Blog: Quantum Intelligensia
by munificent

Principle of Coherence in Writing

Interested in a a writers principles 101 interactive site?

Date:   5/2/2005 8:27:06 AM   ( 19 y ) ... viewed 1596 times

An Analysis of Coherence Principles of Composition



The brief essay on this page, "Accounting for Taste," was written by James Gleick, former editor for the New York Times, lecturer at Princeton, and author of three books about how technology affects our lives. (Two of those books were Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award finalists. Excerpts from his most recent book, Faster: The Acceleration of Just About Everything are available online.) Mr. Gleick has graciously given us permission to use his article in this Guide to Grammar and Writing.

Hello, James Gleick," said Amazon.com the other day (click here if you’re someone else). "Take a peek at your brand new music recommendations."

I peeked. Amazon’s computers predicted that I would like the Beastie Boys, Adiemus, Frank Sinatra, Harvey Danger, and the Dave Matthews Band. What an impressive list! All right, I don’t actually care for any of these, but still. It was quite a shot in the dark, considering I’d never been to Amazon’s music department before. This is the way it’s going on the Internet: if marketers want your money and your time and your "eyeballs," they feel they should figure out who you are and what you like.

Not only does their software try to calculate your taste in music by keeping track of the music you buy, it even tries to work out your taste in music from your reading habits. This could be a parlor game: If you like Vladimir Nabokov, maybe you’ll also like Igor Stravinsky? If you like War and Peace, maybe you’ll like the 1812 Overture?
If you like E. L. Doctorow’s Ragtime, maybe you’ll like Scott Joplin’s ragtime?
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest and 10,000 Maniacs?
Consumer Reports and Crash Test Dummies?
Kafka’s "Metamorphosis" and the Beatles?


We like to believe that our souls are our own and there’s no accounting for taste. So it’s disconcerting to find that, on line, there’s suddenly lots of it. Amazon has its BookMatcher, the music store CDnow has its Album Advisor — sooner or later every merchant of just about everything will follow suit, analyzing your private likes and dislikes with "real-time recommendation engines" based on "collaborative filters" and fuzzy logic.
The basic idea is the same everywhere. Say you favor turtlenecks, convertibles, nautical history, bebop, and zinfandel. No doubt you are proud of your rare good taste, but it’s a big world, and somewhere in a million-entry electronic-commerce database are a few other people with the same preferences.
If you knew that your doppelgängers were raving about the latest Mike Leigh movie, wouldn’t you want to give it a look? In the jargon of the collaborative-filter game, these weird pals are your "community" and your "trusted associates." Their taste might be more in tune with yours than the few people you trust in your own small circle of friends.

The whole thing is just a mildly clever database look-up, but maybe it works, at least for some people and some kinds of taste. It has no intelligence about the content of the merchandise — Mozart and Madonna might be flavors of ice cream, for all it knows. It only has the beginnings of what could become a formidable electronic dossier: your purchasing history plus your volunteered comments about what you love and what you hate. At CDnow, for example, a customer can choose buttons for "I own this already" or "Not for me"; the computers, of course, watch and learn.
It’s scary. "Is one’s entire psyche’s most secret landscape really a fairly public thing, given just a few pieces of information?" asks Douglas R. Hofstadter, the cognitive theorist and author of Gödel, Escher, Bach. "If you know that I love Chopin and Bach and am totally cool to Beethoven, can you predict that I love Cole Porter and Fats Waller but am indifferent to Oscar Peterson and Charlie Parker, and hate Elvis Presley?
"What is disturbing, to spell it out, is the idea that one’s taste, which seems like such a personal thing, connected with and determined by one's inmost being, should have, in a way, a mechanically, nearly deterministically, knowable nature."


Maybe we’re not quite knowable at that. And these are computers, so the mistakes they make can look very, very stupid. When they go off the rails in a sensitive area like taste, some people get angry. "The worst thing of all," says one irate customer, Russ Korins, "if you like Third Eye Blind — who sing ‘Semi-Charmed Life,’ that song that goes doo doo doooo, doo doo DOO do, and ‘Graduate,’ a mainstream version of Avenue A rebel rock, screaming, ‘Can I graduate?!’ — then what do they also recommend? The Four Seasons by A. Vivaldi."
At CDnow, they take this sort of thing in stride. "You can’t argue with the customer — they know what they like," says Evan Schwartz, director of product management. "People love to click on ‘Not for me,’ ‘Not for me.’"
When customers click, and especially when they buy, they add to the storehouse of information about that mercurial, irrational, chaotic thing we call taste. As knowledge builds up, maybe the computers will stop recommending Vivaldi to Third Eye Blind fans. Or maybe it will turn out that Vivaldi and Third Eye Blind have some kind of century-bridging affinity, even if no musicologist could say exactly what. Or maybe it’s a moving target, and last year’s Third Eye Blind fans have a different sensibility from this year’s.

