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Expanding Consciousness Or Encapsulation Analysis

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Expanding Consciousness, or Encapsulation? In this chapter Nye brings to light that we are becoming technology junkies, that we have an ever increasing hunger for more things to keep us interested. We want the quick fix of life, and have forgotten how to really enjoy things. We have become a generation that can multi-task, one that is addicted to all of the various technologies that have been introduced into society. He goes on to say that as we adapt to each new instrument and devise and learn to (re) interpret the world, we may be losing touch with other modes of understanding(p.185). We are disconnecting with the real world, as we find ourselves consumed with cell phones, emails, and the internet. We become less productive as we are constantly …show more content…

This generation accepts most things such as housing that provides ample space for individuals as part of what is normal. They didn’t go through the early nineteenth century when privacy was not possible, where space was shared with several members. We see that as technologies naturalize over time, that new generations do not have the excitement as when it was first introduced into society. It is just part of what is natural for them. Naturalization is not new, it has been going on for thousands of years (p. 189). Nature and technology harmonize as they seem to become part of each other, becoming as what Jose Ortega y Gasset concluded as being a “supernature”. We have become accustomed to having an overabundance of technologies around us, that we take them all for …show more content…

Some have made attempts to escape from the technological world and to go back to a time in which things were not enhanced by it, to get the natural experience. As we become more and more adapted to being able to communicate by the use of machines, the face to face experience will fade as something of the past. Which as Nye shows in this chapter that there may be an increase of cyber-hermits and electronic hermits, as we disengage from the real world. Martin Heidegger argued that “as technological rationality becomes dominant, people begin to perceive all of nature as a “standing reserve” of raw materials awaiting use” (p.199). As each generation comes along, they view a lot of the technologies that were remarkable to earlier generations, as just being normal to

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