文章领域的形态
The Shape of the Essay Field
June 2025
An essay has to tell people something they don’t already know. But there are three different reasons people might not know something, and they yield three very different kinds of essays.
One reason people won’t know something is if it’s not important to know. That doesn’t mean it will make a bad essay. For example, you might write a good essay about a particular model of car. Readers would learn something from it. It would add to their picture of the world. For a handful of readers it might even spur some kind of epiphany. But unless this is a very unusual car it’s not critical for everyone to know about it. [1]
If something isn’t important to know, there’s no answer to the question of why people don’t know it. Not knowing random facts is the default. But if you’re going to write about things that are important to know, you have to ask why your readers don’t already know them. Is it because they’re smart but inexperienced, or because they’re obtuse?
So the three reasons readers might not already know what you tell them are (a) that it’s not important, (b) that they’re obtuse, or (c) that they’re inexperienced.
The reason I did this breakdown was to get at the following fact, which might have seemed controversial if I’d led with it, but should be obvious now. If you’re writing for smart people about important things, you’re writing for the young.
Or more precisely, that’s where you’ll have the most effect. Whatever you say should also be at least somewhat novel to you, however old you are. It’s not an essay otherwise, because an essay is something you write to figure something out. But whatever you figure out will presumably be more of a surprise to younger readers than it is to you.
There’s a continuum of surprise. At one extreme, something you read can change your whole way of thinking. The Selfish Gene did this to me. It was like suddenly seeing the other interpretation of an ambiguous image: you can treat genes rather than organisms as the protagonists, and evolution becomes easier to understand when you do. At the other extreme, writing merely puts into words something readers were already thinking — or thought they were.
The impact of an essay is how much it changes readers’ thinking multiplied by the importance of the topic. But it’s hard to do well at both. It’s hard to have big new ideas about important topics. So in practice there’s a tradeoff: you can change readers’ thinking a lot about moderately important things, or change it a little about very important ones. But with younger readers the tradeoff shifts. There’s more room to change their thinking, so there’s a bigger payoff for writing about important things.
The tradeoff isn’t a conscious one, at least not for me. It’s more like a kind of gravitational field that writers work in. But every essayist works in it, whether they realize it or not.
This seems obvious once you state it, but it took me a long time to understand. I knew I wanted to write for smart people about important topics. I noticed empirically that I seemed to be writing for the young. But it took me years to understand that the latter was an automatic consequence of the former. In fact I only really figured it out as I was writing this essay.
Now that I know it, should I change anything? I don’t think so. In fact seeing the shape of the field that writers work in has reminded me that I’m not optimizing for returns in it. I’m not trying to surprise readers of any particular age; I’m trying to surprise myself.
The way I usually decide what to write about is by following curiosity. I notice something new and dig into it. It would probably be a mistake to change that. But seeing the shape of the essay field has set me thinking. What would surprise young readers? Which important things do people tend to learn late? Interesting question. I should think about that.
Note
[1] It’s hard to write a really good essay about an unimportant topic, though, because a really good essayist will inevitably draw the topic into deeper waters. E. B. White could write an essay about how to boil potatoes that ended up being full of timeless wisdom. In which case, of course, it wouldn’t really be about how to boil potatoes; that would just have been the starting point.
Thanks to Jessica Livingston and Michael Nielsen for reading drafts of this.
文章领域的形态
2025年6月
一篇文章必须告诉人们一些他们还不知道的事情。但人们不知道某件事的原因可能有三种,这也会造就三种截然不同的文章。
人们不知道某件事的第一个原因,是这件事并不重要。但这并不意味着以此为题就会写出一篇糟糕的文章。例如,你可能会写出一篇关于某款特定车型的佳作。读者能从中有所收获,它能丰富读者对世界的认知。对于少数读者来说,它甚至可能会激发某种顿悟。但除非这是一辆极其非凡的车,否则并非每个人都非了解它不可。[1]
如果某件事不重要,去问“人们为什么不知道它”是找不到答案的。不知道那些零散的冷知识是常态。但如果你打算写那些重要的事情,你就必须问自己:为什么你的读者还不知道它们?是因为他们聪明但缺乏阅历,还是因为他们太迟钝?
因此,读者之所以还不知道你要告诉他们的事情,原因有三:(a)这件事不重要;(b)他们太迟钝;或者(c)他们缺乏阅历。
我之所以做这样的分类,是为了引出下面这个事实——如果我一上来就抛出这个观点,可能会显得有些争议,但现在它应该已经显而易见了:如果你是在为聪明人写一些重要的事情,那么你的写作对象就是年轻人。
或者更准确地说,这就是你的文章能产生最大影响的地方。无论你多大年纪,你所写的内容对你自己来说,也应该至少有几分新意。否则这就不能算是一篇文章,因为写文章本来就是为了把某件事情弄明白的过程。但无论你弄明白了什么,对于年轻读者来说,其带来的新奇感大概率会超过你自己。
新奇感(surprise)存在一个连续体。在一个极端,你读到的东西可以彻底改变你整个的思维方式。《自私的基因》对我来说就是如此。这就像突然看懂了一幅双关图的另一种解释:你可以把基因而不是生物体当作主角,当你换个角度时,进化论就变得更容易理解了。而在另一个极端,文章仅仅是把你已经想到的——或者自以为想到的——东西用语言表达了出来。
一篇文章的影响力,等于它改变读者思维的程度,乘以话题的重要性。但很难两全其美。很难在重要的话题上提出重大的新见解。因此在实践中存在一种权衡:你可以就中等重要的事情极大地改变读者的想法,也可以就非常重要的事情略微改变读者的想法。但对于年轻读者来说,这种权衡发生了偏移。改变他们思维的空间更大,因此写重要的话题会有更大的回报。
这种权衡并不是有意识的,至少对我来说不是。它更像是创作者们身处其中的一种引力场。但每一位文章作者都在其中工作,无论他们是否意识到了这一点。
一旦说破,这似乎显而易见,但我花了很长时间才明白。我知道我想为聪明人写重要的话题。我根据经验注意到,我似乎一直是在为年轻人写作。但我花了好几年时间才明白,后者是前者的必然结果。事实上,我真的是在写这篇文章时才完全弄明白这一点的。
既然我已经知道了这一点,我应该做出什么改变吗?我觉得不必。事实上,看清创作者所处的这个“引力场”的轮廓,反而提醒了我,我并不打算在其中追求回报的最大化。我并不想刻意去惊艳任何特定年龄段的读者;我只是想给自己制造惊喜。
我通常决定写什么的方法是跟随好奇心。我注意到一些新事物,然后深入挖掘。改变这种做法可能是一个错误。但看清了这个写作领域的形态,还是引发了我的思考:什么事情能让年轻读者感到惊讶?有哪些重要的事情人们往往很晚才会明白?这是个有趣的问题。我该好好想想。
注: [1] 不过,写一篇关于不重要话题的佳作是很难的,因为真正优秀的作家不可避免地会将话题引向更深邃的层面。E·B·怀特可以写一篇关于如何煮土豆的文章,最终却写满了永恒的智慧。当然,在这种情况下,这篇文章真正探讨的就不再是如何煮土豆了;那只是一个切入点而已。
感谢杰西卡·利文斯顿(Jessica Livingston)和迈克尔·尼尔森(Michael Nielsen)阅读本文的初稿。