Even though technology has made our lives easier by bridging time and geographical limitations, MIT Sociologist Sherry Turkle believes that such advancements have made us lonelier and shallower, thus, living less meaningful lives. She strives to explain how human beings are becoming slaves to technology. She goes ahead to say that "Face to face conversation unfolds slowly. It teaches patience" (Greenfield 2012). For one reason or, another, Sherry believes that it has become impossible for human beings to create meaningful lives, separate from the kind of technological advancements we have today. In my opinion, the desire to fit in or get accepted by the general society has driven the problem overboard. It is notably as simple as the fact that nobody wants to be left out. Even those who claim to hate social media sites such as Facebook; it does not prevent them from using such sites. We are simply so connected to social media, despite the fact that the effects are quite severe.
The problem does not just stop there; children today are at much greater risk. They go through life without knowing how to communicate or be engaged in deep conversations because technology speaks on their behalf. However, such challenges also do not affect everyone. There are those who have found a great balance between their lives and the manner in which they use technology. Humanity, therefore, can depend on them to instill the same mentality on the current and upcoming generations. Indeed Rebecca points out that "What sounds like a crisis is actually unsubstantiated fear, based on an anecdotal judgment of a generation Turkle does not understand, rather than evidence”( (Greenfield 2012). Humanity only needs to find solutions to these problems, because the benefits of technology far much outweigh the challenges.
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References
Greenfield. R. (2012). Technology. A Different Kind of Digital Generation Gap. Retrieved from http://theatlantic.com