From: “Brian B. Riley” <brianbr@together.net>
To: “Robert Hettinga” <cypherpunks@cyberpass.net>
Message Hash: 9055c4094af38b02489f9e1d7d673e9b59e272d2000220fe1d15bbae5d91d5bd
Message ID: <199810012200.SAA19389@mx02.together.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-10-01 09:03:31 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 1 Oct 1998 17:03:31 +0800
From: "Brian B. Riley" <brianbr@together.net>
Date: Thu, 1 Oct 1998 17:03:31 +0800
To: "Robert Hettinga" <cypherpunks@cyberpass.net>
Subject: Re: EduFUD: Computers, software can harm emotional, social development
Message-ID: <199810012200.SAA19389@mx02.together.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On 10/1/98 2:50 PM, Robert Hettinga (rah@shipwright.com) passed this
wisdom:
>I guess I know too many stone geniuses who've had computers since they were
>children -- most of the people on this list were raised that way, I would
>bet -- to take this crap too seriously, reduced attention "spans" or not.
>
>By the way, "span" is the wrong word for ADD. I was hardly raised on TV,
>much less computers, (I had my face in science fiction books throughout
>most of my childhood), and I've been known to focus on something
>"inappropriately" for hours.
Ever since I discovered my ADHD some two or three years after I started
working with ADHD kids in the our school district a lot of things began
to make sense. But I came to realize and now make it a point to tell
these kids that taken as a whole ADD/ADHD is a blessing more so than a
curse. The ability to hyper-focus on a task at hand gives you the power
to do in a few hours sometimes things it would take others a day or more
to do. For the truly ADD kid (as opposed to the culturally induced
variety) the hell he has gone through and the incredible low self-esteen
they generally have, just hearing that is often enough to make a radical
turn-around for them.
>While I certainly have varying degrees of control of my attention, but I
>just don't see that a "handicap" anymore. My attention is event-driven,
>rather than processed in neat organized batches, and I've learned to like
>it that way, even if it did give me trouble when I was chained in the
>aforementioned tower's dungeon for most of my formative years.
>
>Besides, even if computers cause people to have event-driven attention
>rather than in nice neat industrial batches, that's probably a Good
>Thing(tm). Consider it evolution in action.
>
>Farmers and mechanics may need "control" of their attention, but in an
>information "hunter" like myself, most of the people who do anything useful
>on the net, it's a selective disadvantage.
... amen!!!
Brian B. Riley --> http://members.macconnect.com/~brianbr
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1998-10-01 (Thu, 1 Oct 1998 17:03:31 +0800) - Re: EduFUD: Computers, software can harm emotional, social development - “Brian B. Riley” <brianbr@together.net>