Subject:
A world you were conversant with.
"Ignorance is bliss" so the old adage goes. Do we in this digital age, know too much.
Does this extra knowledge further our desires to have what others have or lead us to become dissatisfied when
we learn of our position in the league table of goods and assets.
Information is handed out by bureaucrats and politicians on a need to know basis. Listening to a sitting in the
Scottish
Parliament this morning, two eminent professors from two Scottish
universities were being questioned about the effect of Brexit on Scotland. It was interesting but then suddenly the session was
brought to a close with
the statement "that the open session was coming to a close and a closed
session was about to begin". I wondered, since this was not a meeting
where "state security" was being debated,
why would they invoked a reason
for secrecy, why were the general public excluded. Was it just an ego
trip by people who clearly think themselves important and more important
than the people who voted
for them, gave them their jobs and in fact pay them out of general taxation.
Anyway back to the thesis that we have too much knowledge.
Our worlds are bordered by relatively insignificant things, of which, the cost of a loaf of bread is one of them
but which little else
rarely matters. Most world affairs are outside our pay grade as they
say, even the crimes against humanity are pursued by people who have no
influence over. The tragedies which have
happened or are happening, there is little we can do but feel sorry for those effected.
The problem is that feeling sorry has a cumulative effect on our psych. We begin to feel uneasy at our own luck
to be unaffected
and wonder will it happen to us in the future if and when we are
effected. For instance the list of diseases seems to grow each year and their causes with them. Our diet and lack of exercise
is deemed a killer more
dangerous than an attack by ISIS (no doubt is). The fall in our ability
to have the money to spend on things we didn't know we needed, until
some marketing executive got to work
on our addled brains and convinced us of its necessity.
I come from a time when we were inclined to think for ourselves and form our own judgement. Before television streamed its views into our home, before
people began to walk around with a smart phone to tell them where to
turn.
In
this pre television world your needs were governed by your own
independent consideration, the ability to consider what actually matters
to you,
was gathered from a small personal compass, from the actual world
around
you, the one you knew and you were conversant with.
No comments:
Post a Comment