We discuss the first and second chapters of Adrian Johns’ recent book. Some of the topics include the late-19th-century panic over the exhausting effects of “unnatural” reading and neurasthenia, other technologies (of both acquiring knowledge and making notes) and their advantages and disadvantages, saccades and thought, the strange misuse of the incorrect theory or recapitulation, and the general weirdness of how close reading science was to eugenics and social Darwinism.
Update: I’m not sure why, but Substack doesn’t seem to be making transcripts today. Here’s a link to the video on my Vimeo, where I think it did make a transcript, because I used the AI to remove some filler words and long pauses (it’s also 14 minutes shorter!).
Coffee shops wise, pick a big enough mall, and it would have say 10 coffee shops... so don't even need sun screen between shops. : )))))
@Chris, Dan, yeah, I'll be back, thanks. This book just didn't grab me, but I enjoy watching your discussions. I vote for the Doto book, or any of the many others I've marked in the Book Suggestions. BTW, missed having the transcript on this one.