Editing 1227: The Pace of Modern Life

Jump to: navigation, search

Warning: You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you log in or create an account, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.

The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 10: Line 10:
 
The debate as to whether or not the pace of modern life is detrimental to society, culture, and the human experience in general has been going on for longer than we may realize. Presently, the debate has focused on technology such as smartphones, tablets, and other portable electronics; however, many of the same arguments were made against {{w|newspaper}}s, magazines, telegraphs, telephones, and even written correspondence 100 years ago.
 
The debate as to whether or not the pace of modern life is detrimental to society, culture, and the human experience in general has been going on for longer than we may realize. Presently, the debate has focused on technology such as smartphones, tablets, and other portable electronics; however, many of the same arguments were made against {{w|newspaper}}s, magazines, telegraphs, telephones, and even written correspondence 100 years ago.
  
People often tend to think of older times as better. The people complaining compare their present time to the time they lived in before, that is, a couple of decades ago, and this has been happening for over a century (at least). This comic makes a point that the older times people refer to, were also criticized in exactly the same fashion. Since the same criticism is applied to each generation by the generation before that one, every generation thinks that the one they were born in is the good one. This is presentism as explained by Randall in [[24: Godel, Escher, Kurt Halsey]].  
+
People often tend to think of older times as better. The people complaining compare their present time to the time they lived in before, that is, a couple of decades ago, and this has been happening for over a century (at least). This comic makes a point that the older times people refer to, were also criticised in the exact same fashion. Since the same criticism is applied to each generation by the generation before that one, every generation thinks that the one they were born in is the good one. This is presentism as explained by Randall in [[24: Godel, Escher, Kurt Halsey|comic 24]].
  
The comic begins and ends with very similar arguments, perhaps emphasizing how these debates cycle and repeat over time. The comic does not directly state whether these opinions and criticisms were justified or simple fallacies. There is a desire to consider our present existence as good and reasonable and that society has been improving over time. The difficulty lies in considering the possibility that each generation was perhaps correct in their criticism.
+
The comic begins and ends with very similar arguments, perhaps emphasizing how these debates cycle and repeat over time.  
 
 
On reading all of these quotes, one may find these quotes redundant and tiresome to read.  Readers may find themselves skimming the text and skipping several quotes once they get the overall idea.  This could be a self-referential point demonstrating that the writing style of older times was less convenient than the oft-criticized brief modern style.
 
  
 
Some parts of all that long texts are in bold, others not. Here is the summary for only this bold text, picturing just our ''Modern World'':
 
Some parts of all that long texts are in bold, others not. Here is the summary for only this bold text, picturing just our ''Modern World'':
Line 29: Line 27:
 
:The managers of sensational newspapers create perverted tastes and develop vicious tendencies.
 
:The managers of sensational newspapers create perverted tastes and develop vicious tendencies.
 
:To take sufficient time for our meals seems frequently impossible, may I be permitted to say a word in favour of a very worthy and valuable old friend of mine, Mr. Long walk? I am afraid that this good gentleman is in danger of getting neglected, if not forgotten.
 
:To take sufficient time for our meals seems frequently impossible, may I be permitted to say a word in favour of a very worthy and valuable old friend of mine, Mr. Long walk? I am afraid that this good gentleman is in danger of getting neglected, if not forgotten.
:People talk as they ride bicycles–at a rush–without pausing to consider their surroundings the profession of letters is so little understood, tendency among the children of today to rebel against restraint. Our modern family gathering, silent, each individual with his head buried in his favourite magazine, deal openly with situations which no person would have dared to mention in general society forty years ago.
+
:People talk as they ride bicycles-at a rush-without pausing to consider their surroundings the profession of letters is so little understood, tendency among the children of today to rebel against restraint. Our modern family gathering, silent, each individual with his head buried in his favourite magazine, deal openly with situations which no person would have dared to mention in general society forty years ago.
:A hundred years ago it took so long and cost so much to send a letter that it seemed worth while to put some time and thought into writing it. A brief letter to-day may be followed by another next week–a "line" now by another to-morrow.
+
:Nude men and women in the daily journals fitness and courtliness too often totally lacking a hundred years ago it took so long and cost so much to send a letter that it seemed worth while to put some time and thought into writing it. A brief letter to-day may be followed by another next-week-a “1ine” now by another to-morrow.
 
