Our handheld devices and technologies are a problem, for ourselves and for our children.
Our worlds are now delivered to us by our devices. Because we insist on a world, fitted to specification, personalized according to our beliefs, tastes, and opinions, this “delivered world” as philosopher of technology Gunther Anders called it in the 1950s, is brought to us by our own technologies.
We now no longer have to venture out into the world for ourselves, so, as Anders points out, we remain “inexperienced.”
But as our rationale goes, venturing out and experiencing the world is inefficient; it’s inconvenient; it’s messy; it’s complicated; and uncertain. That’s why we prefer its home delivery through out handheld devices.
Once, we had no choice. Life was a “journey of discovery.” We went out into it, because that’s we had to do, and followed its paths wherever they led. We encountered many things, much not anticipated. We experienced for ourselves.
Now, with our gadgets in hand and around us, we allow them to lead us down the paths it has determined for us. Again, this is much easier and efficient because no time is wasted on deliberation or choosing. We also encounter a world of choice.
Our devices present us with what Anders called an “effigy” of the world. This is a crude model, assembled by algorithms, designed to know better than we do what we want.
There is no longer any need to journey out and experience for outselves, because our efficient technologies do all that for us.
This “home-delivered world” described by Anders is where we have now chosen to live.
Perhaps it is possible to disrupt the grip of this home-delivered existence by refusal, by resistance.
Putting down our devices and taking a walk around the neighborhood or reading a novel in the form of a physical book might be a start. Turning off the notification machines in our pockets is another. There are many.
By doing these things, we “dethrone the devices” in our lives and refuse home-delivery.
By dethroning devices in a child’s education we reconnect them to experience and teach them to refuse the home-delivered world.
That’s technological literacy, empowering others to choose the terms for living themselves.