Back in 1995, the book Being Digital (by Nicholas Negroponte ) was published:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Being_Digital

Fast forward to 2018 and Don Norman writes about being analog and more specifically, about how we are analog beings trapped in a digital world:

https://jnd.org/being_analog/

For starters, let's just say that I feel much more in synch with Norman than with Negroponte.

Now don't get me wrong. Technology has made our lives easier in a multitude of ways. But do we not have the right to decide to what degree we wish to embrace newer technologies?

Are we raising a new generation that believes that to be human means simply to be able to identify the traffic lights, motorcycles or fire hydrants in a particular two-dimensional on-screen image? What an impoverished view of the human race! Just what a piece of work IS man, anyway? And what a piece of work is the computer that we increasingly stake our lives upon?

It doesn't help matters when governments and service industries decree that we MUST interact with them via cellphone, tablet or laptop, whether we want to or not. It means that common sense, human judgement and discretion, deeper thought and reflection, and long-term planning inevitably take a back seat. And I haven't even gotten started on our right to privacy, for ourselves and our families.

A few examples may be in order here. ArriveCan. Income tax. Cash. Cheques. Rogers outages. Zoom meetings. You get the idea.

Just recently, Alterna Savings changed their website. To continue online banking with them, customers (who supposedly are also members) were asked to input both a cell phone number and an e-mail address so that Alterna could send a 4- or 5-digit code to each destination that the customer/"member" would key in to "prove" they were indeed the "correct" customer/member logging in, rather than an impostor. Only then would the customer get access to their own accounts through online banking. Yes, I did try phoning and getting "help" after a considerable wait-time.

Honestly! What are people supposed to do if they don't even HAVE a cell phone or computer? It's so sad, because I really believe in co-ops where the individual is a member rather than the hapless customer of a Big Bank.

I haven't decided on my future with Alterna yet. I've tried using telephone banking with my main accounts and that still works. I think I can still use ATMs to withdraw cash. There's still one account I have with them that they've threatened to declare dormant and impose fees on. They notified me of that via snail-mail but the letter did not clearly indicate when the dormant status would take effect. Maybe I'll look into other credit unions.

But then there's government, which we just have to live with. I still send in a paper return for my taxes but the actual payments now have to be made through my computer banking. I have to pay a fee every 5 years to renew my Government of Ontario identification card and my Government of Ontario health card. Canada Post no longer delivers to my door. Increasingly, you cannot even use cash to pay for government documents like passports.

Kind of gives the lie to that little statement "This note is legal tender in Canada", don't you think? Frankly I don't care if that $20 bill depicts the late Queen Elizabeth II or the recently inaugurated King Charles III - I just want it to be real and valid!

That's something I'd like to look at as we investigate possible Constitutional reforms!
In the midst of a pandemic, are we all becoming shadows or virtual versions of our former selves?

Let's hope not! But I think a lot of the uproar about mental health comes down to the fact that life doesn't feel real any more. We don't feel we can be our authentic selves. We're always second-guessing ourselves, looking over our shoulders, unsure of what we can or cannot do, of what we may or may not do. We've lost our road-maps and our guidebooks for life as we thought we knew it. The threat of climate change and the twice-yearly clock-changing also make it difficult to gain and keep our bearings.

Humans are not machines or computers, even though we are living so much of our lives online at the moment. We shouldn't let our human qualities of imagination, judgement, critical thinking and humanitarianism - or even some of the more negatively perceived human qualities - atrophy, just because we have to do a lot of things in ways the machine can "interpret" or at least respond to.

I was encouraged to read this opinion piece in yesterday's paper, urging students and their families not to discount the value of a broad, liberal arts education:

https://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/dolansky-why-the-humanities-are-a-good-choice-for-university-bound-students

Or this curriculum document out of Wales, geared to learners at all levels, where I learned a new word which beautifully expresses the concept I think is lacking in our lives at the moment - cynefin:

https://hwb.gov.wales/curriculum-for-wales/humanities/

The learn.org site draws a distinction, perhaps rather arbitrary, between "humanities", focusing on our history and human heritage as opposed to "humanistic studies", which it sees as envisioning the future:

https://learn.org/directory/category/Humanities_and_Liberal_Arts/General_Liberal_Arts_and_Humanities/Humanities_and_Humanistic_Studies.html

