Another reason to use hypertext is that media determinism would argue that the new media will exert some influence over the communication process and over the communicating parties. Is linked text on a computer screen different than unlinked text on a printed page? And if so, how and to what effect? Does the medium become the message? It has been said that hypertext navigation is a world apart from anything we've experienced in our linear, printed-page past. I invite you to give it a chance and decide for yourself.
One last thought. According to Michael Heim's The Metaphysics of Virtual Reality (1993), “in Psychology, medicine, and social sciences, hyper means agitated or pathological” (p. 40). My hope for you, the reader, is that reading this work in hypertext will make you neither agitated nor pathological. Instead, my hope is that you will find a new way of exploring ideas, and of combining one thought with another, and new ways of interacting with the material.
I've included a few links to documents which reside outside of this one somewhere in the vast matrix we call the Web. You will recognize these links because they will include the URL (Uniform Resource Locator). They will look something like the one following:
For an interesting article which addresses the issue of hypertext, see As We May Think available at URL: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/194507/bush. It is interesting to note that the article was written in 1945. (Note: if you're short of time, read only sections 6 and 7).
If you should chose to follow such a link, please use the BACK button when you wish to return to this document. Happy trails.