Thursday, April 22, 2010
An Earth Day Rant
There's a logical fallacy called argumentum ad novitatem or the appeal to novelty, i.e. if something is new and clever it must be worthy of attention. It's the fallacy that the mainstream media inevitability falls into when discussing bicycles. Witness an article in the LA Times, Going Beyond the Basic Bike, wherein we learned about the treadmill bike pictured above--a bargain at $2,011--the kids can use it in a science fair project to simulate inefficient energy transfer! But they'll also have to bust out the Foucault and Baudrillard to explain how a simulation of running becomes a means of locomotion. [Update: a reader points out that the treadmill bike is a joke--kinda proves my point considering that the LA Times took it seriously.]
The article goes on to, I suspect, regurgitate a press release the Tribune Company received from the inventors of the StreetStrider, "Only $1,699" with "special financing available." I bet the folks at Goldman Sachs are busy packaging that financing right now.
Then we have the RowBike, created by Scott Olson, "inventor of the Rollerblade," the RowBike is yours for a cool $1,188.
Memo to the Times: I can guarantee that anyone foolish enough to buy any of these things will soon relegate them to the dusty rear of the garage along with other late night infomercial impulse purchases.Now, can we please, for once, have a review of a practical, inexpensive commuter bike in a mainstream publication? Even the bicycling magazines get caught in the novelty of $30,000 carbon fiber road bikes. Can we treat the bike reviews with the same level of seriousness and utility that we do cars and computer reviews? Can we drop all the other "green" argumentum ad novitatem, such as endless stories about vertical vegetable gardens and algae energy schemes while we're at it?
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