We live in the world of technology we have communicated with. However, we sacrificed the dialogue for pure connection. At home, the family sits with them, writes text and reads e-mails. Officers post articles during the Council meeting We send text messages (and shopping on Facebook) in class and when we are dating. My students teach me important new skills: it includes keeping eye contact with someone when you send someone else; it is difficult, but it can be done. Over the past 15 years I have studied mobile connectivity technology and talked with hundreds of people of all ages and environments about plug-in life. I have learned that the small devices that most of us carry is not only changing our work but also the very powerful thing to change our nature. We are used to a new way of "being alone". Technical support, we can get along with each other, connect to other places and connect us where we want. We want to customize our lives. We would like to enter and exit ourselves. Because the most important thing we do is to control the areas of concern. We are used to the idea that we will be a loyal tribe to the party.
We use it to talk to others to learn to speak with ourselves. Therefore, escape from our conversation may reduce opportunities to learn introspective skills. Today, social media is constantly asking us for something "in our heart", but we have no motivation to truly reflect self-reflection. Self-reflection in conversation requires trust. In addition to the connection, it is difficult to do something with 3,000 Facebook friends. When we are used to being neglected in conversation and get used to less expenditure, we seem to be almost pleased to give up completely. Serious people are meditating on computer programs as a psychiatrist's future. A senior high school student said that he wanted to talk to an artificial intelligence course rather than talking with his father, but said that A. I would put it in my database more.
Turkle says in her article "Flight in Dialogue" that escape from conversations may reduce the opportunity to acquire self-meditative skills. By using technology to communicate, we are losing subtle nuances and influences of human dialogue on the ground. While online "contacts" may be good for our lives, "Even if they are worth it, they can not replace the conversation," Turkle said.
Sherry Turkle's "Flight in Talk" and Curtis Silver's "The Social Media Friendship Mud" (444) claim that certain circumstances are caused by social media. These symptoms include sympathy, depression, self-love, short-term attention, online humiliation, loss of conversation skills, and even changes in brain development. Supporting, refuting, or complicating Sherry Turkle's assertion in "controversial flight" (online paper) is a social media, our social, cultural and knowledge Harmful to developmental development