["Open Mike" is the often off-topic Editorial page of...hey look, a squirrel!]
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I'm back, and I feel properly energized by my Summer Work-On-Something-Else-For-a-Change Staycation.
So listen up for a sec; I think this is interesting. For Friday's "Social Media" post, Reader "Not THAT Ross Cameron" recommended a link from a site called "The Conversation":
"When critical thinking isn’t enough: to beat information overload, we need to learn 'critical ignoring'," by Ralph Hertwig and Anastasia Kozyreva of the Max Planck Institute, Sam Wineburg of Stanford, and Stephan Lewandowsky of the University of Bristol.
That one led me to a second related article:
"To navigate the dangers of the web, you need critical thinking—but also critical ignoring" by Sam Wineburg.
If you're going to read those, I recommend reading the second one first.
Now, these are both easy reads. They're both written in plain, jargon-free English. They're both short: "When Critical Thinking..." is only 1,096 words, and "To navigate..." is only 794 words. Both are broken up by big friendly subheads...
My brain = oatmeal
...And yet, it took me forever to read them, and I read them in a fractured, disrupted way, almost like I didn't know how to, well, read. Which is funny. I'm in the habit of quickly scanning things that people link in the comments, just to be sure we're not going off the rails, and that's how I first approached the one Ross linked. I skimmed it rapidly, and kept getting distracted, both by the inline links (through which I discovered the second article) and other things. After skimming the second one, I went back to working on comments, then found I was still thinking about the article, so I rummaged around TOP until I found it again and went back to read it later. By that time I felt like I am a perfect example of what they're talking about: the low-attention-span reader who approaches "finds" on the Web superficially and uncritically.
By contrast, what I've been away doing for the last few days is the opposite. I'm working on my book. I made a lot of progress, and got immersed in it. I even had a great conversation with a veteran reader of the kind of book it is, which was illuminating and helpful (thanks Sue). The funny thing about writing the book is that it tends to dominate my mind when I'm working on it. I'm sure I don't think about it all day long, but it feels like I do. It's close work, and consuming work. And I love that. What it does, really, is that it allows me to have a long attention span—a very long one.
I'd like to write books for the rest of my life.
It's not that TOP is failing—it's not. Social Security is coming to the rescue next month like the cavalry galloping over the hill in an old Western. It should keep me afloat for a few more years. But the trend lines are clear, and it's clear that I need to figure out what to do next, just in case I live for "a couple three" more decades (the thing about life is that one day you'll be dead, maybe, but you never know when. That makes it hard to plan).
This book, the one I'm working on, is going to fail. It's highly unlikely I'll write a successful book first time out of the gate. It's unlikely that I'll earn minimum wage for the hours I put into it, much less that it will fund a second one. Even John Camp, AKA John Sandford, had to write three practice books before he worked out how to do it. And he's good—he's now had 187 #1 bestsellers (warning, that could be an exaggeration. The real number is probably just as impressive—35? 40?—but I can't find it). I don't even know if I'm good yet. Could well be that I'm not. And making time to write this book is like getting blood out of a turnip, for the very reason I mentioned above—because it needs to dominate my mind when I working on it, making it difficult to concentrate on anything else. When I work on the book project, my mind goes blank for TOP.
Note that other people may be able to multitask effectively, and write a book in the midst of the innumerable interruptions and distractions of life, and alongside multiple other quotidian aspirations. I know a lot of people do that. I'm just talking about how it works for me.
But boy, that's what I want. I want to get up in the morning, and have nothing to do all day but write on one project. Half a page or five pages, infinite room for revising, no specific deadlines. I might die early and I might die late, but if I could do that for a while I'd die happy. These last five or six days have been so much fun. The problem is, how to get there from here.
Snopes
Back to those two articles from The Conversation. They make many interesting points. One of them is that students are typically taught "critical thinking" in schools—close reading and textual analysis—and that this is perfect for those who are trying to hijack your attention. It means that our reflexive tendency is to read fake articles carefully when trying to evaluate their trustworthiness. Actually, the authors say, what you should really do is "lateral reading"—"examine the site by leaving it." That is, look for signals and telltales elsewhere that might bolster or refute the site's or the article's claim to being true.
