Spocksleftball
not right
I didn’t find a forum to put this in, so the lounge will have to do.
As the "information age" envelopes us all to greater degrees, making access to information appears to be the prime focus, with instant gratification a close second, is there an eventual decline in cognitive function per individual? Or the inverse perhaps? Are depth and breadth mutually exclusive? Are new discoveries with meaningful benefit affected in a positive or negative way since the immediacy and brevity of rapid information intake precludes the ability to build upon the work of previous experts within a given field. As information becomes faster, it often takes on newer forms of communication such as visual and audio resources (eg youtube).
The breadth of knowledge grows per individual at what cost?
1. Depth of knowledge?
2. Esoteric specializations?
3. Peer reviewed sources?
4. Hard sciences' role?
At what point do we simply forgo any/all of the four above for speed and generalities?
Note: None of this is formulated. I am asking openly. I work at a small college and see what appears to be degradation in all four areas. Much of the decline is centered on the use of the Internet as a primary resource. I am not personally opposed; I am curious however what others think.
As the "information age" envelopes us all to greater degrees, making access to information appears to be the prime focus, with instant gratification a close second, is there an eventual decline in cognitive function per individual? Or the inverse perhaps? Are depth and breadth mutually exclusive? Are new discoveries with meaningful benefit affected in a positive or negative way since the immediacy and brevity of rapid information intake precludes the ability to build upon the work of previous experts within a given field. As information becomes faster, it often takes on newer forms of communication such as visual and audio resources (eg youtube).
The breadth of knowledge grows per individual at what cost?
1. Depth of knowledge?
2. Esoteric specializations?
3. Peer reviewed sources?
4. Hard sciences' role?
At what point do we simply forgo any/all of the four above for speed and generalities?
Note: None of this is formulated. I am asking openly. I work at a small college and see what appears to be degradation in all four areas. Much of the decline is centered on the use of the Internet as a primary resource. I am not personally opposed; I am curious however what others think.