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Science Technology

The document discusses the dual nature of technology, highlighting it as both a boon and a bane for humanity. While technology has significantly advanced human life and business, it also contributes to environmental pollution and societal issues like cybercrime. The text emphasizes the importance of recognizing both the positive and negative impacts of technology and the need for responsible usage to mitigate its adverse effects.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
128 views8 pages

Science Technology

The document discusses the dual nature of technology, highlighting it as both a boon and a bane for humanity. While technology has significantly advanced human life and business, it also contributes to environmental pollution and societal issues like cybercrime. The text emphasizes the importance of recognizing both the positive and negative impacts of technology and the need for responsible usage to mitigate its adverse effects.

Uploaded by

Mahesh Waran
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Is technology a bane or a boon for humankind?

In: Business & Finance, English Language, Technology [Edit categories] Answer: technology is both boon and bane,incapable of either harming or benifiting anyone There are ~6bn people on earth, w/o technology human kinds population would be a LOT smaller. Most people find it, no pun intended, a boon Technology is both boon and bane,incapable of either harming or benifiting anyone. Sometimes it may become bane because in factories the smoke comes outside,is called as air pollution.Radio,t.v veichles etc... produces noise it makes sound pollution . Sometimes the chemicals of factories mix into water and when sunami comes the water falls on usit is called water pollution.we are introducing technology and we are only killing ourselves. It's a boon, no doubt about it. IT is the backbone of many large organizations and for many it's become impossible to conduct their business without IT support. technology is both boon and bane,incapable of either harming or benifiting anyone There are ~6bn people on earth, w/o technology human kinds population would be a LOT smaller. Most people find it, no pun intended, a boon Technology is both boon and bane,incapable of either harming or benifiting anyone. Sometimes it may become bane because in factories the smoke comes outside,is called as air pollution.Radio,t.v veichles etc... produces noise it makes sound pollution . Sometimes the chemicals of factories mix into water and when sunami comes the water falls on usit is called water pollution.we are introducing technology and we are only killing ourselves. It's a boon, no doubt about it. IT is the backbone of many large organizations and for many it's become impossible to conduct their business without IT support. You dont seem to understand technology at all. Technology is not only about making human lives better. It also includes making the environment sustainable. You have drawn a picture where only the wasteful sides of technology are depicted. But look at what technology has done to make to alleviate the stress that other technologies have put the environment under. Isnt clean-burning fuels a technology? Isnt hybrid vehicles a technology? Isnt white-hat hacking technology? Isnt anti-virus software technology? This list is endless. Crimes have always existed, and with newer technologies, newer crimes come to light. But it is technology again, that helps fight crime viz forensics, DNA testing. Algorithmic crime fighting to counter cyber crime and the sort you have mentioned. Any new development breeds evils, but that fact that further development happens to thwart these evils is what keeps development and technology alive.

You can always use technology to counter the ill effects of technology and this is what all technologists are trying to do. Therefore, analyse both sides of the matter before commenting on a topic such as this. Cheers

In simple words, technology symbolises advancement of human knowledge and man is considered as the creator. Lets accept the fact that modern life is unthinkable without science and technology, but that doesnt mean we ignore the darker side of the issue. Lets briefly discuss about the negative impact of technology on living beings and environment. Various educators feel that the notion of technological society is bringing up a generation of kids in front of computer screens, whose brains are going to be peculiarly different. Technology was discovered for the sole purpose of human development but today it is considered as a setback by many environmentalists. I think the basic problem is that, that when technology gets in the wrong hand, the results can be dangerous and can simultaneously have negative impact on the sustainability of human race. At the same time its adverse effect on society can hardly be ignored. Cyber-crimes, hacking, stealing of personal information, MMS scandals, illegal pornography and various other issues have emerged from the misuse of technology. The abuse of technology for economic interest is equally responsible. The major reason for increase in violence is the advancement in the production of arms and ammunitions, bombs, bio-chemical and nuclear weapons, which gave security and insecurity to different countries but at the same time brought violence both internal and between nations. Increase in pollution has resulted from technological advancement which has degraded our environment and has polluted our water bodies to a great extent. It has not only spoiled our lifestyle but has equally affected the length and quality of our life. The truth is that science and technology has laid an extensive burden on irreplaceable resources and though it has increased human potential, it has subsequently reduced human limits. The issue is that, though we want to enjoy the benefits of science and technology but at the same time we have to avoid the threat of its misuse or abuse which risks our life and nature. Generally people like us who are on the benefitting end, have little or no control over the adverse impact of science and technology. Maybe this is the reason why we assume that there are no issues with technology and if they exist, we believe that we can apply technology to remove or suppress them. We cant abandon science and technology but the unwanted and negative results of technology should be identified and verified, and proper deliberation and efforts should be made to control these unwanted aspects.

