JC, Tom - thanks, I understand what you're both saying, and I agree with you, but here's some background to my thinking/post:
I played golf last week and was paired up with a fellow who I'd call an education methodology consultant. He's at the local university and, in short, helps teachers learn how to teach -- advising the professors on how to plan/design/organize their courses so that their students get the most of of them.
Well, we were chatting about this and that and we got to the subject of technology, i.e. the internet etc. His view was that there are too many naysayers complaining that no one really learns anything anymore because everything they can possibly want to know is available almost instantly on the web, just by googling it, and so people don't want or feel they need to take the time to study any subject too deeply when they know they can search for it only if/when they need it. He believed that the naysayers are wrong, and that in fact the new technology/internet is a wonderfful tool precisely because it "frees up time and resources" -- i.e. it gives people the ability to spend their time and brain power not in studying for years and years but instead in "being creative" and "thinking outside the box", secure in the fact that if/when they need to know something they can find it quickly. Now, needless to say, I'm one of those naysayers -- to me, this technology/the internet encourages and supports an already unhelpful tendency in human beings to confuse "facts" with "knowledge" and to mistake "insights" for "understanding" and to falsely conclude that to "explain" something is akin to "experiencing" it and to be so puffed up by "words" so as to never realize the lack of "wisdom". Maybe I'm wrong, but in any event I do get the feeling that I am or soon will be in the minority, and that the opinions of folks like this education guru will gain more and more traction -- such that the facts and insights and explanations and words gleaned from books (i.e. online books) will carry more and more weight in the world, and in professions like gca. Perversely, I was trying to provide a rationale for the very thing I don't want to happen but think may indeed happen....and was just wondering what that might mean/look like on the ground, in the future.
Peter