Why would we bring people into a world of such limited efficacy of possible knowledge of what makes the "modern" world run? — schopenhauer1
None of these aspects can grasp the whole of the technology.. We are a drops in the bucket of much larger networks of infrastructure and information far beyond what we can ever know fully. — schopenhauer1
Sure, there are certain perspectives as stated which there are individually relevant facts towards but in terms of how a particular technology works itself it is evidently possible for one person to know how a technology works. — Tom1352
One of the most fascinating descriptions of the interaction of mind and matter that I have encountered, the junction point of symbolic instrumentality and instrumental symbolicity I guess you could say. — Pantagruel
Can you define those terms in layman's speak :D? I have not read prior definitions that would make me understand it any better than if I just made it up and nodded my head.. — schopenhauer1
Per my comment, we don't need to understand technology to use it - and yet technology is really a kind of hypostatization or reification of knowledge, knowledge made tangible. — Pantagruel
Even engineers and professors of technology (let's say networking) usually specialize and cannot possibly know every avenue in every part of that field, but they know enough. For example, I doubt the networking expert knows how to create a microprocessor from scratch, and if so, doubtful the kind for modern computing (in other words, knows the general concepts.. but not everything). — schopenhauer1
it is more the alienation for a large percentage (and I can argue even the experts) from knowing all of what sustains them — schopenhauer1
knowledge of creating a microprocessor as within a networking expert's field — Tom1352
But others whose field it concerns will know such information and yet both are necessary to the much broader field of computing. — Tom1352
I certainly agree this can have an alienating effect, but thinking as such is by no means rational, given my earlier point. — Tom1352
But Is that really so? People throughout history have climbed the ladder of culture. An individual does not have to comprehend culture in its entirety to benefit from it, or contribute to it. Your description suggests a schism between the individual and the (social) world (s)he inhabits.
"You imply disparity where none exists" — Pantagruel
But you can never know modern technology fully. — schopenhauer1
No need to invoke the Interweb, this sort of "dilemma" could have been made when agriculture was invented. Did every town dweller understand what went into the food they ate? Likely not. But that isn't the point. Tools free up time for folks to think about things other than sustenance, such as art, culture etc. — LuckyR
There is an alienating aspect to this. We can never mine enough minutia to know all the aspects (only in theory perhaps but not in reality). Why would we bring people into a world of such limited efficacy of possible knowledge of what makes the "modern" world run? — schopenhauer1
Copper/metallic wires pulsing up and down, off and on, the harnessing of this...Electrical power stations, all that.. — schopenhauer1
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.