Effects of Westernization on Indian Culture and Traditions A common and genuine fear amongst conservative Indians (specially elders) is that the rampant westernization amongst Indians is leading to the gradual decline and eventual ruins of Indian culture and tradition. Western goods, dresses, foods, festivals, style, language and moreover the western thought is suspected to be spreading across the populace. The purpose of this article is to look at the many reasons that cause such fears and analyze them by comparing with reality. This analysis is mainly from the Hindu perspective since that is where the authors experience lies. The analysis however, would probably apply in equal measure to those Indians of other religious persuasions as well. Broadly Culture and Tradition can be thought to be made up of:: Celebration of festivals and religious practices, dresses, foods, arts, traditional sciences, language and lifestyle. An analysis on these lines may give us a good handle on the topic and provide a reasonably complete picture. Festivals and Religious practices Indians now celebrate a wide variety of festivals cutting across religious lines. Special attention has been focused on Valentines Day, New Years Eve, Halloween, Christmas and such festivals that are considered to be alien to India. The fact that large number of youngsters have taken to celebrating these has aroused substantial fears leading to even threats of, and in many cases real, physical violence. Christmas and New Years Eve are celebrated these days with gusto amongst the Indian middle and upper classes. Though Christmas is an important religious festival for Christians many Hindus celebrate Christmas. Valentines Day is gaining popularity mainly amongst youngsters. There is an allegation that Valentines Day is a media and commerce introduced venture. Whatever be the cause, it has gained popularity. Most people celebrating Christmas, New years and Valentines, do it as a celebration rather than as a religious festival. Valentines Day is looked upon as a celebration of love and it provides youngsters opportunities to romance the opposite sex. Christmas and New Years are celebrated more for the consumption of cakes and wines rather than for religious reasons. In a manner, many Indians have adopted these as general non-religious festivals. Interestingly, New Years eve celebrations have started acquiring an Indian dimension and it is not always about drinking and dancing. We must note that the traditional Hindu festivals are also celebrated in pomp and splendor, increasing by the year. In Mumbai, during the 2-3 days of Ganapathi Visarjan, Mumbais beaches are full to the brim. The number of people coming and the number of Ganapathis (Huge ones and small ones) is to be seen to get an understanding of the involvement of people. Krishna Janmashtami is celebrated publicly in every other street. Handi breaking competitions in this period have tough competitions and tougher competitors. Heights of the Handis go up to 13 tiers and prizes of some of the mandals go even above 50 Lakh rupees. Sankranti, Ugadi, Deepavali, Dasara, Durga Pooja, Raama Navami are all celebrated nowadays much more than in the previous generation (around 25 years ago).

