I think that we live in the technical field and are constantly communicating. However, we sacrificed the dialogue for pure connection. Actively and realistically, we can oppose this trend by setting up room for active face-to-face conversation.
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
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.
In the article "New York Times" and "Flying in Conversation" Sherry Turkle is replacing the deep relationship with real people to accidentally encounter technology, so the ability to stop technology and talk to others I was wondering the need to regain. Turkle is trying to convince young people fascinated by technology and middle-aged people that they are losing their ability to communicate in public. - Experience of Internet identity in Turkle's article In Turkle 's "Identity in the Internet Age" she questioned the experience "Why is it different, giving such a superior position to the body"? "