Hijacking the Reading Circuit: Are Screens Robbing Children of Comprehension?

Too much, too fast, too fragmented. Is there more to it?

Ever since the internet began to deluge our brains with an unceasing flow of information—meaning both raw data, and raw data given structure in the act of “informing”—intellectuals have been sounding alarms over the impacts on our thinking processes. There is a consensus, even among boosters of new data-heavy technology, that we need to take  a hard look at those impacts and what they portend for the future of our society.

Nicholas Carr devoted a book to the subject in 2010, entitled The Shallows. His book begins with Carr’s self-observations on how his internet information-gathering practices have infused his thinking with a shorter attention span, lack of follow-through on reading material, and a propensity to jump to shaky inferences based on short, superficial snippets of information.  He makes the case that these phenomena have spread throughout internet userdom (now, most of our society), to the detriment of deep comprehension and wisdom.  (I’m not sure Carr used the word “wisdom”—it might sound a little sententious, and I read the book years ago—but if he didn’t use it I doubt he’d object to my imputing the idea to him.)

Carr—and many others preaching similar messages —puts an emphasis on  distraction as the main threat to deeper thinking.  How can you concentrate on any one train of thought when there are so many intercommunicating trains crowding the station, tempting you to hop on board via hyperlink?  And take you to yet another crowded station with yet more bright and shiny hyperlinks?

How right is he?  Is Carr’s examination of The Shallows too shallow?

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Animals Get Help from Above

Eyes in the sky usher in new era for monitoring animal diversity, numbers, and movement

Drones and satellites radically change the game in forestalling the worst in animal declines and species extinctions.  Key to wildlife conservation is just getting the facts—and there are a lot of facts to get when it comes to the complexity of the natural world.  Without accurate and comprehensive information on what is actually happening on the ground, prioritizing and designing conservation efforts are mostly guesswork.  Such is the growing enormity of human impacts on the biosphere, research methods must scale up, or fall behind the accelerating pace of change.

How best to scale up is with devices that can remotely gather vast amounts of data on both groups and individuals—seeing both the forest and the trees.  The best positioning for these devices is up in the sky, and their primary data-gathering methods are electronic.*

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Tribalism, Patriotism, White Supremacy, and the South

Mixed Identity Politics?

Cycling in southern Virginia recently, I noticed a large flag mounted on a 20-foot pole in someone’s front yard—with a conflicted message.  The flag, as it turned out, had an identity issue: one side was the conventional Stars and Stripes U.S national flag; the other side was the “Southern Cross” of the Confederate flag (I assume it must have been two flags sewn together; I wasn’t about to stop and ask.)  Homes with the two  flags displayed separately are not unusual. But this two-faced flag combination captured the mixed identity  of those who declare they are patriots, but who owe allegiance to something that is not quite the United States as conceived by the rest of us.

The more common two separate flags in the yard speak loudly for a tribe that has stood for white supremacy* and deep suspicion of the federal government, while also declaring their patriotism.  That’s the perversely named “nativist” tribe, by which is meant, not affinity with actual native Americans, but quite the reverse: it’s rather an affinity with white people who invaded from Europe, slaughtered most of the indigenous folks and drove them off their lands.  Let’s call the newly arisen nativists “neo nativists.” (Not to be confused with the same psychological term applied to cognitive development.)

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