KNOWLEDGE TAG
Commencement Address
DePaul University
AllState Arena
June 12, 2005
Congratulations!
You have arrived at a signal
turning point in your lifes journey. A milestone you have lost sleep over, sweated
for, prayed forand in some cases beat all the odds.
Its big! How big? Well, not
to get overly metaphysical, it is a moment that more than anything symbolizes the
difference between mankind and our counterparts in the animal kingdom. Other animals must
learn everything anew from birth; humans have the capacity to record what they have
learned and pass it on.
In other words, todays
commencement exercises, in a very real sense, symbolize the moment at which the cumulative
knowledge of all preceding human generations has been passed on to you. Thats
scary big.
When you think about it in this
fashion, graduation is like a giant game of tag. Except now you are it. And you
will remain it until you pass it on to the next generation.
But there is
this one little hitch in the knowledge-game of tag that I better
tell you about. You cannot simply pass on
the knowledge you received. We would still be using stone tools if that
were the case. Before you can tag the next generation you are required
to give them more than you
received. This may be the reason that these are called commencement exercises.
They represent the beginning of your race in Knowledge Tag. Until then
you remain it.
The good news is that it is a
team effort. You are not alone. To win in Knowledge Tag, you have every member of your
graduating class on your team pulling in the same direction. More than that, every member
of every graduating class. More than that, every member of your generation.
The bad news is that it is a team
effort. Dont look around you now, but some members of your generation will do
diddely squat. That means the burden on each of you is to pick up their slack. And there
is more bad news: You are late in the game. It would be a cinch if you were
starting from scratch; if no one had yet invented, say, fire, or the wheel. But no such
luck.
I mean, you will get no credit
for discovering what Aristotle already taught us, or what Galileo observed, or Darwin
defined, or Newton uncovered, or the zillion ways Einstein enlightened the world.
And you will also not be given
credit for those things in life which are the hallmark of todays civilization.
According to Dave Barry, beer is the greatest invention in historybut beer has been
around since 6000 BC. By the way, Barry concedes, the wheel was a fine invention too, but
as he points out, "the wheel does not go nearly as well with pizza." Anyway,
weve had soap since the time of the Phoenicians, dentures since 700 BC, and the
button about the same timealthough I question that fact since there is no record of
a button-hole until the 13th century.
What I am trying to say: You are very
late in this game. Good old Conrad Gesner gave us a pencil way back in 1565, shoe
laces have been around since 1790, we had toilet paper since1857, chewing gum since 1870,
and by the way, the movie, "Something About Mary," would never have been made if
the zipper hadnt been invented back 1893. And if you are thinking of a two wheeler,
forget about it, the bicycle is 200 years old. Even food stuff like the potato chips or
Jell-O are over a hundred years old.
And I must tell you that the
century we just left took a lot of stuff off the table. I mean some nifty stuff like the
teddy bear, born in 1902, and crayons the very next year, and cellophane in 1911. Then
1913 gave us two blockbusters: The crossword puzzle and the brassierethough I fail
to see the connection. This led directly to the discovery of lipstick in 1915, Kleenex in
1924, and the really big one: Scotch tape, in 1930.
And even though your generation
was close to some really cool stuffunlike in Horseshoes, in Knowledge Tag, close
doesnt count. I know you represent the College of Commerce and the Kellstadt
Graduate School of Business, but if youre into transportation, too late, Carl Magee
unveiled the parking meter in 1932. Or if your calling is real estate, Charles Darrow beat
you by inventing Monopoly in 1934. If fashion is your fancy, you are also very late, the
bikini was exposed in 1946, which led directly to disposable diapers four years later. If
sports is your pleasure, fuhgeddaboudit, Astro Turf was created in 1965. If its
information technology, sorry, Post-It notes appeared in the mid1970s. Oh yes, if finance
is your bag, sorry again, some immigrant kid invented financial derivatives back in 1972.
And if your specialty is human relations, I hate to break it to you, but you missed out on
Prozac and Viagra.
You also missed all the easy
stuff like the alphabet, the airplane, air conditioning, the atomic bomb, the combustion
engine, the credit card, gun powder, the light bulb, the locomotive, the personal
computer, the radio, the reaper, the steamboat, the telephone, television, and we all know
that Al Gore beat everyone to the invention of the Internet.
Still, I do have some good news.
For one thing, the Commissioner of U.S. Patents, Charles H. Duell, was just a wee bit off
the mark when in 1899 he declared that "Everything that can be invented has been
invented." Ever say something really, really stupid?
But most important, you are in
America.
According to The Encyclopedia
Britannicas classification of the 321 worlds great ideas and inventions,
better than 50% were conceived in the US. In other words, while Americans may be losing
jobs in manufacturing, and may be outsourcing services to foreign domiciles, we remain
number one in ideas, inventions, and innovations. Bet that really frosts the French. In
other words, we Americans are way ahead in Knowledge Tag. And that is your edge.
More that any other nation on
this globe, Americans are free to think, to experiment, to innovate. It is no accident. In
his book Free to Choose, Milton Friedman asserts that the story of the United
States is a story of two interdependent miracles: an economic miracle and a political
miracle. Each miracle resulted from a separate set of revolutionary ideasboth sets
of ideas, by a curious coincidence, were formulated in the same year, 1776.
One set of ideas was embodied in
Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations, which established that an economic system could
succeed only in an environment which allowed the freedom of individuals to pursue their
own objectives. The second set of ideas, drafted by Thomas Jefferson, was embodied in The
Declaration of Independence. It proclaimed the entitlement of some self-evident truths
among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
During the two centuries
following their introduction, when these two ideals were applied to a people with an
immigrant ancestry, of a multi-cultural heritage, and a multi-racial composition, they
produced an unimaginable result. They became a lightning rod for ideas. They created a
crucible for innovation. They combined to become the decisive driver of progress in
science, technology, and economic development. Is not this diversity the essence of DePaul
University as well? Our fundamental ideals, our way of life, our pluralistic
societyone of a kind on the face of the Earth and unique to the history of
mankind produces an environment that invites thought. It is the winning formula in
Knowledge Tag.
Arent you the lucky ones.
To be here in this country, at the start of a new century, at the start of a new
millennium, and commencing the knowledge-game of tag.
Ladies and gentlemen, start your
engines.
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