问答题 86. Contemporary technological reporting is full of notions of electronic communities in which people interact across regions or entire continents. Could such "virtual communities" eventually replace geographically localized social relations? There are reasons to suspect that, as the foundation for a democratic society, virtual communities will remain seriously deficient.
87. For example, electronic communication filters out and alters much of the subtlety, warmth, contextuality, and so on that seem important to fully human, morally engaged interaction. That is one reason many Japanese and European executives persist in considering face-to-face encounter essential to their business dealings and why many engineers, too, prefer face-to-face encounter and find it essential to their creativity.
88. Even hypothetical new media (e. g. advanced "virtual realities"), conveying a dimensionally richer sensory display are unlikely to prove fully satisfactory, substitutes for face-to-face interaction. Electronic media decompose holistic experience into analytically distinct sensory dimensions and then transmit the latter. At the receiving end, people can resynthesize the resulting parts into a coherent experience, but the new whole is invariably different and, in some fundamental sense, less than the original.
Second, there is evidence that screen-based technologies (such as TV and computer monitors) are prone to induce democratically unpromising psychopathologies, ranging from escapism to passivity, obsession, confusing watching with doing, withdrawal from other forms of social engagement, or distancing from moral consequences.
Third, a strength--but also a drawback--to a virtual community is that any member can exit instantly. Indeed, an entire virtual community can decline or perish in the wink of an eye.
89. To the extent that membership in virtual communities proves less stable than that obtaining in other forms of democratic community, or that social relations prove less thick (i. e. less embedded in a context filled with shared meaning and history), there could be adverse consequences for individual psychological and moral development.
90. no matter with whom we communicate or how far our imaginations fly, our bodies--and hence many material interdependencies with other people--always remain locally situated. Thus it seems morally hazardous to commune with far-flung tele-mates, if that means growing indifferent to physical neighbors. It is not encouraging to observe just such indifference in California's Silicon Valley, one of the world's most "highly wired" regions.

【正确答案】地区与地区之间,或大陆与大陆之间,人们通过电子技术进行交流而形成一些电子社会,这种概念在现代技术报道中随处可见。
【答案解析】
【正确答案】例如,在电子社会中,对于完全人性化的、涉及精神和心理方面的交流似乎很重要的一些因素,包括思维或情感上的细微差异、情绪的热烈程度、不同的场景或环境等,大都被滤除或改变了。
【答案解析】
【正确答案】即使我们设想的能从更多层面反映更丰富的人类感受的新型媒体(譬如:技术先进的“虚拟现实”)也不可能完全按人们所想地替代面对面的交流。
【答案解析】
【正确答案】假设虚拟社会成员没有其他民主社会中成员那么稳定,或者说,其社会关系不如后者那么牢固,即与一个充满了共同理念和历史的社会的联系不那么紧密,则处在虚拟社会中也许会给人的心理和精神方面的发展带来一些不良的影响。
【答案解析】
【正确答案】不管我们与谁交往,不管我们的想象力有多丰富,我们的身体,我们与他人之间在物质上的相互依赖,总是存在于我们所处的环境之中。
【答案解析】