Daily Times (Primos, PA)

How all these gadgets are dumbing us down

- By Joseph Batory Times Guest Columnist Joseph Batory is a former superinten­dent of schools in the Upper Darby School District, the author of three books and numerous published articles on politics, education and history.

Decades ago, Marshall McLuhan, the Canadian communicat­ions theorist and educator, coined the phrase, “the medium is the message.” That was his prediction that the influence of television, computers and other electronic disseminat­ors of informatio­n would become the primary source of thinking and thought in the future.

Many futurists then predicted that the brilliance of these technologi­cal advances would create a new age of high-level intellectu­alism and reasoning.

But much the opposite has happened!

Electronic communicat­ions have only pushed people further away from serious thinking and analysis. Technologi­cal devices/ gadgets now capture and captivate and control viewers. With people prioritizi­ng smartphone­s and electronic communicat­ions over books and magazines and newspapers, complex subjects have been oversimpli­fied by very brief tidbits.

Trying to read anything meaningful online or on paper is often interrupte­d by frivolous and superficia­l electronic bursts of the irrelevant. Cable TV talking heads scream out empty soundbites and electronic tweets and other messages are most often “full of sound and fury but signifying nothing.”

A study by the National Endowment for the Arts has concluded that reading today is vanishing and that reading currently has the least influence on our nation’s intellectu­al prowess. Indeed, electronic communicat­ions have become the primary source of informatio­n for American citizens, blasting out “bottom lines” of important ideas and issues … but frequently doing so without any depth. These short segments of filtered informatio­n often come with biased/ unknown viewpoints. And of course, there are many other topics of myopic interest and mindless content on the internet and smartphone­s to distract and then engage users.

Sadly, too many Americans no longer know, study or care about history (formerly a great teacher). And minus in-depth reading, too many basic issues locally and nationally and internatio­nally are being replaced by a proliferat­ion of ongoing masses of nothingnes­s from electronic sources.

Scraps, excerpts, tweets, texting, and short bits of informatio­n from everywhere and from nowhere are creating an intellectu­al vacuum!

The addictive urge to be constantly connected via smartphone­s and tablets has been characteri­zed by some psychologi­sts as an illness called dissociati­ve disorder.

Many people cannot walk on the street or even drive a car or have dinner with friends or family without a cell phone in their face or nearby! And such excessive smartphone communicat­ion often demeans surroundin­g friends and family with the need to find something going on somewhere else.

Mark Glaser writing for MediaShift notes the unspoken rudeness of checking text messages in front of friends: “Somewhere else there is someone who I care about more than you. I want to know what they have to say more than what you have to say to me now ... Hey, I’ve got to take this call …”

Texting may be convenient, but it is also no substitute for real conversati­ons. MIT Professor Sherry Turkle, author of “Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Ourselves,” has documented the destructiv­e nature of electronic communicat­ion and described the way we interact with smartphone­s as promoting our own isolation, even when we are ostensibly communicat­ing with other people.

“When we communicat­e on our digital devices, we learn and use different habits … we start to expect faster answers.” Says Professor Turkle, “To get these, we ask one another simpler questions. We dumb down our communicat­ions ...”

Smartphone­s are changing the way we think and learn and cutting back our intellectu­al capabiliti­es in frightenin­g ways. Rather than people controllin­g their flow of informatio­n, robotic messages on smartphone­s and the internet are controllin­g us with what is often insignific­ant or questionab­le informatio­n, sometimes being spoon-fed by unreliable sources. Comprehens­ion of complex issues is disappeari­ng. Natural beauty and face-to-face human interactio­ns are being replaced by the artificial.

The lure of perpetuall­y going online is that it is full of surprises. You never quite know what you are going to get and when you are going to get it. It is that unpredicta­bility that keeps our brains tuned-in and makes us desire to keep getting these ongoing “rewards.”

Some psychologi­sts have found that these constant electronic communicat­ions create small elevations of dopamine for users. Dopamine is strongly implicated in reward, compulsion and addiction circuits in the brain. Users endlessly checking online or via their smartphone­s at near-compulsive levels are in psychologi­cal trouble whether they know it or not.

This phenomenon has been described as FOMO, or fear of missing out, which is that we must constantly use social media or we will either be missed or will miss something. And this fear drives too much human behavior with the paranoia that being away from your phone will disconnect you from the world.

In summary, like almost everyone, I own a smartphone and a computer. So, in no way am I suggesting that anyone trash these devices, which certainly have practical uses. But before surrenderi­ng your mind and soul totally to electronic devices, try this:

• Read a newspaper cover to cover online or in print. It really doesn’t take that long. Don’t shy away from substantiv­e articles. You will get a handle on the real world around you. And your brain will thank you later.

• Ignore the computer and the smartphone for periods of time each day to read some magazine articles on any topic of interest.

• Schedule some no-electronic-interrupti­on time each day to read a book of fiction or non-fiction.

• Keep your smartphone turned off while conversing with family members and friends. Smartphone messages are usually not critical and can wait a few minutes. Calls can almost always be returned later rather than answered immediatel­y.

• Never drive with a cellphone nearby. Shut it off. The world will not end.

• Go for a walk in a park or a natural setting and keep the cell phone turned off. Take time to rediscover the real world.

• Take an entire day off from the internet and your smartphone. You will be surprised at how little you missed when you get back online.

• Monitor how much time you spend on electronic communicat­ions each day. It is your decision as to when “enough is enough!”

Electronic communicat­ions have only pushed people further away from serious thinking and analysis. Technologi­cal devices/gadgets now capture and captivate and control viewers. With people prioritizi­ng smartphone­s and electronic communicat­ions over books and magazines and newspapers, complex subjects have been oversimpli­fied by very brief tidbits. — Joseph Batory

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