服务承诺
资金托管
原创保证
实力保障
24小时客服
使命必达
51Due提供Essay,Paper,Report,Assignment等学科作业的代写与辅导,同时涵盖Personal Statement,转学申请等留学文书代写。
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标
51Due将让你达成学业目标私人订制你的未来职场 世界名企,高端行业岗位等 在新的起点上实现更高水平的发展
积累工作经验
多元化文化交流
专业实操技能
建立人际资源圈The redefinition or loss of identity--论文代写范文精选
2016-03-15 来源: 51due教员组 类别: Paper范文
搜索身份变得更加困难,从物理现实社会重新定义自身,作为信息的多元性导致大脑变得越来越分散。在与信息技术相关的大多数事情一样,有两种对立观点关于信息技术的影响个人的身份。下面的paper代写范文进行详述。
Abstract
These compounding and interwoven influences of Information Technology all ultimately have either a direct or indirect impact on the character and identity of the individual. If the principles of Post-Structuralism are taken into consideration, society, ethics and culture all serve to shape the subjective life-world of the individual. Consumerism, the displacement of distance and time, and the dissent caused by fragmentation and plurality all serve to disrupt and disorientate the identity of the individual. Information Technology, as has been demonstrated, renders reality increasingly flexible and open to interpretation.
All of these factors should be taken into consideration when considering Information Technology’s influence on the identity. According to Pullinger (1999), ‘[w]e no longer live in a society shaped by a story, but in a turbulent world continuously shaped and reshaped under two main influences: information technology and the search for identity’. This search for identity is made all the more difficult as society redefines itself from a physical reality to an information-based reality. As the plurality of information has resulted in the mind becoming increasingly fragmented, the individual is now living in a reality that is characterized by constant flux. As in most things associated with Information Technology, there are two opposing views regarding the influence of Information Technology on the identity of the individual.
Marx (2004) states that through Information Technology, the individual now enjoys more moral and tactical freedom than ever before. However, this does not necessarily mean upliftment and emancipation, rather it means that the identity is free from totalizing concepts and free to express itself in any way it desires. An alternative view is also offered that Information Technology undermines the individual’s identity framework resulting in the collapse of the identity rather than its strengthening. It is the authors’ opinion that regardless of whether the impact on the identity is positive or negative, it can be guaranteed that a massive change in the traditional identity of the individual is inevitable.
In a traditional social community, vocations and culture all helped to provide a story for the individual to follow. Pullinger (1999) says these social structures helped provide answers to the questions of identity and life: ‘[w]hat is the meaning of my life? [w]here am I going? [w]hat choices are available to me?’ As the market place and organizations become increasingly flexible, jobs disappear or are transformed, traditional social interaction and communities become obsolete, identities which were previously derived from these are left without a coherent foundation. Through the tools, software and networks of Information Technology the uniqueness or individualism of the identity is promoted.
The individual can no longer merely accept the meta-narratives passed onto them by society and culture. The ambiguities created by Information Technology and the undermining of truth have encouraged the individual to seek their own worlds of understanding. The individual is given the means for freedom of expression, is encouraged to explore and discover the world, encounter different life-styles, meet new people and be challenged by different paradigms of thought. The Internet provides the individual with a world of information that could potentially contradict that which they had previously accepted as truth. It can also provide a window into a philosophy or culture that they find more acceptable, that more closely aligns with their personal values and sense of meaning.
This is not to say that Information Technology will always cause dissent. It could by the very mechanisms provide knowledge and insights that reinforce currently accepted value systems. However, through Information Technology the ‘blinkers’ have been removed, the individual can now make that choice for him or herself. According to Suler (2002), ‘[a] single person’s identity embodies multiplicity. You possess many sectors within your personality and play numerous roles in your life – such as child, parent, student, employee, neighbour and friend’. Through the tools and mechanisms of Information Technology the personality can be deconstructed and the individual is able take on different personae and explore the different facets of their personality as desired. This type of identity switching has become increasingly prevalent in the virtual communities of the Internet. Borgman (2000) states that since many individuals find self-expression in the physical world difficult, they look to the Internet to provide the means to define and affirm themselves. This is supported by Rosenberg (2004: 624) who states that the virtual worlds of Internet seem to be predominantly populated by individuals intent on self-discovery and understanding.
Due to the nature of the Internet and the detachment of the individual from his or her physical environment, it is possible to present an image of oneself in exactly the manner you desire. This enables the individual to become anything and anyone they want to be, or only to reveal of themselves that which suits their current needs (Rosenberg, 2004: 590). The individual’s representation can vary to suit his environment, highlighting or exaggerating certain of the characteristics, changing attitude and temperament.
Personal histories and stories can be manufactured, one can even go as far as changing one’s gender to explore aspects of the opposite sex. Rosenberg (2004: 590) states that ‘if all the world’s a stage, then cyberspace has become the stage of choice for many’. However, Slouka (1995) warns that due to the ease with which Information Technology can render the exploration of multiplicity possible, this can result in these multiple selves springing up everywhere. This excessive multiplicity could put the true identity of the individual under extreme pressure resulting in a ‘springtime for schizophrenia’. The rise of Information Technology has placed the identity on a fulcrum. The opportunity exists for the strengthening of the individuality of the identity or its demise. The ultimate result, in the authors’ opinion, depends largely on the strength of character of each individual.(paper代写)
51Due网站原创范文除特殊说明外一切图文著作权归51Due所有;未经51Due官方授权谢绝任何用途转载或刊发于媒体。如发生侵犯著作权现象,51Due保留一切法律追诉权。
更多paper代写范文欢迎访问我们主页 www.51due.com 当然有paper代写需求可以和我们24小时在线客服 QQ:800020041 联系交流。-X(paper代写)

