Overlooked No More: Sultan Khan, Untrained Chess Player Who Became a Champion

He beat some of the world’s top players despite growing up with little access to chess books and not having the same knowledge his rivals possessed.

In July 1929, 12 chess players gathered at Chatham House School, a venerable institution in Ramsgate, England, to contest the British championship. The field included several well-known masters, as well as one player who stood out from the rest because he was not from England, but from the jewel of the British Empire: India.

His name was Sultan Khan.

It is doubtful that the other competitors knew much about him, and they probably did not regard him as much of a threat. At the time, Europe was the center of the chess world, and though Khan had won the All-India Championship the year before, it was most likely against an inferior level of competition compared with what he would face in the upcoming tournament.

In addition, there were differences in the rules of chess played on the subcontinent. For example, pawns could not move two squares on their first turn, and there was no similar rule for castling. Instead, on one move during the game, the king could move like a knight. The need to adjust to how the game was played in Europe gave Khan ‌a significant handicap‌, particularly in the early phase of games‌.

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Growing up in India under British rule, Khan also had little or no access to chess books, so he knew next to nothing about the theory of how to begin games — knowledge that his rivals possessed.

None of that stopped him. Khan won the championship convincingly, recording victories in more than half his games while losing only once. This marked the beginning of a whirlwind period of four years in which Khan competed against the world’s best players and more than held his own.Despite his first name, Khan was not royalty. According to a 2020 article by Ather Sultan, his oldest son, and Atiyab Sultan, one of his granddaughters, written for the Pakistani news site Dawn, Khan was born in 1903 (some other sources say 1905) in Khushab, a town in the Punjab region of modern-day Pakistan. His family were landowners and pirs, or Sufi religious guides.

Khan learned to play chess from his father, Mian Nizam Din, when he was young, and he was the best player in Punjab by the time he was 21. A wealthy landowner, Sir Umar Hayat Khan Tiwana, hired him to develop a chess team, for which he received a monthly stipend and room and board. When Sir Umar went to live in London in 1929 so he could attend the Round Table Conferences for parliamentary reform in India, Khan went with him.

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Al-Aqsa Mosque Waiting for the Arab Leaders

Al-Aqsa Mosque Waiting for the Arab Leaders

Mahboob A. Khawaja, PhD.

Truth has its own Language

How do you contemplate wisdom, reason and respect for tolerance and decency out of the political chaos, blind terror, religious awe, and moral and intellectual hatred filled trajectory submerged in inhuman action? The live video portrayal across the global networks of  Israeli police using stern grenades, smoking blasts and beating the worshipers at midnight prayers during the month of fasting (Ramadan) at the Al-Aqsa Mosque – the Third holiest site in Islam. The Israeli Police Commissioner termed it as “a terrible impact of police behavior.”  A flip flop of mediocre expression of the prevalent reality. At loss is the decadent culture of human thinking, behavior and integrity and failure miserably to respect the others – the innocent and helpless worshippers, if you want to be respected for your national identity and religious values. The souls of Abraham, Ishmael, Ishaq, Jacob resting in neighboring Al-Khalil (Hebron), and Moses and Jesus must have been tormented by the extreme wing of the Israeli political governance under PM Netanyahu. There is a chronic problem of irresistible political and religious necessity to dehumanize Palestinians in particular and Muslims in general that the State of Israel occupies their Third Holiest site in East Jerusalem. Netanyahu desperately needs diversion and unthinkable conflicts for his own survival and to avert the massive 14 weeks long public protests and new kind of socio-political chaos to balance his weak and corrupt leadership. What is the core impulse of the problem?

This was not the first incident of politically geared hatred and primitive tyranny against the Abrahamic Faith worshipers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque. Ramzy Baroud, a Palestine scholar explains in his 2014 article: Al-Aqsa vs. Israel: The Lurking Danger Beneath” (Uncommon Thought Journal: 3/14/2014):  Something sinister is brewing around and below al-Aqsa Mosque in occupied East Jerusalem, and it has the hallmark of a familiar Israeli campaign to strip the Mosque of its Muslim Arab identity. This time around, however, the stakes are much higher. It was on February 25, 1994, that US-born Jewish extremist Baruch Goldstein stormed into the Ibrahimi Mosque in the Palestinian city of al-Khalil (Hebron) and opened fire. The aim was to kill as many Arabs as he could.