Then there's "humanism" which also seems to mean different things to different people. For some, it's an alternative to faith, a belief that yes, this (life here on earth) IS all there is, and it's up to us to make the most of it and build a better world together. As an example, here's the UK Humanists' site:

https://humanism.org.uk/about/

I still love that word "cynefin" and the idea of belonging, comfort, habitat and all the other connotations it embodies.
Hello everybody! Get yourself a cappuccino, café au lait, espresso, maple latté or whatever your particular poison, find yourself a hotspot and settle in to read my blog. I plan to use this space for regular editorial comment on whatever issues are on my mind. At first, I'll likely post quite frequently. Later, once I've gotten off my chest those issues I feel most strongly about, I may be posting less often. Today I want to talk about introverts. During my school days, also known as the 1960s, it seemed that the kid in the class who got the "leadership" or "citizenship" award of the year was always the bossiest, showoffiest kid in the class. As the youngest of four children, one of my pet peeves was, and remains to this day, bossy people. Being introverted is not necessarily the same thing as being shy, though the two traits may go hand in hand. They certainly did in my case when I was younger, though as I grow older and care less about what people think of me, I'm less shy though still introverted in that I get my energy and my best ideas through solitary reflection and listening to others, not from "thinking out loud" as some of the more extroverted folks are always urging me to do. When I was in kindergarten, being too timid to respond "here" or "present" when the teacher did roll-call was equated to being stubborn and was punishable by being stood in the corner. Is bashfulness a "choice"? I think not. On the other hand, I deplore the way ordinary personality traits such as shyness are now being pathologized through psychiatric vehicles such as the DSM, as if we humans had NO control over our own behaviour, and almost no free will whatsoever! I cringe when I hear "psychoses" labelled with names like "borderline personality disorder" and "oppositional defiance disorder". Years later, in what (or so I thought) was the more enlightened 1990s, my daughter was auditioning for a spot at our local arts high school and I recall the drama teacher telling another young hopeful that maybe if she was too shy to go through the audition, then drama was not her thing. I thought what a terrible thing for ANYBODY, but especially a drama teacher, to say to a child. And I don't think it's true, anyway. If anything, one would think that the ideal actor would be able to behave in a slightly autistic fashion, shutting out the audience altogether and becoming totally absorbed in the fantasy of the story he or she were acting in. That may possibly not be true for certain modern drama, where the actor actually goes out into the audience and interacts with its members but for traditional plays I should think it might be. Around that time, when I was working at a large government library (which, shamefully, is to close its doors at the end of this month), I selected for purchase a book called something like "Why Should Extroverts Make All the Money?" It wasn't only about monetary success, though - it talked about other aspects of success and overall "fit" in the workplace. According to an article by Angela Hill in yesterday's Ottawa Citizen, (see http://www.ottawacitizen.com/life ) introverts are getting more respect these days thanks in part to a couple of new books on the subject. About time, I say! Hill points out that schools often encourage "group projects" and workplaces use the open-office approach to encourage teamwork, which is anathema to the creativity of an introvert, who prefers having a door to close. When I was still in the workforce, it seemed the worst thing someone could say about you was that you weren't a "team player". Another popular slogan was "There's no 'I' in TEAM". But of course, while some office tasks are best done in groups, others demand privacy or space for solitary reflection. Still, is it really true that the modern world is geared to extroverts? I wonder. The tendency in government and large corporations these days is, if anything, to move AWAY from face-to-face service. They encourage you to access them via your computer or telephone (which increasingly may be the same device)and now that I'm retired, I have to MAKE occasions to talk to real human beings. All that controversy over Muslim women and their niqabs and the self-righteous assertion that "In our culture we show our FACES to get service" is so hypocritical. Really. When I need some kind of service relating to my pension, for example, I need my superannuation number and I have to either go online or phone up a number and go through an electronic voice-menu tree of options. I really think they care more what your number is than what your name is. Just before I retired, I found government to be obsessed with PROCESS at the expense of CONTENT - and by content, I mean not just memorizable facts, but also professional skills, judgement, knowledge, wisdom, you name it. At one of those infernal management retreats I was "invited" to one time, I recall one regional manager having the temerity to lay bare his frustration with having to "raise a ticket" on the intranet, when the network was down, to request a minor office move that was to happen that afternoon! While I listened silently in sympathy and recognition, most of the folks there were tripping over themselves to criticize him because he just didn't "get" the process or the corporate culture. Consider too the other things we do in day-to-day life. When did you last go to a bank in person to withdraw money? Don't you just use an ATM? Even at the grocery store, there is increasing pressure to use the automated checkouts instead of interacting with a real human cashier. So maybe, all things considered, the world IS becoming more geared to hermits and introverts. I'm not opposed to automating certain functions, I just often feel that we are becoming the servant of the machine rather than the other way around. We are slowly but surely suppressing those things that make us uniquely human. We try to eliminate "human error" but in the process, we eliminate human CORRECTNESS, human VERACITY, human ESSENCE. So here I am, an introvert who nonetheless requires a certain amount of human contact and interaction. I think it's very important in maintaining perspective and not losing sight of what is important in life. Thankfully, that perspective does seem to come with age.
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