Does our technological society breed discontent?

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i_wanna_blue
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21 Mar 2009, 4:09 pm

I am just wondering. All us members live in areas of the world and environments which are influenced by our technological advancements. We all have televisions, mobile phones, computers, electronic aplliances etc, etc. But what about people who live in rural remote areas of the globe? People in some areas of Eurasia for example who have never seen a tv or used a computer. Do you think these people who have simplistic lives and most importantly (I assume) a simple social order live with any of the stressors that we ordinarily do?

Work stress, school stress and general incapability of being content with each other. I wonder specifically about their psychological state of mind. Are we not (living in this environment) more prone to negative psychological impacts as opposed to them? Well this is just a thought. Again I dont state any of this as fact.

How do you think our general social order dictated by our technological advancements has shaped our psyche as society?

I just find it hard to imagine hundreds of years ago, people having anxiety disorders or needing medication for depression. Maybe this is just my lack of imagination. Do what we see as abnormal psychological behaviours influence previous generations of society on the scale it is doing presently? I guess we can never truly know. What do you think?



Zyborg
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21 Mar 2009, 4:21 pm

i_wanna_blue wrote:
I am just wondering. All us members live in areas of the world and environments which are influenced by our technological advancements. We all have televisions, mobile phones, computers, electronic aplliances etc, etc. But what about people who live in rural remote areas of the globe? People in some areas of Eurasia for example who have never seen a tv or used a computer. Do you think these people who have simplistic lives and most importantly (I assume) a simple social order live with any of the stressors that we ordinarily do?

Work stress, school stress and general incapability of being content with each other. I wonder specifically about their psychological state of mind. Are we not (living in this environment) more prone to negative psychological impacts as opposed to them? Well this is just a thought. Again I dont state any of this as fact.

How do you think our general social order dictated by our technological advancements has shaped our psyche as society?

I just find it hard to imagine hundreds of years ago, people having anxiety disorders or needing medication for depression. Maybe this is just my lack of imagination. Do what we see as abnormal psychological behaviours influence previous generations of society on the scale it is doing presently? I guess we can never truly know. What do you think?


Neurotypicals get stressed by computers and machinery.

Aspergians get stressed by social interaction with neurotypicals.

I think Aspergianism as trait is result of modern technology. It is affecting human evolution. We are next step. Homo Aspergianius.



ManErg
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21 Mar 2009, 4:25 pm

I don't think anyone really knows the answer, you may find this article interesting:

http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/14091/


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TPE2
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21 Mar 2009, 4:56 pm

i_wanna_blue wrote:
People in some areas of Eurasia for example who have never seen a tv or used a computer. Do you think these people who have simplistic lives and most importantly (I assume) a simple social order live with any of the stressors that we ordinarily do?


You should not assume that, if a society is more simple, the individual lives of the members of these society are also more simple. Sometimes it is the opposite: a "simple society" could mean less specialization, then more complicated individual lives.



ruveyn
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21 Mar 2009, 7:50 pm

Every society breeds discontent. Given any society there is someone in the society that is unhappy because of the way the society is.

ruveyn



pakled
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21 Mar 2009, 8:14 pm

thanks to labor-saving gadgets, we're one of the first societies to have time for discontent...



ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo
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21 Mar 2009, 8:19 pm

pakled wrote:
thanks to labor-saving gadgets, we're one of the first societies to have time for discontent...

Ha, as if no one was ever discontented before labor-saving gadgets were invented! We are not one of the first societies to experience discontent. We are one in a long succession of societies to experience it.



i_wanna_blue
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22 Mar 2009, 5:51 am

ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo wrote:
pakled wrote:
thanks to labor-saving gadgets, we're one of the first societies to have time for discontent...

Ha, as if no one was ever discontented before labor-saving gadgets were invented! We are not one of the first societies to experience discontent. We are one in a long succession of societies to experience it.


I'm not saying previous societies did not experience discontent. I am just wondering if our current lifestyle makes us more prone to abnormal psychological behaviours thus breeding a more widespread discontent.



i_wanna_blue
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22 Mar 2009, 3:01 pm

ManErg wrote:
I don't think anyone really knows the answer, you may find this article interesting:

http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/14091/


That was a very interesting article ManErg, thanks for the link.



marshall
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23 Mar 2009, 12:26 am

I agree that there is something paradoxically unhealthy about our current society. While we've eliminated a lot of the physical suffering with modern medicine and made life much less labor intensive through our technology.I agree that there is something paradoxically unhealthy about our current society. While we've eliminated a lot of the physical suffering with modern medicine and made life much less labor intensive through our technology there seems to be less and less built in social cohesion. The built in social support networks of extended families and clans/tribes is gone. We’re increasingly expected to find our own support network and so the less socially inclined people often get the shaft from our society. This is the bigger issue I think, and with the current economic climate it’s becoming even more acute.



ManErg
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24 Mar 2009, 6:20 am

Another interesting article on this question:

http://www.ratical.org/ratville/AoS/theSun.html


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