Proverbs 9:9 (NKJV)
9 Give instruction to a wise man, and he will be still
wiser; Teach a just man, and he will increase in learning.
The words of the teacher tell us that those who are wise
will increase in wisdom. Teach a just person and their learning will increase.
These things are difficult for the foolish and evil ones.
On February 22, 1911, Gaston Hervieu climbed the Eiffel
Tower to test a new parachute for pilots. He checked the wind, took a nervous
breath, and began the test. His silk parachute filled with air, then sailed
safely to the ground. Hervieu did not make the jump himself; he used a
160-pound test dummy. To one man this was an outrage. Franz Reichelt was an
Austrian tailor who was developing a parachute of his own. He denounced
Hervieu's use of a dummy as a "sham" and, one year later, on the
morning of Sunday, February 4, 1912, arrived at the Eiffel Tower to conduct his
own experiment.
As Reichelt posed for pictures he announced, "I am
so convinced my device will work properly that I will jump myself." Gaston
Hervieu pulled him aside and tried to stop him. Hervieu claimed there were
technical reasons why Reichelt's parachute would not work. The two men had a
heated discussion until, finally, Reichelt walked away.
Modern parachutes use 700 square feet of fabric and
should be deployed only above 250 feet; Reichelt's parachute used less than 350
square feet of fabric, and he deployed it at 187 feet. He had neither the
surface area nor the altitude needed to make a successful jump. Hervieu was not
the only one who had told Reichelt that his parachute suit would not work. It
had also been rejected by a team of experts who told him, "The surface of
your device is too small. You will break your neck."
He not only ignored experts, he also ignored his own
data. He tested his parachute using dummies, and they crashed. He tested his
parachute by jumping thirty feet into a haystack, and he crashed. He tested his
parachute by jumping twenty feet without a haystack, and he crashed and broke
his leg. Instead of changing his invention, he clung to his bad idea in the
face of all evidence and advice.
Reichelt fell for four seconds, accelerating constantly,
until he hit the ground at sixty miles an hour, making a cloud of frost and
dust and a dent six inches deep. He was killed on impact. [Adapted from Kevin
Ashton, How to Fly a Horse (Doubleday, 2015), pp. 88-89]
May we never be as blind and foolish as to disregard the
teachings and advice of others! Envy blinded Reichelt and he would not listen
to others or take note of his own observations of failure.
Let us always be willing to listen and see the
foolishness of our own ways.
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