Simply stunned by this extraordinarily thoughtful, profound review by Ben Tarnoff in @NewYorker: "Lowry Pressly’s new book . . . defies this pattern. It is a radiantly original contribution to a conversation gravely in need of new thinking."
https://t.co/Gc8yXJOTsV
"Daring gambit on the border of exploitation."
Today's article pick from Damn History, a free newsletter for readers/writers of #popularhistory. Congrats to writer @LowryPressly & @thenation!
Read/subscribe to Damn History: https://t.co/fue2o3nUz1
https://t.co/R2gezrD4JQ
an excerpt from FREE GIFTS in @nplusonemag on social cost as the underbelly of the free gift, and the peculiarity of pollution as "matter out of place" in a system where matter is ordered by price: https://t.co/ndJtVXc84a
There’s been public discourse abt information & privacy, but none I’ve encountered as deeply thoughtful & rooted in broader human context as that which I was delighted to discover in the work of Lowry Pressly. This review of his book, The Right to Oblivion, is likewise phenomenal
Fascinating convo w/ @LowryPressly & @econtalker exploring why privacy isn't just about data and information—it's about spontaneity and depth. Worth a listen! 🎧
https://t.co/qsmvxZ60aT
🆕 Check out today's episode of EconTalk!
@LowryPressly joins @econtalker to explore why privacy goes beyond just secrets or managing information, the need for spontaneity, the significance of moral development, and how we can achieve our full humanity. https://t.co/9GXq9edo3e