At that moment, nearly 800 Muslim worshipers were kneeling down during the dawn prayer in the holiest month of the Muslim Calendar; Ramadan. He killed up to 30 people and wounded over 120. Exactly 20 years later, the Israeli army stormed al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest Muslim site, and opened fire. The timing was no accident…… That same dangerous combination – rightwing politicians allied with religious zealots – is at work once more. They are eyeing Al-Aqsa for annexation; the same way the Israeli government is laboring to permanently annex large swathes of the occupied West Bank….

Global Reaction to Israeli Police attack on the Worshippers

AT the UNO Hqt, New York, thousands of concerned masses held protest against the Israeli police incursion and attacks on the Muslim worshipers inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, Palestinians call it ‘Haram-Sharif’ – a Place of Honor and Respect. Like other religious followers, Jews, Christians, Muslims and others were active participants calling to global audience for respect of the sacred site and reasoned conflict resolution and peace between Palestine and Israel.

At the edge of reason, Israeli political leaders under PM Nethanyu appear to be victims of ignorance, religious immorality and imbecility to have ordered the police to raid the Al-Aqsa mosque. Had they known who the Prophet Abraham, Ishaq, Jacob , Joseph, Moses and Jesus were and what were their teaching, beliefs and practices, they would have never dared to tyrannize the innocent worshipers at the mosque. Muslims in their daily five time prayers send salutations to Abraham, and his progeny and their belief and respect is an integral part of the Islamic faith. No Palestinian or other Muslims could ever dare to disrupt the Jewish worshipers or insult the Prophets of Islam – Abraham, Ishaq, Jacob, Moses and Jesus. It was only convenient and self-serving interest to the extreme right wings of Israeli political governance.  But the real issue rests not with Judaism; it is the “Zionism” that governs the minds and Israeli political construct.

Alan Hart – an American Jewish scholar a former BBC Panorama and ITN Middle East correspondent with a vast first-hand knowledge of the subject narrates in his 2010 book: ZIONISM, THE REAL ENEMY OF
THE JEWS / Volume III Conflict Without End?

Alan Hart (“Zionism and Peace Are Incompatible” Dissident Voice, Oct 21, 2010), explains the core problem embedded in Zionism: 
 “Zionism is not only Jewish nationalism which created a state in the Arab heartland mainly by terrorism and ethnic cleansing. It is also a pathological mindset. In the deluded Zionist mind the world was always anti-Jew and always will be. It follows that Holocaust II (shorthand for another great turning against Jews) is inevitable. It follows that there can be no limits to what Zionism will do in order to preserve nuclear-armed Greater Israel as a refuge of last resort for all Jews everywhere when the world turns against them……. But alas, reality continues to slap everyone in the face: Zionism and peace are incompatible. I will say it again, Zionism and peace are incompatible.” 

Are the Arab Leaders and Custodians of the Holy Mosques Alive?

While the world was watching the most pernicious actions and its consequences on news screen, most Arab leaders lacking moral and intellectual profile and reasoning were obsessed with their own personal agenda items and strategic priorities. While political tyranny and cynicism rules across the Middle East, landscape, what this author narrated some 20 years earlier (“Arab Ummah vs. Muslim Ummah, Who you were and where you are?” Media Monitors network, May 8, 2002), remains unchanged. The contemporary leaders pose no moral, intellectual or political challenge to Israeli leadership and the occupation. If the Arab people were united and had educated and intelligent leadership would have changed the shape and forms of contemporary hopeless affairs. Should the authoritarian Arab leaders not be questioned and held accountable for their incompetence, treachery and failure to protect the interests of the Arab people?  
 “World observers describe the Arab leaders as “defeated” cronies who capitalize on inflicted miseries of the masses to build palaces and to increase foreign bank balances. Is it possible that the defeated parties could pressure the victors? Or demand favorable terms and conditions on issues which involve life and death questions? ……When you discarded Islam, you left behind all its merits and claims. Your leaders believe, you are an economic man and women like the Western cultures, they work to earn, you consume fatty dinners and enjoy 4 wheels cruiser without working for it. Your enemies are happy; you are true believers in progressive economic myths and life styles. But your leaders are without followers, without sense of responsibility or guilt. Most Western political analysts believe Arab leaders hardly bother to use their brain; it is always new and fresh like a baby.” 

