ABSTRACT
Grammarians complain about the oxymoron “virtual reality,” but the semantic twist of the phrase tells us as much about our tenuous grasp on reality as it does about the computerization of everything we know and experience.
Grammarians complain about the oxymoron “virtual reality,” but the semantic twist of the phrase tells us as much about our tenuous grasp on reality as it does about the computerization of everything we know and experience.