(This post was last modified: 01-18-2023, 11:21 PM by draebeard.)
The Chinese (and Japanese) make very good copies. They even make notable improvements on their copies, such as the Feather ASD2 over the Gillette Tech and the Lexus LS400 over the W123 series Mercedes Benz. However despite their high intelligence, for some reason they seem to lack conceptual inventiveness. Hence they always borrow and copy.
I think that reason is the use of character language, where each word has it's own unique character. Unlike with alphabetical languages, you cannot change a word by changing one letter, and you cannot play Scrabble with character languages. The kind of conceptual agility implicit in the game of Scrabble does not develop in the mind of the character language user. Hence the character language user has a hard time thinking outside of the box.
So while the character language user will of necessity have a better memory and faster and more accurate recall, he or she will not have the conceptual agility that invention requires. Which is why the Chinese make copies, and mostly very good copies. The Chinese did after all invent gunpowder, but it wasn’t until the Germans got their hands on some, five centuries later, that the gun was invented.
I think that reason is the use of character language, where each word has it's own unique character. Unlike with alphabetical languages, you cannot change a word by changing one letter, and you cannot play Scrabble with character languages. The kind of conceptual agility implicit in the game of Scrabble does not develop in the mind of the character language user. Hence the character language user has a hard time thinking outside of the box.
So while the character language user will of necessity have a better memory and faster and more accurate recall, he or she will not have the conceptual agility that invention requires. Which is why the Chinese make copies, and mostly very good copies. The Chinese did after all invent gunpowder, but it wasn’t until the Germans got their hands on some, five centuries later, that the gun was invented.