The Arab people, politics (if any) and culture needs a navigational change to coexist with moral and intellectual demands of the 21st century. They are prisoners and divided in sectarianism in their countries. Carly Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett Packard (“TECHNOLOGY, BUSINESS AND OUR WAY OF LIFE: WHAT’S NEXT” 09/2001), fascinated us with her ideas and vision she had shared decades ago on the Islamic civilization:
“There was once a civilization that was the greatest in the world….
And this civilization was driven more than anything, by invention. Its architects designed buildings that defied gravity. Its mathematicians created the algebra and algorithms that would enable the building of computers, and the creation of encryption. Its doctors examined the human body, and found new cures for disease. Its astronomers looked into the heavens, named the stars, and paved the way for space travel and exploration……..

Recently, a Palestinian old woman was reported with a heart attack and the attending physician explained that for long she was waiting to be free by the marching Arab armies and Generals. But the other day she heard roaring sounds and public outbursts and she imagined that perhaps Arab armies had come but she was told there are no Arab armies and no Generals and that crowd cheering and noise was coming from a football match and consequently she fell on ground and fainted. No wonder, why the Palestinians have no proactive leadership and are highly disorganized. They failed to have a united purpose for sustainable change in the Middle East.  The Prince of the UAE chatting with the UAE newsmaker tv network about his new pets and blond wife, when asked about the attack on the worshipers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque, he was not aware at all. He sounded optimistic to ask the CIA for authentic information. The Saudi royals when contacted for comments by the Truth digger foreign network made a surprise statement that they enjoyed friendship with Nethayau and American leadership and hope to conduct peace talks on Palestine-Israel relationship in the near future. How long would Al-Aqsa Mosque wait for the neo-colonial kings, prince and presidents of the Arab world, asked one Imam of the Saudi mosque in Friday sermon? It is reported that he was put under house arrest for his own safety. Imagine the history when Arabs were the pioneer of new knowledge, scientific and technological discoveries and human development and where do they stand today in global analysis? Please see by this author: “The Arab Time Capsule: Once You were the Leaders of Islamic Civilization” Al-Jazeerah Editorial: 02/01/2010:

“It is highly probable that but for the Arabs, modern European civilization would never have arisen at all; it is absolutely certain that but for them, it would not have assumed that character which has enabled it to transcend all previous phases of evolution. For although there is not a single aspect of European growth in which the decisive influence of Islamic culture is not traceable, nowhere is it so clear and momentous as in the genesis of that power which constitutes the paramount distinctive force of the modern world and the supreme source of its victory-natural science and the scientific spirit.”  Robert Briffault (The Making of Humanity, London, 1918), Professor at Cambridge University. UK.

Dr. Mahboob A. Khawaja specializes in international affairs-global security, peace and conflict resolution and international affairs with keen interests in Islamic-Western comparative cultures and civilizations, and author of several publications including the latest: One Humanity and the Remaking of Global Peace, Security and Conflict Resolution, 2019.

Man’s Timeless Quest for Knowledge

Man’s Timeless Quest for Knowledge

Since there is no limit to human perception, comprehension, and investigation,

Knowledge is a timeless quest of humankind’s cognition to find

What is acceptable as a justified true belief!

