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Is Our Digital Future Inevitable or Do We Have Options?

12/10/2012

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Back to my blog after some professional and personal interruptions. I thought I’d begin again by talking about the way many people so readily embrace the new technologies that stream out of software and hardware  companies and into their lives. Most dismiss objections about the changes in our lives, in our relationships—indeed in our brains— that those new technologies may trigger.  For better or worse, it’s inevitable, people say. Stopping the changes, or even the rate of change, is impossible now. Many pundits and members of the digerati enjoy not just defining the current trends but also predicting the future, whether it be the next new thing or a broad vision of social change over the upcoming twenty years or more.

But is it all inevitable? I recently came across another take on the issue of inevitability and the impossibility of stopping the relentless march of change over time. In Thomas Mann’s Doctor Faustus, the narrator reflects on the consensus in his intellectual circle in Munich that as the 1930s unfolded, Germany was in for “hard and dark times
that would scoff at humanity, for an age of great wars and sweeping revolution, presumably leading far back beyond the Christian civilization of the Middle Ages and restoring instead the Dark Ages that preceded its birth and had followed the collapse of antiquity.”

Yet Mann’s narrator observes that no one objected to those conclusions. No one said this dark version of the future must be changed, must be avoided. No one said: ”We must somehow intervene and stop this from happening.” Instead they reveled in the cleverness of their insights, in their recognition of the facts and their inevitable results. They said: “’It’s coming. It’s coming, and once it’s here we will find ourselves at the crest of the moment. It is interesting, it is even good—simply because it is what is coming, and to recognize that fact is both achievement and enjoyment enough. It is not up to us to take measures against it as well.’”

It is a predicament well worth remembering, I believe, as we listen to our own technology enthusiasts. Our dark age ahead my not have death camps and atomic bombs but it has the possibility of being just as pernicious and inhumane. It could well be a time where in celebrating the wonders of technology we ignore what is the best essence of what it means to be human. We would do well to consider our choices while we still can.

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Mythology for Our Time: The Hero As Multiprocessor

7/18/2012

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“I am a multitasker,” my ten-year-old niece declared with a triumphant grin at a recent family get-together. I was horrified, frankly. After all the neuroscientists have been telling us lately about the limitations of our working memory—most people can only hold about seven items in  their working memory at any given moment—and about how switching back and forth between tasks actually makes people more inefficient, I was appalled to see a  member of our younger generation expressing multitasking as a positive achievement and a model for how to negotiate life.

If recent surveys and current trends are any indication, by the time my niece is 15, she will be checking her Facebook account, watching TV, texting several friends, and doing her homework in a rapid cycle of sequences for seven or eight or more hours per day. She will have acquired 365 friends on Facebook and sleep with her cell phone under her pillow. She will spend a great deal of her time tethered to her machines, alone, “communicating” with others through a truncated set of texting words, abbreviations, and acronyms. The closest she might come on some days to deep emotion will be expressed in a string of emoticons. Her time alone will resemble not solitude, where some contemplation of oneself and one’s life might occur. Rather it will be more of a muffled isolation within an electronic cocoon.

What draws people to the spell of multitasking? Why is this goal so valued as a continuous activity today? I think it began with a  set of metaphors that started making their way into our language, probably in the 1970s, possibly even earlier. I was first personally struck when I was having a conversation with a businessman  conversant with computer programming as he described how he “interfaced” with his client. When I asked him what he meant by “interface,” he told me he meant how people connected, just like the 8- or 12-pronged plugs that connected a
  computer terminal to a mainframe. By the 70s, we began to speak and think of some mechanical aspects of human thinking. By the eighties, the use of computer terminology to describe human thought became commonplace. We “processed” information. We “transferred” knowledge. We “crunched” the numbers. In short, we began to think of ourselves more as calculators than as people. Multiprocessing seemed a natural after that.

With the ubiquity of digital devices today, people have begun to emulate the microprocessors with which they share their lives. They have adopted the rhythm of the multitasking, breaking down large tasks into smaller steps and
processing multiple activities in a nearly simultaneous way. There are many problems with these analogies and the changes in our behavior they foster, but I’ll just mention two. One, we humans are not made to be multitaskers. We
basically can do only one relatively involved task at a time (most of us can walk and chew gum at the same time, but that’s different from activities that require real focus). The second problem involves the whole idea of equating
human activity with computers. It leaves out very large parts of what makes us human in the first place: creativity, self-awareness, morality, and our abilities to love, trust, empathize, grieve, and experience a whole range of
emotions that machines can never understand. All these experiences color our thoughts, one would hope, and make them more deeply human along the way.

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Lost in the Information

12/8/2011

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Towards the end of James Gleick's 400+ page book, The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood, Gleick sums up our current dilemma as we climb what he calls "the exponential ladder of information” as follows:
"As the train hurtled onward," Gleick writes, "its passengers sometimes felt the pace foreshortening their sense of their own history. Moore's law had looked simple on paper, but its consequences left people struggling to find metaphors with which to understand their experience." (395) A little further on he himself struggles with the experience of the Internet: "The network has a structure, and that structure stands upon a paradox. Everything is close, and everything is far, at the same time. This is why cyberspace can feel not just crowded but lonely. You can drop a stone in a well and never hear a splash." (425)

Not everyone agrees with Gleick that the Internet is ordered. Steven Johnson, writing of order in Emergence: The  Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software, points out: “The portals and the search engines exist in the first place because the Web is a tremendously disorganized space, a system where the disorder grows right alongside the overall volume." It is, he concludes, a phenomenon incapable of generating its own structure. The sheer barbarity and utter senselessness of the Internet as a whole may well contribute, I believe, to our fundamental alienation from it. Taken as a whole, it is far too chaotic an experience to comprehend.

That fundamental loneliness, that emptiness and confusion, Gleick  himself may have best expressed in the metaphor of the cloud—the evanescent, impalpable, invisible network that "looms over us . .  not quite tangible but awfully real; amorphous, spectral hovering nearby yet not situated in any one place." (395-6)

And that is the nature of the digital experience: it eludes us even as it overwhelms us. In the end, we are alone in the endless sea of countless nodes, myriad connections, and, oh yes, the information.

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