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Loadstar 22
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t.lookin glass 2
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2022-08-26
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BACK TO CARGO CULTS....
Seriously, why this confession of
ignorance? It's not because I'm
overly contrite-- lack of ego has
never been one of my faults. Rather
we should ask to what extent we are
all neophytes, all ignorant of many
of the basic concepts that form the
foundations of modern life.
We confront the image of South
Pacific islanders signalling airplanes
via bamboo radios with amusement, and
perhaps a little embarassment. After
all, they never knew that the joke was
on them, that their capacity for
understanding had been predefined by
stone axes just as surely as ours have
been by telecommunications.
Yet modern culture forces all of us
into cargo cults, to be users of
technologies we don't understand. The
only difference between us and the
tribesmen is that our devices usually
work.
Otherwise, for most of us, the
artifacts-- the televisions, the
automobiles, the computers-- that we
use in everyday life could just as
well be made of bamboo and powered by
strong magic.
The reason's straightforward enough-
there is simply too much to know,
after the information explosion made
possible by the computer.
We are forced to specialize, and the
gulf between Shakespearian scholar and
computer programmer can be as great as
any between stone-age tribesman and
modern soldier.
What are the implications of
intrinsic ignorance? What do we do if
professions become communities unto
themselves, unable to communicate
anything meaningful to other groups?
Perhaps, though, computers can be a
solution to the very problem they
created; their ubiquity in every
profession could rejoin what's been
separated.
Consider.... For over a thousand
years, despite wars, plagues, and
superstition, the one thing that
united Europe in a common culture was
the language spoken by rulers, clergy,
and scholars-- Latin.
Perhaps BASIC, RPG, or COBOL will be
the foundation of this era's Latin, a
language, a way of life, that will
provide a cohesiveness necessary for
a unified culture.
ANTHEM
There is another dimension to my
confession of ignorance. Like most
confessions, mine is both a warning
and an invitation. First the
warning-- THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
will feature neither "how-to"
articles nor reviews of software.
Instead, THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS
will be an invitaion to extrapolate
and explore some of the human
implications of the Computer
Revolution, a place for reflection
amidst all the fun and frolic of
LOADSTAR.
Its focus will be on evolution-- the
subtle changes in our everyday lives,
our ways of thinking, that are being
brought about in a increasingly
computerized society.
Evolution is inevitable, of course,
After all, while the blacksmith pounds
his anvil, the anvil hammers the
blacksmith, building muscle and sinew,
creating reflexes that are remembered
for a lifetime.
Whether we are tribesman or
businessman, we are inevitably shaped
by the tools of our trade.
Who are we computer-users? What are
we becoming? THROUGH THE LOOKING
GLASS will provide no answers, but
perhaps it will offer a glimpse of
changes, good and bad, to come.
--------<end of article>-----------