What say you? Is this the era of the Third World ("era of undeveloped, impoverished, unstable and violent nations"). — Ciceronianus
What say you? — Ciceronianus
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt says this is the era of stupid and he blames it on social media elevating the political fringes, which thereby bully everyone else into submission. Thus, cancel culture and Trumpism rule. — Joshs
Hey thanks for setting me straight on that lyric. Always thought it was a reference to a 'latter day' someone or other. (BTW, for bonus points, I know what the Crimson Tide reference means, ask if you're curious.) — Wayfarer
My feeling is that social media, email, text messages; the technology of the Internet and communications, discourages thought (and other things as well, such as prudence, consideration, patience). The emphasis is on responding, quickly and emotionally. Little or no effort is involved. The inhibitions imposed by face-to-face contact are absent. There's no need to verify or justify claims, and challenges may be ignored. There's no need to think, and no reward for thinking. The desire is to be the equivalent of the loudest know-it-all at the nearest bar — Ciceronianus
Recently watched an exchange between Jonathan Haidt, Steven Pinker and Jordan Peterson, titled Enlightenment and the righteous mind. I think it relates to some of the issues raised in the OP. — universeness
My feeling is that social media, email, text messages; the technology of the Internet and communications, discourages thought (and other things as well, such as prudence, consideration, patience). — Ciceronianus
It certainly does. Unfortunately I strongly disagree with the positions of all three of those thinkers. None of them have a grasp of what I consider to be the most important ideas in 20th and 21st century philosophy — Joshs
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt says this is the era of stupid and he blames it on social media elevating the political fringes, which thereby bully everyone else into submission. Thus, cancel culture and Trumpism rule — Joshs
They discuss the rise in social media and the effects it has had on all of us. — universeness
I would say, the lack of superior wisdom or morality of the ruling elite — unenlightened
We don't listen to serous debates by people with good insight, but to youtube debates between self-appointed pundits, more concerned with their own media image than anything else - just like the rest of us. — unenlightened
The inhibitions imposed by face-to-face contact are absent. — Ciceronianus
so, what about ‘they call Alabama the Crimson Tide, call me Deacon Blues’? You know what that’s about? — Wayfarer
but in the universe of discourse, most of our intellectual history has not been face-to-face, but rather through books, letters, essays. — Fooloso4
Third World Man is Joni Mitchell’s favourite Dan song. — Wayfarer
I wonder if communication via social media will come to be face-to-face communication through Zoom or holographs or images in virtual reality or some other device. — Ciceronianus
I don't, beyond the fact that Alabama, the Crimson Tide, is one of the winners in the world... — Ciceronianus
From a slightly more positive perspective, I might label this "era" as the birth pangs of the Fifth World. The "fourth world" label is already taken, in reference to the almost extinct indigenous peoples, left behind even by the Third World banana farmers. In my sideline sociological myth, the "Second World" was the land of conquistadors & colonizers, who had the power to exploit Nature and older cultures via technology : machines, communication & transportation (or Guns, Germs & Steel).What say you? Is this the era of the Third World ("era of undeveloped, impoverished, unstable and violent nations"). — Ciceronianus
But we may have to endure a dismal Dark Age in the meantime. — Gnomon
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