(Mirza Iqbal Ashraf)

The quest for knowledge is with man from the time when he, a chimpanzee-like animal, descended from his nest on the tree and started walking in an erect position on his feet with hands free. Standing upright in an elegant posture, the biped no more viewed itself an animal; rather perceiving itself different from the animals set itself apart from other living creatures. As the biped started his journey of new life, with a stimulus of self-awareness evolved to find itself belonging to the species sapiens or wise of the genus Homo meaning “man.” According to one etymology amongst the Europeans the word “man” came from the Proto-Germanic Mann, or “person,” which originating from the Proto-Indo-European root, meaning “hand.” Thus, “man” evolving from his chimpanzee-like ancestry walking upright, with every step started his journey to know the world in which he had appeared and seek knowledge of everything around him. With free hands, man’s pursuit of freedom and knowledge started to know about himself and his world.

Karl Jaspers, in his book The Origin and Goal of History writes:

Seeing the earliest times man has attempted to picture the whole to himself: first in mystical images (in theogonies and cosmogonies, in which man had his appointed place). Then in the image of divine activity operating through the decisive events of world politics (the historical vision of the prophets), then as a process of revelation running through the whole course of history, from the creation of the world and the fall of man to the end of the world and the last judgement.1

But seeing the whole in himself, he first portrayed himself in mythical images. As he progressed ahead, he depicted his presence in the world in the image of divine activity through the process of Divine revelation. From the creation of the world to his appearance on the planet earth, as his consciousness matured, he became more conscious of himself. He found “human” within himself. But the word “human”—of or belonging to man—which, in turn, comes from the Latin humanus, is thought to be a hybrid relative of homo, meaning “man,” and humus, meaning “earth,” in its sophistical form, developing from the French word humain was commonly came into use in Europe much later in the mid-thirteenth century. When the status of “man” got a raise to the level of a “human being” he displayed many unique characteristics incomparable to any other species.

The trait of “human” though hidden in him right from his birth that before he was openly recognized as human, voluminous knowledge of philosophy, science, humanities, literature, and art, dealing with the progression of knowledge—decidedly a big-bag of a treasure-trove—had already started appearing during the “First Explosion of Knowledge” which had happened in Greece during the sixth century BCE when the foundation of an everlasting Cognitive Revolution was set by the thinkers like Daedalus, Thales, and Anaximander. But a couple of millenniums before the Greek philosophers, we find a “heaven of invention of knowledge” situated in the ancient town of Ur in Mesopotamia—what is now Iraq—where around 2300 BCE, first poetic syllables originated and were rhythmically chanted. Angus Fletcher in his book the Wonder Works, writes about the invention of literature:

Sometime around 2300 BCE, in what is now Iraq, literature’s first known inventor was born within a great mudbrick palace near the snowmelt waters of the Tigris River. There, upon a fragrant cedar cot, the newborn-babe was lullabied to sleep. . . But soon the dreamful infant would become even more famous. Everywhere throughout the city-states of Mesopotamia, all the way from the silver mines of Anatolia to the beaches of Persian Gulf, her name would be sung. And her name was Enheduanna.2

The name Enheduanna was being chanted in fevered tone meaning: “She is the high lord of the moon” which in its original syllables, “En-hedu-‘anna. En-hedu-‘anna. En-hedu-‘anna” is viewed to be the beginning of the invention of literature by man.

A couple of centuries after Enheduanna in the same corner of the world and from the same city of Ur, a race of men grew up calling themselves “Jews.” They created a new knowledge of faith founded on Abraham’s proclamation that there is one transcendent God who had made a paradise from which the first man and his wife through their own fault were exiled. The city of Ur in Mesopotamia, revered as a place of tremendous spiritual and cognitive imagination, is the same region where Abraham (2167-1992 BCE) the Prophet-patriarch of three revealed religions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam was born. It is the same region where the first epic poem known the Epic of Gilgamesh (2100-1200 BCE) considered as the first great work of literature engraved on 12 clay tablets was found. It was the same region where appeared a religion revealed by Zoroaster (c.1400-1200 BCE) who presented a faith which made its impact on the cultures and religions that appeared after him.

Whereas in one small corner of the world, a race of men grew up guided by a chain of prophets descending from Prophet Abraham, calling themselves Jews and affirming the scriptural exposition of knowledge relating a temptation for knowledge to the first couple living in paradise which resulted in their being thrown out of the Garden into the wilderness. On the other hand in the south-eastern corner of Europe in a city known Athens in Greece according to a Greek myth, knowledge which became the foundation of progression of knowledge in the western civilization was gifted to man by a mythical god Prometheus who stole fire from heaven and gave it to mankind living on earth, a knowledge which invited mankind to enter into an urban life and establish a civilization. Berry Allen in Knowledge and Civilization has argued.

