Halford
Member
I must admit in the end I have little sympathy for the 'technology is killing craftsmanship' position.
Take, for example, the heat we use to cook.
We no longer have to hit rocks together to make sparks to start a fire. Or rub sticks together until we carefully, and with great effort, get a baby fire going. These were once highly prized and economically critical skills! The came technology: People invented tinderboxes, and then matches, and then safety matches, and then lighters, electric switches, piezoelectric igniters for gas stoves, microwaves, induction cooktops...
And now we've "lost the craftsmanship" of spending an hour kindling the fire on which our survival through the cold night depends.
So since we stopped spending hours every day on these basic necessities for survival, we have managed to produce the greatest works of art and literature, built thriving enterprises, and spent intimate time with our families and friends -- and of course developed sophisticated and delightful ways of preparing and enjoying food -- where once we were too busy rubbing sticks together so that we might avoid dying tonight.
Technology is not the problem. The question is how we use what it gives us.
Take, for example, the heat we use to cook.
We no longer have to hit rocks together to make sparks to start a fire. Or rub sticks together until we carefully, and with great effort, get a baby fire going. These were once highly prized and economically critical skills! The came technology: People invented tinderboxes, and then matches, and then safety matches, and then lighters, electric switches, piezoelectric igniters for gas stoves, microwaves, induction cooktops...
And now we've "lost the craftsmanship" of spending an hour kindling the fire on which our survival through the cold night depends.
So since we stopped spending hours every day on these basic necessities for survival, we have managed to produce the greatest works of art and literature, built thriving enterprises, and spent intimate time with our families and friends -- and of course developed sophisticated and delightful ways of preparing and enjoying food -- where once we were too busy rubbing sticks together so that we might avoid dying tonight.
Technology is not the problem. The question is how we use what it gives us.