So I was going to break some incredible news about how John McCain not only did indeed have an affair with that lobbyist, and not only is she HIS OWN ILLEGITIMATE GREAT-GREAT-GREAT-GRANDDAUGHTER, but she is ALSO descended from slaves John McCain owned before the Civil War! That will, however, have to wait for another day.
I want to respond to Garrett’s post about whether or not America is getting dumber. The WP article by Susan Jacoby is full of good points, and I agree that the numbers she references are scary. I agree that, as she says, we’ve seen “the triumph of video culture over print culture”, and that that’s a very bad thing. I’m also frustrated by how uninformed many people seem to be, and how complexity of thought is often tagged as “elitism”. Intelligence is probably the most important gauge of whether I’m attracted to someone (romantically or platonically), and I think it’s ridiculous that it’s so often ignored in the name of PCness.
But I think she gets some stuff wrong. I heartily believe that large chunks of our entire culture are rotting away before our eyes — but I don’t think it’s directly caused by a decline in national intellect.
First off, it may be true that we’re reading less as a nation and getting crasser, but I don’t think it’s anything like a seismic shift. Most Americans — most people everywhere — have always turned to ridiculous, base things for entertainment: bear baiting, minstral shows, 50s sitcoms, whatever. People are naturally attracted to violence, schlock, gaudiness, and sex. Most 13-year-olds in any decade, unlike Susan Jacoby, weren’t spending most days “reading for hours in a treehouse” — they were probably playing games or secretly feeling each other up. Yes, I’d rather see kids rolling hoops down some idyllic street than playing Halo for hours on end, but hoop-rolling is hardly a more “intellectual” activity. Developing the ability to appreciate and understand more “intellectual” stuff takes patience and training, whether it’s self-imposed or taught by someone else.
I know the low culture of the past and of the present aren’t entirely the same. I think there are two big differences between a crowd of Midwesterners gawking at Siamese Twins in a carnival sideshow and a TV audience watching fellow human beings humiliate themselves on a reality show. First, the scale of spectacle, since you can’t cram 25 million viewers into a single circus tent. Second, the intensity of the spectacle, and I think this IS a real problem. The money and psychological sophistication of mass media, coupled with the competition of the entertainment industry, means purer and purer doses of excitement are available at all hours of the day. We’ve upped the voltage on our entertainment to the point where we’re immune to smaller crass pleasures (like, say, staring at sideshow freaks). Jacoby is dead on about the erosion of American attention spans, I believe. I don’t know how to solve that problem, though, other than to avoid TV as much as possible (always good advice) and encourage others to do the same.
But be that as it may, I also think the Jacoby article is wrong in completely discounting the idea that living in a tech-saturated world is purely destructive. To be clear, I agree that it’s fucked up we plop babies in front of the TV for hours. I think World of Warcraft is creepy and alarming. But, the ability to navigate the Internet, utilize technology, and generally participate in an ADHD culture IS its own set of skills and its own form of intelligence. In fact, developing that particular form of intelligence is necessary for survival in the modern world. And, it doesn’t spell the end of human critical thought. The most successful (and also probably most content) individuals among our generation will be the people who can do both — who can navigate the shallow “video culture” of mainstream America while also developing the complex analytical and empathetic and creative abilities associated with reading, writing, etc. Of course you can certainly overstate that case and many do (”we don’t have to read books now that we have Wikipedia!”), but the truth is that we develop new intelligences to replace the old ones that are left behind as our culture shifts. The idea of “multiple intelligences” (yes, I recognize the irony of linking that) is an old one. And as a whole, it’s debatable whether “intelligence”, whatever it means, is declining over time. In this article by the serious badass Malcolm Gladwell, he mentions the fact that IQ scores have been steadily rising over the course of this century, to the point that the threshhold level for mental retardation has had to be steadily raised to account for upwardly-shifting medians in the IQ bell curve. As Gladwell says, this just drives home the point that intelligence isn’t any single measurable figure, whether an IQ score, an attention span, or a knowledge of geography or literature. Those are all pieces of the human mind, not ultimate yardsticks of its intrinsic value or power.
Finally, I think Jacoby is missing something about the role of “smartness” in our culture. As much as contemporary American anti-intellectualism might be a real phenomenon, Americans also have a seriously weird complex about the idea of being “stupid”. Americans can’t stand thinking they’re stupid, which is one reason they get all defensive about their lack of knowledge. When pundits or talk show hosts rail against liberal elites, intellectuals, and politicians, the message to the viewing audience isn’t “fuck smart people”. It’s “these poweful people think they’re SO SMART, but look how stupid and lacking in common sense they really are; you, the viewer, are the smart one. You can clearly see the solutions to the problems. (”Build a wall!”. Or, “End the war now, at all costs!”) Doesn’t it enrage you that they’re in control? We Report — YOU FUCKING DECIDE.” That’s not to say that politicians and intellectuals and whoever else in positions of power don’t do stupid, arrogant things or don’t deserve to be skewered. They do, and they do. But the ravenous public appetite for that skewering suggests something else is being satisfied in those news programs outside — a fulfillment of the need of the viewer to feel smart and validated. Hearing Lou Dobbs or Bill O’Reilly or whoever make their simplistic arguments makes the viewer feel he’s wiser, not through informing him but through lending credence to his preconceptions and implicitly reinforcing the idea that the viewer doesn’t have to learn new ideas and think critically about the story at hand in order to be intellectually worthwhile.
