Brian:
 
Your ruminations about the problems with the "book" are very  important.  
Most of human history has been conducted through discussions  and conflicts 
that cannot be put into books.
 
A culture that is locked into "books" is a very ODD one indeed.  This  is 
the topic of McLuhan's !962 Gutenberg Galaxy, which you skipped but might now 
 enjoy.  
 
The West, under the environmental dominance of books, has been a very  
strange place indeed.
 
McLuhan's interest in ELECTRIC technology -- telegraph, telephone,  radio, 
motion pictures, etc. -- was precisely because this new technological  
environment *undermined* the effects of the BOOK.
 
The *book* that has, of course, had the greatest effect (as a book) on our  
culture is the last book of the Bible, the Revelations of St. John 
(otherwise  known as the "Apocalypse.")
 
Speculations about the END OF THE WORLD (and the underlying conviction that 
 the world we have *must* come to an end because it is so terrible and so 
evil)  are the basis of much of the modern Western world for the past 400 
years.  
 
And, it is the basis of most political "radicalism," as expressed on  
nettime and elsewhere.  None of this end-of-the-world thinking would be  
possible 
with the book.
 
"Communism" is, afterall, just another version of the Millennium (after the 
 Armageddon of "class warfare") as promised by John.  And, it's the same  
BOOK-based utopian thinking that gave us modern Capitalism.
 
Two sides of the same coin.  Like the TWO PARTY political  system.  LEFT 
and RIGHT.
 
Often things that appear to be "opposites" are really the same because they 
 are built on the same premises.   Even though they may be vehemently  
"opposed" and prepared to fight with great passion, they are really just the 
YIN 
 and the YANG of the same underlying and agreed upon beliefs. 

You can  think of this as the universe "balancing" things out.  In Gestalt  
psychological terms, these are two major "figures" that share a common 
"ground."  Two sides of the same coin -- hard to "see" them both at once and 
yet 
you know  that "heads" and "tails" couldn't exist one without the other. 
 
If you haven't read it, then Western civilization over the past 400 years  
won't make much sense without "Revelations."  And, maybe even if you have,  
it still doesn't. 

When the NYTimes ran its lead story on the Royal  Society of London in last 
week's Science Times, "A Redoubt of Learning Holds  Firm: The Royal 
Society, crucible of the scientific revolution that formed the  modern world, 
strives to stay relevant," they went out of their way to note  that: 

"Newton, Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle and many more came  together in a 
spirit of revolutionary if at times eccentric inquiry.  Magic  and alchemy 
greatly fascinated the society's founders . . . During that  intoxicating 
century, nearly everything holy, from royal rank to economics to  science to 
the 
immortality of the soul, was challenged . . . Though  rationalists, these 
scientists viewed God as central to their universe and their  work.  As 
Edward Dolnick, author of 'The Clockwork Universe' [the image  picked by the 
Times to fill the page above the story is of clockwork-like  telescope gearing] 
, an entertaining history of the early society [if you'd like  to read an 
even more entertaining history, go to Neal Stephenson's 'The System  of the 
World,' the final piece of his three-part Baroque Cycle], noted, the  founders 
viewed the laws of nature and of God as inseparable.  They were  mapping 
this universe . . . And there was that question of magic.  Society  members 
lived in a time shadowed by apocalyptic dread, from plague to fire to  war.  
They were fascinated by alchemy, unicorns' horns and magic salves,  and they 
often experimented on themselves." 

_http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/04/science/royal-society-holds-firm-amid-pol
itical-challenges-to-science.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/04/science/royal-society-holds-firm-amid-political-challenges-to-
science.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all)  
 
Our own times (driven as it is by today's Tea Party "libertarians" who are  
the flipside of the same "individualist" coin as the Occupy Wall 
Streeters), are  likewise "shadowed" by the "revolutionary" upheavals of the 
1960s. 
How different  is this from the 1660s? 

We are still "experimenting on ourselves."   LSD is (personal) alchemy and 
a "magic salve."  Global warming is the  plague and the fire.  Vietnam was 
the war. 

But, now we have  CYBERTERRORISM (driven the new "yellow peril" who can't 
be creative so they must  steal our intellectual property)!! 

History is funny that way.  Even if you *do* understand it,  you are likely 
doomed to repeat it. <g>
 
Mark Stahlman
Brooklyn NY
 
 
In a message dated 9/9/2012 5:58:15 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:


Hello Mark,

Thanks for your suggestions. I  read the last chapter of
Boole's Laws of Thought, Constitution of  the Intellect
and it was very worthwhile in ways that are  beyond
words. It also provides a next step for  interpretation
in connecting logic with ordering, which is  essential,
if not how ungrounded reasoning may relate to  chaos.

My particular problem is with reading itself, for it is  easy
to consider ideas, yet to get to the ideas can take lots  of
effort which is the inherent inefficiency. For this  reason
I much prefer communicating with people about the  ideas
(living ideas) versus in books, in their archived  versions.

Reading books or long texts on a computer  screen
must be a form of monastic punishment, I figure. It  is
likely strange that an adequate e-reader for such media
is non-existent for 'ideas' beyond Penguin classics format.
Meaning  large format front-lit e-ink display for PDF texts . .  .
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