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n2j3 | 4 months ago

Literacy didn’t just spread knowledge, it narrowed what we recognize as knowledge.

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jessmartin|4 months ago

This! It’s both-and. Literacy has been undeniably good, but we rarely consider the consequences of widespread literacy.

There’s a way of knowing something that can be recalled orally from memory that is different and valuable. But we even measure it using a yardstick for written knowledge (accuracy, breadth, etc).

I believe this overemphasis on written knowledge (really, it’s implicitly a denial that any other type exists) is part of what drives the hysteria about LLMs ending the world. LLM doomerism has to believe that written knowledge is at least the most important if not the only necessary form of knowledge.

diego_moita|4 months ago

And that is a double win, right?

Superstitions should never be considered "knowledge", the same way that stupidity is not intelligence and noise is not information.

IAmBroom|4 months ago

You believe that literacy prevents superstition? I live in a country where millions of literate people post their beliefs in horse worm treatments curing COVID.