In
Roger Scruton’s article “Curiouser and Curiouser” (Nov 2011), he argues that we
are being controlled by technological devices. Scruton supports his argument by laying out
how we are becoming dumber by electronic gadgets, where we are not thinking for
ourselves but letting our ipads, ipods, iphones, etc. do the thinking for us. Scruton further elaborates
that we have no more privacy and morality is in decline due to technology. Scruton talks about the impact of the fast
pace of technological advancement, in
order for readers to take note that we are not merely keeping up with
technology, but we are “caught up” or trapped in technology. The intended audience
is people who believe that technology can only be an asset to our daily lives,
not a liability.
I
agree with Scuton’s argument that the fast moving technological advancement has
captured some people and is holding them hostage, but on the other hand some
people have gained more mobility and are able to compete better with
technology.
Scruton’s
argument shows how we are not using our brain, but becoming dependent on our electronic
devices to think for us. We use them as
our brain and babysitter. We also share
our private information and images that we think is somewhat safe in
cyberspace, but can be hacked and opened up by someone else. It could be ‘big brother” or the computer
geek a few houses down from you. Scruton
shows that there is a thin line between privacy and publicity in the world of
technology. Scruton argues that we don’t
think that it is immoral to steal other people’s information and access their
e-mails because technology has made it so where just a few strokes on a
keyboard brings us into someone else’s world.
It’s so easy, so why not? The
temptation is strong, like placing a delicious looking cake in front of someone
who’s on a diet – he/she is likely to taste it.
Whether or not they will feel guilty afterwards is all up to their state
of consciousness. Scruton continues to
support his argument by stating that our information is no longer locked in a
file cabinet where it is not easily accessible, but is now being stored on
gadgets that can get misplaced, lost, or the access code ends up in the wrong
hands. Scruton says that “We are caught
in the worldwide web like flies, wriggling in the suffocation bonds of
communication. And we don’t know the way
back; we are sitting at our desks, but far, far indeed from home.” The impact of the information age has made us
so dependent that we are becoming creatures of habit, rather than ascending to our
higher thought process which, in turn, will give us greater authority over our
lives and thought process. Our reality is now becoming “fuzzy” spiraling out of control into the myriad of unconscious
cyberspace. Scruton shows that we are
not the controllers of our electronic devices, but we are being controlled by
them. However, Scruton should have expounded on the positive effects of
technology and the people who made it possible. People such as Philip Emeagwali,
Dr. Mark Dean, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs are just a few that have made
technological advancements that have had a very positive impact on our
society. We can surf the web whether at
home or on the go and look up the price of a product , as well as learn about
mathematics and science just to name a couple of the positive impact that
technology has had on our lives.
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