DEUS
ex MACHINA
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
May 27, 2015
As
disturbing as the radicalism of the 1970s were in terms of abandoning our
psychosexual mores, four decades later with the advent of the personal
computer, we have essentially forsaken our conscious self and undergone an
evolutionary change.
Computers,
after all, are capable of simulating mental as well as physical
activities. Not least of which is anyone
with an iPhone knows it has speech, reducing the boundaries between people and
machines.
Few are aware of this intrusion on intimacy, being constantly on and interacting with machines, indeed, interacting with each other by means of machines and their programs: i.e., computers, smartphones, social media platforms, and dating apps.
Few are aware of this intrusion on intimacy, being constantly on and interacting with machines, indeed, interacting with each other by means of machines and their programs: i.e., computers, smartphones, social media platforms, and dating apps.
We
are endanger of losing our humanity of becoming indistinguishable from our
gadgets. Small wonder there are
increasing anxieties and troubles in relationships between people.
So
many of us are “in love” with our devices, unable to put them down during
dinner, in a college lecture class, during a church sermon or television drama,
glued to the screens of all sizes and shapes, all colors and embroidery,
endlessly distracted by electronic pings, vibrations, and buzzers.
This
is the latest incarnation of a people who no longer find solace in God or the Christian
myth. Machines are no longer
interchangeable, but it is people who have been for it is the machine now that
has all the gravitas and personality. It
is the machine that has become our god.
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