Analysis Of In The Forest Of Gombe, By Sherry Turkle

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The “connectivity” of the world today seems like it is straying further and further from what was once thought as “connectivity.” In Sherry Turkle’s essay Alone together, she discusses how technology is becoming more and more powerful and tries to dispute the fact that if humans are still linked with each other on the same level we once were. Turkle discusses this point rather well when she states, “our networked life allows us to hide from each other,” (263). Also, Turkle discusses in her essay how robots are becoming more and more integrated in the world we live in; and, these robots are essentially taking the place of humans in some situations making us less connected with each other. While in “In the Forest of Gombe,” the author Jane Goodall …show more content…

The internet and the rise in new technologies are put in place to help us get more evolved as a united civilization. As new technology evolves new networks are put in place to help people be more connected with each other. One example of this is LinkedIn, LinkedIn allows people to connect with others online and allows other job opportunities to be found by these people with the new technology that is formed. The internet also allows people to be connected (not as strong of a connection as it once was) with people who they might not have stayed in contact with after a certain amount of time; people can be more connected with people from their past. [Goodall Quote here]One example of this is how juniors and seniors in college still are in constant contact with people from high school new technologies like Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, and Twitter allow people to be more connected and intertwined with different individual’s lives. By knowing things about people’s everyday lives, it allows people to be more shallowly connected but, these people are more connected. One other piece of technology that is helping us a whole to be more connected and more involved with each other are robots. Prior in this essay robots were discussed as significant others and how that seems like such an outlandish idea of being in a relationship with a robot. Turkle discusses …show more content…

There must be a perfect balance between the amount of technology we use to better ourselves and the amount of technology that takes over our lives. People have a false sense of who they are because who they happen to appear as online may be fake. To illustrate this, people can think that they are “friends” with hundreds of people when they could only talk to five people who they think are their “actual friends.” The internet allows people to have this fakeness that is just a given when people try to show themselves online. Turkle illustrated this point perfectly when she was talking about Second Life, an online virtual world where people can develop their own avatars to be them. “On Second Life, a lot of people, as represented by their avatars, are richer than they are in first life and a lot younger, thinner, and better dressed” (Turkle 263). The fakeness that happens while online is only present because people have the option to show themselves in a perfect setting. If there were boundaries set in place so people could only produce an identical version of themselves online there would be a substantial decrease in the use of the internet. There are somethings that must be kept off the internet and away from technology because there are times that technology is just out of place. “Lost in awe at the beauty around me, I must have slipped into a state of

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