the fate of culture in an age of disruption: an ignite talk by andrew hazlett

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Things Fall Apart... and a Terrible Beauty is Born Slides for a talk delivered by Andrew Hazlett at Ignite Baltimore #6, September 30, 2010. Is the Internet making us stupid, or will it enable a new renaissance in learning, culture, and the arts? I submit that the answer is "yes." Complex thought, sustained attention, rational dialogue, historical awareness, cultural literacy, an appreciation of art and beauty... these are values long associated with liberal education, book publishing, print magazines, cultural coverage in newspapers, great museums, public libraries, and other traditional "information technologies." Now, as waves of disruption sweep over these long-standing institutions, many observers have wondered if treasured values are slipping away... perhaps forever. Are we raising a historically illiterate "dumbest generation" stranded in "the shallows" of the web, distracted by fleeting moments with mobile devices, online video, and social networking? Maybe so, but what if our emerging networked culture is also history's greatest opportunity for curious individuals to engage with "the best that has been thought and known in the world"? What if our new age of information is enabling the rise of new means of discovering and spreading enduring truths?

TRANSCRIPT

A Glorious Dream

“...getting to know, on all the matters which most concern us, the best which has been thought and said in the world, and, through this knowledge, turning a stream of fresh and free thought upon our stock notions and habits...”

Matthew Arnold, 1875 Preface to Culture and Anarchy

American high school seniors in 2001

Q: When the United States entered the Second World War, one of its allies was...

Survey says:

A. Germany - 19 % [WTF !!??]

B. Japan - 9 % [maybe the Germans did bomb Pearl Harbor?]

C. the Soviet Union - 48% [Correct!]

D. Italy - 24% [lovers not fighters?]

Source: U.S. Department of Education

“The Internet mirrors society.If you don’t like what you see in the mirror,

don’t break the mirror.”Vint Cerf

[an actual inventor of the Internet]

New York SunFebruary 7, 1909

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