The following article confirms a conclusion that seemed inescapable to  me
a long time ago: Most people are shallow.
 
There are corollaries to this view:
 
Most people, when it comes to political or cultural issues that are  
difficult for them
to understand,  reflexively act like ostriches and bury their head in  the 
sand.
 
Most people about most things are not intellectually curious.
 
Most people do not look at tough conceptual problems as challenges to  
overcome
but as unwelcome distractions to ignore as soon as they can come up with 
an excuse to do so.
 
Most people habitually oversimplify complex issues and force them to fit  
preconceived
categories that they already know. For example, are you familiar with  
economics?
Thus all problems   -war between Shi'ites and Sunnis, moral  conflicts in 
US politics, etc-
reduce to the question, what are the economics of the situation? 
 
 
American political culture has a great weakness that is related to the  
phenomenon
under review here. The Civil Rights movement of the 1960s profoundly  
effected
our whole society. But does it follow from the legitimate goals of the  
original
movement that all other grievances should be regarded as issues of Civil  
Rights?
Is gender just like race? Is homosexual pathology just like race?
 
There is a dearth of critical thinking in our culture  -despite the  fact 
that the theme
of critical thinking has been known and a subject of interest since at  
least the 1980s.
 
The question therefore is:
What should Radical Centrist philosophy say to people that can inspire  them
to become critical thinkers, to become intellectually curious, to see the  
value
in solving difficult intellectual problems?
 
There is a parallel to observe, athletics. If you have ever participated in 
 sports
you should be able to see this easily enough. Do you want to run a quarter  
mile
in less than a minute?  You know that your work is cut out for you, a  lot 
of
physical training, a lot of determination, a lot of exercise generally,  and
repeated tests to  measure your progress. To get from where you  started out
to your best time for a quarter might take a year, or two years, but  in 
the end
you have the great satisfaction of running, if not  0.59. 9, whatever your 
best results
may be, perhaps 1.10.00,  which is quite good  even if it isn't good enough 
 for
serious competition.
 
The point is that this is a challenge. There are satisfactions that others  
simply
cannot ever have unless a challenge is met and success at reaching a  goal
is achieved. I mean, it is the difference between being an athlete who  runs
faster than a large number of other runners who also are quite good,
vs being a couch potato who has no experience of athletics at all.
 
One deserves praises and plaudits, the other deserves contempt or  pity.
 
My challenge all along has been to make the most of Radical Centrism,
to make good use of its ideas and outlook in as much of my life as  
possible.
A corollary has been to persuade others of the great good of RC.
To say the least the goal of persuasion remains unfulfilled. Still, I  try.
 
Except for Ernie, no-one else does, no-one else seems to "get it."
 
That is too bad. And for so many smart people here it is incredibly  stupid
 
 
You can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink.
Well, OK, as I just said, I have been trying  -and I'm not done  trying.
But this is ridiculous.
 
 
Billy
 
 
 
===================================
 
 
 
 
The Atlantic
 
 
Why Audiences Hate Hard News—and Love Pretending  Otherwise
Ask readers what they want, and they'll tell you  vegetables. Watch them 
quietly, and they'll mostly eat  candy. 
 
_Derek Thompson_ (http://www.theatlantic.com/derek-thompson/)  Jun 17 2014

 
 
You may not realize this, but we can see you. Yes, you. The human  reading 
this article. We have analytics that tells us roughly where you are,  what 
site you've just arrived from, how long you stay, how far you read, where  
you hop to next. We've got eyeballs on your eyeballs. 
Why is it so important that digital news organizations track which articles 
 you're reading on our websites? The obvious answer is that it teaches us 
what  you're interested in. The less-obvious, but equally true, answer is 
that it  teaches you what you're interested in. 
If we merely asked what you wanted, without measuring what you  wanted, 
you'd just keep lying to us—and to yourself. 
Here's what I mean by lying. This year, the Reuters Institute for the Study 
 of Journalism asked thousands of people around the world what sort of news 
was  most important to them. The graph below shows the responses from 
Americans.  International news crushed celebrity and "fun" news by a margin of 
two-to-one.  Economic and political news finished even higher. 
 
But what happens when we stop asking readers what's important and start  
looking at what they actually read? 
 


