Christine Rosen makes a good point here in an article entitled “Awe and the Machine.” I do find it lamentable that most of us understand very, very little about the science at work behind our technological innovations. More significantly, it is regrettable that people are so ready to sacrifice direct experience for virtual reality. At the end of the day, virtual experience is only so fulfilling to the human soul. It is real people, places, and experiences that affect on a much more profound level. Emphasis is my own:
“In the early age of machines, they inspired awe by proving capable of doing what man could never do alone (such as power an entire factory), or what we once believed only man could do (play chess). Now we expect our machines to do just about everything for us, from organizing our finances to writing our grocery lists. Our machines not only ease the mundane burdens of daily life (cooking, cleaning, working), but also serve, increasingly, as both our primary source of entertainment and the means for maintaining intimate relationships with others. Henry Adams’s dynamo has been replaced by Everyman’s iPod, and awe has given way to complacence and dependence. Your computer’s e-mail program doesn’t inspire awe; it is more like a dishwasher than a dynamo. Nineteenth-century rhapsodies to the machines that tamed nature, such as the steam engine, have given way to impatience with the machines that don’t immediately indulge our whims. The decline in humility toward our machines comes at a time when we know almost nothing about how or why they work. Although overwhelmed by its power, Henry Adams nevertheless had a basic understanding of how the dynamo operated. Most of us know very little about how our laptop computers run or how to repair our washing machines. Today we are less likely to feel awe in the presence of our machines than we are to experience what historian Jacques Barzun called “machine-made helplessness.” This, too, is a form of blind faith, like the people who, devotedly following the instructions of their car’s GPS device, drive right off a hill, all the while certain that this must be impossible — how could their perfectly calibrated machine be wrong? The awe experienced by earlier generations was part of a different worldview, one that demonstrated greater humility about many things, not least of which concerned their own human limits and frailties. Today we believe our machines allow us to know a lot more, and in many ways they do. What we don’t want to admit — but should — is that they also ensure that we directly experience less. Updating your Facebook page is a lot easier than venturing out into the world to confront a dynamo, as Adams did. But it is also, in the end, likely to be a lot less awe-inspiring.”
(Source: http://incharacter.org/features/awe-and-the-machine/)





4 comments
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May 13, 2010 at 7:47 am
Marissa
Here’s a revelant essay that I just finished writing!
As I was driving the other day, I saw a license plate that read, “IM2BUSY.” “Too busy for what?” I asked myself. Too busy for friends? Too busy for family? Enjoying nature’s splendor? Reading? Learning? Too busy for God? The problem with today’s society is that we are too busy with inane details. Period. All those time saving, energy saving gadgets really don’t save any time. Logically, the modern human should have more leisure as a result of recent technology, but it is quite the contrary: all that free time is wasted on piddling little details like checking one’s facebook account, driving to the mall, and texting friends. All this “busy-work” leaves no time for the real, solid things of life. For example, unlike the average “technological” human, a small farmer is a truly busy worker, but still has time to love his family and friends and enjoy nature’s splendor because he is really living, not wasting time with technological “entertainment.” A Kindle, while it is a very ingenious invention, is pale in comparison to a real, paper and paste, book. A book you can lend to someone and interact with and smell the unique aroma that old pages get. I have not observed that with electrical books. Most importantly, a person free from the ensnarement of technology has time and freedom to adore God. Yes, I do realize that there are religious “apps” for your iPhone, but an “app” is pathetic when compared to the real experience of visiting a church and looking at the colors and patterns the stained glass windows make and smelling the spicy incense. The human mind naturally has an obsession for the latest and the greatest. I think that it is God-given as a means to promote the survival of the human race. But, when the human mind gets obsessed with checking email, things start to go wonky. Have you ever noticed how easy it is to spend hours on the internet? I have. It’s easy for me. Technology is like a drug. You get addicted to it. As an excuse, your brain tells you that you are “busy.” But you’re not busy, you’re wasting precious time! Let’s turn off the electrical drugs and start living!
*Author’s note: I do realize that technology can save human lives, such as at a hospital. I also love my GPS (I have absolutely no brain for directions). And I agree that when used correctly, technology can be very helpful.
May 24, 2010 at 1:50 am
Matthew
Hear hear: Marissa said everything I’ve been thinking!
May 13, 2010 at 7:50 am
Space Alien MF82593
Greetings from Mars!
My, what a lovely writer that earthling is! She inspires me!
Farewell!
May 13, 2010 at 9:23 am
REWard
Very, very true!
sad, but true! Keep up the good work Calvary Patriot!