> the amount of information on the web itself dwarfed anything available in books
Yes but that information has turned out to be largely shallow and meaningless noise. For example, if you're searching for anything of substantial importance - something like "why do I feel an aching sense of spiritual emptiness" - all you get are blog posts citing other blog posts with titles such as "7 ways to feel more happy and boost your self esteem, with pictures."
Books are more authoritative than websites. In an age where folks complain of a post-fact society, we should return to books as a source of confidence in absolute truth.
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[ 3.9 ms ] story [ 20.7 ms ] threadYes but that information has turned out to be largely shallow and meaningless noise. For example, if you're searching for anything of substantial importance - something like "why do I feel an aching sense of spiritual emptiness" - all you get are blog posts citing other blog posts with titles such as "7 ways to feel more happy and boost your self esteem, with pictures."
Books are more authoritative than websites. In an age where folks complain of a post-fact society, we should return to books as a source of confidence in absolute truth.