The Decline of Text and the Re-emergence of the Visual https://bnarcissisticabuserecovery.runboard.com/t2453 Runboard| The Decline of Text and the Re-emergence of the Visual en-us Fri, 29 Mar 2024 13:32:43 +0000 Fri, 29 Mar 2024 13:32:43 +0000 https://www.runboard.com/ rssfeeds_managingeditor@runboard.com (Runboard.com RSS feeds managing editor) rssfeeds_webmaster@runboard.com (Runboard.com RSS feeds webmaster) akBBS 60 The Decline of Text and the Re-emergence of the Visualhttps://bnarcissisticabuserecovery.runboard.com/p22737,from=rss#post22737https://bnarcissisticabuserecovery.runboard.com/p22737,from=rss#post22737This letter constitutes a permission to reprint or mirror any and all of the materials mentioned or linked to herein subject to appropriate credit and linkback. Every article published MUST include the author bio, including the link to the author's Web site (at the bottom of this message). =============================================================== The Decline of Text and the Re-emergence of the Visual By Sam Vaknin Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"   YouTube has already replaced Yahoo and will shortly overtake Google as the primary Web search destination among children and teenagers. Its repository of videos - hitherto mere entertainment - is now beginning to also serve as a reference library and a news source. This development seals the fate of text. It is being dethroned as the main vehicle for the delivery of information, insight, and opinion. This is only the latest manifestation in a plague of intellectual turpitude that is threatening to undermine not only the foundations of our civilization, but also our survival as a species. People have forgotten how to calculate because they now use calculators; they don't bother to memorize facts or poetry because it is all available online; they read less, much less, because they are inundated with sounds and sights, precious few of which convey any useful information or foster personal development. A picture is worth 1000 words. But, words have succeeded pictograms and ideograms and hieroglyphs for good reasons. The need to combine the symbols of the alphabet so as to render intelligible and communicable one's inner states of mind is conducive to abstract thought. It is also economical; imposes mental discipline; develops the imagination; engenders synoptic thinking; and preserves the idiosyncrasies and the uniqueness of both the author and its cultural-social milieu. Visual are a poor substitute as far as these functions go. In a YouTube world, literacy will have vanished and with it knowledge. Visuals and graphics can convey information, but they rarely proffer organizing principles and theories. They are explicit and thus shallow and provide no true insight. They demand little of the passive viewer and, therefore, are anti-intellectual. In this last characteristic, they are true to the Internet and its anti-elitist, anti-expert, mob-wisdom-driven spirit. Visuals encourage us to outsource our "a-ha" moments and the formation of our worldview and to entrust them to the editorial predilections of faceless crowds of often ignorant strangers. Moreover, the sheer quantity of material out there makes it impossible to tell apart true and false and to distinguish between trash and quality. Inundated by "user-generated-content" and disoriented, future generations will lose their ability to discriminate. YouTube is only the logical culmination of processes started by the Web. The end result will be an entropy of information, with bits isotropically distributed across vast farms of servers and consumed by intellectual zombies who can't tell the difference and don't care to.   -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Also Read: The Six Sins of the Wikipedia Is Education a Public Good? The Idea of Reference The Future of the Book The Kidnapping of Content The Internet and the Library The Future of Online Reference Will Content Ever be Profitable? The Disintermediation of Content The Future of Electronic Publishing Free Online Scholarship - Interview with Peter Suber ============================================================== AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article) Sam Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101. Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com nondisclosed_email@example.com (samvaknin)Mon, 26 Jan 2009 03:50:12 +0000