It homogenizes it, for better or worse.
Languages and dialects become extinct, local customs are obliterated, holidays and celebrations are watered down or redefined to serve the larger masses. Products and services become universal with no regional limitations or "personality". Politics becomes more centered, while, ironically, religion becomes more polarized. Community standards makes way for political correctness, and personal morals are stampeded by mass opinion polls. Crimes are more scrutinized, and nations are less independent. War is known for what it is, and celebrity is made from something that is not. A single person can be heard by millions, and millions can be ignored by a single person. Rumor can become "knowledge" at the speed of an electron, and fatal errors can be made nearly the same speed.
What I like best - I can be friends with a person half a world away.
What I like the least - I sure miss hearing the ladys' southern accents when I travelled in the South. Just not as common as the old days.
2007-03-25 18:09:00
·
answer #1
·
answered by freebird 6
·
2⤊
0⤋
Does communication affect culture or vice versa? Communication has changed. We don't talk one on one as often anymore. Now we send emails and talk on the computer. We communicate via machines. We brush by each other on a crowded street without saying a word but will type to each other here. No more old-fashioned handwritten letters. Now it's e-mail. A lot of communication has become impersonal & yet in some ways the internet allows us to open up more than we would have before. I wouldn't feel this comfortable talking to strangers anywhere else...
2007-03-25 17:48:20
·
answer #2
·
answered by amp 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Huge! We have a hard time with a concept for which there is no word. Moreover, our definition of words shapes our view of society. For example the word "justice" has different meanings depending on where in the world you live.
For some "Justice" equates roughly to fairness. To others "justice" means state imposed decisions that don't consider fairness.
Another example, Eskimos have roughly twenty words for "snow," depending on what kind of snow it is. We here in the lower 48 states have about five words that mean snow.
Communication tends to reflect the physical circumstance of the speaker. A listener who is not familiar with the circumstances of the speaker has a difficult time understanding what is being said.
There is, however, one way of communicating that eliminates local circumstance and speaks universally to all. That language is mathematics.
To the extent that societies become more skilled technologically and they subsequently utilize math or math like logic, they become marginally easier to understand.
2007-03-25 17:58:43
·
answer #3
·
answered by fredrick z 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
HUGE! The historical influences which formed language usage are the same which formed culture, almost to the extent that the two are difficult to separate.
2007-03-25 17:42:27
·
answer #4
·
answered by sonoffm 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yeah, i'm experiencing that recently seeing a female this is Taiwanese... the total eye touch element is almost worrying and that i save 2nd-guessing myself on if I ought to look without postpone at her or away purely off to the section or something... complicated.
2016-12-15 08:56:50
·
answer #5
·
answered by unck 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
Contemporary communication makes it easier to solve small problems before they become huge problems. I just wish people would use it more often; that's what it's for...
2007-03-25 17:44:13
·
answer #6
·
answered by knight2001us 6
·
0⤊
0⤋