We find that many festivals are moving more and more into the public domain while retaining the private celebrations too. The Public Ganapathi pandals in Mumbai attract lakhs of devotees (crores of rupees are collected at Lalbaghcha Raja Ganapathi). The public celebration of festivals provides coverage for those who dont or cant celebrate privately. Regarding religious practices, the activity is now higher than it was in the earlier generations. Group singing of Soundarya Lahari, kumkumrchanas, homs and ygas seem to be increasing. Temples are overflowing (may be the same with Churches and Mosques). What used to be road side shanty temples acquire full temple status with permanent buildings and committed following. Old temples in several villages are all being renovated and people (both local and those who have migrated) are actively contributing to these initiatives. Religious gurus are attracting more followers and there is a wider audience for their discourses. Dresses Western dresses have percolated into the Indian populace quite widely. Some of the Indian traditional dresses such as Dhoti, Turban (for men), Saari, Langa-Blouse-Daavani (for girls) are becoming rare. The westernization of the Indian dress started much before, during the British rule. The Pants, Skirts, Shirts, Ties, Suits and such have been in vogue for quite some time now. Indian dresses continue to live well. The traditional dresses are common on all special occasions including amongst youngsters. The Salwar-Kameez, Kurta-Pyjama, Mundu, Saari and such are still commonly used. Western dresses have also been adopted widely, probably from the convenience aspect. The western dresses that are inconvenient to wear such as corsets, large flowing gowns and skirts are quite rare. Here again, traditional Indian dresses dont seem to be in any danger of being subsumed by westernization. Foods The Indian palate has welcomed many western foods (and eastern as well). Pizzas, Burgers, Ice creams, Noodles are all common place in Indian cities and towns. Of late Barbecues, Steaks, Pasta, Lasagna, Spaghetti, Tacos, and other foods are also making their presence felt. When the major western food joints started operations in India, there were widespread fears that it was the end of Indian foods like Dosa and Idly. No such thing has happened. If any, the Indian foods, with all their regional traditional identities in tact, have grown stronger. There is enough demand for the Appam as for the Rumali Rotis. The Rasgullas and the Mysore paks are both relished with equal fervor. Some special dishes that were getting quite rare a decade ago are now reappearing and are even being marketed commercially. For instance, in Karnataka, dishes such as Manohara, Kunda, Kardant, Todedev are spreading from their earlier regional silos and are addressing larger markets.

There may not be many Indian dishes of value that have been sacrificed at the altar of western / foreign foods. Arts Western music and dance are quite popular amongst urban Indians. Concerts by western artists are well received. Hollywood movies have a decent market, at least in the tier-1 cities. Have these affected Indian arts? Indian traditional arts also seem to be doing well. Carnatic and Hindustani classical and light music, Bharata natya, Kathak, have good following. Many people qualified in various professions also practice these, at times giving up their main professions to follow the route of the traditional arts. Many schools / trainers teaching the classical arts seem to have enough students. Bollywood, Tollywood, also have good markets and are teaching a thing or two to Hollywood. As in foods and dresses, even in art, the Indian traditional arts dont seem to have lost out to the western arts Traditional Sciences In case of traditional sciences, there is a widespread feeling that Indian medicinal systems like Ayurveda have been ignored and ridiculed and only western allopathic medicine is being encouraged. Some feel that Indian sciences like yogsana will be appreciated only if it comes from the west. Ayurvedic practitioners are doing quite well. There are many companies that prepare and market ayurvedic medicines and these are as commercially oriented as their allopathic counterparts. Governments are running Aurvedic colleges and enough people are graduating from these. All in all, Ayurveda seems to be doing quite well. We must acknowledge that the allopathic medicine is far advanced in terms of scientific growth and is the only option available for proven remedies in critical conditions. The improving infant mortality, life expectancy and such health care related metrics can all be credited to the allopathic medicine. Adaptation of this is inevitable and desirable. As for yogsanas, they never went out of practice in India. There is now, much higher appreciation for the benefits of yogsanas, prnyma and Meditation. Many schools teach these to students as part of the regular extra curricular activities and the children of today are likely to know more sanas than their parents. Language Learning English is seen as the ipso-facto requirement for gaining better employment opportunities and consequently better life style. Usage of English is on the rise and it shall be so for some time to come.

Have the Indian languages been neglected? Study of these by serious student scholars may have seen a down trend. This is to be expected since English is a vehicle that brings in global employment opportunities to India. Almost all scientific and engineering terminology is in English and this is the natural language for studying these subjects. However, following for literature in the local languages seems to be quite healthy. Lakhs of people attended the recently concluded Kannada shitya sammelana in Bangalore. Large number of Kannada books (amounting to Rs 8 Crores) were sold on this occasion. Similarly, the International Tamil conferences have been great hits recently. The leading authors of Kannada are still writing books and selling in substantial numbers. It could be a similar story with other Indian languages. There is a sizeable market for English books too. However, when people read English literature, novels and such, it is from the standpoint of an external observer. Few will try to superimpose the western cultural and traditional aspects expressed in these books upon themselves and their lives. A casual look at all the famous intellectuals of the country (those exposed to wide range of western literature) in the last century will prove that study of English literature does not automatically affect the lives they lead. We can find that in the different regions of India, people are quite comfortable in using their mother tongues without any sense of inferiority. The education system fosters learning of multiple languages and anyone not conversant with the local language and / or mother tongue would be considered not up to the mark. As usage of English spreads to all sections of the society across the country, the exalted status enjoyed by English will come down to be on par with other native languages. Then it will become just a language of convenience and not have any cultural aspects coloring its usage. That local languages are as popular as English is already seen a sampling of popular Radio / TV channels / programs should establish this. There is a strong following for the vernacular television and print media. All in all, it appears that though English is getting quite common, the other local languages are not really languishing. Lifestyle A great deal has been said about the Pub culture fostered by the western civilization and the devastating effect it has on Indian culture. The ease with, and extent to, which girls and boys mix together; the disco bars; the drinking and merry making; the coffee joints with hookahs; are all frowned upon as being against Indian morality. There is no particular lifestyle that can be said to be Indian. The Indian values of family life, respect to elders, affection to younger, sense of duty are all still very much in evidence. People given to the pleasures of life like drinking, merry making, were always there even in the ancient Indian society. In fact, it appears so that in ancient India, people by and large had a jolly good time. The frowning upon all pleasures as sins is probably foreign to Indian and may be an effect of the Victorian conservatism imported by British. The Muslim rule may also have had significant influence in this conservatism.

