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Reading Ourselves to Death — The New Atlantis
n the 1960s and ‘70s, some literacy theorists, among them Eric Havelock and Jack Goody, argued that it was writing that gave humans the capacity forabstract thought.
Kit Wilson • Reading Ourselves to Death — The New Atlantis
Join me in a thought experiment. Imagine you are imprisoned in a room by a despotic regime and allowed contact with the outside world only through a primitive computer. Called a text-only terminal, the computer lets you send and receive as many written messages as you like. It lets you read as many articles as you like. But it can’t display images... See more
Kit Wilson • Reading Ourselves to Death — The New Atlantis
Peter Thorpe argued in Why Literature Is Bad for You that the negative effects of reading outweigh the positive: “If we become too involved in the beautiful imitation, we can begin to lose touch with the real thing.”
Kit Wilson • Reading Ourselves to Death — The New Atlantis
We increasingly try to fit all our experience into a digital spreadsheet, and written words can be logged, searched, counted, isolated, and edited or deleted far more easily than anything else. They allow us to construct a simplified parallel reality alongside the unbearably ineffable one.
Kit Wilson • Reading Ourselves to Death — The New Atlantis
We may believe that all this text somehow captures reality. But as the words engulf us, the world recedes ever more from our grasp.