by Jo Morgan
Are we heading down the wrong path?
Philosophers like to question
everything and many of them love a bit of a moan. Much writing about
contemporary culture reads as a lamenting of the youth of today; a claim that
things were better before, that we've lost our way.
What has changed?
In premodern times things were
clear: authority came from God. In modern times things changed but reason took
over as the ultimate source of authority. Now, in postmodern times, anything
goes. Any or no source of authority can now be accepted. Absolute truth has
been abandoned and we can be what we want to be. We are no longer defined by
our birth status or biological makeup and this has created progress in many
ways. One is no longer limited by being a peasant, a woman or gay for example,
we have been liberated from the confines of the past and we can be more
authentic than ever before.
But are our lives actually more real, more authentic or have we lost
touch with reality? Have social and technological changes alienated us from
reality and in turn ourselves and each other?
The controversial philosopher
and sociologist Jean Baudrillard claimed that postmodern society is
characterised by Hyperreality, an age of simulation in which the real no longer
exists. Celebrity culture, pornography, computer games, news reports and all
media contribute to a manufactured world which has now become our world. The media is an orchestrated spectacle,
manipulated by power-players with a set agenda. Wars are staged, politicians
are lying to us and the smoke screens are pulled by diverting our attention
from this atrocity to the war on terrorism / drugs / immigration.
Is Baudrillard right?
If he is, things are only
going to get worse as technology advances. The psychologist Sherry Turkle
argues that we have become isolated from ourselves and each other as our
reliance on technology has increased. We are increasingly incapable of solitude,
turning to our mobile devices the second we are alone. Our online lives and identity
can be edited, perfected and controlled. Since we cannot exert the same level
of control over our real lives, we prefer to be online. It is easier and safer
and machines are always there for us. Turkle’s view is pessimistic but most of
us can relate to at least some of what she says. Perhaps we are losing a grip
on reality as our real lives take up less and less of our day.
Second Life: “Finally, love your friends, love your
body and love your life.”
Should we allow science and technology a totally free reign in its
advances?
It may be time to stop and ask
some serious questions about the impact which technology is having on humanity.
Increasingly, humans are losing their jobs as they are being replaced by
machines. Are we willing to favour profit and efficiency over human
flourishing?
Are we going to allow robots
to replace humans in parenting or caring for the elderly? Proposals for robots
to care for the elderly are already on the table. Turkle’s studies have shown
that mimicked empathy by machines has the same effect on us as real human
empathy. The elderly might be tricked into perceiving their care from robots as
real but is this ethical? Should we choose what is cheap and convenient over
what is right?
Will we get to the point where
we prefer sex, even marriage with robots over humans? Sexbots (robots humans
have sex with) have been around for over two decades but they are entering a
new age. As Matt McMullen, creator of RealDoll says, “…the goal, the fantasy,
is to bring her to life”. Many people feel uncomfortable with the use of
sexbots, but why? Is their use harmless fun? Is it adultery, if you’re married? We need to stop and ask these questions.
Are we rendering ourselves obsolete?
Alan Turing explored this
question in the 1950s by tricking humans communicating with machines into
thinking they were communicating with other humans. More than six decades on,
have we now totally lost the ability or even desire to know who we are
communicating with, whether they are real, whether we are real?
Technology has made our lives easier, longer and more
interesting. It has improved efficiency, healthcare, access to knowledge and so
much more.
But technology is also alienating us from ourselves, each
other and reality. This matters. We will not have the answers unless we ask the
questions. We need to stop and think.
i dont know about this
ReplyDeleteIt is quite a shock when you really think about it. Are we becoming isolated?
ReplyDeleteBut how does this cause us to be isolated? What does it do to our brains?
This reminds me of the fears everyone has of AI becoming evil, watch terminator if you don't understand what I mean. Once there was a meeting about this and several people signed it, including Stephen Hawking (according to the internet) This is considered a serious problem.
ReplyDeleteI have mixed views on this post because without it I would not have read this post or have typed this message. However i don't think that we should have as many devices in our lives.
ReplyDelete