The Baroness, Consciousness, and the Twitterverse: A Conversation with Susan Greenfield
Greenfield recommends pub debates or rants on street corners instead of using social media. Quote: “How sad that a species that previously wrote novels and expressed themselves in thousand word letters, are now having to encapsulate important or interesting ideas in 150 [sic] characters, and that’s the first issue. And if you are used to doing that, are you going to start living your life in windows of 150 characters? And I do find that rather sad. Secondly, there’s many ways in which you can have debates and discussions. You can go to the pub, you can go out to the street, you know, you can go to universities, you can come to the Royal Institution in London. There’s many, many places and ways in which you can discuss ideas… to say that this is the only vehicle for debate and discussion for people who are ordinary human beings who aren’t in positions of power, who don’t have the platforms politicians have, I find that a bit disingenuous.” Then we’re told how one becomes a Baroness in the House of Lords. Greenfield admits she’s never used Twitter, but characterizes users as threatened and angry with a “shaky sense of identity” similar to small children demanding attention, and “perhaps they’re going nowhere.” Ironically, she is keen on the Royal Institution of Great Britain producing webcasts for the “globalization, not just democratization of science.” While their talks look interesting, the Royal Institution demands your street address and other personal data to register to watch, so I won’t. Ah, culture clashes.
| Producer: The Science Network | Featuring: Roger Bingham, Prof. Baroness Susan Greenfield |
| Format: Flash | Date: 22/05/09 |
| Length: 00:48:00 | |
| http://thesciencenetwork.org/programs/the-science-studio/a-conversation-with-susan-greenfield | |
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Tags:brain, consciousness, culture, fail, internet, sociology, technology, Twitter, video | |
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Pretty cool post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say
that I have really liked browsing your blog posts. In any case
I’ll be subscribing to your blog and I hope you write again soon!
Thanks Katy!
After hearing the arguments of someone, what is the first thing one must do: check that they are sustained by proper scientific evidence in order to consider them valid.
Do that, see what proofs there are, what evidence, You will find that there is almost no research done, nothing can sustain her theories.
Hold on, so no-one is writing novels anymore because of Twitter? I’ll get scribbling one and it’s bound to be a bestseller!
You could publish it on Twitter a sentence at a time.
Hey, like the post, but as a side note, you realize that Katy is a robot right? I get almost that same comment verbatim on everything I post. Doesn’t it seem suspiciously vague?
I like to be nice to robots, orcateers. I’m Canadian.

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