The contemporary world is dominated by digital technology. Computers, the internet, mobile phones and related devices have reshaped how we work, learn and live. They were originally developed to save labour and perform repetitive numerical tasks and later to store, edit and retrieve vast amounts of text and data. The fusion of computers and the internet produced mobile phones that today function as offices, cameras, libraries, marketplaces, wallets and social arenas — a single device fulfilling dozens of roles.
Specialized programs and software have dramatically reduced computational time and effort across every field. In achieving their original objectives — conserving manual labour and boosting computational efficiency — digital systems have been highly successful. But the larger question is whether these achievements translate into real, overall gains for humanity. To answer that, we must examine what digital technologies have actually delivered in human terms.
Key questions to ask include: Have digital devices made life substantially more comfortable and productive? Have they improved health, nutrition and longevity? Do they reduce cultural divides, strengthen social bonds, improve governance and foster scientific progress without environmental harm? Have they increased knowledge, rationality and happiness?
An objective look reveals mixed results and worrisome trends. On the positive side, digitization has democratized the distribution of information, made facts harder to conceal and empowered individuals and movements with unprecedented reach. Many tasks are easier, markets are more accessible and scientific collaboration has accelerated in some areas.
Yet a number of adverse consequences are evident:
- Information overload and confusion: We live in an age of information onslaught: an overwhelming flow of data that is often fragmented, inconsistent and partial. Rather than clarifying understanding, this torrent can muddle thinking and impede true knowledge.
- Erosion of originality and creativity: Heavy reliance on digital tools and readily available content can crowd out original thought and slow genuine innovation, as mechanical reuse and aggregation replace deep reflection.
- Virtual life displacing real life: The real world is increasingly ceded to virtual spaces — Facebook, Google, WhatsApp, Instagram, Twitter and similar platforms — altering social interaction and public discourse.
- Weaker personal relationships: Interpersonal ties can become temporary, shallow and self-centred when mediated primarily through screens and curated online personas.
- New forms of crime and insecurity: Economic and other crimes persist and have diversified into cybercrime: hacking, identity theft and online fraud create fresh vulnerabilities.
- Rising materialism and spiritual detachment: Increased material focus and a diminished inclination toward spiritual or community values are observable in many societies.
- Growing inequality: The wealth gap has widened in many places, with digital gains often accruing to those already advantaged, exacerbating social and economic disparities.
- Geopolitical strain, not harmony: The arms race and national domination tendencies continue; digital power can intensify strategic competition rather than reduce it.
- Job displacement from automation and AI: Robotics and AI threaten to make large segments of the workforce redundant, posing risks of unemployment and social dislocation.
- Environmental and health concerns: Mobile networks and wireless communication rely on microwave radiation saturating the lower troposphere. Some traditions — for example, the ancient panchbhut doctrine — view this as contamination of the ether (akash tatva) with potentially adverse biological effects. These claims require rigorous scientific investigation but raise worries about long-term environmental and health impacts.
These trends suggest several concrete harms: ideological confusion from information overload, deterioration of intellectual quality (possibly linked to ethereal contamination), increase in nervous and mental disorders, erosion of family and community relationships, rising rates of conflict and divorce, widening trade and wealth disparities and potential new epidemics. A famous quotation from a distraught user of modern digital devices is worth citing.
“When I got the mobile in my hand, I forgot how to write letter. When the computer arrived, I forgot spellings. While dealing with cards and banks, I forgot the worth of money”. This statement amply captures the personal sense of loss that can accompany the technological convenience.
The digital revolution is deeply entangled with economic systems, chiefly capitalism — that generate and amplify inequality and insecurity. From a critical perspective, digitization and automation perpetuate structural imbalances, concentrating wealth and power and provoking social tensions that history often resolves through struggle.
What should be done? First, scientists, economists, sociologists, policymakers and technologists must undertake comprehensive, multidisciplinary investigations into the social, health and environmental effects of the digital systems. Questions that merit urgent research include the long-term biological effects of pervasive wireless radiation, the societal impact of AI-driven automation and the cognitive consequences of persistent information overload.
Second, technology design should be reoriented toward sustainability and human well-being. Whether framed in terms of “Vedic Physics” or mainstream environmental science, the principle is the same: refine, modify or redesign technologies to eliminate secondary harms. This means creating tools and platforms that preserve privacy, reduce distraction, promote meaningful connection, protect ecological systems and distribute economic benefits more equitably.
Third, governance and regulation must catch up. Policies are needed to safeguard jobs, rein in abusive corporate practices, prevent cybercrime, ensure fair distribution of digital dividends and encourage ethical AI deployment. Education systems should teach digital literacy, critical thinking and resilience so people can navigate information responsibly and preserve humane values in the digital age.
In closing, digital technology is neither pure boon nor unalloyed bane. It has delivered enormous efficiencies and broadened access to information, but it has also introduced new harms and amplified existing inequalities and risks. The challenge is to steer its development with foresight and moral seriousness — to harness its benefits while actively mitigating its social, health and environmental costs. This requires research, redesign, regulation and a renewed commitment to human-centered values so that digitization serves the common good rather than undermining it.



















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