I am currently reading The Master and His Emissary , which appears to be an excellent book. ("Appears" because I don't know the neuroscience literature well enough to say for sure, yet.) But then on page 186 I find: "Asking cognition, however, to give a perspective on the relationship between cognition and affect is like asking astronomer in the pre-Galilean geocentric world, whether, in his opinion, the sun moves round the earth of the earth around the sun. To ask a question alone would be enough to label one as mad." OK, this is garbage. First of all, it should be pre-Copernican, not pre-Galilean. But much worse is that people have seriously been considering heliocentrism for many centuries before Copernicus. Aristarchus had proposed a heliocentric model in the 4th-century BC. It had generally been considered wrong, but not "mad." (And wrong for scientific reasons: Why, for instance, did we not observe stellar parallax?) And when Copernicus propose...
Thanks for passing it on!
ReplyDeleteNot that I find what he wrote defensible, but I hope he wins his suit against Google.
ReplyDeleteWhat is not defensible in what he wrote?
Delete"What is not defensible in what he wrote?"
ReplyDeletePerhaps that he uses the Oxford comma?
To answer your question, he wrote "we should be optimizing for Google". We should be optimizing for DuckDuckGo.
ReplyDelete