The New Yorker fallacy
June 23rd, 2006
The New Yorker fallacy: “The belief that absolutely anything, if reported on in exhaustive detail and presented in glossy prose, will fascinate.”
True enough, but it’s still a consistently excellent magazine.
A year-round Davos of the mind, written since 1999 by Lance Knobel
The New Yorker fallacy: “The belief that absolutely anything, if reported on in exhaustive detail and presented in glossy prose, will fascinate.”
True enough, but it’s still a consistently excellent magazine.
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