Jürgen Hubert
First Post
More educated, at least - my proficiency in the English language doesn't come from nothing...
So true -- and one of Johnson's points about watching a game (reality show) versus watching a scripted narrative: when you watch a game, you think, What would I do? It's the "Monday-morning quarterback" phenomenon.EricNoah said:I think it helps you interact with media in a different way -- I know I don't just "consume" a book or a movie, but I'm always on the lookout for what I might have done were I the DM (or player) in this story.
Teflon Billy said:Doesn't seem to have helped my overuse of parenthetical asides...but nothing's perfect![]()
Ditto.Jürgen Hubert said:More educated, at least - my proficiency in the English language doesn't come from nothing...
Celebrim said:Yes, I do think complex gaming makes you smarter. I also think that complex gaming is increasingly a powerful educational tool. Eventually, I expect that interactive games will overtake passive entertainment as the dominate form of mental recreation in society. Arguably, we've already reached that point.
For myself, probably the one thing I'd point to is the influence D&D has had on my map reading and sense of direction.
But, I also ended up reading far more history than I probably ever would have had I not been interested in RPG's.
As long as I'm praising games though, I think it only fair to play devil's advocate for a while I think video games in particular don't necessarily encourage people to develop the mental endurance required for really hard problem solving. Somethings just require longer attention spans, resistance to boredom, and long study _without_ continually getting rewards and positive feedback. Video games - even those requiring long attention spans and repetitive tasks - still give you continual feedback, and can train you to have poor tolerance for things that don't continually blink at you.
Wired said:Video games and TV -- from The Sopranos to The Simpsons to Grand Theft Auto -- may indeed be helping to make us smarter, and in surprising ways, just as Johnson argues. But the nagging and unanswered fear is that they may not be making us better people or helping us create a better society
Mature adults have always found the younger generation flighty, impulsive, lazy, disrespectful, etc.MonsterMash said:I'd say I have noticed that younger people seem to have shorter attention spans than I did at their age, this may be incipient geezerdom as I approach 40 or may be that I do have a different way of working that comes from being old enough to have been an adult before the instant gratification culture emerged.
Certainly, exercise is good. I grew up watching TV, playing video games, and running around, playing Nerf football.MonsterMash said:There is also a definite link (I'll dig up some details) about physical exercise helping to improve brain functioning.
Teflon Billy said:I know it's made me smarter.