The Importance of Taking the Easier Path

Richard Seltzer
Morning Musings Magazine
2 min readMar 7, 2022

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Excerpt from “Why Knot?” Buy the book at Amazon

A friend of mine bemoans the invention of GPS. Relying on GPS, people lose their sense of direction and their ability to use maps. He sees that as an impoverishment of our spatial awareness. He also bemoans the availability of the information resources of the Internet: people don’t remember facts when they can easily look them up. He hearkens back to what was lost culturally with the invention of the printing press, and the decline in the ability to memorize with the invention of writing. He sees it as a moral failing to take the easy path made possible by advances in technology.

My view is that we are programmed to take advantage of every opportunity to do more with less, to not waste effort or memory space unnecessarily, to follow the path of least resistance, like water flowing down a hill. When an easier way to do something becomes available, we have a strong inclination to adopt it and forget the old way. That inclination has repeatedly been important for the survival and advancement of humankind.

Admittedly, our increasing dependence on technology puts us at risk should the electrical and electronic underpinnings of modern civilization vanish (through such disasters as solar flares or nuclear war). But should that happen, we’ll adjust to the new reality and relearn what we need to relearn. In the meantime, we’ll advance far more quickly both as individuals and as a society by supplementing our natural abilities with the use of technological innovations.

Excerpt from “Why Knot?” Buy the book at Amazon

List of Richard’s other essays, stories, poems and jokes.

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Richard Seltzer
Morning Musings Magazine

His recent books include Echoes from the Attic, Grandad Jokes, Lizard of Oz, Shakespeare'sTwin Sister, To Gether Tales. and Parallel Lives, seltzerbooks.com