that wellspring often have to do with the fallout, the blessings and curses that come from what the ability to mutate means for any particular individual.
it’s a metaphor that works quite well, as long as you don’t take it too literally. (pun not intended but i can’t help noting it.) everyone wants to be able to adapt to circumstances within the course of their own lifetime in a way that puts them on top of their situation. an entire religion—buddhism—seems to rotate around this central idea. mostly buddhists seem to be saying that only in rare circumstances does one soul “mutate” into a state in which that soul truly achieves enlightenment. most of us have to keep spinning on the great wheel and reincarnating until we get it right. i’m not a buddhist so i may be getting this wrong, at least in terms of emphasis.
for you, your “super power” or “mutation” is your understanding of scientific models or rational ways of thinking. it seems to me that you have achieved quite a bit along these lines. you started thinking about these things at a young age, coincidentally (or not?) about the same time stan lee’s mutants discover their powers, as a budding teenager. (hopefully i’m remembering your recent post correctly.) in my sparsely informed viewpoint, entirely based on the posts i’ve read here, you have been driven by something intrinsic to you to understand the world in just the way you do now. everything led you to the point you are at now. there were things that were obvious to you at a young age that were not, i assure you, obvious to most other people.
you might phrase that very differently, and with much greater precision, and without all the biases and faulty logic that i’m sure infect my own thinking.
if you think about it though, you’ll see that in some way you are a kind of mutant. you are the exception, not the rule. you started to think about things, at a young age, in a way that most people never get to. it may be that you come from a long line of such thinkers. the further out i push the metaphor, the shakier it gets. at the end of the day it’s about discovering your own inherent powers and using them in a way that is, hopefully, best for you and for the people around you.