Age of Distraction

Regular price €179.80
A01=Robert Hassan
Author_Robert Hassan
Bicameral Mind
Book Man
Category=GTC
chronic
Chronic Distraction
Clock Time
cognitive overload
Cognitive Surplus
Communication Technology ICT
Corporate Ceo
digital literacy
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Google Search Functions
Immovable Ideas
Information Overload
information society studies
Large Dual Task Costs
Longer Agents
Mathematical Expression
Mechanistic Materialism
media theory
MIT Medium Lab
Moveable Type Printing Press
networked society cognitive distraction
Nostalgic Entertainment
Number Systems
People's Houses
People’s Houses
philosophy of communication
rhythms
Robert Hassan
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin
Social Acceleration
Steam Ships
Technological Bridges
temporal
temporal perception
Typographic Culture
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412843065
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Connections between time, technology, and the processes of reading and writing make clear the links between experiences of what appear to be quite different phenomena. Reading and writing have functioned together in a particular way to build the world as we have known it for three thousand years. These interacting processes have now been transformed at their core and are building a different world, one where certainties of the previous era are disappearing and being displaced by what the author sees as a chronic and pervasive mode of cognitive distraction.

Robert Hassan offers a perspective permeated by a sense of history, beginning with the invention of writing and the development of the skill of reading. Together with technological developments, these provide a unique view of the trajectory of modernity into late-modernity, and illustrate how the arc of progress has transformed. New modes of time, technology, and reading and writing are helping create a faster world where we know less about more—and forget what we know evermore quickly.

What is the "time" of a thought? Is it possible to measure thinking? Can we consider knowledge or information, or reading and writing, as having temporal "rhythms"? These are questions Hassan tries to answer. So unfamiliar are we to thinking in such terms that they sound impossible. To a significant degree, time, thinking, and many forms of knowledge are the fruits of subjective experience. We connect experiences at superficial levels, where people have different experiences that may be objectively the same, but our interpretations will always diverge in respect of the "reality" we confront. This intersection of philosophy and communication takes the reader into new realms of analysis.