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In this internet age are we really more content?
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Rob
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Jan 20, 2013 09:48AM

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Plus being happy is a matter of choice as Jenni said and one does not necessarily rely on material things for that :)

Probably every generation has bemoaned progress and the loss of the "way it was before." However, that does not mean that those people would be reading books, writing, playing board games, talking to their loved ones, etc. any more than they do now if the technology of today did not exist. You can always choose to unplug your devices and read or ride your bicycle.
Happiness is a choice.

Most of us on goodreads attain simple pleasure from reading a book and let the mind take us where it will. I will often ignore the phone, ignore the front door, switch off the computer, switch off tv...and read a book..some may find this offensive and boring! but this simple pleasure of reading can do more to stimulate my mind than any other form of communication or entertainment.



Sounds like we're the same generation. However, your question if for adults, so I don't think we should compare to when we were growing up.
I can compare pre-Internet when I was getting my undergraduate degree to Internet when I went back to school for a masters degree. So I can say definitely that life is better with the Internet! And, therefore, I was more content and happy with the Internet.



I think in this day and age everybody needs to be careful about how much they put out on the internet because you never you what sort of people are out there, I'm not saying anyone on this site is dangerous, in fact you all seem quite nice! But there does seem to be a generation that thinks that they are entitled to just about everything, and they want it now and fast. And I wonder if many people are happy in that mind set? May be if we all just slow down a bit and enjoy the simple things in life, family, friendship, a good book! More people would be content and I believe less likely to hurt one another.

It's a blessing and a curse. In the old days neighbors talked over the fence and got to know each other. Younger people want to apply for jobs online rather than walk in and meet you potential coworkers or boss. We are losing the personal touch in a lot of ways. People find dates on websites. Why not the local church or a party etc.? I have heard of teens texting each other when they are in the same room! On the other hand, if you have a relative living far away you can talk to them with the click of a button.



But, as such, it can become what we want it to be. As mentioned above, it is a great tool for learning. However, just because you found out something on the internet, does not mean that it is necessarily truthful or correct. As it's computer driven, it may be either depending on what we're looking up and where we go to look it up. And, as a computer tool, it will look for what we tell it to look for. As a computer instructor told me many years ago, it's all about what we tell it to do. The computer is just as happy doing the wrong thing as it doing the right thing. And, what is right or wrong is all in the eye of the beholder.
I find a lot of peoples actions and comments on the internet to be tasteless and/or obnoxious. Certainly not all and on this site, we seen to have less tendency to run into that type of response. Maybe it's because we're book lovers and that doesn't attract the obnoxious responses in the numbers that, say, a site devoted to sports might/would. I see less intolerance of my opinion of a book than I see when I laud my favorite teams. More educated? Maybe, maybe not. Just because someone loves books doesn't necessarily mean that they are more educated. However, a book site, I would think, would draw the more educated clientele than the sports site.

You just have to remember, turn the internet off and go out and do something with other people now and then. Lead a balanced life.


It breeds a world of dilettantes who use Youtube to temporarily solve a problem rather than mastering any skills themselves (via their own life experience). It allows people to conveniently and improperly skim information without building or retaining any wisdom of their own. It dumps our whole society into a morass of distrust and disrespect.
Do you really want your doctor or pharmacist, 'looking stuff up' instead of *knowing* how to treat you? Do you want professionals to be that careless? Do you want them missing a crucial symptom you're displaying because they're distracted by a txt message? That's what's happening.
A giant bullshit machine, that sucks in the feeble, absorbs them, and keeps them there in a state of perpetual infancy.
By the way, since when was TV ever a boon to human progress? So now we have a TV that that surrounds us and which we can carry everywhere? How is that a good thing?
We're witnessing nothing less than the death of critical thinking and the open-armed embrace of sloth, human decay, and gullibility.