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Celerity

(55,578 posts)
Thu Jul 9, 2026, 10:23 PM 21 hrs ago

The End of Reading Is Here

Optimists once believed that universal literacy was inevitable. Now it seems that the age of reading might be a short anomaly in human history.

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/2026/08/reading-crisis-postliterate-age/687618/

https://archive.ph/mQTYi


Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Wordsworth Editions.

Twenty-three hundred years ago, the legend goes, King Ptolemy I of Egypt asked his court adviser to assemble a comprehensive collection of the world’s written works. Ptolemy, who had served under Alexander the Great, envisioned a library that would safeguard the sum total of humanity’s knowledge. His successors inherited this mandate. Royal forces ransacked every ship that arrived at Alexandria, searching for scrolls. These were stored at the Mouseion, a shrine to the Muses modeled after Aristotle’s Lyceum. Aristotle’s own book collection was said to be among the holdings.

Much of the history of the Library of Alexandria has been lost. But we know that it was the site of many of the premodern world’s greatest intellectual achievements. The king paid scholars to live and work in the library, and the collection was available to anyone “eager to study, an encouragement for the entire city to gain wisdom,” a visiting Greek rhetorician wrote. It was at the library that Eratosthenes calculated Earth’s circumference and Zenodotus edited the earliest manuscripts of Homer’s epics. Euclid, who wrote the Elements of geometry, may have studied there as well.

This run of scholarship would not last. By 400 C.E., the library had disappeared. Many scholars regard its destruction as the greatest loss of knowledge in history and the beginning of the Dark Ages. Historians have spent centuries parsing fragments of papyrus in an effort to understand what went wrong. Traditionally, the answer was believed to be war. During the Siege of Alexandria, in 48 B.C.E., Julius Caesar started a fire that incinerated at least 40,000 scrolls. The library survived in diminished form until the fourth century C.E., when followers of the archbishop of Alexandria sacked the pagan temple that housed the remaining manuscripts.

But contemporary historians tend to dismiss the importance of these dramatic incidents in favor of a more mundane cause of death: negligence. Maintaining the collection was an enormous expense. Humidity, mice, and insects slowly ate away at the papyrus scrolls. Scribes had to continually copy old texts before they deteriorated and became illegible. Eventually, the challenges of maintaining the library became greater than the will to preserve it. “It is not that the disappearance of a library led to a dark age, nor that its survival would have improved those ages,” the classics scholar Roger Bagnall has written. The fact that the library was allowed to die showed that the dark age had already arrived.

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The End of Reading Is Here (Original Post) Celerity 21 hrs ago OP
Its pretty sad..... Bayard 20 hrs ago #1
... Solly Mack 20 hrs ago #2
The only souvinier I bought when I visited Jefferson's Monticello dflprincess 20 hrs ago #3
I love to read GenThePerservering 17 hrs ago #4

Bayard

(30,838 posts)
1. Its pretty sad.....
Thu Jul 9, 2026, 10:38 PM
20 hrs ago

You never see a kid reading a book anymore. Its all about the phones--like many adults.

Solly Mack

(97,531 posts)
2. ...
Thu Jul 9, 2026, 10:51 PM
20 hrs ago

I can't think of anything to say that wouldn't come out sounding rude or mean.

I love to read.

dflprincess

(29,481 posts)
3. The only souvinier I bought when I visited Jefferson's Monticello
Thu Jul 9, 2026, 11:11 PM
20 hrs ago

was a magnet with his quote "I cannot live without books." Bought one for my niece as well who is also a big reader.

GenThePerservering

(4,111 posts)
4. I love to read
Fri Jul 10, 2026, 02:21 AM
17 hrs ago

and often read books on my mobile - saves the trouble of carrying a lot of paper around.

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