Neil Postman Rhetorical Analysis

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Neil Postman Rhetorical Analysis Inventions are changing before our eyes and the world does not seem to question what new technology reveals and what its consequences will be. In the future of technology, there are many individuals who see technology as either a sanction or a burden. Many individuals cannot seem to imagine a world with no technology, however, there are many others who argue that humans are becoming too dependent on technology instead of their own observances and cognition. Technology continues to develop and has become affected people’s everyday life. This issue is addressed by an American Critic and an educator by the name Neil Postman. He has written many books, and has talked about the evolution and creation of technology …show more content…

For example, Postman shares that there are “winners and losers” in the world of technology and this is where the main problem lies (pg.3). The winners are those who benefit from being in the world of technology and get rich off of it such as reporters, individuals gaining careers on television and as entertainers who will do anything to continue to promote this technology. While the losers are those who is looking for change in society by looking up to them without realizing the winners do not reveal the truth because it will be “economically unwise to reveal the price to be paid for technological change” (pg.4). He then states at the end of this paragraph that “the blessing and deficits of a new technology are not distributed equally.” Along with this contradiction, he goes on and shares how we have become a world who depends on these new technologies by sharing examples on how things were made with good intentions when the project was beginning, but had a negative outcome at the end. One of the big examples he used was how television has affected not only children but also the school system. Postman does not show both sides to his argument, but instead he goes straight into the burden that “television may bring a gradual end to careers of school teachers” because teacher were the first to invent the printing press (pg.3). Consequently, Postman then goes on to say that teachers are blind to this reality, losers, for not seeing of the negative outcome coming their way and instead seem to be enthusiastic toward this new

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