Another defense mechanism for the Web is to have known sites that you trust. I have a handful of newspaper sites and magazine sites that I trust. I have a pretty good feel for famous organizations and where they currently stand in their arc. I know the biases of certain sites and often have a general idea how they do or do not accord with my own beliefs.
For example, I read the other day that last year there were 13,000 weddings in the USA that cost $1,000,000 or more. I didn't look into that myself, because I read it in The Atlantic, and that's a source I trust. Even if they make a mistake from time to time, my guess is that they've done the fact-checking.
One of the sites I trust is the one that should be everybody's first stop when they encounter an extraordinary claim on the Web: Snopes. "Snopes, formerly known as the Urban Legends Reference Pages, is a fact-checking website. It has been described as a 'well-regarded reference for sorting out myths and rumors' on the Internet. The site has also been seen as a source for both validating and debunking urban legends and similar stories in American popular culture" (Wikipedia). Snopes has not been without its own problems, but it does a great job of fact-checking common "memes" and claims. I can't tell you how many times friends and relatives have passed along nonsense to me that has already been explained and evaluated on Snopes. I read the site periodically just for entertainment and general knowledge. Quote Investigator and the Annenberg Public Policy Center's FactCheck.org are other good ones.
Finally, I think I have a good nose for ulterior motives. But I'm not smug about that—there have been times I've been fooled, times I've been gullible, and I'm very aware of those lapses. I'm not immune. At the very least, though, people should be well aware that powerful special interests are engaging in coordinated disinformation campaigns on the Web, which then get amplified in the echo chambers. So, if something looks suspicious, it might be. Even in the absence of evil intent, there are a whole lot of enthusiastic liars out there.
Anyway, read those two articles if they sound interesting. But clear your mind first, hit "Reader View," and focus. Don't do what I did. It's too trickster-ironic to read an article about attentiveness without giving it proper attention!
Mike
Original contents copyright 2023 by Michael C. Johnston and/or the bylined author. All Rights Reserved. Links in this post may be to our affiliates; sales through affiliate links may benefit this site. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. (To see all the comments, click on the "Comments" link below or on the title of this post.)
Featured Comments from:
Rob de Loe: "You need to take more short staycations because you come back loaded! This was excellent. 'Critical ignoring' is such a simple but powerful idea. I sorta-kinda use it already, but not enough and not consciously.
"My main contribution to the post was going to be to suggest the Bielefeld Academic Search Enginer (BASE) for people who want to find relevant open-access scientific publications. I just discovered it today and was going to post the link for readers because it looks extremely useful, and it can be hard for people outside universities to access published science. Whoa Nelly! I just found it. How do I know it's any good? I hopped off the site and did a quick search for external information about it. I then did some test searches on topics I know. Seems legit, so here's the link."
"The impact of this post will also go beyond me. I'm going to integrate the articles you linked, and the idea of critical ignoring, into the first-year course I teach in Winter. My students need this idea. Thank you!"
Mike replies: Don't thank me, thank Ross Cameron!
KeithB: "Be careful, because Snopes does not want you to even trust them, and have several fake articles, notably that Mr. Ed was actually a painted zebra."
Not THAT Ross Cameron: "Thanks for sharing Mike, Glad to be of service to Global TOP HQ. I think the TL:DR is that our time is precious, so we need to learn how to spend it wisely when giving attention to the interwebz. The Conversation is becoming one of those sites that I trust for information. It is published by academics, so we still get their biases, but there seems to be less of an ideological bent behind the publication itself. And all the best to Rob with teaching his classes."
Good articles. Thanks.
What concerns me now is how it has been shown over and over again that AI makes stuff up. It lies and it's algorithmic conclusion is that it's okay or worse, normal.
When someone precedes a statement with "Honestly" or "Truthfully" I assume that everything they tell me is a lie. Otherwise why would they need to make that distinction. These really are sad times.
Posted by: JimF | Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 01:39 PM
I am an expert at 'Critical Ignoring'... Ask my wife.
