Where we go to let new ideas take flight
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One aspect of the terrorist attacks in Brussels last month was so obvious as to go largely unremarked: They struck the city鈥檚 airport. Air travel is such an essential part of modern life that the classic list of terrorists鈥 鈥渟oft targets鈥 naturally includes airports.聽
The attacks have brought renewed relevance to a recent essay by Nathan Heller in called 鈥淎ir Head: How aviation made the modern mind.鈥
The piece riffs on a new book by Christopher Schaberg, 鈥淭he End of Airports.鈥 Its main idea seems to be that digital technology obviates much need for travel. Mr. Heller quotes Mr. Schaberg: 鈥淚n a world where social networking can facilitate revolutions, and where connections happen as easily online as off, it seems inevitable that moving hundreds of bodies around in large vessels will go out of fashion.鈥
It may seem inevitable, but it also seems not to be happening: Heller says that the number of people flying increased from 100 million people in 1960 to , despite the 鈥渁dvent of the mobile Web and the intensification of terror-inspired travel constraints.鈥
predicts 3.8 billion passengers for 2016.
Aviation is a modern industry 鈥 it鈥檚 just not modern the way your phone is modern. 鈥淭he airplane seems to hail from the same era as your old dishwasher, which conked out last year,鈥 Heller writes, imagining a typical trip.
Yet that old plane can provide some new insights. 鈥淭he battle between jet planes and smartphones isn鈥檛 about speed or glamour,鈥 Heller writes. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about ways of knowing.鈥
In a 2013 piece in on 鈥淭he 50 Greatest Breakthroughs Since the Wheel,鈥 James Fallows 鈥 a pilot himself, by the way 鈥 noted that the airplane 鈥渕ade possible an entirely new form of human movement 鈥 and, perhaps as important, an unprecedented way of seeing and understanding the Earth.鈥
Heller, however, seems to be interested in more on-the-ground kinds of knowing. There is no substitute for 鈥渆ncounter thought,鈥 his term for the 鈥渨ay of processing the world which grew from easy geographic leaps and happenstantial connections,鈥 which aviation facilitates. The Internet, meanwhile, he dismisses as 鈥渁 vast, interactive museum engineered by curators.鈥
Along with insights on 鈥渆ncounter thought,鈥 Heller has some observations on what often results from such encounters: pieces of writing. Describing himself as a fearful but addicted flier, he writes, 鈥淎 part of me is sure I鈥檒l die at every takeoff, yet I need to feel that panic and lift or I鈥檓 hopeless. Flight is the best metaphor for writing that I know.鈥
I know that lift. Those of us who think our problems through with a pen in hand know the moment of clarity that comes when a solution emerges from the scribbles. And the false starts fall out of our thought the way the earth seems to fall away beneath a departing aircraft as it soars up to the clouds.