This word, by force of use, has come to mean very little. Why, I am not to tell here. Honestly, I do not know. But seemed like a nice title for the post. The human ear is very sensitive to differences in loudness. Not only that. The range of intensities to which the ear responds is extremely wide. A ratio of about one hundred million billion to 1. Now, the ratio between the highest intelligences to the most humble one is even larger. You know some guy one day, and think of him as extraordinarily over you in this and that. You consider it a kind of phenomenon. Then another day you come to know one such that the other is nothing compared to this. And yet, at some point in your later life, you discover an even greater intellect. The process can continue almost indefinitely, for there are many several thousand millions people out there and you've only known a very limited number.
Suppose the matter in which these people you knew excelled was music. Now compare the one you finally get to meet in your old days (I'll transitorily assume you're very old), a real monster for which unbelievable feats were an easy thing, and compare him with Beethoven. Of course, you may have found somebody above him, or about his same creative powers. Nothing opposes the fact the you met Stravinsky (not saying Stravinsky is comparable to Beethoven). But we'll assume there is a tiny probability of this to happen.
Then again, you see all of the bright fellows you had known are less than nothing matched against the Maestro. Why? Because he was a genius. That's why. I'm only trying to convey the idea that we should used the words according to definition. What need to call genius to somebody who is at most a talented people. What need to call genius an interpreter. Only the creator can be a genius, according to my definition, OK, of the word. But I think it's the one given in any dictionary directly or indirectly. A statesman can be a genius, perhaps Bismark was one, perhaps Tony Blair, I do not know. But great things must have been build. But generally, there are born only a very limited number of them in a century. In music, perhaps I'd apply the term, if it's about XIX century music, to no more than five. Lets see: Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, ... Humm, I overestimated the number. To access to the title of genius, you must give mankind some unique product, that is the object of wonder for generations to come. That is my humble opinion.
Suppose the matter in which these people you knew excelled was music. Now compare the one you finally get to meet in your old days (I'll transitorily assume you're very old), a real monster for which unbelievable feats were an easy thing, and compare him with Beethoven. Of course, you may have found somebody above him, or about his same creative powers. Nothing opposes the fact the you met Stravinsky (not saying Stravinsky is comparable to Beethoven). But we'll assume there is a tiny probability of this to happen.
Then again, you see all of the bright fellows you had known are less than nothing matched against the Maestro. Why? Because he was a genius. That's why. I'm only trying to convey the idea that we should used the words according to definition. What need to call genius to somebody who is at most a talented people. What need to call genius an interpreter. Only the creator can be a genius, according to my definition, OK, of the word. But I think it's the one given in any dictionary directly or indirectly. A statesman can be a genius, perhaps Bismark was one, perhaps Tony Blair, I do not know. But great things must have been build. But generally, there are born only a very limited number of them in a century. In music, perhaps I'd apply the term, if it's about XIX century music, to no more than five. Lets see: Beethoven, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, ... Humm, I overestimated the number. To access to the title of genius, you must give mankind some unique product, that is the object of wonder for generations to come. That is my humble opinion.
Comment