Posted by: JTK | Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 02:29 PM
Your remark about disinformation campaigns reminded me of a comment made by Donald Knuth, the prominent computer scientist, in a video interview. "If I find too many people adopting a certain idea, I probably think it's wrong."
Posted by: Bill Tyler | Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 02:32 PM
Interesting...."13,000 weddings in the USA that cost $1,000,000 or more".
If I remember reading somewhere correctly, the more lavish a wedding is, the more likely it is to fail.
Posted by: Dan Khong | Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 05:08 PM
First, my thanks to you and to Reader "Not That Ross Cameron" for addressing the very important issues of fact checking and "Critical Ignoring" and the reading references in The Conversation.
The well-intentioned advice on Lateral Reading, etc. is correct and important, BUT I fear it comes at least 10 years too late, is hopelessly old school, and has almost become a blunt sword.
Why?
The elites in business and politics have accumulated so much wealth and influence globally in the past one or two decades, brought the majority of the mass media under their influence, unfortunately also partly the universities and faculty, founded an overabundance of seemingly humanitarian NGOs and trusts, which blow vast amounts of interest-driven information globally into the world.
In other words, these days, if a diligent reader employs the technique of Lateral Reading for fact-checking, his risk is now very high of finding a large number of sources that confirm the first text in its accuracy, but which come from the same poisoned well as this one!
You mentioned a few sources of information which you consider trustworthy,- which I respect very much.
But who considers the big dramaturgy of the stage play, knows that with high probability also for these institutions the day X might come,- because money and influence is available practically unlimited with the opposite side (whoever you would like to use for it) . And instead of search and destroy is much more intelligent: infiltrate.
I have no isolated solutions for this big problem at hand.
But, at least there is something to be gained by not immediately falling into the next prepared trap because you think you can save yourself with bogus security.
You know the joke: "If I can't even trust my used car dealer anymore, who can I trust?"
Posted by: Lothar Adler | Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 05:33 PM
Amazon's Kindle Direct Publishing is today's vanity press. You set the price and Amazon takes a commission.
Anyone can publish a book on any subject they desire. If many people buy your book you'll make a profit. Couldn't be simpler!-
Many if not most TOP regular readers will purchase at a fair rice. I know I will.
Posted by: c.d.embrey | Tuesday, 11 July 2023 at 08:45 PM
I'm glad to hear you're enjoying the writing etc, apart from doing TOP. Just like I enjoy switching away to do my photobooks, or updating my family tree (I'm back as far as 1385 on my father's side). Or adding to my memoirs, or making changes to my model railway layout (I might get around to actually building it, one o'these days). Never bored.
But back to the topic: I use a plugin for Firefox called Print Friendly which, if you find a web article you like and want to save, formats it into an A4 pdf (and lets you edit and delete big pictures and so on) for later printing. It saves to the Downloads folder. I don't necessarily read it straight away, and rarely actually print it, but if it survives a week or three, I might save it, otherwise it's just a critically reviewed article that doesn't clutter my PC too much. I have some (such as your plant based diet articles) that survive indefinitely, but not too many. It makes for discriminatory reading.
Posted by: Peter Croft | Wednesday, 12 July 2023 at 02:00 AM
Thanks Mike.
There is one thing that you can be sure of, whether you die early or late, and that is after you die, you will be late.
Posted by: StephenJ | Wednesday, 12 July 2023 at 05:05 AM
How am I supposed to get any work done while you keep posting all of these interesting links???
Posted by: Ger Lawlor | Wednesday, 12 July 2023 at 05:06 AM
This reminds me of a discussion with my kids on day after school - their homework was to research something on the internet. “Don’t use Wikipedia “ their teacher had told them, “ because anyone can write on it”. I would disagree strongly with that - the editorial policies and consensus of multiple authors probably make it more reliable. Anyone can make a website, set up a YouTube channel or whatever the current fashionable content format is these days. How do we know if they’ve been subjected to any editorial control or fact checking?
But then again, most people aren’t aware of the biases in their media consumption. I’m not sure what the American equivalent might be, but in British newspapers, it would be very rare for someone to read the Telegraph and the Guardian (right and left leaning papers respectively)
Posted by: ChrisC | Friday, 14 July 2023 at 04:31 AM