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https://studentshare.org/english/1641614-alone-together-by-sherry-turkle.
Effects of social Media According to Turkle, social media has a myriad of consequences like dehumanization and narcissism effects. These effects range from social, psychological and moral consequences. For instance, when one is constantly fixed to the social media, they will lose the affection for fellow humans. Their lives will be reduced to solitude and with egocentric attitudes. This will consequentially be spread to the vastness of their social environments. If they were previously in consistent social ties with their families, they will start developing a sense of lost touch with the loved ones.
Now and again they will heed social validation otherwise left on their own (Jacob, 2). Moreover, one will have an impeded way of thinking. This means that contrary to the natural process of cognition, the person will be reduced to a merely mechanical object. A sense or rationality will be lost; the main cause of this is the conflicting environment that is provided by the social media. Ideally the human mind languishes when they fully rely on the social media (Jacob, 3). More to the aforementioned, the individual looses their natural abilities to think as they become over dependent on the wide range materials provide by the media.
In relation to this, the person also doesn’t achieve the maximum concentration required under normal and natural learning conditions. This is the same case that is extended to the people in their environment. The person also suffers from that condition which makes them physically present but mentally absent since they are focused to performing many tasks at the same time. Moreover, they suffer from decaffeination which basically means never being in a position to enjoy the same overall effects that can be provided by the human environment.
They are basically shifting their attention to the machine world and constantly switching from the humanity domain (Jacob 2). Work citedJacob, W. Shatzer. "Review, Sherry Turkle, Alone Together: Why we Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other." Journal of Technology and Theology (2011): Vol 2. pp. 1-3.
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