Heroes
May 28th, 2005OK, a couple of posts have intervened, but here is the list of heroes I promised. These are famous people whose intelligence and audacity have had a revolutionary impact. Also, to be a hero of mine, they must somehow appeal to my particular sense of what is most admirable in a person. Please leave a comment to tell me who your heroes are.
Edward O. Wilson
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
Steven Weinberg
John Marty
Howard Dean
Jimmy Carter
Thomas Jefferson
Ludwig van Beethoven
Paul Kurtz
Mark Twain
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Edward O. Wilson is a leading researcher of ants. He became famous for writing Sociobiology. He became my hero when he wrote Consilience, because it finally makes clear how the scientific, materialistic worldview that grew out of the Enlightenment affects our understanding of ourselves and our place in the universe.
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. is America’s greatest living historian. He is a passionate, sensible, non-communist leftist. I read his memoir, and now I finally understand why a person would wear a bow tie.
Steven Weinberg is a Nobel laureate in physics. He is a principle figure in our modern understanding of cosmology, which depends on the application of particle physics, our most basic science, to the history of the universe. He wrote The First Three Minutes, which explains what we know about the time immediately after the big bang. More than that, he provides clear-eyed explanations of what modern science means for our lives.
John Marty is a Minnesota state senator from Roseville. He is principled, honest, and idealistic. He is able to explain how ideals and moral values should be translated into public policy. I volunteered on his campaign for governor.
Howard Dean, like Arthur Schlesinger Jr., is a passionate moderate. He knows that public policy really matters to real people, and he is passionate about making policies that let government work for everybody.
Jimmy Carter is a moral man who let his morality guide his public service, both in government and outside it. He is easily our greatest president since FDR.
Thomas Jefferson embodies the Enlightenment, and he understood that he was in a special place in history when the new ideas of the Enlightenment were being put into action.
Ludwig van Beethoven inherited the marvelous artistic tradition of classical era music (as exemplified by Haydn and Mozart), and then he transcended that tradition in a way that few artists in any field have ever dreamed of.
Paul Kurtz is the greatest living proponent of secular humanism. He is able to write in a way that is clear and direct while recognizing and responding to all the myriad approaches that people have to religion and philosophy.
Mark Twain is perhaps America’s greatest wit, and he uses that wit to subtly comment on human nature as it relates to what is good and right. If only all moral philosophy were such a pleasure to read.
Martin Luther King, Jr. did more than see injustice where others saw the way things had always been – he also saw the way things could be and worked tirelessly towards that end. His vision still resonates.