 
The style of the comic is very similar to that of [[1311: 2014]], which was released half a year later.
 
  
 
The title text shows that the meaning of the institute of marriage debate has likewise been going on for quite some time.
 
The title text shows that the meaning of the institute of marriage debate has likewise been going on for quite some time.
Line 79: Line 75:
 
:The cause of the ... increase in nervous disease is '''increased demand made by the conditions of modern life upon the brain'''. Everything is done in a hurry. '''We talk across a continent, telegraph across an ocean''', take a trip to Chicago for an hour's talk... '''We take even our pleasures sadly and make a task of our play''' ... what wonder if the pressure is almost more than our nerves can bear.
 
:The cause of the ... increase in nervous disease is '''increased demand made by the conditions of modern life upon the brain'''. Everything is done in a hurry. '''We talk across a continent, telegraph across an ocean''', take a trip to Chicago for an hour's talk... '''We take even our pleasures sadly and make a task of our play''' ... what wonder if the pressure is almost more than our nerves can bear.
 
::G. Shrady (from P.C. Knapp)
 
::G. Shrady (from P.C. Knapp)
::"Are nervous diseases increasing?" ''Medical Record''
+
::”Are nervous diseases increasing?''Medical Record''
 
:::1896
 
:::1896
  
Line 96: Line 92:
 
:::1902
 
:::1902
  
:The art of conversation is almost a lost one. '''People talk as they ride bicycles–at a rush–without pausing to consider their surroundings''' ... what has been generally understood as cultured society is rapidly deteriorating into baseness and voluntary ignorance. '''The profession of letters is so little understood''', and so far from being seriously appreciated, that ... Newspapers are full, not of thoughtful honestly expressed public opinion on the affairs of the nation, but of vapid personalities interesting to none save gossips and busy bodies.
+
:The art of conversation is almost a lost one. '''People talk as they ride bicycles-at a rush-without pausing to consider their surroundings''' ... what has been generally understood as cultured society is rapidly deteriorating into baseness and voluntary ignorance. '''The profession of letters is so little understood''', and so far from being seriously appreciated, that ... Newspapers are full, not of thoughtful honestly expressed public opinion on the affairs of the nation, but of vapid personalities interesting to none save gossips and busy bodies.
 
::Marie Corelli,
 
::Marie Corelli,
 
::''Free opinions, freely expressed''
 
::''Free opinions, freely expressed''
 
:::1905
 
:::1905
  
:There is a great '''tendency among the children of today to rebel against restraint''', not only that placed upon them by the will of the parent. But against any restraint or limitation of what they consider their rights ... this fact has filled well minded people with great apprehensions for the future.
+
:There is a great '''tendency among the children of today to rebel against restraint''', not only that placed upon them by the will of the parent. But against any restraint or limitation of what they consider their rights ... this fag-has filled well minded people with great apprehensions for the future.
 
::Rev. Henry Hussmann,
 
::Rev. Henry Hussmann,
 
::''The authority of parents''
 
::''The authority of parents''
Line 118: Line 114:
 
:::1908
 
:::1908
  
:'''A hundred years ago it took so long and cost so much to send a letter that it seemed worth while to put some time and thought into writing it.''' Now the quickness and the cheapness of the post seem to justify the feeling that '''a brief letter to-day may be followed by another next week–a "line" now by another to-morrow.'''
+
:'''A hundred years ago it took so long and cost so much to send a letter that it seemed worth while to put some time and thought into writing it.''' Now the quickness and the cheapness of the post seem to justify the feeling that '''a brief letter to-day may be followed by another next-week-a “1ine” now by another to-morrow.'''
 
::Percy Holmes Boynton, ''Principles of Composition''
 
::Percy Holmes Boynton, ''Principles of Composition''
 
:::1915
 
:::1915
Line 128: Line 124:
  
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
[[Category:Language]]
 

Please note that all contributions to explain xkcd may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see explain xkcd:Copyrights for details). Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

To protect the wiki against automated edit spam, we kindly ask you to solve the following CAPTCHA:

Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)