Once, imagination belonged to humans. Now, algorithms dream too. The brush, the word, the voice of artificial intelligence... It has seeped into almost every field of art. Yet there is a strange silence in the air. Can emotionless creation still be considered art?
Living Beyond the Ordinary
These days, we go out with what can only be described as “controlled socializing.” On weekdays, it’s all masks and sanitizers; on weekends, we spend our days at home, “staring at walls” and “rediscovering ourselves.” In short, we’ve been living through — and continue to live through — a time that feels like a blessing for those who embrace digital life, yet a nightmare for those who struggle with tension and anxiety disorders.
These days, we go out with what can only be described as “controlled socializing.” On weekdays, it’s all masks and sanitizers; on weekends, we spend our days at home, “staring at walls” and “rediscovering ourselves.” In short, we’ve been living through — and continue to live through — a time that feels like a blessing for those who embrace digital life, yet a nightmare for those who struggle with tension and anxiety disorders.
Even though we’ve now moved from the feverish days of Corona into the so-called “new normal,” we all know that many things will never be the same again. Because the new normal has, in truth, made us quite a bit abnormal. If only the story of “humanity’s transition from the agricultural age to the industrial age, and then to the information age” were told in textbooks with a “Corona chapter,” perhaps it would be far more memorable. Because right now, with the Corona Virus, we’re feeling our evolution into the digital age deep in our bones!