the Forty-Second Parallel

Hello, I'm Matt Grayson and this is my website. Feel free to learn more about me or just browse the archives. If you feel so inclined, you can also drop me a line. Thanks for stopping by!

Archives for January 2008

2 entries were found in the archives.

The Battle for Your Attention

Posted 25 JAN 2008 | Comments

Khoi Vinh, reacting to the recently updated Apple TV, conscientiously objects to the war in our living rooms:

I'm already subscribing to digital cable television ... and Netflix, and I have a backlog of DVDs that I actually own but that I never seem to have the opportunity to watch. ... What's available at my fingertips today is already way more television than a healthy person really needs access to.

What 'd prefer, I think, is to get out of my house more often or, failing that, I'd like to actually get through more of these books piling up on my coffee table that I can't seem to find time for. Say what you will, but yes, I do intend to waste my life away on reading and experiencing things in the real world. Having an Apple TV doesn't fit into that plan.

His reaction mirrors my own experience, especially as our family grows.

The Independent Folly

Posted 23 JAN 2008 | Comments

And this judgment itself implies another: independent voters are better, in the sense of being more reflective and less ideological, than voters who identify themselves strongly with one or the other of the two major parties. The assumption is that if we were all independent voters, the political process would be in much better shape.

This seems to me to be a dubious proposition, especially if the word "political" in the phrase "political process" is taken seriously. Those who yearn for government without politics always invoke abstract truths and moral visions (the good life, the fair society, the just commonwealth) with which no one is likely to disagree because they have no content. But sooner rather than later someone gives these abstractions content, and when that happens, definitional disputes break out immediately, and after definitional disputes come real disputes, the taking of sides, the applying of labels (both the self-identifying kind and the accusing kind) and, pretty soon, the demonization of the other.

Stanley Fish