Books are bad technology
We need to stop thinking of 'books' in the
codex form of printed sheets, and embrace the new definition, of data storage
and distribution devices, to make full use of new technology
BY LUIS MIRANDA | PUBLISHED: 26, Mar 2019
Socrates did not write anything. He opposed
the new concept of writing because he believed that writing would adversely
impact our memory and distort the way we dealt with each other. Over the next
2,400 years, the written word and books took over the world. Today, people look
at the digital world with the same suspicion–it will destroy the way we deal
with each other. This blog looks at why we should embrace new technologies
because the older technologies that we are used to, were at one time considered
to be radical and bad. Yes, many elites considered writing to be bad technology
thousands of years ago. And people feared that books would keep people away
from meeting others and lead to the growth of silent communication.
I love gifting books and our kids have picked
up that habit. Our son, Khashiff, recently gifted me a book titled, simply, The
Book. It is a book about books, written by Amaranth Borsuk, a scholar who works
on the intersection of print and digital media. It was an eye-opener for me. She
talks about the book as object, as content, as idea and as interface. It made
me look at books from a new perspective. Today, people say that the youth are
reading less. Actually, they are not reading less; they are just reading
differently.
What is a book? I ask people this question
and I get different answers. Borsuk defines a book as a portable data storage
and distribution device that is a by-product of the shift from oral to literate
culture. What a brilliant definition. I’ve never looked at books that way
before. To most people, including me, a book is the codex--sheets of paper
printed on both sides, bound on one side, with a front and back cover. That’s
how I have known books as. Because we looked at books as an object, not for the
content.
When people first started documenting oral
messages, they did so by painting and carving on rocks. Later, tablets and
scrolls came into being. Paper was invented around 105 AD in China, but people
still preferred the old technology of writing on bamboo slips. People did not
want to adopt this new technology, which prompted Emperor Huan Xuan to issue an
imperial decree that forced people to use paper and give up antiquated
technologies. It took another 600 years for paper to reach the West, and that
happened thanks to the spread of the Islamic Empire.
The codex (which is the form of the book that
we have grown up with) developed over a period of 200 years and the invention
of printing presses led to the growth of literacy. Some people criticised
printing presses because it made artists and book writers less important.
Today people say that the youth do not read
books and that they spend too much time on their phones. As we look at the
criticism against smart phone technology today there are three points to note.
First, people objected to books many
centuries back. As I said earlier, the great Greek philosophers were opposed to
the written text. They felt that the new technology of writing would ‘destroy
the oral arts of debate and storytelling’ on which based their context of the
world. Borsuk writes about how in Plato’s Phaedrus (Plato wrote books!),
Socrates disdained the written word for separating ideas from their source.
Socrates feared that writing will both hamper memory and muddle the
interpretation of philosophy in the hands of the reader. Doesn’t that sound
familiar today, when people complain the same way about smart phones and
Google? How people are using their memory less (is it really that important to
remember Socrates’ date of birth?) and how people are jumping to conclusions
because they do not fully understand the issue at hand. History teaches us that
so much remains the same despite so much changing. Writing, in fact, allowed
knowledge to grow beyond the monasteries and the elites. It democratised knowledge,
the same way that technology today is democraticising knowledge. And the elites
of today protest, just like the elites of the past protested. People are wary
of change.
Second, people feared that books would make
people interact with others less. But people continued to talk to each other
for the past thousands of years, despite the growth of books. I am pretty sure
that people visited each other less after the telephone was invented, because
you could now talk to someone else without being in the same room. Today,
people criticise new technologies like WhatsApp and smart phones because people
interact with each other less in person. But the watchman in my building can
talk to his wife back in her village thanks to his phone. He can see live
videos of his child growing up thanks to his phone. If you look back at
history, people communicate more today, it is just that they communicate
differently.
And finally, if we look at books as an idea,
we realise that the shape of how we communicate depends on the materials
available to us at that time--the clay tablet, papyrus scroll, codex book--they
were all shaped by the materials available at that time. Smart phones, e-books
and internet-based apps are all by-products of the materials available today.
I love reading books. And I still prefer the
feel of a paper book, even though I have a collection of books on my iPad and
read a lot on my iPad and iPhone. I personally find the smart phone to be an
incredible device to stay in touch with people, take notes on, read books on,
learn about new ideas, and so on. And I believe, thanks to Amaranth Borsuk,
that those who criticise the way people communicate today, are behaving the
same way as the people who objected to the introduction of books centuries ago.
Source : http://www.forbesindia.com/blog/accidental-investor/books-are-bad-technology/
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