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Technology has afforded humankind such tremendous advances over the last 125 years—the telephone, the airplane, and the personal computer, to name a few, it is difficult to imagine life without them. But as great as some of the innovations have been for society, technology also has presented its distinct challenges with which we are grappling today: social isolation, physical inactivity, and dependency on machines.
This Reading from The Trinity Forum, a story written in 1909, is eerily prophetic, anticipating airplanes, videophones, and even the Internet. Written by E. M. Forster (author of Room with a View and Passage to India), "The Machine Stops" depicts a future society utterly reliant on one large mechanical system that feeds, bathes, transports, entertains, and educates its citizens. The Machine is so revered that to speak against it or go against its ways, could mean certain exile.
While Forster's fictional society is doomed, his ninety-year-old story raises questions meaningful to us today. Is increasing dependence on technology dangerous? How much technology is too much? While blessed with innovations, how can we overcome some of the challenges technology presents? Why is the answer not "end technology and head for the mountains?" Dan Russ, educator, writer and Trinity Forum moderator, addresses some of these current issues in his foreword.
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