TEXT Ⅰ Alienation and the Internet
Will Baker
The Internet provides an amazing forum for the free exchange of ideas. Given the relatively few restrictions governing access and usage, it is the communications modal equivalent of international waters. It is my personal belief that the human potential can only be realized by the globalization of ideas. I developed this position years before the Internet came into wide spread u. And I am excited at the potential for the Internet to dramatically alter our global society for the better. However I am also troubled by the possible unintended negative conquences.
华尔街英语的价格
互联网提供了一个惊人的论坛,让思想的自由交流。给出了相对较少的限制访问和使用管理,是国际水域的通讯模态等价。这是我个人的信念,那就是人的潜力只能实现的全球化思想。几年前我开发了这个职位的广泛应用,网络走进。而且我高兴看到了因特网的潜力,是它戏剧性地改变了我们的国际社会,使其向更好。然而,我也陷入了困境的可能的意想不到的负面后果。
There has been much talk about the "new information age." But much less widely reported has been the notion that the Internet may be responsible for furthering the fragmentation of society by alienating its individual urs. At first this might sound like an apparent contradiction: how can something, that is on the one hand responsible for global unification by enabling the free exchange of ideas, alienate the participants?
有很多人谈论“新信息时代。”但是却很少报道这个观点:因特网可能负责促进社会分裂它被疏远的个人用户。乍听起来这似乎是个明显的矛盾:能够促成如何一方面通过授权负责全球统一思想的自由交流,让渡出席的人吗?
优游自在I had a recent discussion with a friend of mine who has what he described as a "problem" with the Internet. When I questioned further he said that he was "addicted," and has "forced" himlf to go off-line. He said that he felt like an alcoholic, in that moderate u of the Internet was just not possible for him. I have not known this fellow to be given to exaggeration, therefore when he described his Internet binges, when he would spend over twenty-four hours on line non-stop, it gave me pau to think. He said, "the Internet i
sn't real, but I was spending all my time on line, so I just had to stop." He went on to say that all of the time that he spent on line might have skewed his n of reality, and that it made him feel lonely and depresd.
aceticacid我有一个最近讨论和我的一个朋友有他所说的“问题”与网际网路。当我盘问了进一步的他说,他是“上瘾”,有“被迫”自己去离线。他说他感觉自己像个酒鬼,有节制地使用因特网对他来说简直就不可能。我知道这个人给夸张,所以当他描绘其互联网的不理智,当他会在24小时以上在线不停,这给了我不得不思考。他说:“因特网不是真实的,可是我的开支是我所有的时间上网,所以我不得不打住了。”他接着说,他花在线或许已经扭曲了他的现实感,而且使他感到孤独和沮丧。
青浦英语培训The fragmentation of society has been lamented for some time now. It ems to me that it probably began in earnest after World War 初二数学课程Ⅱ when a generation returned from doing great deeds overas. They won the war, and by God they were going to win the peace. Automobile ownership became commonplace and suburbs were created. "Progress" was their mantra. So even prior to the Internet's widespread popularity, folks were already bec
tongueoming distanced from their extended families and neighbors. And when we fast-forward to today we e an almost cruel irony in that people can and often do develop on-line relationships with folks on the other side of the globe, without leaving their homes. But at the expen of the time that would have otherwi been available for involvement in other activities which might foster a n of community in their villages, towns and cities.
见或不见 仓央嘉措人们对社会分裂感到悲哀已有较长一段时间了。在我看来它可能开始认真地在二次世界大战以后产生company的用法Ⅱ回来时做伟大的功绩,海外。他们赢得了战争,并由神他们要赢得和平。已经成为司空见惯的汽车所有权和郊区被创造的。他们的口号是“进步”。所以即使前互联网的广泛普及,人们都已成为距离他们的亲戚和邻居。更糟糕的是,当我们会快进到今天,我们看到了一个近乎残酷的讽刺:人们往往开展网上关系与另一半地球的另一边,不离开他们的家园。但为代价的再也没有时间可供介入其他活动,也能培养社区意识的在村庄、乡镇和城市。
Last weekend my wife and I invited our extended family to our home to celebrate our daughter's birthday. During the celebration my young nephew spent the entire time on my computer playing a simulated war game. My brother-in-law and I were chatting nearby an
d it struck us that in generations past, his son, my nephew, would have been outside playing with his friends. But now the little fellow goes on line to play his games against his friends in cyberspace.
ubs上周末,我和我太太邀请我们所有的亲戚来家里来庆祝我女儿的生日聚会。在庆祝我的小外甥花了整个时间在我的电脑上玩模拟战争游戏。我的姐夫和我聊天,它使我们这附近在几代人的过去,他的儿子,我的侄子,早已以外的发挥与他的朋友。但是现在的小傢伙下去玩他的游戏线向他的朋友于网络空间。
螺丝刀英文
It ems to me that the Internet is a powerful tool that prents an opportunity for the advancement of the acquisition and application of knowledge. However, bad on my personal experience I can understand how, as they surf the web some folks might be confronted with cognitive overload. And I can also understand how one might have his or her n of reality distorted in the process. Is the Internet a real place? Depending upon how a "real place" is defined it might very well be. At the very least, I believe that when we u the Internet, we are forced to ask fundamental questions about how we perceive t
he world about us — perhaps another unintended conquence. Some would argue that the virtual existences created by some urs who debate, shop, travel and have romance on line are in fact not real, while others would argue that, since in practical terms, folks are debating, shopping, traveling and having romance, the conver is true.