The Institute of Corporate Administration (ICAD) held its 2015 Digital Entrepreneurship Summit last Saturday (October 31, 2015) at Kwara Hotel Limited, Ilorin. As guest lecturer, I spoke on “Entrepreneurship Opportunities in the Digital Economy: A Communicative Approach”.
During the interactive session, the point I made on the need to be unreasonable in the age of Digital Economy generated some heat. At that point, I used the Boiling Frog Theory to explain what was meant. At the end of the day, many people decided to be unreasonable, change and explore the entrepreneurship options available online and offline.
The Boiling Frog Theory is actually an experiment. If you put a frog in a vessel of water and start heating the water, the frog adjusts its body temperature accordingly as the temperature of the water rises. The frog keeps on adjusting with increase in temperature until the water is about to reach the boiling point and it is no longer able to adjust anymore. At that point, the frog decides to jump out but is unable to do so because it has lost all its strength in adjusting with water temperature. Very soon, it dies.
Actually, the background to the issue of being unreasonable is that in the year 1794, Thomas Paine wrote a book, “The Age of Reason”. It was all good to be reasonable. But in the year 1989, Charles Handy wrote another book, “The Age of Unreason”. Hence, it is no longer trendy to be “reasonable”.
The difference between being reasonable, which Paine took pains to explain, and unreasonable, which came handy through Handy’s book, was simply explained by the Irish Nobel Prize laureate, George Bernard Shaw. According to him, a reasonable man adapts himself to the world while the unreasonable man persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Now back to the theory, it is reasonable to say it was the boiling water that killed the frog. But what killed the frog was its inability to decide when to jump out. It requires some quality education to know when to jump out or confront a situation instead of just adjusting. In the digital economy of the 21st century, what you study does not actually matter; the world is interested in the excellence in you, what you have to offer.
Funke Akindele is an unreasonable young woman. She studied law; she is a famous actress. Nkem Owoh is an unreasonable man. He studied Engineering; he is a renowned actor. Dr SID trained as a doctor. An unreasonable man, he is a prominent musician. If these people were reasonable, they would practise what they studied by not “wasting” the investment, kill their talents and be anonymous.
Listen, to be unreasonable is to be courageous in pursuing your dreams. Students dream and they need role models. The most unreasonable person in Nigeria today in my opinion is that man who will have my vote any day as future President of this country. His name is Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi. Look at him having the last laugh, the Lion Heart!
Except you are unreasonable, how would you dare the all-powerful President of Nigeria and refuse to budge, despite all suffocating pressures? How would you jump from the party in power with all the privileges and lead an opposition campaign and believe you could unseat a “sitting” Nigerian President, something unprecedented? How would you risk your life because of principle and refuse to make peace with Mama Peace to enjoy your peace? Being unreasonable would make you do all that. Unlike the frog, you jumped from the boiling water and today, wherever you go, like MTN, you generate ripples. Even your enemies secretly admire you. Be unreasonable!
Another unreasonable person I know is Ismaila Monsur Akolade, currently a Mass Communication student of the University of Lagos. He earlier spent 10 years at the Medical College of the University of Ilorin. When he was to write his final exams, he just walked away. That was the last bridge to cross to be confined to a life of stethoscope, needles and syringes, which he never wanted.
Today, the young man is making waves and I read with relish the interview he once grated “The Nation” newspaper. He is a campus celebrity, a social media aficionado, a potential First Class graduate, ruling his world like Glo and happy with himself now. Monsur, that admirably unreasonable young man who was inspired by “Three Idiots”, a movie!
Better be inspired by idiots and excel than sit down and complain there is no job or opportunity! Be unreasonable!
Thank you for the explication of the boiling frog theory
View CommentVery insightful. Thank you sir
View CommentThanks for reading, always. No wonder you are a leader because readers are real leaders.
View CommentIts impossible to read you without learning from you sir. Thanks for taking time to teach us
View CommentI read this piece in UNILORIN Bulletin more than a year ago and I couldn’t but appreciate the message. In a world filled loads of reasons to unreasonable, it would be self-limiting to continue swimming in the well of reason when there is an ocean waiting be “unreasonably” explored. Thanks for this wonderful piece sir
View CommentYou are welcome. Exactly.
View CommentYou got it spot on, sir. Thanks for the education. The Boiling Frog Theory makes a lot of sense!
View CommentI feel so happy that you once taught me in the university…one of the lecturers I so much enjoyed his classes….I am happy there is internet…this has made the classes to continue…I will always be in your class….Thank for this wonderful one
View CommentIt takes great courage to be unreasonable, only the ones with lion heart can pull it through. Pursuit your passion, never allow situation to dictate for you and you will be there in no time.
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