Perhaps what is more interesting than the actual contents of this article
is Ong's comparative approach here. He explains that although the
sound-to-sight shift can be traced back as far as the difference between
Hebraic views of knowledge acquisition (sound-based) and Greek views on
the topic (sight-based), the Greeks were still much more sound oriented
than we are today. Likewise, while Aristotle is credited with an
approach to logic that helped the shift toward a more visual process of
thinking occur, Ong explains that Aristotle's logic remained rooted in
the oral tradition, especially when one compares it to logic of the post-Renaissance
period. Finally, Ong's comparative approach can be seen in his conclusion,
where he asserts that while a sight-based approach to logic is seen as
a "way" to gain knowledge, this approach is radically different from that
of the Christian tradition, where the phrase "I am the way" indicates an
emphasis on the oral rather than the written tradition.