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Elizabeth Hummel's avatar

Great essay. A context I hold is that "there is a price for everything, and you always pay." No human technological advancement comes without cost. Which should be obvious, but we (maybe naturally) tend to focus on the glittering promise more than the potential costs. The whole idea that every human technology from flint tools to social media is "progress" and "advancement" is so entrenched. The truth is, there are always both real advantages and real downsides, as you point out so well regarding urbanization vs. village life.

I have always imaged that the longing for individual liberty has been in the hearts of some humans of all ages. Who was that crazy woman who wanted to do something different, something innovative? Who was that man who refused some time-honored ritual? How did these outliers plant cultural seeds that led to changes like urbanization, even as they may have been killed or ostracized? As you write, only with urbanization that gradually developed in human societies could that freedom really be explored by the people who wanted to explore it. And yet, here we are back in the awful cages, but without the benefits of the village!

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Andres's avatar

Great stuff. I still remember my first real city-life experience, when at 16 I left my "village" for Tours, France to study for several months. I knew then I would always live in a big city. I ended up in NYC for 12 years, yet I certainly felt this happening, along with similarly dystopian consequences, during my last years there.

Social media ruined social life, and I don't know if we can come back from that now that the genie is out of the bottle.

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