@ Caledonian: eh? But why would the ability to suspend one’s social-operations module at will make it boring to look at stories while using that module? And in what sense is one seeing them “directly” when one stops treating them as simulated social interactions?
Perhaps “learning” is the wrong word. But “recognition” seems too restrictive to capture everything that makes a good story good. There’s also surprise—when an author uses the reader’s capacity for recognition against them. Surely you admit that this is pretty much the life-blood of storytelling. And, for that matter, it strikes me that it probably can teach you something—about your own inferential dispositions, if nothing else.
@ Caledonian: eh? But why would the ability to suspend one’s social-operations module at will make it boring to look at stories while using that module? And in what sense is one seeing them “directly” when one stops treating them as simulated social interactions?
Perhaps “learning” is the wrong word. But “recognition” seems too restrictive to capture everything that makes a good story good. There’s also surprise—when an author uses the reader’s capacity for recognition against them. Surely you admit that this is pretty much the life-blood of storytelling. And, for that matter, it strikes me that it probably can teach you something—about your own inferential dispositions, if nothing else.