Toys of the Mind
James
R. Fisher, Jr., Ph.D.
©
May 29, 2015
Workers
come to venerate ideals, beliefs, policies, customs, norms and hierarchical
relationships without reflection.
“It is the way it has always been, so it must
be right.” These come to be accepted as “truths,” to which the majority
subscribe, when they are simply “toys of
the mind.”
They are not real. They are fabrications. But when the unreal is treated as real it becomes real in its consequences.
What
is appealing about “toys of the mind”
is that we can talk into our machines and listen to them talk back to us, or
delete what appears on our mobiles with a sense of being in control.
Moreover, our mobiles (iPhones, smartphones, etc.) act as an intuitive
entity that listens to us, and while giving us this sense of power appears to
understand us, and to know us.
We contrive
to believe this is true, and even a safe understanding, a privileged
relationship tantamount to intimacy, when it is clear that is the most intrusive
device ever invented by man.
That said
as denial is nearly as natural to us as breathing, we choose to see our
operating systems as a manifestation of our consciousness.
We have retreated into the surreal and yet
surprised when our lives more resemble a science fiction tabloid.
The great irony is that our creation, this
unnatural hybrid of memory boards and short circuits assembled from the dissecting
room of our electronic slaughterhouse has become more human than its human
creator. And yet, quite remarkably, we
don’t seem to be concerned.
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