The Human Voice is the New Clinical Study
I once spent $165 on a 50ml frosted glass jar of “molecularly active” night cream because a digital brochure convinced me that its 74% increase in cellular turnover was the only thing standing between me and relevance. I ignored the fact that the primary ingredient was a petroleum derivative and focused instead on the bar graphs that looked like they belonged in a pharmaceutical boardroom.
It was a mistake of intellectual vanity: I assumed that because the language of the marketing was difficult to parse, the product must be sophisticated enough to solve a problem I hadn’t even named yet. The cream eventually arrived, smelled faintly of a laboratory floor, and sat on my skin like a layer of non-breathable plastic that made my face feel claustrophobic.
The Dialect of Measurement
We have been conditioned to believe that the official data sheet is the most honest representation of a product’s value. We scan for percentages of hyaluronic acid, we look for clinical trial durations, and we memorize the names of synthetic peptides as if they were protective incantations.
The language of measurement: Providing a sense of objective certainty in a subjective world.
This is the language of measurement, a dialect designed
