In Tension with Intention: The Divide Between Humanity and Technology
The mission of the Center for Applied Technology is to transform the way technology shapes the 四虎影院 experience. We seek to accomplish this goal not only by building software for the school, but also by being conscious of how we use technology鈥攁nd social media in particular鈥攂oth professionally and personally.
Recently, the CATLab hosted a lecture by Dr. Felicia Song. Zak Landrum, the program director, told us that 鈥渁 lot of the inspiration for the most thoughtful aspects of the CATLab came almost directly from Dr. Song鈥檚 Internet and Society class.鈥 As a cultural sociologist, she studies social media through the lens of 鈥渉ow we understand meaning as a society.鈥 Dr. Song helped us grapple with the problem of technology today, identify an antidote, and articulate our plans of action for engaging the digital world.
The problem
In her article 鈥,鈥 Dr. Song gives us both a sociological and theological diagnosis for the problem of technology. She describes the digital environment as 鈥渁 set of rushing rapids consisting of texts, posts, likes, tweets and quippy hashtags that we are compelled to traverse to maintain both our most intimate and most pragmatic of relationships.鈥 Drawing on the work of philosopher James K. A. Smith, Dr. Song shows that technology provides us with a set of 鈥渟ecular liturgies鈥 that train us to focus our attention and love away from the Kingdom of God.
In her lecture, she said that 鈥boundaries are slipping,鈥 and as a result, 鈥渙ur expectations of each other鈥 shift as well. Although she used a lot of the language of addiction, she said that our society鈥檚 relationship with technology was more of a 鈥渟hared compulsion鈥 that normalizes our need to always be connected and 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 frame it as a problem.鈥 Referring to her class on Internet and Society, she described an 鈥渁rc in the students鈥 experience鈥濃攕tudents usually began the class believing that they had healthy relationships with technology, only to be awakened to a truer picture of their problem.
The professional/personal divide
All that said, Dr. Song conceded, 鈥淭here鈥檚 a big difference between professional uses of the screen and personal uses of the screen.鈥 Zak added that a lot of that difference comes down to using 鈥technology as a tool as opposed to technology as a social influence.鈥 As we discussed the divide between the professional and personal, Emily noted that she found it hard to 鈥渂e fully immersed in work if I have notifications on,鈥 showing how disruptive鈥攅ven invasive鈥攎edia can be. Zak further reflected that the distinction between work and home 鈥渦sed to be such a physical divide,鈥 but that nowadays it is more 鈥渓ike a partitioning of the mind.鈥
Here at the CATLab, we鈥檙e working hand-in-hand with technology all the time, but our professional engagement with social media occupies only a few minutes at the beginning and end of each day. We鈥檙e encouraged to be intentional, not obsessed, with social media. In addition, the 鈥減rofessional development鈥 time in the morning and evening also give us space to simply reflect on what we鈥檝e done and where we鈥檙e going.
, for instance, uses his time primarily as 鈥渁 way to mentally prepare myself for the day.鈥 He has also spent time following 鈥渙ther people in my line of work and what they are currently working on鈥 to gain inspiration for things he can do. Similarly, said that 鈥渉aving the social media makes me think more intentionally鈥 about how he鈥檚 presenting himself to employers who might be looking at his profile. His social media is primarily for his professional persona, 鈥減retty compartmentalized鈥 in the sense that he only spends time on while he鈥檚 at work. , too, began using social media as part of her work for the CATLab. She hopes to 鈥渧enture out into the professional setting鈥 and connect with people in her field, building up a kind of portfolio to say, 鈥渢his is what I鈥檝e done, things I鈥檝e thought about in the workplace, things I鈥檝e learned, how I want to learn.鈥
Thinking well about technology
When asked if there was an 鈥渁ntidote鈥 to our current digital immersion, Dr. Song replied that we should 鈥渢ry to find ways to spend enough time in our week for our brains to remember what it鈥檚 like to not be on a screen.鈥 Her champions 鈥counter-liturgies that push back against these mis-formations of the heart鈥 that come from the 鈥渟ecular liturgies鈥 of technology. 鈥淲hether it鈥檚 like surfing or baking or changing diapers,鈥 she told us, we need times in which we are 鈥渄eeply grounded in something outside鈥 of the digital world.
She went on to say that the current generation of young adults seems to be 鈥渟elf-correcting鈥濃攎ore and more young people are beginning to see the damage of digital addiction and choose to unplug. The students chimed in their agreement: 鈥淧ersonally,鈥 said Sam, 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 gone on social media since freshman year in college.鈥 James reflected on the need for 鈥渙pportunities to pull yourself away 蹿辞谤肠颈产濒测.鈥
Despite the growing disillusionment with social media, it is still important for us to be conscious of our use of technology and to remember, as Dr. Song writes, 鈥渢he fact that we are embodied persons who bring both physical presence and voice.鈥 We should seek not merely to avoid addiction but to 鈥渓ive in a way that is flourishing.鈥 At 四虎影院, Dr. Song has thought deeply about the implications of social media both 鈥渟ociologically and also theologically.鈥 And while society forms part of the problem, we can also harness it as part of the solution:
鈥淭he point is: our technological practices do not need to be privatized; individuals and individual families do not need to be the sole arbiters of how technology gets used. Instead, when set within the framework of counter-liturgies, the work of the people, it is wholly possible for groups of friends, families, church communities and work organizations to promise each other to commit collectively to not subjecting each other to FOMO, but choosing to abide through countercultural practices that encourage a compassionate view of each other鈥檚 vulnerability as frail human beings.鈥 - Felicia Wu Song
In essence, this struggle to redeem technology demands collective, even institutional, effort. Here at the CATLab, we are trying to join that effort by making space for conversation and reflection. We recognize that we are people within community, and that what each of us does individually has an effect on the community as a whole. While we all agreed to take a social media fast one day a week, we are also seeking other ways to practice grounding ourselves outside the digital realm. For Ethan, this looks like cutting down on screen time during the weekends so that he can spend more time with friends. For Rebecca, it鈥檚 鈥渂e[ing] intentional with people in person.鈥 She was especially inspired by Dr. Song鈥檚 prompting to 鈥渃ultivate other realities鈥 beyond the digital. After some reflection, Rebecca asked a question that merits serious thought in our technology-dominated world: 鈥淲hat are we doing to embody our humanness?鈥