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A Point of View: Does more information mean we know less?

We pay a price for all the information we consume these days - and it's knowing

less, says Alain de Botton.

One of the more embarrassing difficulties of our age is that most of us have

quite lost the ability to concentrate, to sit still and do nothing other than

focus on certain basic truths of the human condition.

The fault lies in part with our new gadgets. Thanks to our machines, of which

we are generally so proud, the past decade has seen an unparalleled assault on

our capacity to fix our minds steadily on anything. To sit still and think

without succumbing to an anxious reach for a machine has become almost

impossible.

But we can't just blame the machines. There is a deeper issue at stake - the

feeling, so rife in modern secular culture, that we must constantly keep up

with what is new.

The obsession with current events is relentless. We are made to feel that at

any point, somewhere on the globe, something may occur to sweep away old

certainties. Something that if we failed to learn about it instantaneously,

could leave us wholly unable to comprehend ourselves or our fellow human

beings.

Novelty

The news occupies in the secular sphere much the same position of authority

that the liturgical calendar has in the religious one. Its main dispatches

track the canonical hours with uncanny precision. Matins have here been

transubstantiated into the breakfast bulletin and Vespers into the evening

report.

Start Quote

Alain de Botton

Though technology has rendered it more or less absurd to feel gratitude over

owning a book, there remain psychological advantages in rarity

End Quote

The prestige of the news is founded on the unstated assumption that our lives

are forever poised on the verge of a critical transformation, thanks to the two

driving forces of modern history - politics and technology. The earth must

therefore be latticed with fibre-optic cables, the waiting rooms of its

airports filled with monitors, and the public squares of cities ribboned with

the chase of stock prices.

Contrast this with how religions think of what is important. For the faiths

there is seldom any need to alter insights or harvest them incrementally

through news bulletins. The great stable truths can be written down on vellum

or carved into stone rather than swilling malleably across hand-held screens.

For 1.6 billion Buddhists, there has been no news of world-altering

significance to their faith since 483 BC. For their Christian counterparts, the

critical events of history came to a close around Easter Sunday in 30 AD, while

for the Jews the line was drawn a little after the destruction of the Second

Temple by the Roman general Titus, in 70 AD.

Even if we do not concur with the specific messages that religions schedule for

us, we can still concede that we pay a price for our promiscuous involvement

with novelty. We occasionally sense the nature of our loss at the end of an

evening, as we finally silence the TV after watching a report on the opening of

a new railway or the tetchy conclusion to a debate over immigration.

It is then we might realise that - in attempting to follow the narrative of

man's ambitious progress towards a state of technological and political

perfection - we have sacrificed an opportunity to remind ourselves of eternal,

quieter truths which we know about in theory, and forget to live by in

practice.

Fasting

Rather than letting us constantly catch up on "news", religions prefer to keep

reminding us of the same old things, according to strictly timetabled routines.

The Book of Common Prayer, for instance, decrees that its subscribers should

always gather at 6.30pm in the evening on the 26th Sunday after Trinity, as the

candlelight throws shadows against the chapel walls, to listen to a reading

from the second section of the Book of Baruch. Just as on the 25th day of

January they must always think of the Conversion of Saint Paul, and on the

morning of the 2nd of July reflect on the Visitation of the Blessed Virgin Mary

and imbibe the moral lessons of Job.

TV remote control Machines dominate most homes

How free secular society leaves us by contrast. It expects that we will

spontaneously find our way to the ideas that matter to us and gives us weekends

off for consumption and recreation. Like science, it privileges discovery. It

associates repetition with punitive shortage, presenting us with an incessant

stream of novelty.

For example, we are enticed to go to the cinema to see a newly released film,

which ends up moving us to an exquisite pitch of sensitivity, sorrow and

excitement. We leave the theatre vowing to reconsider our entire lives in light

of the values shown on screen, and to purge ourselves of our decadence and

haste.

And yet by the following evening, after a day of meetings and aggravations, our

cinematic experience is well on its way towards obliteration. Just like so much

else which once impressed us, but which we soon enough came to discard - the

majesty of the ruins of Ephesus, the view from Mount Sinai, that poetry recital

in Edinburgh, the feelings we had after putting down Tolstoy's Death of Ivan

Ilyich.

In the end, all modern artists share something of the bathetic condition of

chefs, for whereas their works may not themselves erode, the responses of their

audiences will. We honour the power of culture, but rarely admit with what

scandalous ease we forget its individual monuments. Three months after we

finish reading a masterpiece, we may struggle to remember a single scene or

phrase from it.

Wisdom

Our favourite secular books do not alert us to how inadequate a one-off linear

reading of them will prove. They do not identify the particular days of the

year on which we ought to reconsider them as the holy books do, in the latter

case with 200 others around us and an organ playing in the background.

Bible The bible was one of the few books people used to have in the house

There is arguably as much wisdom to be found in the stories of Anton Chekhov as

in the Gospels, but collections of the former are not bound with calendars

reminding readers to schedule a regular review of their insights.

We are reluctant to admit that we are simply swamped with information and have

lost the ability to make sense of it. For example, a moderately industrious

undergraduate pursuing a degree in the humanities at the beginning of the 21st

Century might run through 800 books before graduation day.

By comparison, a wealthy English family in 1250 would have counted itself

fortunate to have three books in its possession, this modest library consisting

of a Bible, a collection of prayers and a compendium of lives of the saints -

these nevertheless costing as much as a cottage.

Elevate

If we lament our book-swamped age, it is because we sense that it is not by

reading more, but by deepening and refreshing our understanding of a few

volumes that we best develop our intelligence and our sensitivity.

We feel guilty for all that we have not yet read, but overlook how much better

read we already are than St Augustine or Dante, thereby ignoring that our

problem lies squarely with our manner of absorption rather than with the extent

of our consumption.

We are often urged to celebrate not only that there are so many books to hand,

but also that they are so inexpensive. Yet neither of these circumstances

should necessarily be deemed unambiguous advantages. Consider the immensely

costly and painstaking craftsmanship behind a pre-Gutenberg Bible - a product

of a society which wished to elevate individual books into objects of

extraordinary beauty so as to emphasise their spiritual and moral significance.

Though technology has rendered it more or less absurd to feel gratitude over

owning a book, there remain psychological advantages in rarity. We can revere

the care that goes into making a Jewish Sefer Torah, the sacred scroll of the

book of Moses, a copy of which will take a single scribe a year and a half to

write out by hand, on a parchment made from the hide of a ceremonially

slaughtered goat which has been soaked for nine days.

We should stand to swap a few of our swiftly disintegrating paperbacks for

volumes that would proclaim, though the weight and heft of their materials, the

grace of their typography and the beauty of their illustrations, our desire for

their contents to assume a permanent place in our hearts.

The need to diet, well accepted in relation to food, should be brought to bear

on our relation to knowledge, people, and ideas. Our minds, no less than our

bodies, require periods of fasting.