Toting up traditional lore on the mythical personages of the past, Homer’s contemporary Hesiod, says that Prometheus “knows more than anyone in the world about anything.” His gift to humanity (as enumerated by Aeschylus) include architecture, astronomy, domesticated animals, mathematics, medicine, metallurgy, the riddling art of divination, and the paradoxical gift of blind hope. Greeks praised Promethean knowledge for its metis, or cunning intelligence. The daidala (ingenious works) of Daedalus exemplify metis, as does Athena’s intelligence, “cunning, technical, and magical, all at the same time.” It was she [Athena] who invented the ship and taught the Argos shipwrights how to measure with a rule. The conceptual theme of metis is effective performance, especially under uncertain conditions. Its weapons are those of thought, and perception rather than brute force: nets, lures, traps, snares, pitfalls; anything twisted together, woven, plotted, arranged, or contrived, including chains and magical bonds. Such knowledge is admired for its flair, wisdom, foresight, subtlety, deception, resourcefulness, opportunism, and skill—all powers that excel in dealing with the transient, shifting and unpredictable.3

As the Greek investigators understood what can and cannot be reasonably said and rationally explained about human nature and good life, knowledge with the advent of Christianity from its Promethean metis evolved into an illusionary apprehension of metaphysical philosophy with greater focus that knowledge is whatever God reveals. But before Christianity, the Jews were God-obsessed and finally followed by the Muslims created a golden period of knowledge from eighth to thirteen, particularly when the advent of ninth century heralded an era of Islamic Renaissance of knowledge and the philosophical and scientific progress created by the Muslims was passed over to the Europeans.   

Arguing cogently, we find, though progress is in the nature of almost everything, the pursuit, passion, acquisition, and progression of knowledge in all fields, is exclusively a human legacy. The great mystic poet of thirteenth century, Jalaluddin Rumi speculating about knowledge believed that everything is made known to mankind by its opposites:

Just as everyone in the matter of gnosis (Divine knowledge) describes the unseen differently, a philosopher too gives various kinds of explanations. A scholastic theologian tries to deny the philosopher’s statement. Not all of them are right, become sure, nor are they all astray. If there were no lies, there would be no truth. Falsehood gets its power from the truth. Do not say then that all this (the world) is false and imaginary. There is no idea without its reality. He who says, “All is true” is foolish and he who says “All is false” is damned.4

Rumi speculating about the evolving process of human life and knowledge said, “Every moment the world is being renewed but we are unaware of the changes for its form seems unchanged. Our life in our body keeps on freshening like a stream of water, although it appears static in form.”5 But moving away from metaphysical concerns about the nature of everything the scholars of the Western philosophy defined the study of knowledge “epistemology”—a term derived from episteme meaning knowledge by the ancient Greeks. Philosophers of epistemology, both ancient Greeks and today’s Westerners urge the higher value of contemplative truth of knowledge which they defined as “pragmatic truth of knowledge.”

Though we know that human beings learn and teach more and more from day to day, for conceptual awareness to overturn metaphysical philosophy it took almost a millennium for the scientists first; to present a scientific theory of the evolution of man presented by Charles Darwin (1809-1892) through biological science and second; from the idea of knowledge by Friedrich Nietzsche (1844-1900). Despite his belief in skepticism, Nietzsche was no more skeptic about his views regarding knowledge which he comprehended more realistically than most of the other epistemologists. Debunking most of the claims of classical philosophy, his views are more modern which make us wiser about our will to knowledge. Nietzsche in his The Gay Science Book V remarks:

We philosophers and “free spirits” feel, when we hear the news that “the old God is dead,” as if a new dawn shone on us, our heart overflows with gratitude, astonishment, premonitions, and expectations. At long last the horizon appears free to us again, even if it is not bright; our ships can at last put out to sea in face of every danger; every hazard is again permitted to the discerner; the sea, our sea, again lies open before us; perhaps never before did such an “open sea” exist.6

