Alan Kay has a couple of slides in his Europython 2006 keynote, illustrating Universals and Non Universals
It's right at the start of this video: http://mrtopf.blip.tv/file/51972
From anthropological research of over 3000 human cultures, he presented two
lists, the first were universals, the things that all human cultures have in common. This list included things like:
- language - communication - fantasies - stories - tools and art - superstition - religion and magic - play and games - differences over similarities (?) - quick reactions to patterns - vendetta, and more
He then presented a list of non universals, the things that humans find harder to learn. This list was shorter and included:
- reading and writing - deductive abstract mathematics - model based science - equal rights - democracy - perspective drawing - theory of harmony (?) - similarities over differences (?) - slow deep thinking - agriculture - legal systems
These lists are really important I think as a guide to what our formal education system ought to be teaching - at least a starting point to a discourse on powerful ideas, as distinct from the dumbing down and smothering effect of generalised curriculum statements
I'm curious as to where alan got his list of "non universals" from and would like more details about them. I put a question mark after a couple I didn't understand but which sounded interesting.
When I google "non universals" anthropology not much comes up but the search universals anthropology was more successful:
http://www.amazon.com/Human-Universals-Donald-E-Brown/dp/007008209X or *http://tinyurl.com/28n7vv*
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