Sunday, November 16, 2008

Does technology really make our lives better?

While it is no question that technology has progressed an incredible amount over the last century, i think that whether or not that technology has had a positive or negative effect on the "human experience" is more debatable. Myself and all of us in the class were all born into the age of computers, never having to have dealt with the inconvenience of typewriters, or dependent on large reference books for information. While many may look at this and say that the lives of my generation are better and easier because of the technology, i disagree. I think that the use of the new technologies presented leads us to be dependent on them, useless without them, and lead us to more stressful, more isolated lives.
With the availability of the internet as a resource, with its vast databases of information, the information that you want does take less time to find. However, i think that as technology increases the rate at which we get information, the curriculum that we are taught adapts itself to encompass that resource to the fullest. By this i mean that because we can access information more easily, we are expected to know more of it in a shorter period of time. The overall effect is that the computers and the internet speed up our lives as a whole, making them more chaotic, not easier.
Advances like cell phones and ipods also have a detrimental effect on our lives. While i love my ipod, i can't help but notice when i see a group of friends sitting around each other, all listening to their music individually, texting other people on their cell phones. Human interaction is replaced by technology, little screens and small letters.
In general, i think that the way technology has progressed has damaged the way that we interact with each other. Isolation is promoted rather than communication, but while i'm not going to throw my various gadgets and gizmos away, i do recognize their effect on me. It is interesting to look at how our society progresses alongside our technology. I would rather have a society based more on human interaction than high speed information and individually based entertainment.

2 comments:

Cristina Meehan said...

I agree in the progression of the technological age our human inate experience has been compromised and things have become less personable. As we go through our lives checking things constantly facebook email news we lose the old novelity of a friendly phone call to an old friend or good old snail mail.

Jeannie Logan said...

You make an interesting point of how we tend to equate speed with progress, when in fact a faster-paced life can be very chaotic and unsatisfying. I think every successive generation must get more impatient. Sometimes I can't even wait for 3-minute popcorn! And Heaven forbid you should hesitate when the light turns green for more than a nanosecond, or else you may be the target of an angry honk!