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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Is technology producing a decline in critical thinking and analysis?
2009-02-02
Posted by:

#13  There are more lawyers than scientists and engineers combined.

Let me qualify that with R&D scientists and engineers combined. I was looking at electrical engineering employment per the IEEE and noticed that from 2000-2005 a quarter of the electrical engineers left the field. That's even with the flood of foreigners educated at US universities and then seeking employment in the US.
Posted by: ed   2009-02-02 21:27  

#12  Both the legal and financial rewards system steer bright people away from technical fields. Why study grueling subjects when you can party and make millions in law or wall street.

There are more lawyers than scientists and engineers combined. What do these million+ lawyers add to the nation's productivity or wealth? Why shoot for $100-150K/year when you can make $million+/year at an investment bank?
Posted by: ed   2009-02-02 20:51  

#11  Case in point. Sum.
Posted by: Mike N.   2009-02-02 20:17  

#10  Its not technology causing the decline. Its the crap culture and by extension, crap schools. The some of both cannot exceed 100 percent. IOW, as liberalism rises in a society, critical thinking decreases. Its axiomatic.
Posted by: Mike N.   2009-02-02 20:16  

#9  [Anonymous has been pooplisted.]
Posted by: Anonymous   2009-02-02 20:11  

#8  Using tech that was developed a while ago, mostly by older generations.

We've been eating our intellectual seed corn for over 20 years now and some of those bins are looking pretty damned empty now. And we are not turning out the skills we need, especially in advanced areas.

Certain areas of high tech are my expertise. I *know* what skills our domestic kids have - and how they compare with those of some other countries. I'm not alone in being more than concerned about it, either.
Posted by: lotp   2009-02-02 19:58  

#7  Adults have felt this way since the time of Plato. Somehow we've got the stupidest kids who keep winning wars against the smartest.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2009-02-02 19:18  

#6  This is purely annecdotal, but my experience is that current college age students have far less skill and endurance in following a line of reasoning through multiple steps, far less comfort with rigorous abstractions common in, say, mathematics and far more superficial multitasking than I did/do.

But it is not universal - the young Chinese students taking classes next to me do just fine. And that may well be tied in part to a culture that is stressing discipline in extended study, classical music and other practices that build those skills.
Posted by: lotp   2009-02-02 19:10  

#5  Also see: The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don't Trust Anyone Under 30)
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2009-02-02 18:57  

#4  I dunno.

Lemmie google it.
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-02-02 17:47  

#3  Visual intelligence has been rising globally for 50 years, Greenfield said.
So the problem is?
Posted by: Darrell   2009-02-02 17:26  

#2  No, but rubbish teaching is.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles the flatulent   2009-02-02 17:17  

#1  No argument, my grandson (Highly intelligent) has NO concept of (Say) visualizing, I had to show him how to wind a coil of wire to make a magnet, stack plates and create a transformer, THEN he got it.
Posted by: Rednek Jim   2009-02-02 16:26  

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