Over a hundred years ago, the composer John Philip Sousa warned against what he called ‘The Menace of Mechanical Music’. Sousa was concerned that with the advent of recorded music (specifically Thomas Edison’s phonograph, an early gramophone), mothers would no longer sing their children to sleep.
As a result, continued Sousa, children will either stop singing altogether or become “human phonographs – without soul or expression”. “Then what of the national throat? Will it not weaken? What of the national chest? Will it not shrink?” Sousa meant well, of course. But what if we had listened to him, and decided to ban or severely restrict this emerging technology?
No Buddy Holly, no Beatles, no Bowie… Even a hundred years ago, moral panics over new technologies were an old phenomenon. More than two thousand years ago, Socrates warned against the dangers of writing: by removing the need for learners to use their memories, writing – he argued – would “create forgetfulness in [their] souls”. Socrates, too, meant well but it’s a good job we ignored him. Far from being a pernicious influence on mankind’s development, writing has given us everything from great literature to contract law to The Big Issue and our website that you’re reading right now.
With the benefit of hindsight, it’s easy to dismiss Sousa and Socrates as cranks or Luddites. There’s no way that, in the 21st century, well-meaning public figures would issue evidence-free pronouncements on the evils of modern technology based on personal hunches backed up by little to no evidence.
On Christmas Day, a group of authors, educators and academics, led by Sue Palmer, author of Toxic Childhood, published a letter in The Guardian warning against the danger to children of “increasingly screen-based lifestyles” and called for “national guidelines on screen-based technology for children up to the age of 12, produced by recognised authorities in child health and development”. At first glance, this seems like a perfectly sober and sensible suggestion. Nobody is talking about banning anything, and what parent wouldn’t appreciate a few helpful rules of thumb?
On closer inspection, however, the very notion of guidelines rather strongly implies that screen-time is inherently a bad thing. We issue guidelines telling people to smoke and drink less; not to limit the time they spend reading, writing or listening to music. So is screen-time a bad thing? As a reply from a group of senior academics pointed out a week later, it is currently impossible to say.