Indians, including the financially well-to-do still get married with the intention of staying together for the rest of their lives. If financial insecurity has reduced amongst working women and consequently they are able to assert themselves against abuse, it has be applauded as progressive rather than considering it as a loss of culture and tradition. If in the past Indians treated their women badly or unequally (daughters, wives and widows), then the equality that is being bestowed upon women is a good value. This shall probably restore the respect for women that ancient Indians were proud to have. Rampant Consumerism / Brand Materialism Another aspect of the lifestyle clearly noticeable is the rampant consumerism and brand materialism. In recent years, we are seeing in India an expanded brand materialism, an annoying number of goods for the flesh and its enjoyment. This practice has affected all aspects of life not just cultural. This is also reflecting in the gross / coarse practicing of the traditional Indian values. For instance, the sizes of the Ganapathis, the quantum of money donated, the lavishness of the feasts and such. It is not that ancient Indian societies were free from this, but their opportunities were limited. Due to paucity of mechanization and automation, the society then was closer to nature and the speed of life was within healthy limits (as perceived from todays standpoint). Consumerism is not the bane of just Indian culture and traditions. This is an issue for all societies that believe in simplicity and environmentally friendly lifestyles. The general consumerism and the things people do to feed this, is disturbing for many people. It appears that everything is hopeless and is degenerating. This is not unique to the current times. Even in the Mahabharata, Sage Vyaasa shows his frustration in the final swargArOhaNa sarga as below ::

rdhva bhur viraumyea na dharmt arthaca kmaca sa kimartham na sevyate

ca

kacit

rnoti

mm

I raise my arms and shout but no one listens. From dharma come wealth and pleasures. Still why is dharma not practiced?
In any case, evolution will eventually create a balance when lifestyles are unsustainable. Summary We live in a global world with the borders becoming hazier. Goods and cultural aspects travel across geographies. The current upward growth of India in the world economy makes the osmosis of cultural aspects inevitable. There are many aspects of India that the western worlds are adapting. Similarly, Indians are taking from many foreign countries. Indian culture has been embracing aspects of foreign cultures over the years. Aspects of Hindustani music are attributed to Persia and Sufi music. Many foods from foreign lands are now well entrenched

into the Indian cuisine. Indian culture has thus ensured that it is strong and has survived. Closing it down in an un-impregnable box (not that it is possible to do so) would choke it and eventually kill it. The Indian culture and traditions are not getting killed. Rather more things are getting adopted, accommodated and adapted. Every new aspect of culture adopted from the west (or elsewhere) adds a new taste, a new dimension to our existence. It does not take the place of another value, but rather adds to it. Good aspects from various cultures are added to the already heady mix, catering to a hitherto unexplored taste. Undesirable traditions and cultural aspects will be discarded whether they are Indian or foreign. The valuable ones will be retained and consolidated. This is a process of evolution. It will all make the Indian experience richer and merrier. Indian culture dates back to over 6000 years. Anything that is proven by time thus, definitely has intrinsic values that are appreciated and cherished by Indians. Moreover, it has sustained since it has been able to take many things foreign and make them its own. External winds are blowing and will blow theyll bring in some things of value and probably blow away some of lesser value. But Indian Culture can surely take care of itself.

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