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    « Blogs: "Insignificant" | Main | Crimson-Faced »

    January 17, 2005

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    Jon Husband

    Thomas Homer-Dixon recently reviewed Blink ! (hehe ... I typo'ed Bloink !) in the Toronto Globe & Mail Books Section, and said much the same thing. Homer-Dixon wrote the book The Ingenuity Gap, which was very serious and thought-provoking.

    A thoughtful and interesting review, I found. I don't know if it's accessible online.

    Jon Husband

    THD also suggested. I think, that reducung the issues to our abilities to come to decisions quickly isn't the whole story .. and that ignoring facts and other key information in service of relying on our abilities to "blink !" can indeed be facile and might tend to fit all to easily into our environment of seeking quick answers and responses where more thoughful and deeply analytic approaches would better serve the issue.

    Tom Guarriello

    I'll try to find the review, Jon. I'm only 75 or so pages into Blink, and find it good storytelling. I'm a phenomenological psychologist by training, so I've spent many years thinking about explicating the structures of lived-experience, most of which is "lived" rather than "known." Part of the problem is the models we've constructed of cognition, and I'm not an advocate of the "complex computer" model that Gladwell seems to advocate (so far, in my reading of the book). Becoming infatuated with "rapid cognition" at the expense of analysis is as simplistic as the reverse.

    Jon Husband

    The link to THD's review is available on my most recent blog post.

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