"Prone to fads" defines every urbanized civilization I've ever heard of, and 
tribal societies are less given to innovation that he thinks, because the 
traditional lore is a store of highly specialized local knowledge about 
conditions whose changes are well understood. Even the odd once-in-a-lifetime 
events can usually be answered by consulting one of the elders or grandmothers.

It's my guess that innovation is the hallmark of an expanding or frontier 
society where all bets are off and great benefits can be had from it. Or in 
borderlands where cultures interact. 

Because a lot of what he describes as "docile copying" and getting our 
information from the society at large can also be interpreted as "it is not 
rational to reinvent the wheel!" Unless it's not working for you.
And there is the other condition for innovation - to be subject to a clumsy 
procedure or machine and grit your teeth and mutter "Bad design. VERY bad 
design. I could do better." And be able to do it.

In which case all that culturally accumulated knowledge is there to serve you.


http://idiotgrrl.livejournal.com/





> Date: Sat, 17 Dec 2011 06:54:29 -0600
> From: evil.ke...@gmail.com
> To: brin-l@mccmedia.com
> Subject: Brin: Infinite Stupidity
> 
> Edge never fails to disappoint.
> 
> http://edge.org/conversation/infinite-stupidity-edge-conversation-with-mark-pagel
> 
> ---
> "It’s cheap to maintain Lies and expensive to maintain Trvth."
> --KZK's Maxim
> 
> _______________________________________________
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