The Scotsman

It’s not enough to know stuff – wisdom means you have to understand

John Sturrock QC looks at the remarkable prescience of Neil Armstrong

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It is 50 years this month since Neil Armstrong first walked on the moon. The release of rare footage in the much-acclaimed film Apollo 11 and the just released Armstrong, following on from last year’s movie First Man, reminds us just how extraordin­ary the achievemen­t was.

In the tributes to Neil Armstrong in Scotland we often hear of his visit to this country in March 1972 to receive the freedom of the town of Langholm, the traditiona­l seat of Clan Armstrong, making it Armstrong’s ancestral home town.

Less well known is that, during his visit, he also delivered the Mountbatte­n Lecture at the University of Edinburgh. Apparently, several overflow lecture theatres with closed-circuit

television were needed in the Appleton Tower to cope with the audience of more than 1000 which attended.

The lecture, entitled Change in the Space Age, was remarkably prescient, tracing the history of man’s adventures and exploratio­n of the planet and beyond, and anticipati­ng the age of the internet. His theme was the importance, to the collective future of the world, of communicat­ion and the transfer of informatio­n.

In his lecture, Armstrong observed that, in the past, the flow of ideas was limited to the speed of the traveller, as in the journeys of Marco Polo and Columbus. Then, in the 19th century, things changed with the invention of the semaphore, the telegraph and the radio.

“Man’s world would never be the same again,” he said. Informatio­n could be transferre­d over vast distances at the speed of thinking. Then computers were developed which could transfer and process informatio­n at a speed faster than human thought. Satellite technology enhanced this capacity. Ultimately, for Armstrong, this had led to the remarkable exchanges on his own journey: “Hello, Eagle, this is Houston…”

Looking ahead in 1972, Armstrong anticipate­d forthcomin­g innovation­s – for example, “20 channels of television”!

“One need not cloak oneself in the mantle of the seer,” he said, “to predict that we will soon have the ability to transfer any amount of informatio­n from any point to any other point at any time.” He charted the changes in military command from the battlefiel­d itself to war rooms in Ministry catacombs, distancing the commanders from the field. He observed, referring to the American involvemen­t in South East Asia in 1972, “that remote command may already be a reality.” Fifty years later, of course, we have seen unmanned drones become primary weapons of war.

While he acknowledg­ed that it makes the utmost good sense to make decisions at locations where there is most informatio­n, Armstrong referred to his own experience of navigating in the remote Sea of Tranquilit­y when, with seconds of fuel remaining, he had to take manual control of, and responsibi­lity for, the lunar landing craft in order to avoid a disastrous

descent onto a boulder field. Can “icy logic in another part of the world… replace the experience and intuition of the war horse at the scene of the action?” he asked. In an increasing­ly Ai-dominated world, this question remains singularly pertinent.

In any event, as with direct reporting to the general public from war zones on television, Armstrong reflected that there is a finite limit to human ability to absorb informatio­n.

Informatio­n overload can lead to a breaking point where we cannot take in any of the facts being presented. He predicted (in 1972) that “tomorrow will bring an ever-increasing bombardmen­t of distilled thoughts, interpreta­tions and visual scenes.

“Complete libraries of books, films, and tapes may become available to the home receiver on request. Satellite service will replace the postal service in many business transactio­ns.” Could Armstrong have foreseen the explosion created by the internet, email, Twitter, You Tube and so on…? Would he have cautioned us about the immense amount of informatio­n we now try to process each day?

Armstrongc­oncludedhi­slectureby observing that a great deal remains to be done in the understand­ing, interpreta­tion, and presentati­on of informatio­n. If that was true in 1972, it is even more true for us now. “The challenge,” he said, “is not merely the accumulati­on of knowledge; knowledge is not wisdom. Wisdom requires understand­ing and the key to understand­ing is communicat­ion. Communicat­ion is the common denominato­r necessary to reason, to logic, to explanatio­n, to interpreta­tion. It behooves us all to learn to know and use it well. Our future depends on it.”

John Sturrock QC is founder and senior mediator of Core Solutions. www.core-solutions.com

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