Mind Amplifier: Can Our Digital Tools Make Us Smarter?
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About this ebook
Instead of asking whether the Web is making us stupid, Howard Rheingold turns that lens around and asks how designing and using digital media mindfully could make us smarter. What if humans could build tools that leverage our ability to think, communicate, and cooperate? Humans invented social learning, speech, writing, alphabets, printing, computers, and the Internet, which means we should be systematically directing the evolution of intellectual augmentation. Mind Amplifier: Can Our Digital Tools Makes Us Smarter? examines the origins of digital mind-extending tools, and then lays out the foundations for their future. Rheingold proposes an applied, interdisciplinary science of mind amplification. Rheingold unveils a new protocol for developing techno-cognitive-social technologies that embrace empathy, mindfulness, and compassion elements lacking from existing digital mind-tools.
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Mind Amplifier - Howard Rheingold
Tools for the mind
Every day we see tremendous economic and societal enthusiasm for an enormous range of networked electronic communication gadgets that provide quick access to ideas and people everywhere. At the same time, there is an understandable apprehension that an addictive dependency on these same devices, which often provide so much, can also numb our minds and emotions, making people and culture shallow.
Instead of asking whether the Web and the various devices connected to it are making us stupid, what if we could mindfully design and use digital media to make us smarter? What if humans could build electronic tools that leverage our ability to think, communicate, and cooperate? I think we can. Humans invented social learning, speech, writing, alphabets, printing, computers, and the Internet. We should be systematically directing the evolution of intellectual augmentation.
Therefore, I want to look at this new assortment of networked devices that are so essential to our lives as the tools they really are, and examine how we may use those tools to, in turn, design more humane and effective technology. Ultimately, I will explore how we can use our machines and digital media to create an informed and socially conscious form of mind-extension. The root ideas are not my original creations. Rather, by linking together the work of media historians, cognitive psychologists, and computer visionaries, I hope to provide a framework to guide our future use of machines-to-think-with. In our species’ self-interest, we need to understand the human-computer symbiosis in which we’ve become enmeshed.
In this quest, we can certainly look to the past for guidance. Our unique ability to create thinking tools has paid off very well for Homo sapiens in many areas. Our primate ancestors probably became human by inventing ways to use their brains that no other species had been able to duplicate (such as foresight, language, and social learning). The democratization of alphabetic literacy enabled by printing presses, for instance, laid the foundations for democracy and science as a collective enterprise.
Conversely, we are also now aware that building powerful machines before asking how they might change us can be destructive and even dangerous. The list of those negative consequences is long and spectacular — the widespread adoption of the automobile caused equally widespread air pollution that may be changing Earth’s climate; computers empower billions of people and form the infrastructure for unprecedented surveillance; nuclear weapons threaten the continued existence of human civilization.
We humans have only recently begun to learn the consequences of using our thinking tools en masse. Technologies that empower individuals can, when used by millions, exhibit emergent negative, even deadly side effects. The democratization of air travel (lower ticket costs, multiple carriers, many routes to choose from) has also enabled the rapid spread of global epidemics, for instance. Likewise, texting while driving a car is becoming a major cause of highway fatalities.
It’s not just the mind-tools that matter when creating civilization shifters. Knowing how to use mind-tools is what reshapes thinking and bends history. If you know how to use mathematics and the scientific method, it becomes possible for you to build both digital computers and thermonuclear weapons. Can we piece together what we know about designing extensions of the human mind — both cognitive and technological — and use what we learn to address the life-threatening impacts of our tool use? I do not want to ignore the possibility that using new technology to solve problems arising from the use of older tools is a self-destructive loop. Neither do I want to argue for or against the probability of a singularity
in coming decades — a hypothesized evolutionary tipping point when intelligent machines might out-think humans at such velocity that we won’t understand what our creations are up to.
Ultimately, though, I want to consider the question that motivated some of the pioneers of personal computing: How might we build media that will enable people to think and collaborate in ways never before possible? What if using information media knowledgeably could make us smarter as individuals, as societies, as a species? This question was first posed decades ago by Vannevar Bush, J.C.R. Licklider, and Douglas Engelbart, and less successfully by Emanuel Goldberg and Paul Otlet before them.¹ ² ³ ⁴ ⁵ Now that the technologies envisioned half a century ago have grown billions of times more powerful (and now that billions of people are using them), it’s worth reconsidering these original ideas, and how to apply new tools to their