Isn’t it absolutely undeniable that technology has changed the world? We cannot deny the fact that we have the power to destroy most of the world’s population within a day. We cannot deny the fact that TVs, cellphones and computers have become somewhat an inseparable part of our daily lives. It is a fact that we cannot deny and yet we cannot see.
What is technology? We often think of it as something that makes our lives better. Technology is all but a powerful tool that carries us further beyond our capabilities. It is an instrument that has been, and still very well carries, our broad definition of our civilization and humanity. Being constantly glorified and vilified through the journey of history. At every step we take towards technological
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It is Orwell’s representation of an instrument not only capable of control, but also the instrument of absolute terror and ‘pure power’; an instrument able to control the thought and ideas of a society. Orwell takes the perils of technology to its extreme, omnipresent lengths. It is by far Orwell’s strongest argument and our greatest, unchallenged danger. Technology is easily the most dangerous and neglected aspect of the modern world. Why? Because we love it. Everyday, we demand them and we rely on them. What makes young people happier more than better phones, faster computers, bigger TVs and corporates are just as happy to provide them. However what we don't see is its danger, its impact that it has on us, mentally and even physically. How long will it take for us to turn into a society filled with ignorance and blindness. ‘Telescreen’, ‘The Party’, ‘Room 101’ It seems like everything Orwell define in 1984 is simple, bleak, symbolic and after all universal. After all, ‘1984’ is a book that reflects and provokes our social paranoias, ‘1984’ is the ‘Room 101’ of our society. But these only exist as fiction, right? Wrong. While technology in ‘1984’ serves the interests of the Party, our technology often serves those who are poisoned with greed and corruption. What technology has achieved today are the dreams of those in the past, but our nightmares of today may quite possibly be the reality of