The Internet is Like a Second Life to Most

676 Words2 Pages

According to Marshall McLuhan “We shape our tools and afterwards our tools shape us”; this is something Sherry Turkle is more worried about in her Together Alone: Why We Expect More Form Technology and Less from Each Other. She asserts that people nowadays are all “Cyborgs” we can not live a moment without technological devices. However the author of Diagnosing the Digital Revolution :Why Its So Hard To Tell Whether It’s Really Changing Us Alison Gopkin states that we have always been like this. We human beings have been addicted to things like books just like how we are to technological devises. I agree with Sherry Turkle on how technological devises are rewiring our brains. I agree with her because her argument is well presented, she used a lot of relatable examples to get her point across and she also used her personal experience to show the relationship between we the people and our tools. People today love the experience of being connected with others by hi-tech devices such as cellphones, laptops, tablets and others. We have less and less time to face the environment around reason being we are too busy either text messaging, face booking, checking our emails and other things that involve being online .When I enter my drama class on the first and seat down, I looked around and found every single one of us on our phone, everyone was busy connecting with people away from them rather than starting a conversation with the person right next to them. The Internet has become like a second life to most of us. Turkle mentions that especially to teenagers the internet offers them a free space to explore identity which by Erik Erikson is called the Moratorium. In Computer-generated places like games “we expect to play an avatar, we end ... ... middle of paper ... ...seat down an eat with one hand and with the other we go through Facebook or text message our friends rather than talking to the people around us. Although Gopkin has a totally different view about this she states that even when our parents talk to us do we really listen to them “is the teenager who comes home from school and IMS her friends while she updates her Facebook page really much worse than the one who came home and watched Gilligan’s Island reruns ?(42). We turn to create more fake friends than the real one who would actually come and see us when we are sick , or in the loss of a close loved one. People never share they real problems on social media we always share unserious problems like dead of dog rather than problems like I am under depression after my divorce. To Sum up I would like to state that we still have time stop our tools from reshaping us .

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