How refreshing to read Thomas Docherty鈥檚 plea for a new relationship with time, efficiency and (implicitly) technology in the academy (鈥Rushing to bad judgement: need for speed kills learning鈥, 18聽July).
It was Karl Marx who insightfully wrote of capitalism鈥檚 inherent tendency to 鈥渁nnihilate space by time鈥, and our sometimes fraught individual and collective relationship with technology is one that all students should have time and space to explore.
Here鈥檚 a radical proposal: does any university have the courage to introduce a compulsory first semester for all its degrees that looks at our relationship with time and the breathless momentum of modern technology? Such a聽module would have the likes of James Gleick鈥檚 Faster, Martin Heidegger鈥檚 History of the Concept of Time and The Question Concerning Technology, Paul Virilio鈥檚 Speed and Politics, William Meissner鈥檚 Time, Self, and Psychoanalysis and Carl Honor茅鈥檚 In Praise of Slow on its core reading list. Then, perhaps, a deep, thoughtful engagement with the postmodern paradoxes that 鈥渓ess is more鈥 and 鈥渟lower is faster鈥 might generate a new generation of citizens able to bring a critically reflexive perspective to our vexed relationship with time and our hyper-modern 鈥渃ommunication鈥 technologies. For as Mahatma Gandhi famously had it, 鈥淭here is more to life than increasing its speed.鈥
Richard House
Department of education studies and liberal arts
University of Winchester
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