atw: Re: Tell the U.S. Marines to Getz Tuft [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]

Howard.Silcock@xxxxxxxxxxx:
On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 17:10:24 +1000,  you wrote:
> I see we are reviving the 'culture wars' again. It's interesting how people 
> addicted to
> the 'scientific' viewpoint are so ready to write off people's emotions 
> because they
> don't fit into their models.  We can't quantify or measure what it means to 
> 'fall in
> love' or to enjoy something, so anyone who mentions these aspects is abused 
> as lacking
> 'scientific rigour' and the concepts are denigrated as not worthy of 
> attention.
>

No. I'm certainly not saying that.  Liking something is fine.  I like sugar, 
certain types 
of bread, certain fats,  and a whole host of other things that taste nice in my 
food.
I even used to like smoking cigarettes, once.  And I still like beer and wine.
But if I accumulate any or all of these things without regard to the overall 
effect they
are having on say, my main purpose of staying alive and healthy, I'd be stupid. 
 
If I avoid these dangers am I similarly "brainwashed" ?

Whatever other people have in mind for nice appearing documents and web pages,
I regard my main purpose in writing is not to make others "feel good" so much 
as to communicate
information.  Of course, if I can do both, that would be even better !  But my 
general experience
is that people who gain understanding they otherwise mightn't have had, 
actually feel good too .

For me, this is not a culture war -- it is a disagreement over whether you want 
to communicate information
effectively OR to have certain types of beautifully shaped text (which may 
indeed look nice to your audience) in the face of evidence that one form of the 
latter can actually PRECLUDE the former to a large degree, 
whether they look nice or not ! 

>
> However, if I 'really like' a font, or even fall in love with it, I don't 
> like being
> told that that experience is not worth anything. Efficiency isn't everything, 
> though
> some people seem to be so brainwashed by rationalism that they really believe 
> that.
>
The experience is lovely. Fine. Have a lovely time with that !  It's like 
wearing fish-net stockings:
if you like it, go for it.   Some people quite like that too.

But if you're a male and want to do it in a formal address to the United 
Nations,
I'd suggest you'd be starting with a communication problem that it might be 
impossible to overcome.
  
I'm actually quite fond of some nice sans serif fonts.
And I quite like some poetry.
But I think Tech writing is distinguishable from Poetry.

Is it so teddibly teddibly low-brow to suggest comprehension comes first ?   Is 
this really
"rationalism's brainwashing " ?   Gawdelpus!


--Peter M

 

 

 


 









> Admit that your 'scientific studies' only tell us part of the story and you 
> demonstrate
> the real 'open mind' that scientists like to think they have.
>
> Oh dear, Michael G is going to hate me for sending this!
>
> Howard
>
>
> Peter Martin <peterm_5@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent by: austechwriter-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> 24/10/2007 04:15 PM
> Please respond to
> austechwriter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
>
> To
>
> <austechwriter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, <austechwriter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> cc
>
>
> Subject
>
> atw: Re: Tell the U.S. Marines to Getz Tuft [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]
>
>
> Michael Lewis:
> On Wed, 24 Oct 2007 15:37:00 +1000,  you wrote:
>> Peter Martin:
>>
>>> Every time this topic comes up, (as it does regularly) I run a pile of 
>>> Google and
>>> other searches looking for something that updates Wheildon.   I've yet to 
>>> find
>>> anything that approaches his work.   But <sigh> here goes again...    
>>> Anyone got an
>>> alternative yet ?
>>>
>>>
>> Not me. In fact, even Karen Schriver (_Dynamics in Document Design_, Wiley, 
>> 1997)
>> relies chiefly on readers' aesthetic preferences. She does indicate that 
>> serif body
>> text "may" be more "readable", but -- quite legitimately -- suggests that 
>> cultural
>> and other factors might be at work.
>>
>
> Yeah but sorry, we could all die "wondering".   What people say they like and 
> what they
> actually take in are very often completely different matters.   Used to be 
> audience
> surveys said TV viewers "like" documentaries, but that "liking" doesn't turn 
> up in the
> general figures on
> what they actually watch.  Probably that's still the case.
>
> Wheildon at least did a series of surveys using scientific method, as opposed 
> to "feel
> good"
> airy fairy stuff.      He found that for BODY typeface, comprehension levels 
> were up to
> 3 times
> higher for serif typeface.   That to me spells something an awful lot more 
> important
> than either the infinitely vague "aesthestic preference" studies or even 
> vaguer
> speculative suggestion  that cultural differences may or may not be at work.  
> (They're
> almost certainly at work,
> but who can say how and where and to what extent etc if the simplest tests 
> aren't
> done?) Until there's some methodology, this is an Angels-dancing-on-end-of-a 
> pin area.
>
>> I've often wondered whether the typography of the books children use while 
>> learning
>> to read might influence the outcome.
>>
>
> Interesting speculation.  Why not now check around and find one major English 
> newspaper
> that uses sans serif typeface as the font type in their new body copy ?   (cf
> classified ads, which
> are paid for by the inch/centimeter). Check women's magazines and their body 
> copy.
> Check the last ten books you read as an adult.   Hmm is this cultural or did 
> these
> people find something out a long time ago ?
>
>>
>> David Whitbread (_The Design Manual_, UNSW Press, 2001) suggests that 
>> serif/sans-
>> serif is the wrong question -- different typefaces of different styles excel 
>> at
>> different applications.
>>
> Yeah but did David Whitbread actually do any tests to say what excels where 
> and to what
> extent ?   Or is he just speculating in the net wilderness too ?   Where are 
> the
> readership
> studies and statistics on information take up for "difference styles" ?
>
> Wheildon does say that that the font difference is not marked in things like
> headlines...
>
> But he points out (as any newspaper sub knows) that all-capital headings are 
> hard to
> read.  (The Sydney Morning Herald used to have a rule that at least 3 
> sub-editors had
> to check the wording of the daily banner poster -- usually in all-caps -- 
> because more
> first-draft spelling mistakes occurred there per word than in any other 
> section of the
> paper.)
>
> And wide sections of body type can also affect comprehension. And this was 
> one variable
> also tested with basic methodology.
>
>> Coincidentally, I'll be using passages on precisely this issue from 
>> precisely these
>> books (and others) as illustrations in my presentation at the ASTC (NSW) 
>> conference
>> on Friday.
>>
>
> I hope you'll include some basic comprehension test results somewhere from 
> someone.
>
> Otherwise, it's just a religious issue:  (i.e, in the "My contemplative navel 
> gazing
> speculation
> is better than yours " etc...)
>
> --Peter M
>
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