Kalidas
Well-Known Member
I think what has to be remembered in a discussion about castes and genetics is that castes are basically jobs. The Potter caste, the Warrior caste, the Farmer's Caste etc. We're talking about a series of skills. Almost any skill can be taught to any person as long as they are able bodied and mentally "sound". Some may excell over others, but truly, anyone can learn anything, given a proper teacher, time and dedication. Genetics do not determine the skills we can learn and at best only marginally influence the degree to which we excel at them. But as some point, the degree to which you improve ceases to matter. An average blacksmith and an excellent blacksmith probably both know how to shoe a horse. Does the average blacksmith have to resign himself to a different vocation simply because he is not the best? Simply because it's "not in his genes"?
I can see the validity in Aup's point about how certain important and highly skilled vocations are strengthed by the ability to guarantee they get passed on from one generation to the next. Still, if I were a teacher I wouldn't want to waste my time teaching my child a skill who didn't care about the trade. I'd rather get a passionate apprentice who was willing to put in the work. People who are passionate AND skilled do the best work.
:camp:
I am going to respectfully disagree but we can disagree that's fine.Sure anyone can learn anything they are able bodied to do. But I don't think without that internal drive ingrained in them at birth they will be unwilling to learn. A popular saying among teachers is "I can teach you, I can't learn you." As I said you don't have to agree with me, I can and have been wrong many times.