A Commonplace Book

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The [Toronto] Globe and Mail (Ostry)

 

It's a highway that promises amazing opportunities in education and, in one sense, the ultimate in freedom. To sit alone in a room with a machine that offers instant access to the whole of the world's information is surely to experience a new dimension in freedom.

For some, however, it may also bring a new dimension in alienation. If a little learning is a dangerous thing, a bottomless well of information may prove just as dangerous. The solitary mind could drown in it. The global village, it turns out, is a lonely place. Though the mass media have hugely increased the flow of information, many over-informed city people feel a cultural emptiness, a spiritual vacuum, a sense of being strangers in their own place. Will the electronic highway give such people a sense of community, or will it simply turn them into tuned-in, hooked-up hermits?
-- Bernard Ostry "The Mermaid Inn: The wiring of Canada: a danger, a challenge, a certainty" [paywalled], The [Toronto] Globe and Mail (Canada) (December 9, 1978).
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