Analysis Of Alone Together: Why We Expect More From Technology And Less From Each Other

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In today’s modern society, happiness refers to having a positive sensation about the quality of life and its importance of life values for attaining a good life is pretty much across the world. Nowadays, the surroundings among individuals tend to display deep connections with the livelihoods of humans. When there are an inanimate and an interactive technology, as for robots that might come into play, humans tend to show signs of love because they form the interactions within their surroundings as an important part of human nature. Most people may also perceive creating a deep and powerful connection with technology as being either naive or silly person. In the essay “Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other,” …show more content…

As your respective brain waves mirrors one another, each of you, moment by moment, changes the other’s mind” (Fredrickson 110). The notion of love is defined as some type of feeling when two individuals truly connect, for this example exemplifies that it is present when sharing one common emotion. As for this example, the two are sharing love, when they are connecting and experiencing a common emotion, which then results in the notion of understanding of a connection. Even though this example displays that sharing one emotion with another person may lead to a happier life, it also shows a change in action. Sharing one emotion, for this case, shows that it also causes two individuals to change each other’s minds. This indicates that positivity resonance not only is in the sharing of an emotion but can also lead to a course of action. A similar but different example is given by Turkle that shows a course of action being taken because of a shared emotion. In Turkle’s essay, because children have a strong connection with their Furbies and share emotions, positivity resonance exists between them. “But in the case of the Furby, people will hold the Furby upside down for thirty seconds or so but when it starts crying and says it’s scared, most people feel guilty and turn it over” (Turkle 475). Here the child and the Furby are sharing the feeling of fear. Although in this example the child feels both guilt and fear from holding the Furby upside down, the Furby only feels fear. Positivity resonance is present here because they’re sharing a common emotion with an already established bond. Even though the common emotion isn’t positive as in the Fredrickson example, this shows that sharing an emotion doesn’t have to be positive in order for positivity resonance to exist. This example also shows a

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