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By Douglas Rushkoff
![]() That is the question Maybe the news that the Internet makes people depressed shouldn't have taken us by surprise. It's what concerned cyberreactionarles have been telling us since the heginning: the Internet renders us incapable of forming real relationships, isolates us in an empty electronic simulation and destroys family bonds. Now, the well-meaning killjoys have some science to back their conjecture. As front-page news stories have announced to the world, researchers at Carnegie Mellon University determined that people who spend even a few hours a week online experience higher levels of depression and loneliness than those who don't. What makes the results partIcularly credible is that the two-year, one-and-a-half million-dollar study's sponsors - companies like Intel, Hewlett-Packard and Apple Computer - have a vested interest in proving the opposite. I pored over the study for gaps in their reasoning. What sorts of online activities were the test subjects engaging in?
In spite of the truly interpersonal nature of their activities, the subjects experienced an objective increase in depression and loneliness - a small but significant rise of about 1 per cent, as measured by standard psychological tests.
Subjects also showed a marked decrease in the amount of time they spent with their families and size of their non-virtual social circles.
![]() The social scientists who carried out the research have hypothesised that the Internet just doesn't provide the deep, emotionally supportive interaction afforded bythe face-to-face encounters of real life. They believe that virtual relationships simply can't substitute for real ones. Perhaps. But why, then, would the addition of electronic relationships into our lives make us more depressed than we were to begin with? Is it just because of the time that online interaction takes away from the rest of our lives, reducing our opportunity to interact with family and friends?
Maybe online communities whet our appetite for the community that so-called "real life" has been denying us for too long. We have marketed and mediated ourselves into extreme isolation relative to what human beings experienced for the past few centuries.
Might our experiences online be revealing to us some of what we've left behind?
In fact, the whole of the entertainment culture might be a form of anaesthesia-electronic Prozac that keeps us from experiencing the full weight of our market-driven, highly divided global society.
Like the musicians on the deck of the titanic, our entertainments keep us calm and distracted as the boat sinks intot he ocean.
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