I'm on-line lots, and I like it just fine, but paper is special for aesthetic reasons that make me somewhat skeptical about predictions that it will die. I even confess to spending fairly large amounts of money to place myself in positions where paper fits, and computer screens don't. Machines in my Lab of every variety, machines throughout my house, my laptops with CDPD modems so that a TCP/IP connection can be maintained wirelessly, inverters in my cars for power... and so on: this is my life. But because I guess I've written a thing or two, I have some money to burn -- and I burn it sometimes for peace and isolation where *print* journals and books rule. It's brisk on the Atlantic now, even this close to the mainland, and a fire is burning out here in my house on Block Island. The last thing in the world I want to do right now (paradoxically!) is read stuff on this bloody screen. I can pick up this issue of the journal *BBS*, drop it on the floor (I can even hit it with a hammer and no damage results), toss it over to the couch, stroll outside with it, stroll back inside and curl up with it beside the fire, and so on. These joys will not die, nor will the search for them; I'm not just reporting idiosyncrasies here. Ergo, either paperless scholarship must somehow to some degree take the form of hard copy (electronic books, e.g., that are wirelessly updated, etc.), or paper will survive. I imagine, as well, that parallel points can be made about aesthetically pleasing *generation* -- of math, say. Trying to work out a complicated proof via a keyboard is nauseating. (The literature shows that even the primitive formal work required to excel on standardized logic tests (e.g., the logic sections of the American GRE and LSAT) screams out for paper and pencil.) I'm working on understanding how certain rather tricky wave equations capture physical processes that are uncomputable. I'm going to flip on the light at my old desk here, and pull out my sketch pad. There are equations and proofs to work through, with figures and jottings and symbols that cannot flow freely from my mind through my keyboard to the screen, but which can be shaped easily by pencil. Now yes, I typed this out cold, and Stevan types out stuff cold with his fingers flying over the keyboard all the time (which is why the paperless medium fits him like a glove), but that's just straight text, simple text. For the other stuff I'm glad my desk, with its low-tech tools, awaits. Tomorrow I'll bring the journal to the beach. I'm not worried about getting sand in it...
=============================================================== Selmer Bringsjord * [email protected] * Professor Director, Minds & Machines Lab & Program Dept. of Philosophy, Psychology & Cognitive Science Department of Computer Science ----------------------------- http://www.rpi.edu/~brings ----------------------------- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Troy New York 12180 ===============================================================
