首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Is the Internet Making Us Forgetful? A tourist takes a picture of the Empire State Building on his iPhone, deletes it, then
Is the Internet Making Us Forgetful? A tourist takes a picture of the Empire State Building on his iPhone, deletes it, then
admin
2013-10-17
39
问题
Is the Internet Making Us Forgetful?
A tourist takes a picture of the Empire State Building on his iPhone, deletes it, then takes another one from a different angle. But what happened to that first image? The delete button on our cameras, phones, and computers is a function we use often without thinking, yet it remains a fantastic concept. Most things in the world don’t just disappear. Not our thrown away plastic water bottles. Not the keys to the apartment. Not our earliest childhood memories.
"It is possible that every memory you have ever experienced that made its way into your long-term memory is still buried somewhere in your head," Michael S. Malone writes in his new book The Guardian of All Things-. The Epic Story of Human Memory. It is both a blessing and a curse that we cannot voluntarily erase our memories. Like it or not, we are stuck with our experiences. It’s just one of the many ways that human beings differ from digital cameras.
Yet, humans are relying more and more on digital cameras and less on our own minds. Malone tells the story of how, over time, humans have externalized(外化)their internal memories, departing themselves from the experiences they own. The book is a history in time order—from the development of paper, libraries, cameras, to microchips—about how we place increasing trust in technology.
Is it a good thing for electronic devices and the Internet to store our memories for us? When we allow that to happen, who do we become? Will our brains atrophy(萎缩)if we chose not to exercise them? Malone, who is a Silicon Valley reporter, shows us the technological progress, but backs away from deeper philosophical questions. His love for breaking news—the very idea of breakthrough—is apparent, but he fails to address the more distressing implications.
The biology of human memory is largely mysterious. It is one of the remaining brain functions whose location neuroscientists can’t place. Memory nerve cells are distributed all over the brain, hidden in its gray wrinkles like money behind couch cushions. " What a plunge," opens Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway, as Clarissa tosses open her French windows and is transported into her remembered past. " Live in the moment" is a directive we often hear these days in yoga class, but our ability to weave in and out of the past is what makes life interesting and also difficult for humans.
The Neanderthal(穴居人的)brain was powerful, but lacking a high-capacity memory, " forever trapped in the now," according to Malone. The stories, images, and phrases that we turn over in our minds while lying awake in bed were different for them. Neanderthals could receive the stimuli of the world—colors, sounds, smells—but had limited ways to organize or access that information. Even the term Homo sapiens(晚期智人)reveals how our brains work differently from our ancestors. Translated from the Latin, it means knowing man. Not only do we know, but we know that we know. Our self-consciousness, that ability not only to make memories but to recall them, is what defines us.
Short-term memories are created by the compound of certain proteins in a cell and long-term memories are created by released magnesium(镁). Each memory is then inserted like handprints in concrete. This is what we know about the physical process of memory making. Why a person might remember the meal they ate before their parents announced a divorce, but not the announcement itself, remains a scientific mystery.
The appearance of language is linked to memory, and many early languages were simply devices that aid memory. They served as a method for sharing memories, an early form of fact-checking that also expands the lifetime of a memory. The Library of Alexandria is an example of a population’s desire to catalog a common memory and situate it safely outside their own short-lived bodies.
The ancient Romans even had a discipline called Ars Memorativa, or the art of memory. They honored extraordinary acts of memorization, just as they honored extraordinary feats in battle, and Cicero excelled at this. Memorization was an art that could be polished using patterns, imaginary structures and landscapes. Without training, the human brain can hold only about seven items in short-term memory.
The invention of computer memory changes everything. We now have " Moore’s Law," the notion that memory chips will double in performance every 18 months. Memory plug base continues to decrease in size while our memories accumulate daily. Because of growing access to the Internet, Malone argues that individualized memory matters less and less. Schoolchildren today take open-book tests or with a calculator. " What matters now is not one’s ownership of knowledge, but one’s skill at accessing it and analyzing it," he writes. However, something is lost. We have unlimited access to a wealth of information, yet little of it belongs to us.