Let's start with today. The most important story in the world, according to 
 every major American newspaper this morning, is the violent splintering of 
Iraq.  It was the front-page and top-of-the-homepage story in the 
Washington  Post, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and  more.  
Surely, there are millions of people who are reading about Iraq, because  
they're fascinated in the Middle East, in foreign policy, or in the general 
news  cycle. But despite Iraq's prominent location on every major newspaper, 
the  most-read stories on those papers' websites aren't about Iraq,  at all. 
In the Post, the top stories included an op-ed about _Benghazi_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/dana-milbank-heritages-ugly-benghazi-panel/2014/
06/16/b8bd423c-f5a3-11e3-a606-946fd632f9f1_story.html?tid=pm_pop) ,  and 
updates about the World Cup and a midwest tornado. WSJ's most-read  box led 
off with two stories about YouTube games and taxes. The Times'  most-emailed 
stories included two pieces about gluten and postpartum  depression. Not one 
of the most-read or most-emailed boxes on three  papers' websites included 
the words Iraq, Sunni,  or Maliki when I looked this morning.  
Iraq is a uniquely difficult news story. But there's nothing unique about  
U.S. readers side-stepping the news cycle. Last year, BuzzFeed released a  
_review  of traffic to sites within its partner network_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/02/the-facebook-effect-on-the-news/283746/)
 , 
including  the New York Times and The Atlantic. Of the  20 most viral 
stories across those sites, just three dealt with recent news  events—the Miss 
America Pageant, a Netflix announcement, and the Video Music  Awards —but the 
vast majority weren't news. They were quizzes, lists, and  emotional poppers. 
 
(http://cdn.theatlantic.com/newsroom/img/posts/Screen%20Shot%202014-02-11%20at%205.26.01%20PM.png)
  
Ask audiences what they want, and they'll tell you vegetables. Watch them  
quietly, and they'll mostly eat candy. 
Audiences are liars, and the media organizations who listen to them without 
 measuring them are dupes. At the Aspen Ideas Festival last year, Ehab Al  
Shihabi, executive director of international operations  for Al Jazeera 
America, shared survey data suggesting that _40  to 50 million people were 
desperate for in-depth and original TV journalism_ 
(http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/06/whats-the-matter-with-tv-news/277316/)
 .  Nine months 
later, it averaged _10,000  viewers per hour_ 
(http://al%20jazeera%20america%20was%20averaging%20about%2010,000%20viewers%20at%20any%20given%20time%20of
%20the%20day,%20while%20cnn%20had%20272,000,%20msnbc%20349,000%20and%20fox%2
0news%20924,000.%20but%20it%20is%20important%20to%20understand%20that%20al%2
0jazeera%20america%20is%20only%2
0in%2050%20million%20to%2055%20million%20of%20the%20nation's%20110%20million%20homes/)
 —1.08 percent of Fox News' 
audience and 3.7 percent of CNN.  AJAM, built for an audience of vegetarians, 
is 
stuck with a broccoli stand in a  candy shop. 
The culprit isn't Millennials, or Facebook, or analytics software like  
Chartbeat. The problem is our brains. The more attention-starved we feel, the  
more we thirst for stimuli that are familiar. We like ice cream when we're 
sad,  old songs when we're tired, and easy listicles when we're busy and 
ego-depleted.  The Internet shorthand for this fact is "cat pictures." 
Psychologists prefer the  term fluency. Fluency isn't how we think: It's how we 
feel  
while we're thinking. We prefer thoughts that come easily: Faces that are  
symmetrical, colors that are clear, and sentences with parallelisms. In this 
 light, there are two problems with hard news: It's hard and it's  new. 
(Parallelism!) 
Fluency also explains one of the truisms of political news: That most  
liberals prefer to read and watch liberals (because it feels easy), while  
conservatives prefer to read and watch conservatives (because it feels easy).  
It's a not-even-industry-secret that down-the-middle political reporting that  
doesn't massage old biases is a hard sell for TV audiences. Fox News has  
monopolized the market of 60-and-overs watching cable news, predominantly  
because that group watches the most cable news and naturally skews 
conservative.  Grappling with new information is exhausting, so we prefer to 
consume it 
in _explicitly digestible lists_ (http://www.vox.com/)  or wrapped in old  
viewpoints we already have. 
Before there were eyeballs on your eyeballs, it was difficult to know 
exactly  what you were reading. The Times knew you subscribed to  the Times, 
for 
example, but we couldn't see exactly what pages you  were reading. We could 
survey readers to learn what they wanted, but readers  lie. 
The analytic age of journalism has its detractors, but with regard to 
serving  our audience, it gets us closer than ever to that highest purpose of 
journalism:  learning the ugly truth.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Wh... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • Re... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar

Reply via email to