Growing up in India I was taught if you accidentally touch a book with a foot, to touch it with your hand and then touch your forehead. A gesture kinda like crossing yourself (symbolizing apologizing to Saraswati, goddess of knowledge). I think I was ~10 when I dropped the habit.
Conversation
I don’t know if kids in India are still taught to do this, but traditionalists are still offended if you don’t.
Most parts of the world have a similar reverence if not the explicit ritual.
I think it’s an unhealthy reverence.
2
5
To get to the post-textual, post-verbal era, when words are for AIs and humans have to think in post-latent spaces where the AIs can’t reach, gotta get past this kind of reverence. We’re overdue for some healthy disrespect.
1
3
16
So long as GPT-25 digests a text, its done its job.
1
3
Attack and dethrone books!
Hail threadthulhu 🐙
1
1
5
All hail!
Quote Tweet
Replying to @vgr
Long live the block
Hail threadthulu 
1
1
1
Someday (“when the tonguin’ is done”), we’ll see the age of books for what it has been: the first stage of the creation of cognitive fossil fuels. The real prize is the oil forming inside AIs right now.
2
14
Realizing I’m mildly triggered by any behavior that vaguely resembles prayer without actually being prayer in a traditional religious sense. Actual prayer I can tune out and ignore. But prayer directed at books, constitutions, music, art, Straussian Great Men... annoying.
1
7
There’s some story, I forget source, about a tyrant who promised not to burn a library of a conquered land but got around it by putting all their words in alphabetical order or something. I kinda like the spirit of that story a lot.
1
Things like Google n-grams effectively do something halfway to that. The “fossil fuel” UX of books.
1
1
Replying to
Death of the author ftw. Mainlining Borg mind stream without the intercessionary figure of the author confusing matters by invoking some sort of platonic realm of idea traditions.
2
5
Imagine a world where memes and gifs and threadthulhus turn directly into Mars rovers and new Rick and Morty episodes without tediously bottlenecking through “books”
1
2
9
It’s not that they’re going to be entirely obsolete. They’ll just become one specialized UX among many for a subset of hive mind access.
2
1
4
I mean I’m writing one now (serialized) but only 1 in 3 of my book-sized ideas is also *book-shaped.* And that just shows my age/rigidities (and tbh hangover of youthful vanities). I suspect other things being equal, Zoomers will have 1 in 10 ideas in book form.
1
9
Replying to
Similar reasoning behind oral tradition of the Vedas: "..they comprise rather tonally accented verses and hypnotic, abstruse melodies whose proper realizations demand oral instead of visual transmission. They are robbed of their essence when transferred to paper.." (wikipedia)
1
Replying to
I think this anti-book thread is interesting though I don't agree with most of it. I ingest many forms of media but I still like books. There's a level of nuance/context that can be difficult to piece together from facts but good authors distill/explain in ways that enlighten.
1
Replying to
This discussion reminds me of interactive CD-ROMs. I vaguely remember having a space one and maybe a NatGeo one. Some books came with them. This was just before the internet became popular, mid 90s. Internet experience not quite same as CD-ROMs, tho.
1