Human beings have a notion of self, a subjective world particular to us, thanks to our highly complicated and individualized brains that Malone compares to " the roots and branches of a tree." We own our own hardware, and we all remember differently. The Internet offers us access to information, but it is really a part of the external world of colors and sounds that even Neanderthals could receive. A world in which all our memories are stored on electronic devices and all our answers can be found by Googling is a world closer to the Neanderthal’s than to a high-tech, idealized future. I don’t remember when I first learned the word dejd vu but I do remember the shirt I wore on the first day of 9th grade. Memory is a tool, but it can also teach us about what we think is important. Human memory is a way for us to learn about ourselves.
"Live in the moment" is a directive that is hard to achieve because______.
选项
A、it can only be heard in yoga class
B、the brain’s function is not advanced
C、people have the memory of the past
D、human memory is very mysterious
答案
C
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/yQQFFFFM
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
BanksinShanghaialsoopenfrom9a.m.-5/6p.m.PeoplecanputfundsonTransportCardtousefortaxis,themetro,lightrail
BanksinShanghaialsoopenfrom9a.m.-5/6p.m.DuringthedinnertheChinesepeoplewouldproposetoastsfrequentlysoasto
Radicalcutstosocialwelfarespendingtoreducebudgetdeficitscouldcausenotjusteconomicpainbutcostlives,warnexpert
SpidersSpiderscanbedistinguishedfromotherArachnidsbecausetheprosoma(combinedheadandthorax)isonlyseparatedf
Whatdoesthespeakertellusaboutimportantdecision-makingintheUS?
A、Shethinksahairdryerissuitable.B、Shewantstoknowwhat’smakingallthenoise.C、Sheisn’tsurehowpracticaltheman’s
Whenapersonfallsasleep,allactivitydecreasesandthemusclesrelax.Theheartbeatandbreathing【C1】______slowdown.Thepe
Whenapersonfallsasleep,allactivitydecreasesandthemusclesrelax.Theheartbeatandbreathing【C1】______slowdown.Thepe
Whenapersonfallsasleep,allactivitydecreasesandthemusclesrelax.Theheartbeatandbreathing【C1】______slowdown.Thepe
随机试题
简述在网状模型和关系模型中,实体之间联系的实现方法。
主治梅核气的常用方剂是
乾隆年间,四川重庆府某甲“因戏而误杀旁人”,被判处绞监候。依据清代的会审制度,对某甲戏杀案的处理,适用下列哪一项程序?(2006年司法考试试卷一第18题)
M公司的境外子公司编报报表的货币为美元。母公司本期期末汇率为1美元=7.40元人民币,平均汇率为1美元=7.30元人民币,利润表和所有者权益变动表采用平均汇率折算。该子公司资产负债表中“盈余公积”期初数为150万美元,折合1215万元人民币,本期所有者权益
如果公安机关及其人民警察仅有违法行为,而未造成对合法权益的损害后果,()。
甲、乙两人同时从泳池同一端出发不断往返于泳池两端,泳池长度为50米。若甲最快速度为85米/分,乙最快速度65米/分,五分钟内他们最多相遇几次?
从下列两题中任选一题作答,如果两题都答,只按第I道的成绩计入总分。认真阅读下面一段访谈记录,请一一列举出这段访谈存在的不足之处。访谈问题:家长对孩子教育问题的看法访谈者:一位35岁男子,在北京某大学从事教育管理工作受访者:一位47岁男子,在北京某
基层群众自治制度是中国特色社会主义政治制度之一。其优越性主要体现在
十进制数75等于二进制数( )。
PassageOneAtBenjaminN.CardozoHighSchoolinQueens,hewasknownasMatthewKaye,anearnestsocialstudiesteachersh
最新回复
(
0
)