РефератыИностранный языкTeTechnology Developments Essay Research Paper Scientific and

Technology Developments Essay Research Paper Scientific and

Technology Developments Essay, Research Paper


Scientific and technological developments have real and direct effects on every


person’s life. Some effects are desirable; others are not. Some of the desirable


effects may have undesirable side effects. In essence, there seems to be a


trade-off principle working in which gains are accompanied by losses.


Example:


As our society continues to increase its demands on energy consumption and


consumer goods, we are likely to attain a higher standard of living while


allowing further deterioration of the environment to occur.


Today, we are often told, we live not simply in an age of information, but in an


age of excessive information. The amount and availability of information seem to


be increasing at an exponential rate. We feel that our entire world is moving,


changing, mutating, at an accelerated pace. Our interactions with this world of


information seem plagued by an increasing sense that we cannot keep up, can’t


take it all in, that we are being overwhelmed by information, deluged by data:


the sense of an information overload.


One of the first attempts to represent this kind of information overload appears


in Ted Mooney’s 1981 novel, Easy Travel to Other Planets. There, Mooney


describes A Case of Information Sickness in the following terms:


If information was once considered the solid ground, the factual basis, on which


to make decisions and take actions, it no longer seems to be so. Indeed,


information no longer seems to be solid at all. Not only does it not provide a


grounding, a foundation, from which to see, know, or act, it comes to be seen as


obscuring our vision, our attempts at knowledge, our ability to control the


forces of the world. Information, it might be argued, has become precisely what


all that is solid melts into. Information flows; it spreads; it dissolves all


boundaries, all attempts to contain it. Thus, it is hardly surprising that we


increasingly feel ourselves enveloped by a rising tide of information, immersed


within it, feeling at once exhilarated and overwhelmed. Whether we figure it as


gaseous or liquid–an atmosphere or an ocean, smog or muck, a cloud of charged


plasma or an electromagnetic wave–we seem, almost invariab

ly, to represent


information as fluid.


Colonizing the Internet


It is perhaps in reaction to this sense of being overwhelmed, lost in the vast


data of the Internet, that many Web-related corporations have relied on


metaphors of navigation and mapping as the figures par excellence of


interaction. Thus, interaction becomes precisely a matter of charting a course


through the abundant fluidity of the Net. It is no accident that browsing the


Web is figured as becoming a Navigator or Explorer–names that cannot help but


remind us of the European mariners of the fifteenth century and their voyages of


so-called discovery. Like their predecessors, today’s Web-explorers must also


navigate the unknown and at times tempestuous seas of the Internet. Like these


earlier explorers, too, they often seek to chart and to claim this new world, to


make themselves the masters of various sites within it, exploiting its resources


and enriching themselves in the process. In short, they seek not simply to


explore the exciting–perhaps even exotic–new world of cyberspace, but also to


br ing it under control, to tame its wild currents and flows–that is, to


colonize it.


Consider, for example, how efforts to improve the Web have been described: the


world of the Web, it is said, must be made more easily navigable, its


information–its secrets–must be made more accessible; to this end, various


sites must be established: beachheads, outposts, trade routes and portals, and


in some cases even cities; efforts must be made to contain the chaotic nature of


the Internet, to tame its wildness, to make its sometimes exotic appeal more


marketable, more decent, safer, more civilized, not to mention commercially


viable. In short, its energies must be harnessed, its movements channeled, its


resources exploited. The metaphors involved here are extremely similar to those


used by colonialism; they presume a need to survey and subdue, to catalogue and


contain, and, ultimately, to turn to profitable use, those areas that are seen


as wild, chaotic, and other. Commercializing the Internet, then, is precisely a


matter of trying to know and control, to colonize and master, that whi ch is


seen as culturally other.


334

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Technology Developments Essay Research Paper Scientific and

Слов:780
Символов:5298
Размер:10.35 Кб.