Human beings, thus, started constantly creating and adding new knowledge, but the progression of knowledge carried forward in the Western world is a continuing story of dynamics of human knowledge. Richard Tarnas in his book, The Passion of Western Mind has expressed.                                                                                                                                                                                        

The history of Western culture has long seemed to possess the dynamics, scope, and beauty of a great epic drama: ancient and classical Greece, the Hellenistic era and imperial Rome, Judaism and the rise of Christianity, the Catholic Church and the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, Reformation, and Scientific Revolution, the Enlightenment and Romanticism and onward to our compelling time. Sweep and grandeur, dramatic conflicts and astonishing resolutions have marked the Western mind’s sustained attempt to comprehend the nature of reality—from Thales and Pythagoras to Plato and Aristotle, from Clement and Boethius to Aquinas and Ockham, from Eudoxus and Ptolemy to Copernicus and Newton, from Bacon and Descartes to Kant and Hegel, and from all these to Darwin, Einstein, Freud, and beyond.7  

The dynamism of progress of knowledge in Western civilization, is a narration of a unique story of human knowledge aroused by wonder, imagination, love, emotion, and faith, which is being carried on by the Western Civilization. Although there are many scholars in every corner of the world, but almost all of them are embraced by the dynamism of Western knowledge. It is believed this progress will perennially continue and will never cease as long we are living on this planet. Progressing from rationalism, there appeared new direction in the theory of knowledge. Whereas knowledge was generally defined as a familiarity with facts, information, or skills obtained and perfected through cognition and experience, as in Socrates’ view, “Knowledge is perception, knowledge is true belief, and knowledge is justified true belief” philosophers have never been satisfied with the definition of knowledge by Socrates.

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) in his “Theory of Knowledge” expounded, “At first sight it might be thought that knowledge might be defined as belief which is, in agreement with facts. The trouble is that no one knows what a belief is, no one knows what a fact is, and no one knows what sort of agreement between them would make a belief true.”8 But I believe: “Since there is no limit to human perception, comprehension, and investigation, knowledge is a timeless quest of mankind’s cognition to find what is acceptable as a justified true belief.”9.In the modern time, the pursuit of knowledge is closely integrated with the sciences. It is viewed the workings of the universe are revealed through scientific theory, pragmatically explained, and scientifically developed. Up against the biological limits of what the brain can absorb and perform man today believes he can reach beyond the world around him.

Stepping into the third decade of 21st century our new generation is following the scientific view which advocates that the first order of the universe was mathematical—based on the laws of physics or it was all numerical—which in modern sense is digital. Whatever was originally born by physics with the appearance of mankind changed into metaphysics? But we, in the present century are turning back to the scientific origin of the universe—the mathematical, physical, and digital. I would say we are no more being guided spiritually but are being guided rationally and are led digitally. We see that in modern age humanity’s social, political, ethical and moral challenges can be fixed by the digital technology with the right set of algorithms based on the best data loaded in the fastest computers. But we are unaware, though we invent and develop things with the best of intentions for our benefit, there can appear unintended, negative, and deadly consequences. Just as no one could predict that nuclear fusion could also produce the atom bomb, in the same way, the after effects of the digital dilemmas need to be taken into consideration before it is too late. Thus, before activating our own created digital doubles, we must consider that we are creating all time friendly codes of algorithms which would not become humanity’s deadly executors.

The magnetism of modernity has remained human being’s perennial passion since his earliest days. A born thinker, philosopher, scientist, and discoverer, man has cognized to define his identity striving incessantly to shape it according to his contemporary period. Liberating himself from the deterministic modes of his existence and viewing to be no more at the mercy of biological and natural forces, he endeavors to be woven like a tapestry by his own hands for himself. Intelligence communicates instantly with intelligence, wherever and in whatever way it acts. This is so between people, between a teacher and his student, a mentor and his disciple, between a musician and his instrument, between a thinker and his idea; even between an idea and an idea. A true scientist listens to the intelligence of Nature in a form of dialogue. But a true spiritual, views, listens, and communicates with the invisible intelligence of the Absolute Spirit.  

