....................from Maggie Jackson's Distracted: The Erosion of Attention and the Coming Dark Age:
Cyberspace, in science fiction writer William Gibson's words, is a "consensual hallucination."
The fear was that the Internet would turn us all into hermits, and maladjusted hermits at that.
"I don't think people know how to socialize anymore, to sit down and come together, because there are so many alternatives. They like to be entertained, not socialize."
We become attentional wanderers, sated by the mirage.
As economist Jeremy Rifkin reminds us, "the great turning points in human history are often triggered by changing conception of space and time."
A culture of divided attention fuels more than perpetual searching for lost threads and loose ends. It stokes a culture of forgetting, the marker of a dark age.
Without safety nets of trust or secure traditions, he says, relations crumble into obsession and compulsion. Or revenge.
Can we Google our way to wisdom?
But what constitutes a distraction? Are we paying attention to the screen or are we distracted by it? The answer is slippery, tantalizing, daunting, for distraction is in the eye of the beholder.
We can create a culture of attention, recover the ability to pause, focus, connect, judge, and enter deeply into a relationship or an idea, or we can slip into numb days of easy diffusion and detachment. . . . The choice is ours.











