Loneliness In Stephen Marchie's Is Facebook Making Us Lonely

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Yvette Vickers, former playboy playmate found dead almost a year later with her computer still on. Social media is at the for fount of everyday life for millions of people throughout society, with Facebook being the main culprit. A website that is supposed to be used to help us connect with others, whether it may be family or friends. However, does this immersing broadly used program increase the feeling of loneliness among us. Likewise, the real question is, what is loneliness and how do we define or diagnose it? At a main point, social interaction with other help fuss the effect of loneliness, and therefore increase our social connection. With the increasing risk of a breakdown in society, there have been a drastic growth in professional …show more content…

The power of waiting behind a screen, waiting for a response, or like from someone isolates us from the fact of face-to-face interactions. Marchie, point out the fact of Facebook arriving during a time of an immense increase in human loneliness, causing Americans to live in a state of solitary. He supported it with factual statistical evidence of how, in 1950 less than 10 percent of Americans lived by themselves. However, in 2010 almost it had a significant increase in number where 27 percent of households only had one person in it. Consider the source, in 2010 an AARP survey concluded that 35 percent of adults older than 45 were …show more content…

Marchie’s say, “Facebook denies us a pleasure whose profundity we had underestimated: the chance to forget about ourselves for a while, the chance to disconnect.” However, I also feel like the statement leaves the readers with a lasting question in your mind. Why is it that we just cannot log on to Facebook for one day, are we all just addicted to the application of Facebook? Also, Marchie’s statement contradict his whole point of the essay, because he says that it doesn’t allow use to disconnect from the world, but with this disconnect cause loneliness in our lives. Therefore, the question remains is Facebook initially good for us or is it bad? His last statement seems to have thrown of the whole essay from what we were swayed to believe in from the

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