I was listening to a CBC doc on Google’s attempt to digitize and make searchable as many of the world’s books as possible. I think it will represent an incredible advance for humanity, even if it some may perceive it as a threat.
There were however a few puzzling counterarguments presented over the course of the doc. One was from academia where some scholars were concerned that simply being able to search books instead of having to read them mean more work is being done at the last minute perhaps without the care and consideration that would have gone into it previously. I do share some of this concern. You can certainly miss out on interesting ideas if you are simply searching for information that backs up your position, but if you are simply looking for that information, do you really retain the other things you read anyway? I don’t think this will spell the end of academics reading entire books. They do read just generally to expose themselves to new ideas right? If not, this seems to be a non issue.
Being able to search even half of every English book ever written would be a historic achievement, and we shouldn’t be concerned that academics will simply stop reading because of it.
Monday, October 5, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment