Almost all of us are now deeply immersed into the abyss of digital world...
John Stanton can be reached at jstantonarchangel@gmail.com. He lives in Virginia.
The Digital Storm: Blowing Away the Human Mind
Global Research, March 01, 2017
“Temporal compression, as it is technically called, is an event
that concretely modifies everyone’s daily life at the same time. In the
face of this acceleration of daily life, fear has become an environment
even in a time of peace.
We are living in the accident of the globe, the accident of
instantaneous simultaneity and interactivity that have now gained the
upper hand over ordinary activities…With the phenomena of instantaneous
interaction that are now our lot, there has been a veritable reversal,
destabilizing the relationship of human interactions and the time
reserved for reflection in favor of the conditioned responses produced
by emotion…
Promoting progress means that we are always behind: on the
high-speed Internet, on our Facebook profile, on our email inbox. There
are always updates to be made: we are the objects of daily masochism and
under constant tension.” The Administration of Fear, Paul Virillio
The electromagnetic/digital storm emanating from television, computer
and cell phone screens flood the neural pathways of the brain drowning
synapses. The ferocious digital winds from the storm twist and rattle
axons, neurons and dendrites like the winds from a powerful thunderstorm
that shears leaves off of trees and bends branches to and fro. The
lightning strikes from this digital storm randomly sever connections in
the cerebral cortex, just as a lightning strike violently amputates the
limbs from a tree. And, at times, the electromagnetic field and its
constituents, now having translated itself into images, sounds and text,
crash into the cerebral cortex send shock waves through the entire
structure of the brain down to the base of the spinal cord. The cerebral
cortex has been trashed.
The New Cocaine?
The digital storm, though ultimately damaging, is stimulating. It
rushes to find the nucleus accumbens and floods it with dopamine which
the hippocampus, in turn, ‘memorizes’ as rapid stimulus for satisfaction
or pleasure. The amygdala then ‘records’ the event making sure that the
human response is ‘conditioned’ to find pleasure and, indeed, seek it
out desperately. The brain reboots itself and in so doing its human
face. Addiction ensues and brains/humans change.
The digital storm forms a ‘new brain’ and, hence, human character.
Transmogrification becomes complete. Perhaps it’s all evolution’s plan.
But interesting symptoms appear indicating this could be devolution.
The addiction to the digital storm is so overwhelming that the brain
creates a punishing craving mechanism: connection insecurity. Its
emotion is fear, the fear of not being connected, or being seen, or
taking part in the social scene. It’s the fear of missing out on the
daily on-line world and being MIA to comment on the latest incidental
text, image or sound. To eliminate connection insecurity the brain
creates an addiction that resembles the cocaine addict’s frenzied search
for more having snorted up the buy and the stash.
Don’t See Me, Touch Me, Read Me
You can see it in the mothers and fathers that push their infant
children down the sidewalk talking into the cell-phone rather than
talking to the child. What does that child store in the brain? Gossip?
Recipes? Sports trivia?
Or at the family dinner table where adults and children feel
compelled to check email or take calls not wishing to be offline for 60
minutes at Sunday dinner. Worse still, the dinner hosts have to remind
the cell-phone users to ‘please silence your cell-phones’ as if in the
movie theater.
And walking down the street, the ability to say ‘good morning or good
evening’ has been eroded as everyone seems to be working a conversation
via the cell-phone or looking down at email. It’s a world of people
walking with their heads-down on the street. It’s heads-down in
elevators, offices and even in church pews on Sunday.
The brain’s pause and contemplative thought functions have been
degraded and exist like abandoned and rusty rail road tracks. The brain
has replaced these two elements with a reflexive response mechanism
from the unconscious and unfiltered mind.
Such is the mind of the President of the United States, Donald Trump
and his penchant for Twitter, television and newspapers. His thinking,
like the bulk of the American citizenry, is limited to 150 characters a
thought. Producing 150 characters is an exhaustive effort for most
these days. No doubt, a student has been assigned to describe the novel
War and Peace in 150 characters. Tell us what is unique about your life
in 150 characters, they’ll ask.
And don’t dare write an article of more than 500-750 words on a
subject, because ‘readers’ will not stick with it, they say. ‘Give me
all bullet points, our President says.
When in falling asleep, or in your dreams, you ‘see’ text scrolling
vertically / horizontally (and you can read some of it) or you observe
images of computer screens with data displayed (which you can interpret)
your brain and you have been altered. And when you notice that these
images start to appear in your recurring dreams and it seems to be
altering your deepest consciousness, it’s probably time to seek shelter
from the digital storm. Think about it, if you can.
“’She watches with the raptor’s eye, trained on distance as she is, and dark—so when she turns to what is close, so intimate and huge, she keeps the gift of sight beyond herself, neither sentimental or detached….’Who, indeed, watches the passing show with the raptor’s eye? Couple the quick tweet and modalities of social networking with the videoing and blogging obsession, immersion in video games, overtime on the Internet and the constant interruption of face to face interaction by the cell phone, and you have a recipe for attention deficit in the life world. What are educational institutions to do in the culture of online engrossment and the fast electronic update? The humanities might rearticulate its worth in a climate of unexamined absorption.” A Field Guide to a New Meta-Field, Barbara Stafford
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