David Brooks on his "Outsourced Brain"
NYT’s David Brooks on outsourcing memory, reference, and decision-making to things that theoretically do it better:
I have relinquished control over my decisions to the universal mind. I have fused with the knowledge of the cybersphere, and entered the bliss of a higher metaphysic. As John Steinbeck nearly wrote, a fella ain’t got a mind of his own, just a little piece of the big mind — one mind that belongs to everybody. Then it don’t matter, Ma. I’ll be everywhere, around in the dark. Wherever there is a network, I’ll be there. Wherever there’s a TiVo machine making a sitcom recommendation based on past preferences, I’ll be there. Wherever there’s a Times reader selecting articles based on the most e-mailed list, I’ll be there.
And, ironically enough, if you didn’t catch the Grapes of Wrath reference, it’s easy enough to find it. Because, if you’re like me, sometimes you also outsource your pop culture knowledge to Google, Wikipedia, and IMDB.
As for Brooks’ opening anecdote – using a GPS? A life-saver for me. Ever since moving from a state where everything orients on a north-south grid to a place where diagonals and seemingly non-Euclidean intersections rule, I’d be literally lost without my Nüvi.
Previously (and mentioned in Brooks’ piece): Clive Thompson on the downside of the outboard brain.
[via: rickroberts in the 43f forum]
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Brain enhancement
The pocket calculator is the worst brain atrophying tool devised by man. Why do you think the local Burger King has to shut down when their cash registers go down. Figure tips and change, reconcile your checkbook, even do your taxes, with your third grade arithmetic knowledge.
“A brain is a terrible thing to let go to waste.”
p.s. …and don’t get me started on spell chequers!