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           |  |    Information Overload Now, Future 
	Disorientation and Shock  By Paul Balles Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 13, 2012 
 Spira has no doubt that "too much information without reflection can 
	stall our productivity. It affects our ability to manage thoughts and ideas, 
	contemplate and even to reason and think." ***Six months ago, I wrote about Alvin Toffler's book Future Shock, 
	which looks at a world with "too much change in too short a period of time".
 
 In Toffler's view, change overwhelms people, leaving them disconnected 
	and suffering from "shattering stress and disorientation" –- or “future 
	shocked”.
 
 The majority of social problems are symptoms of future 
	shock according to Toffler. From his discussion of the components we also 
	suffer from "information overload".
 
 Journalist William J. Lynott 
	explains that the brain has limits on how much information it can handle. 
	Beyond that limit the brain becomes overloaded; thinking and reasoning 
	become dulled, decision-making flawed and, in some cases, impossible.
 
 Lynott says "We are being overwhelmed with information. Each new day 
	introduces an unrelenting flow of data -- TV news, the Internet, e-mail, 
	voicemail, faxes, cell phones, pagers, billboards, junk mail, newspapers, 
	magazines, books, catalogues, nonstop cable news."
 
 Even without 
	considering social media like the current fascination with Facebook, twitter 
	and LinkedIn, Lynott argues there's no escape. "It assaults us at home, at 
	work, even at play,” he says.
 
 “By one estimate, a single issue of 
	the New York Times contains more information than the average 17th-century 
	person would come across in an entire lifetime."
 
 Sociology Professor 
	William I Robinson writes "As the crisis of global capitalism spirals out of 
	control, the powers that be in the global system appear to be adrift and 
	unable to propose viable solutions."
 
 Is this a result of information 
	overload as Toffler predicted and Lynott observed? It has become very 
	difficult to handle all of the information bombarding us while trying to 
	keep focused on anything.
 
 With a spotlight on the current situation, 
	Robinson says "There will be no quick outcome of the mounting global chaos.  
	We are in for a period of major conflicts and great upheavals."
 
 Following the recent movements (if that's what the gatherings can be called) 
	by "rioters" or "demonstrators" or “hooligans”, Robinson argues:
 
 From the slaughter of dozens of young protesters by the army in Egypt to the 
	brutal repression of the Occupy movement in the United States, and the water 
	cannons brandished by the militarised police in Chile against students and 
	workers, states and ruling classes are unable to hold back the tide of 
	worldwide popular rebellion.
 
 Can there be much doubt that these 
	events are chaotic? What do we have so far?  Too much change happening 
	too fast. Information overload is reflected in global chaos leading to major 
	conflicts and worldwide upheavals.
 
 How does information overload 
	figure in chaos and how do we react to it?  Remember, information 
	overload comes when we are trying to cope with more information than we're 
	able to process to make sensible decisions. In this situation, we either 
	delay making decisions or we make the wrong decisions.
 
 The solution 
	is to be clear about key priorities and primary interests, use scanning to 
	get through the piles of data and determine which information is actually 
	relevant.
 
 Instead of having dulled senses as a result of being 
	bombarded by information overload, we can manage time better.
 
 The 
	volume of information we have today “throttles productivity, reduces our 
	capability to absorb and learn, puts our physical and mental health at risk, 
	and interferes with personal and business relationships," according to 
	Jonathan Spira, CEO of Basex, a research firm focusing on issues companies 
	face.
 
 Spira has no doubt that "too much information without 
	reflection can stall our productivity. It affects our ability to manage 
	thoughts and ideas, contemplate and even to reason and think."
 
 Solutions: avoid too much TV, focus, organize, take time to reflect, 
	meditate, prioritize, Google "information overload".
   
 
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