Monday, January 17, 2005

wince

Malcolm Gladwell's new book, Blink, is about the two-second intuitive judgments that people make and how there is often a considerable amount of wisdom in such judgments. My own sequel, Wince, will be about the two-second intuitive judgments that I make when I'm reading where I think, "Now we've passed from nonfiction into obvious (if entertaining) apocrapha or even into just outright fiction." An example from Blink that caused me to wince:
[Psychologist Silvan Tomkins] was a legendary talker. At the end of a cocktail party, a crowd of people would sit rapt at Tomkins's feet. Someone would say "One more question!" and everyone would stay for another hour and a half as Tomkins held forth on, say, comic books, a television sitcom, the biology of emotion, his problem with Kant, and his enthusiasm for the latest fad diets -- all enfolded into one extended riff. (p. 198)

3 comments:

  1. it is interesting how many of the folks we consider "public intellectuals," are writers who spin out secondary accounts of already-published research.

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  2. p.s. to above: gladwell is a very good, and entertaining, author. it just seems that the pundits these days are too often folks like gladwell who are smart, well-read, and good writers, but who are not the thinkers making the really important discoveries or breakthroughs. perhaps the latter don't write in a style that has broad appeal (or in some cases is even accessible?).

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  3. Mine life with anxiety is not fraught
    I make'th snap decisions on the spot
    will it be donuts cold or hot?
    regardless of yesterday's sack I bought
    -this but a parting thought
    my future in cholesterol is wrought
    Woe! the calories I would'st have fought
    had'eth I but a spoon of tofu in the pot
    a hefty paunch is all I've got
    'tis donuts I've only ever sought - LDM

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