With advent of twenty-first century knowledge of modern science and technology, which has bequeathed man an unprecedented power, has become a menace unless we learn the intrinsic value of knowledge and implement the basic enlightenment idea of science and technology to achieve social progress through our knowledge of internet technology (IT) and artificial intelligence (AI). But the crisis of modern time is that we have science without the wisdom of philosophical knowledge. Whereas science has helped mankind improve their lifestyle by provide many comforts in daily way of living, by providing better health care it has raised our life span resulting into population growth. Scientific knowledge, without wise consideration, has alarmingly helped create lethal war weapons to an extent that today’s wars, terrorism, pandemics, air, sea and earth pollution, and destruction of rain forests have affected the climate change, raising alarm that there may also be a time when knowledge could not be useful for the mankind.

Moving forward from the period of “Third Explosion of Knowledge” which is marked by the emergence of “Information Technology” (IT) and “Artificial Intelligence” (AI) we have established new scientific perspectives of philosophical and intellectual outlook. Today, human legacy of past geniuses is being challenged by the Silicon Valley’s Robotic Geniuses. What is much more important than human genius is the developing culture of inventions of IT and AI. Traditionally, in the past, knowledge has remained focused on four basic subjects, that is religion, reason, logic, and ethics; but modern technology has taken over all four subjects of knowledge as a “scientific form.” Today, instead of the old centers of knowledge, we have Silicon Valley of Digital Geniuses—a valley of modern culture of inventions and reinventions—run by the Siliconian-Geniuses who do not fight for or against change but embrace it and empower human quest for more inventions.

Copyright © 2023 by Mirza Iqbal Ashraf

Notes:

1. Jaspers, 2021. p. 3

2. Fletcher, 2021, p.1.

3. Allen, 2004, p. 2.

4. Rumi, vol. ii, verses 2923-2942.

5. Rumi, vol. I, verses 1144-1145.

6. Nietzsche, Book V, The Gay-science/aphorism-343.

7. Tarnas, 1881, pp. xii-xiv.

8. Russell,

9. Ashraf,

“How To Grow Old” By Betrand Russel

The great British philosopher, mathematician, historian, and Nobel laureate Bertrand Russell (May 18, 1872–February 2, 1970) contemplated the question of what could be the measure of a life well lived in a wonderful short essay titled “How to Grow Old,” penned in his eighty-first year.]

In spite of the title, this article will really be on how not to grow old, which, at my time of life, is a much more important subject. My first advice would be to choose your ancestors carefully. Although both my parents died young, I have done well in this respect as regards my other ancestors. My maternal grandfather, it is true, was cut off in the flower of his youth at the age of sixty-seven, but my other three grandparents all lived to be over eighty. Of remoter ancestors I can only discover one who did not live to a great age, and he died of a disease which is now rare, namely, having his head cut off. A great-grandmother of mine, who was a friend of Gibbon, lived to the age of ninety-two, and to her last day remained a terror to all her descendants. My maternal grandmother, after having nine children who survived, one who died in infancy, and many miscarriages, as soon as she became a widow devoted herself to women’s higher education. She was one of the founders of Girton College, and worked hard at opening the medical profession to women. She used to tell of how she met in Italy an elderly gentleman who was looking very sad. She asked him why he was so melancholy and he said that he had just parted from his two grandchildren. ‘Good gracious,’ she exclaimed, ‘I have seventy-two grandchildren, and if I were sad each time I parted from one of them, I should have a miserable existence!’ ‘Madre snaturale!,’ he replied. But speaking as one of the seventy-two, I prefer her recipe. After the age of eighty she found she had some difficulty in getting to sleep, so she habitually spent the hours from midnight to 3 a.m. in reading popular science. I do not believe that she ever had time to notice that she was growing old. This, I think, is the proper recipe for remaining young. If you have wide and keen interests and activities in which you can still be effective, you will have no reason to think about the merely statistical fact of the number of years you have already lived, still less of the probable shortness of your future.

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