Jacoby calls this attitude, the “arrogance about [a] lack of knowledge”. Yeah, true that, but the smugness also masks a deep, deep insecurity that pervades the American consciousness, a perpetual fear of inadequacy that is itself created by a popular culture that innundates us with reminders of our shortcomings followed by pitches for products to cure or conceal those flaws. Some of those pressure points of psychic insecurity are well documented: unattractiveness, obesity, social anxiety. But just as important, we are
also all terrified of exposing our ignorance, irrationality, and dullness. Even if we aren’t overly ignorant, irrational, or dull, we’re as frantic and anxious as a normal-bodied teenage girl castigating herself for being too fat. Secretly, we don’t want to be stupid, which is why it’s so important that we redefine “stupid” as “the other guy’s position”, be it religion or secular humanism.
But I think that up to a point, at certain times, presented in the right way, most people are also quite willing to learn new things if they can see the value in learning them and they’re not already clammed up from distrust. It’s just that in our depersonalized, lunatic, capital-driven, neurotic society, the opportunities for that kind of truly constructive discourse are minimized. That’s true both in the school systems and outside. And there’s a feedback loop: our abilities to learn new things and pay attention and consider thoughtfully opposing viewpoints become atrophied through disuse, making it less likely we’ll try to think critically. And then the problem only gets worse. So, although I agree with Jacoby that “it is past time for a serious national discussion about whether, as a nation, we truly value intellect and rationality”, I wonder — is calling Americans stupid really helping a single goddamn thing?
As best I can tell, the point I was trying to make was that while Americans may not necessarily be getting less intelligent, it seems easier to toss that hat into the ring these days.
Sure, Everybody Loves Raymond ran for like seventeen seasons (or something… I’m so bad at math), but Americans have always had their “low culture” pastimes (as you and Alex have pointed out). So what’s the big deal?
I think that a lot of the argument (not Jacoby’s in particular, but the “Americans are getting less intelligent” point) stems from the fact that while we work/play/exist in a culture where information is available to us almost instantly in a wide variety of media, Americans seem to be choosing the sound-bitten version of that information rather than a more classic medium that may offer more depth. Why read a book about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict when there’s a History Channel special on that topic?
To answer the final question you proposed, not necessarily. The question is obviously divisive, and will put many people on the defensive immediately. That argument will appear every so often, which it will continue to do, but if some form of that question at least makes us look at how we consume information (and perhaps how we prioritize the information we choose to consume), then how bad can that be?
i’d be curious to know who says this: ”we don’t have to read books now that we have Wikipedia!” because it seems to me that folks who can get caught up and sink hours into reading about stuff on wikipedia are not the kind of people who would write off books, but I guess I don’t know. Regardless, I doubt that analytical and creative abilities are as wed to books as you make them out to be.
I agree very much with your point about cable news selling a product to fix people’s insecurities about being ignorant, but I think that this idea can extend to more “elitist” discussions provided to a trendier audience. How many colleges across this country have forums that pit evolution against creationism in an effort to provide all sides of an argument (selling the idea of being well informed of equal but opposing viewpoints), when all this does is bury rational thought deeper. Print media is as guilty as tv in this.
so yes, i too think it should be subject to national debate, but i see little difference in those that watch fox and those that sneer at television while actively disregarding critical thought in what they read. reading versus electronic media is not only a tired battle, but it misses the root of the problem.
this comment wasn’t cogent, and i’m sorry. i’ve been completely distracted by a cat playing in a box.
Yeah, I absolutely agree about your second point, and part of what I was trying to say (but now that I skim over what I wrote, apparently failed entirely to say) was that each news and entertainment niche sells its own image of what’s stupid, what’s snobbishly elitist, and what’s good middle of the road common sense. It’s similar to music — people with taste different with your own are either too pretentious or too blandly mainstream.
The Wikipedia thing was poorly stated on my part — I wasn’t trying to indicate that that’s a certain type of person. My point is more that the information you get from the internet and other electronic media sources IS different than what you get from books in that the internet lends itself to fast-paced, haphazard information that’s filtered heavily by the viewer’s own perception of what’s important. Of course, you CAN read things online critically and methodically (just as you can read books hastily and jumpily) but the nature of the medium lends itself to a more scattered, decontextualized way of absorbing information…which has its own advantages, for that matter. But I really do think print vs. electronic media is a relevant distinction to draw, generalization though it might be. Out of curiosity, what do you think is the root of the problem we’re talking about? I don’t think you can pin the blame entirely on TV by a long shot, but I think it’s a pretty big piece.
This wasn’t cogent either…I’m distracted by close-quarter group living for the first time in awhile.