(Also, is my phrasing that bad? I thought I wrote it pretty well. :()
Well, I’m glad you wrote it, but I’m not the one complaining that we produce too much text.
if it were, we would expect there to be a lifetime-length canon optimizing your esthetics-per-work count, with occasional tweaks (deletions & additions) by specialists when some work is realized to not be very good or just exceeded by some unincluded work.
I think you’re underestimating long tail effects. There is a sense in which we can say that some authors are much better than some others, but people have extremely specific tastes, too: no one canon will suffice, not even canons for particular genres and subgenres. Consider that I like the particular philosophical style of Greg Egan; giving me a list of top “hard science fiction” won’t help me. Or consider that one of my favorite short stories ever is Scott Aaronson’s “On Self-Delusion and Bounded Rationality.” Now, Scott Aaronson isn’t a professional fiction writer; I don’t even think that story was even conventionally published in an official fiction venue; it’s not going in any accepted canon. But why should I care? It’s going in my canon. Or consider that there’s a lot of work on very specific topics that I have reason to believe doesn’t exist. So I’ll have to create it. Even if most of you wouldn’t understand or wouldn’t care; well, I’m not living for your sake. Some clever person updated Warhol, you know: “In the future, everyone will be famous to fifteen people.”
So this would fall under the ‘externalities’ category—people writing novels become better people for it?
Consider that I like the particular philosophical style of Greg Egan; giving me a list of top “hard science fiction” won’t help me.
This sounds like an acquired taste; if you only came to like Egan’s style because it exists, and you would’ve come to like some style even if Egan had never been...
It’s not so much “doing this stuff will make you a better person” as much as, “the entire point of this being-a-person business is doing stuff, and it might as well be this as not.”
Well, OK. If writing books are leisure activities, then why does it need any protection or subsidies? You don’t hear many panicked cries that there is a papier-mâché deficiency which needs state intervention.
“No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money.”
Well, I’m glad you wrote it, but I’m not the one complaining that we produce too much text.
I think you’re underestimating long tail effects. There is a sense in which we can say that some authors are much better than some others, but people have extremely specific tastes, too: no one canon will suffice, not even canons for particular genres and subgenres. Consider that I like the particular philosophical style of Greg Egan; giving me a list of top “hard science fiction” won’t help me. Or consider that one of my favorite short stories ever is Scott Aaronson’s “On Self-Delusion and Bounded Rationality.” Now, Scott Aaronson isn’t a professional fiction writer; I don’t even think that story was even conventionally published in an official fiction venue; it’s not going in any accepted canon. But why should I care? It’s going in my canon. Or consider that there’s a lot of work on very specific topics that I have reason to believe doesn’t exist. So I’ll have to create it. Even if most of you wouldn’t understand or wouldn’t care; well, I’m not living for your sake. Some clever person updated Warhol, you know: “In the future, everyone will be famous to fifteen people.”
Um, sure, although I’d phrase it differently. It’s not so much “doing this stuff will make you a better person” as much as, “the entire point of this being-a-person business is doing stuff, and it might as well be this as not.”
This sounds like an acquired taste; if you only came to like Egan’s style because it exists, and you would’ve come to like some style even if Egan had never been...
Well, OK. If writing books are leisure activities, then why does it need any protection or subsidies? You don’t hear many panicked cries that there is a papier-mâché deficiency which needs state intervention.