bunnyb.gal
Practically Family
- Messages
- 788
- Location
- sunny London
:eusa_clap
Forgive me, but I think you both are deluding yourselves by the notion that you’d necessarily be happier living back then. You (we all for that matter) have no choice but to view previous eras through modern eyes. As a result there is no immediacy of context for us, no uncertainty from moment to moment or day to day, no opposing forces to influence our choices and effect our circumstances. The trouble is that we know how it all turned out, for better or for worse, and unless a psychologist can elaborate otherwise, I really don’t think you deny that - you just can’t un-know what you know. Sure we can dream about living in earlier times, and I’ve done it myself, but without the exigencies and realities that gave meaning to the original context, we have no actual investment in the reality of another time period. Thus we pick and choose what makes up our impression and understanding of that era and in the end it all remains a fantasy, wearing costumes and play acting, nostalgia for times we never new. However, I might suggest that one can certainly, though perhaps only at best, aspire to those qualities and aspects which make a certain era appealing - facilitated of course by various garb, accoutrements and period methods - a fun and entertaining exercise to be sure.
Maybe you would be happier living in a previous era, who is anyone to say otherwise, unfortunately that’s something you’ll never be able to know; that knowledge simply does not exist.
Ain't it the truth.I don't think there's any such thing as a "simpler" time. I'd gladly settle for a less idiotic one.
The idea of current technology being overwhelming and intrusive is a very apt observation -- there is very little in daily life today that doesn't have modern tech wound up in it one way or another ...
We've traded social cohesion for convenience, and I say we've gotten the far worst of the bargain.
It is perfectly sane and rational for a person to not see any value in corporate intrusions into our lives.
Going to the bank or the post office was another important center of social connection -- but now, when you bank by ATM and pay your bills online, where's the human connection?
It is perfectly sane and rational for a person to not see any value in corporate intrusions into our lives.
What if you don't have a bank account and keep all your savings under the mattress?
Now there's something very vintage.
What makes it worse is when people submit to this and call it "progress".It's bad enough when something that I've never seen as such is called an "art." But what's really frightening is when that "art" becomes a "science."