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A Good Argument

21 Mar

Yesterday on my run, I listened to last week’s episode of This American Life. It’s called “Save the Day,” and the last act is about the Life Raft Debate at a university in Alabama–basically, the students gather once a year, and professors from various disciplines must convince them that, if they were all on a life raft when the world had been obliterated as we know it, their discipline is the one to save. And it had become more about showmanship than good argument over the years. Until the Devil’s Advocate a few years ago–the person who’s job is to say the student shouldn’t save any of the disciplines–pointed out this fact, and told the students they deserved better. They deserved good arguments, not to be coddled or simply entertained. And he pointed out, too, that a good argument doesn’t have to be boring–it can be funny and entertaining but also engaging on an intellectual level.

It reminded me of a moment in The West Wing when President Bartlet says that if nothing else, they will raise the level of public discourse in the country.

Not to get too political, but this is one of the big reasons I voted for Obama. Because he made good arguments. He didn’t pander, didn’t talk down, and didn’t rely on easy catchphrases and showmanship. I felt that he wanted to engage our minds, he wanted us to think, to form our opinions, regardless of whether we agreed with him or not.

I started to think about this blog post right after listening to This American Life yesterday morning, and it seems particularly timely given tonight’s health care debate.

I think however much we all want to be entertained, we also thirst for a good argument, for the debates, the statements, the information that makes us think. And I can tie it all back into books for children and teens, too. (Of course!) One of the reasons I love working on books for young people is that they have that hunger to know and understand things. A good book opens the world and challenges even while it entertains. It doesn’t talk down, but talks to its audience. It holds that audience in high regard. A good book gives everything, and I think that as a result, all of us and our world give everything back in return. We become engaged with ourselves and with each other.

Emergence & Revision

21 Jul

Actually listened to Radio Lab in a timely matter this week, during a Very Hot run in the park this morning. It was on emergence–how societies can become complex and function even without leaders.

It started off with an amazing visual image of fireflies in Thailand that end up blinking together rather than randomly. Besides “firefly” being one of my favorite words, it also reminded me of the end of Criss Cross, which always warms my heart and makes me feel better about the world.

Someone opened the jar. The lightning bugs knew what to do. They flew out into the night air, every last one. Blinking, “Here I am.”

But besides that, the idea of emergence struck me as one that applied to revising. They talked about how you can’t take one ant out of the ant society and have it work, or how you can’t take one neuron out of the brain and have it contain a whole thought. It’s all in how every ant or every neuron works together. A manuscript is made of individual sentences, but they can’t function alone. A really great revision won’t simply pull out a problem in an individual sentence and fix that, but will see how that sentence fits into the whole, how all of it comes together to form a complex and working story.

Stories and Believing

1 Jul

I’ve taken to listening to podcasts at the gym, and two of my favorites are This American Life (obviously) and Radio Lab. I am not at all orderly or timely about listening to them, so I’m always behind and out of order. The Radio Lab I listened to over the last 2 gyms visits was from January, the “War of the Worlds” episode.

There’s a lot about the topic that’s intriguing, but what I’ve taken away is the question of why people can fall for this sort of thing again and again. After conversation with a psychologist Robert Krulwich said:

“People are suckers for stories; we just cannot help ourselves. . . . The thing is we do go in, we all fall into these stories, he says, it’s just the way we are built. For hundreds of thousands of years, our memories, our friendships, our sense of family, our kinship, we build our identities form stories. Stories that we tell, and stories that we hear.”

We seem to be built to believe in things. Because it’s hopeful. Because who wants to go around not believing? Even if it’s believing in small things, not big ones. We’ll fall for things because we learn so much from the stories that saturate our lives, perhaps. Stories show us that there’s always something to believe in.

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