Technological Determinism Case Study

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Janell Orozco Soci C167, Midterm #1 Question #1 The culture of autonomy is the rise of a culture on the internet that’s producing more social autonomy. The internet had contributed to the culture of autonomy because it has allowed for more sociability, individualism, and expression. For example, Facebook has empowered individuals to be more social whith their thoughts and beliefs on issues on a mass level. Technology has also allowed us to give the mass of power instead of the few elitists that own most networks. This has begun to create a transition away from capitalism focusing on ideas not only objects. Question #2 Solitude is the ability to gain self-discovery which leads to self-security which allows an individual to make future meaningful …show more content…

Those with this perspective think that technology completely stands on its own without influence or change from society. The article Google is Making Us Stupid is a reading within the lecture that shows a dystopian view of technological determinism. Carr (2008) blames that googles simplicity has affected individual’s ability to read long books or articles and has changed the way humans process things. This article is an accurate illustration of technological determinism because it argues that technology by its self (google) is shaping the way society thinks (making them …show more content…

For example, Pinterest is filled with content that is geared towards women, it has a scrapbook type of platform, and its history and creation makes it fundamentally feminine initiating women to be the main users. The specific value and benefit of using SNS is that you can manage and keep up with more relationships through SNS, then the previous 150 persons you could cognitively maintain. Question #10 The article Facebook Subjective Well-Being in Young Adults shows a connection to declining subjective well-being for young adults using Facebook. They find that Facebook is causing negative outcomes due to its invaluable way of creating social connections. Kross (2013) explains that Facebook is unable to fulfill the human need of human interaction, so those who have begun relying on it undermine their true wellbeing. Secondly, the article Fear of Missing Out focuses on how social media platforms including Facebook have created the FOMO phenomena and its effects. Przybylski (2013) exemplifies that users that had ambivalent emotional experiences when using Facebook had high levels of feeling that they were missing out. Their findings showed young adults with high levels of FOMO felt more temptation and would check Facebook after eating, sleeping, walking and during lectures.

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