当你把手机交给其他人的时候,有没有感觉到一丝焦虑,就像你把自己身体的一部分交了出去?这种犹豫源于害怕被暴露。这不是说我们要隐瞒什么——好吧,对许多人来说是这样——但是让其他人用你的手机,就如同你打开了思想的大门,并允许其他人随意进来看看。
At one point in Her, Theodore holds up his phone, closes his eyes, and listens as Samantha guides him blindly through a carnival. Take a look around the next time you’re in a public space. How many people do you see doing the same thing—only, instead of closing our eyes and letting a voice guide us, we let a screen be the guide? The primary object through which we are experiencing the moment is the phone, not our eyes. And certainly not whoever happens to be with us.
《她》中有一个片段:西奥多拿着手机,闭着眼睛,听从萨曼莎的引导,走进一场狂欢中。你下次到公共场所去,可以看一看周围。你会看到多少人在做同样的事情?唯一的区别只是,我们没有闭上眼睛,让声音来引导,而是让屏幕来引导。我们用来感受当下的主要工具,不是我们的眼睛,而是我们的手机。无论谁在我们旁边都是如此。
At the end of the movie—and though it’s a 2013 film, if you haven’t watched it, you should skip to the next paragraph to avoid the plot details I’m about to reveal—Samantha announces that she is leaving and thanks Theodore for teaching her how to love. Technology taught the movie’s human protagonist how to love. Today’s tech is already this powerful. It can teach us how to live, love, laugh, forgive, grieve, forget, desire, cook, and anything else you enter into a search bar.
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