Shhhhh… children. I want to tell you about a time when there
was no internet. A time when if you wanted to know something you had to walk to
the library or ask someone who might know the answer – a teacher or an uncle or
someone. Of course sometimes they were wrong or simply didn’t know, but they
did their best and they were probably almost as good as Wikipedia on a good
day.
These days all of the knowledge in the world is to be found
on the internet. If you need to know something you simply key your question and
within moments the answer comes back. There’s no need to wonder, no need to
consult another wiser person, no need to look in books. We can all know
everything all of the time and perhaps that’s why these days we expect to know
the answers to all of our questions.
Before the internet we didn’t have all the answers.
Sometimes we had to work it out for ourselves, sometimes we had to guess, and sometimes
we were simply left wondering. These days everyone has the oracle in their pocket.
There’s no need to stare at birds entrails, shout down a well, or undertake an
arduous voyage to a temple in Greece .
The internet has all the answers to all of our questions.
With the answers to everything literally at our fingertips
the wonder has gone. We expect (need) to know all of the answers all of the
time and when we can’t find one it confuses us. Silly really, expecting to know
everything, without having to work it out for ourselves through experiencing
and question.
Ask the internet why you feel sad and it presents you with a
depression test, from sad to depression at the click of a button. If you feel
ill, give the internet a list of your symptoms and it’ll return any number of
illnesses you are suffering from. It’ll tell you how to destroy the world, tell
you how and when the world will end, wish you a happy birthday when you are
trying to forget yet another one, it can even tell you what the big question
is.
The internet seems to be all knowing and is becoming
omnipresent. With more and more people turning to it for solutions, I wonder
how long it will be before the internet has its own religion?
Mark McNicholas on FB
ReplyDeleteI must admit to echoing your sentiments
Vicky Sutcliffe on FB
ReplyDeleteI miss the days before the internet.... It was nice not knowing stuff!
Andrew Height
ReplyDeleteHard work, but do you remember trying to work out things for yourself? I spent hours poring over the Breugel prints we had in the library trying to work out the symbolism and messages. Seems that I got it all wrong.
Don't believe it. You get as much junk as answers from the web. Plus most of it is useless without context to your own life experience. Forget the questions and the internet, live a little and experience something new.
ReplyDelete