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September 20, 2009

Is the Internet melting our brains?

From Salon:

Tech

By now the arguments are familiar: Facebook is ruining our social relationships; Google is making us dumber; texting is destroying the English language as we know it. We're facing a crisis, one that could very well corrode the way humans have communicated since we first evolved from apes. What we need, so say these proud Luddites, is to turn our backs on technology and embrace not the keyboard, but the pencil.

Such sentiments, in the opinion of Dennis Baron, are nostalgic, uninformed hogwash. A professor of English and linguistics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Baron seeks to provide the historical context that is often missing from debates about the way technology is transforming our lives in his new book, "A Better Pencil." His thesis is clear: Every communication advancement throughout human history, from the pencil to the typewriter to writing itself, has been met with fear, skepticism and a longing for the medium that's been displaced. Far from heralding in a "2001: Space Odyssey" dystopia, Baron believes that social networking sites, blogs and the Internet are actually making us better writers and improving our ability to reach out to our fellow man. "A Better Pencil" is both a defense of the digital revolution and a keen examination of how technology both improves and complicates our lives.

More here.

Posted by Azra Raza at 07:54 AM | Permalink

Comments

I only hope books with paper pages don't go the way of the dodo. I'm a Luddite when it comes to reading via Kindles.

Posted by: Louise Gordon | Sep 20, 2009 8:40:42 AM

2001 was about a dystopia?

Posted by: Picador | Sep 21, 2009 2:31:15 PM

Pencils to Pixels is better than A Better Pencil. How sad that authors cannot even choose their own titles anymore.

Posted by: J.H. | Sep 21, 2009 4:26:20 PM

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