You might think of these growing databases as merchandising dossiers. Marketers are keeping a file on you, and if it’s not as tangible or incriminating as your F.B.I. file, it’s too personal for comfort. "These exhaustive lists become much more than mere lists; they act as electronic psychoanalysts," writes David Shenk in his recent book, Data Smog.
Under pressure from privacy advocates, most companies in the collaborative-filtering business pledge not to share information without customers’ consent. Even if the trail of your reading history leads your bookseller to conclude that you’re on the verge of buying a new red Porsche Boxster or a blue Gap dress, Amazon promises not to tell the car companies or the special prosecutor.
Still, if we have learned anything, we know that information tends to get around. Do I really want the whole Web to know I’m a Beastie Boys, Frank Sinatra, Harvey Danger kind of guy? I didn’t even know that myself.

9th-
Note; At the included link - the page allows you analysis of the principles of coherence in James Gleick's writing style. It is in essence an interactive page for improving your writing skills. Near as I can read, there are a lot of aspiring writers Bloging on Curezone.

Although I like the topic of Amazon's all- knowing book buying suggestions, I find Amazon is pretty accurate in my reading tastes based on past purchases! BUT, I have never purchased any of their suggestions, either. So with me, it's a wash!

Add This Entry To Your CureZone Favorites!

Print this page
Email this page
DISCLAIMER / WARNING   Alert Webmaster


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with https://www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - Advertise - Stats

Copyright 1999 - 2024  curezone.com

0.032 sec, (2)

Back to blog!
 
Add Blog To Favorites!
 
Add This Entry To Favorites!

Comments (25 of 117):
Re: Psychic Reading Joshu… 23 mon
Re: Psychic Reading dnash 9 y
Re: Well he does n… popoe 16 y
Re: Archetype Quiz: popoe 16 y
Re: Archetype Quiz: mzery 16 y
here's the origina… natha… 17 y
Paul Bauer's Dream… santa… 17 y
Re: Well he does n… BodyT… 18 y
I love holosync ren 18 y
Re: Yes, I guess i… kermi… 18 y
Yes, I guess i sho… munif… 18 y
Is that really you… kermi… 18 y
You are on the cut… kermi… 18 y
Ditto C 9thbody 18 y
Thank you, I have … 9thbo… 18 y
will follow advice… Wrenn 18 y
Yes, I saw! are yo… 9thbo… 18 y
4 links in the abo… Wrenn 18 y
Are you 39810? or … 9thbo… 18 y
Why is it with you… 9thbo… 18 y
Well it's an aprro… 9thbo… 18 y
No Theo I don't he… 9thbo… 18 y
Will the real ah p… 9thbo… 18 y
perhaps a poem... … drofi… 18 y
You posted 4 mess… Wrenn 18 y
All Comments (117)

Blog Entries (12 of 267):
Principle of Coherence in Wr…  19 y
This one may have been mispo…  19 y
Quantum Healing  19 y
Moral Aestheticism  19 y
Psychic Reading  19 y
Nemesis and You-The Magician…  19 y
Chaotic Ideology  19 y
Tension of Opposites  19 y
Excerpt from 'The Tigress'  19 y
Song, philosophy, auditory, …  19 y
The Tigress  19 y
The Lioness-No protector Her…  19 y
All Entries (267)

Blogs by munificent (10):
Yoga Path  18 y  (396)
Cold Water Blog  18 y  (269)
Spirit of Money, Financial Fl…  18 y  (249)
Leadership  18 y  (67)
BaBaGee Blog  18 y  (16)
Breathwork  19 y  (16)
Desire  18 y  (5)
Sacred Sex  18 y  (4)
Apothegm  18 y  (3)
Breathwork for wholeness  19 y  (3)

Similar Blogs (10 of 185):
Son of Truth of Self  by Chef JeM  3 mon
My Enchanted Garden…  by Chef JeM  4 mon
ABCs of Conscious E…  by luckman  5 mon
The Role of English…  by AlisaSerikova  6 mon
Dreaming a New Real…  by lfire  15 mon
My Human Design  by Chef JeM  18 mon
Cheeta: Cultivate H…  by Chef JeM  20 mon
Iotwireless  by iotwireless  22 mon
These Auspicious Ti…  by Chef-doctor Jemichel  23 mon
Neuro-Balance Thera…  by neurobalance5  26 mon
All Blogs (1,019)

Back to blog!
 

Black Walnut Tincture
Hulda Clark Cleanse Kits