Information has become democratized and on the whole I think that's a good thing, even if it generates content that one believes is counterfactual. On the one hand people can double down on ignorance, but on the other the people who are interested in genuine learning can sharply accelerate in this environment at low cost, without having to shell out huge amounts of money to institutional programs. It has made education available to the entire world. The benefits far outweigh the costs.
IMO what social media has actually done is gotten people to uselessly argue, to be reflextively contradictory as a recreational past time. That's because most content is based on short attention spans, which is not conducive to developing critical knowledge. It's annoying AF, but you can always change the channel and listen to someone who you believe is more credible.
IMO what social media has actually done is gotten people to uselessly argue, to be reflextively contradictory as a recreational past time. That's because most content is based on short attention spans, which is not conducive to developing critical knowledge. It's annoying AF, but you can always change the channel and listen to someone who you believe is more credible.