Woravut wrote:cognitive abilities - abilities to 1) process, 2) link, and 3) organize information.
Very interesting... Thanks for the follow-up! When I first read your post, I was also thinking about memory issues. As a kid I had all my friend's phone numbers memorized. Now I barely even know my own phone number. There's no need to remember these 10-digit numbers because they are just a tap away.
I haven't thought about the idea of linking and organizing though, but it's interesting. My initial idea was that information on the internet is like junk food -- easy to find, easy to digest, and cheap. It's just more fun to eat candy than vegetables.
I don't think it's an issue of too much information though. Instead, I think that the problem is that the linking and organization is pre-packaged for us by others. And since humans are inherently lazy, we are satisfied with the shallow pre-processed knowledge that we get from various media outlets that really are just existing to sell advertising. People don't crave deeper knowledge. (Well,
WE crave more. That's why we are getting PhDs. I am talking about society in general.)
But is this any different than before? I am not convinced that the average person pre-Internet was spending their life in the library reading books and making links and organizing information either...