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Archive for June 2008

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Belief is the Death of Intelligence

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Robert Anton Wilson begins his Cosmic Trigger, vol. 1: The Final Secrets of the Illuminati by expressing to his readers his own deep-seated aversion to belief as a cognitive mode of engaging with reality. As he is right to point out, belief closes off possible avenues of investigation by pre-packaging a model of reality that explains reality. A number of postmodern thinkers have correctly suggested that Western scientific rationalism is one of these pre-packaged lifestyle systems just as much as Christianity or Islam. For Wilson, the key is to approach the world from a position of no belief, in which no round observation is leveraged into the square holes of belief.

As evidenced by Daniel Pinchbeck’s 2012: the Return of Quetzalcoatl, this subject position is much easier said than actually done.

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On Google, On Thinking, On Why I’m Not Working on My Dissertation Right Now

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The July issue of The Atlantic arrived at my parent’s house today. It contains a Nicholas Carr essay entitled “Is Google Making Us Stupid?”. The article is worth a look (in a twist, it isn’t on the Internet yet), but it isn’t anything particularly profound. Basically, his argument is that the Internet, and especially Google, is replacing the way our brains are wired with a more parallel approach to information acquisition, information processing, and information retention. I would imagine that most people who blog, rss, and otherwise live the Web2.0 lifestyle (I think “rss” should be a verb) have, if they stop to think about it, noticed that this change is occurring. While I’ve read three books this week, that’s my job and I’ve noticed that it’s getting harder for me to focus on it now that I’ve got so much information competing for my time.

The thing is, though, I live in an information ecology that doesn’t normally value this style of thought. Instead, the English Department continues to value the long, complex, linear narratives that dominated our cultural mind before television and that Carr says are passing away. Frankly, I don’t think this is really how the story goes: television clearly killed the book and, as Carr also points out, people are reading more, now, than they were 20 years ago. This fact troubles a lot of people (again, Carr says that this reading is a new and different kind of reading that removes a lot of the contemplation of linear text consumption), but I see it as positive. Also, when I make this claim about text and English Studies’ relationship with it, I don’t just mean on a profound level: I’m interested in how many of colleagues’ eyes glaze over when I start excitedly babbling about RSS readers and Twitter. On some fundamental level English Studies has never understood the Internet.

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This Post Might Be a Bit of Rant

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I’ve been working on the design of this blog for the last few days (I probably should have been working on writing content, instead, but that’s beside the point). While I’ve finally gotten Wordpress working the way I want, it hasn’t been a fun process. I realize that I ask a lot of software, but sometimes I really wonder: is trying to use the fullest possible set of features so much to ask?

I’ve been trying to get posting via email to work, for quite a while. Well, actually I’m trying to get it working again. I migrated my domain tools to Google Apps and suddenly couldn’t post via email anymore. Why, you ask? Well, it turns out that Wordpress’s out of the box post via email doesn’t work with the SSL used on Gmail’s servers. Does it say this anywhere in the documentation? No. No it doesn’t. The only hint I had was this mention: “Postie supports posting to categories, automatic removal of email signatures, POP3/IMAL (sic) (+SSL) and more.” What does that mean?

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Vacationeering

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I’ve been on vacation lately, so I haven’t had time to sit down and
post on the blog. Partly, this was due to the fact that I was without
Internet and cell (!) access for a week, while Shawna and I were up in
Michigan. A note on that, if I may: we did have some cell service in
Michigan,
but it wasn’t reliable throughout the whole house. Either way, let me
tell you that the iPhone is not a wholly satisfying Internet
replacement. The small keyboard, lack of
del.icio.us access, and no copy/paste make it
really difficult to get any serious Interneting done. That ended up
with me coming home to 800 unread items in Google Reader. Clearly, I
can never leave the presence of the Internet again.

Additionally, I’ve been working on the design of the blog, as you can
see. The new theme takes advantage of a lot more technology and makes
posting to the blog even easier. Also, I’ve started using
disqus to manage the comments. I’m not sure I
like the service, as it sets a really high bar to posting a comment
(creating an account, etc.). So, we’ll see. I like the idea of
trying out Blogging 2.0, but
this whole concept seems silly. As another side note, I want to write
a post called “Book 2.0” with the body: “they got it right the first
time”.

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