the events of bø
Neil Gaiman (via saddest-summer)
“ Stories you read when you’re the right age never quite leave you. You may forget who wrote them or what the story was called. Sometimes you’ll forget precisely what happened, but if a story touches you it will stay with you, haunting the places in your mind that you rarely ever visit. ”
Neil Gaiman (via saddest-summer)
“ We don’t constrain our mental powers when we store new long-term memories. We strengthen them. With each expansion of our memory comes an enlargement of our intelligence. The Web provides a convenient and compelling supplement to personal memory - but when we start using the Web as a substitute for personal memory, by bypassing the inner processes of consolidation, we risk emptying our minds of their riches. ”
Nicholas Carr (The Shallows, p.192) in response to the ongoing trend of avoiding the consumption of knowledge and subsequent memorization, as more use the Web as a go-to-guy guide for information retrieval.
“ The point of new reading technologies, it often seems, is to avoid deep immersion, precisely because it’s an activity the crowd can’t influence or control and thus a violation of the iron rule of digital existence: Never be alone. Deep, private reading and thought have begun to feel subversive. A decade ago, the digital space was heralded for the endless opportunities it offered for individual expression. The question now is how truly individual - as in bold, original, unique - you can be if you never step back from the crowd. ”
William Powers (Hamlet’s BlackBerry) p.135