Philosopher Slavoj Zizek found himself in a windowless room recently. The room had digital screens for walls. Standing confused in the middle of the room, he saw images bombarding the screens all around him. Those who put him in it wanted (it was by some European media) his reactions to the experience. He said: “You are bombarding me with these images. Yes, we live this every day. Modern man lives in images, and has no reality.”
We stupid humans live in images. We began it with motion pictures, then TV and now we have images all around us: they are on mobile phones, tablets, and computers. We spend more time with images than with real life. I mean mentally. Our greatest skill today is swiping of mobile phone screens. Our greatest intellectual output today is comments on Facebook. We are but a failed species. We have reached where the market wants us to be. Our identity today is that of consumers. You are not a painter, or a singer or a dancer or a writer, but a manufacturer of these “products” and there are consumers waiting for you on Youtube, social networks and other apps. Yes, all these fine arts are wrapped up in as consumer products.
Everybody today is a kid or is made one. With huge bodies and elongated desires, but with stunted mental, emotional development, spiritual growth, we go for toys. We talk and think about toys like mobile phones, tablets, laptops and computers, while more abstract toys like apps trap us more into fantasy worlds. Before one fad is over, they upgrade it with new apps, add more features, and continue to hook us to it. They are able to give people a ‘sense of importance’ with it; buying costly phones show how important you are. This is what we could call ‘gadget culture’.
According to a study by Ipso Open Thinking Exchange we spend some 3 hours on social networks each day and an equal time on mobile various apps too.
The slogan today is 24-hours fun with no moment of boredom. So reading has become a boring activity and some writers have overcome this by writing special novels for social netizens. Today’s most “pop novelists” only want to keep readers not bored. But in truth, humanity’s intellectual development is basically linked to boredom. Major arts forms, great novels and poetry were born because somebody was terribly bored with life and wanted others to engage in intellectual and emotional debate. Just ten or 15 years from now, nit-wits, idiots and dumb humans will increase in number. They will have sharp brains for maths and science but no imagination, and no wisdom. That will be the end of creativity. You can’t any more expect towering artists or singers or writers in the coming generations.
We now get in touch with people because of clear reasons including utility and entertainment. If a person is useful we make relation with him or her and if a person is interesting, you are a friend to him or her. It means a human is now a product with features. There is no ideological point like; all humans are unique and great. Poet WB Yeats sang about it in the 20th century: “The best lack all convictions but the worst are full of passionate intensity”. Hell, the times have changed; let’s swipe for new message on Whatsapp.
(The views expressed are personal. Some of the other articles of the columnist are: Women, be careful while in New York, Explaining mysteries to kids, Why didn't Indian media see him?, and Yes, women go crazy over Saritha!)