TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Johann Hari’s Stolen Ideas

54 pointsby samglover97over 3 years ago

7 comments

mellosoulsover 3 years ago
This review seemed rather vitriolic and contributes - in mood at least - to the angry and graceless culture of unforgiveness that seems to dominate some online discourse.<p>I don&#x27;t know how fair it is on his current work and I was never a fan of Hari&#x27;s own pre-reveal sanctimoniousness and obviously some would claim there is an ironic justice in this sort of thing<p>Personally though I find it all really unpleasant and would prefer a critique that assumed a good faith attempt by Hari to undertake his life&#x27;s second chapter with more integrity.
评论 #29859510 未加载
评论 #29859222 未加载
JasonFruitover 3 years ago
From this article, it doesn&#x27;t sound like Hari&#x27;s books are anything unusual: most topical, with-the-times popular non-fiction is poorly sourced and relies on assertions instead of scholarly or scientific studies — and that&#x27;s fine! It&#x27;s okay to have an idea, think about it hard, and write about it, even if you can&#x27;t prove that your thesis reflects reality. It&#x27;s better and more worthy of respect if you can, of course, but what Hari&#x27;s doing right now isn&#x27;t wrongdoing; it&#x27;s just expressing opinions that many people find interesting and insightful.<p>There&#x27;s certainly nothing to justify the title of this article, at any rate.
评论 #29859955 未加载
benjaminwoottonover 3 years ago
I didn’t know this back story, but I thought Lost Connections was very insightful, and he is very credible in his PR:<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;open.spotify.com&#x2F;episode&#x2F;5vGQgHxUDx2KMhy34N2959?si=jo55qaK8SHGhyxSGLZT3hg" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;open.spotify.com&#x2F;episode&#x2F;5vGQgHxUDx2KMhy34N2959?si=j...</a><p>I always thought he had a strange way of being interviewed where he cites sources and studies for almost everything he says. I thought this was commendable at the time rather than putting a thin veneer on other peoples ideas. Maybe it was due to the past accusation of plagiarism.
评论 #29860857 未加载
gnicholasover 3 years ago
This is the first I&#x27;ve heard of Hari&#x27;s ethical lapses. Wish it had been mentioned in the recent HN thread [1] on his new book!<p>1: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=29768539" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=29768539</a>
coldteaover 3 years ago
&gt;<i>But that’s all anecdotal: does Hari actually present any evidence that shortening attention spans is a society-wide problem?</i><p>No. Then again he doesn&#x27;t present much evidence that the sun is hot either...
pkrotichover 3 years ago
The review is simply too salty - exactly what you&#x27;ll expect from an academic. Unless you want to read academic papers all your life - there&#x27;s space for such books just like there&#x27;s space for poetry or even the bible for heaven&#x27;s sake.
joering2over 3 years ago
&gt; then reinvented himself as a non-fiction author and highly successful TED Talk speaker.<p>Unsure how much of prestige it is these days to be a TED speaker. I lost respect to them long ago, and stopped listening to their talks once I realize how much they filter, so you are never going to be sure whether you watch piece that is neutral, or some form of hit-piece or one-sided rant. Just recently they decided to remove Theranos&#x27; COE Elizabeth Holmes speech; it was a great talk, even given by person that (years later) been found guilty of fraud.<p>I guess what I&#x27;m getting at, is that if you create a bullhorn for interesting people, don&#x27;t start being politically correct; otherwise you may lose credibility. And audience.