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effect of technological advancement on adolescents

2006-06-28 00:30:52 · 3 answers · asked by Heske 1 in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

3 answers

My observations point to a diminishing social response and continual alienation from community interaction. Not withstanding basic social inter-action seems to be the important basis for adolescent understanding and interpretation between right and wrong. The generational conflicts are easily recognized by members of each groups participants and problem solving solutions become a commmunity responsibility. Whereas technology usually doesn't require either community response nor action to become effective.

2006-06-28 00:40:33 · answer #1 · answered by Richard R 1 · 0 0

One thing that springs to mind is the diversity of sources a person thinks they can rely on, and the diversity of guidance/opinion that is provided. We all become paralysed by choice. A clear and single moral voice is more persuasive, but it doesn't mean it is automatically right. A vast choice of guidance/opinion forces a person to evaluate and choose their moral standpoint, though it often leads to confusion, apathy or the cherry picking of ideas to support whatever agenda that person is trying to evolve e.g If you want to believe that the holocaust never happend, then all the information is there to suport that opinion, likwise - bringing the age of consent down to 12 years old is argued by many to be morally correct...

2006-06-28 00:42:53 · answer #2 · answered by cobra 7 · 0 0

they get superior info

2006-06-28 00:59:29 · answer #3 · answered by operator10001 2 · 0 0

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