English, asked by ak7746020, 8 months ago

essay on internet and it's discontents​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

The Internet and Its Discontents

“The unexamined online life is not worth living.”

"Remember to live!” was the motto of the German genius Goethe. What strange advice! At first glance it seems uselessly trite, almost like saying “Remember to breathe”. How could we possibly forget? …

Yet we do forget. And our most perceptive authors are always trying to remind us.

Nathaniel Hawthorne (in Ethan Brand ) describes a man who became a devil “the moment that his moral nature had ceased to keep pace with his intellect.” Anton Chekhov (in his story The Man In A Case) explains why men miss the joy in life: “All sorts of things are done in the provinces through boredom, all sorts of unnecessary and nonsensical things! And that is because what is necessary is not done at all.” And I.B. Singer’s hermit-scholar, Dr. Fischelson (in The Spinoza of Market Street), in his devotion to the study of the philosopher Spinoza, seeks an abstruse world within, and thereby isolates himself from all but the most trivial human contact.

Long before our modern age — of television, computers, computer games, and the Internet — it was possible to ignore or to forget our humanness. The powerful seductions of Technology make it even easier to forget.

Answered by hisweta2004
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Internet is a boon. It helps us in many things such as browsing data but it has many discontents too

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