Internet Identity
It is certain that the Internet impacts a person`s sense of identity. As
humans,
we are live by language, and as an Internet user, one submits himself
to an
existence that is pure language: written, audio, and visual language.
This
reality, distilled down to pure language, is appealing to most people.
There is
no violence online. There are no social expression norms. A person
can be, say,
or do precisely as he chooses. More than 131 million people
populate the
Internet. Why is VR so attractive? When a person is born,
many things are
decided for him. No one is asked if their name or visage
adequately describes
his person or psyche. His genetic makeup is created from
that already contained
in his parents, and they dress and feed him with
things they personally enjoy.
It is many years later before he can begin
to make decisions about who he is,
and by then, so much has been laid down as
factual evidence to the content of
his character. The Internet has now
permeated our society. Someone can decide
who they are at the beginning of a
new life, to be reborn in cyberspace. There
is the issue of naming oneself,
to feel inside and find what makes someone
himself. When one signs up with
any Internet Service Provider, the first thing
it will ask is for his new
name. In *1*The Matrix*1* Mr. Anderson named himself
Neo: "New" and also
an anagram for the "One" he truly was.
There is now also the ability to
visualize the image of self and present that as
an avatar in a visual virtual
environment, a step up from nomenclature and font
color self-expression.
Deciding what one looks like as an imaginary character is
also interesting,
and like naming oneself it can be good psychotherapy. These
are used in
elaborate chat rooms where participants immerse themselves in whole
new
worlds, and where identity is defined by images and one's own
character
description. As in a story, dialogue will also define a character,
virtual or
otherwise. Your words are your deeds, your words are your body,
says *2*Sherry
Turkle*2*. There are even thousands of sites that offer
self-inspection quizzes
to help people define themselves in a few short
questions. What is clear is that
the Internet fluidly becomes an extension of
the self, and can play an important
role in defining our identities. Walt
Whitman discusses childlike identity
changes with, "A child went forth every
day/And the first object he look'd
upon/That object he became." In real life
(RL) people are told what to do
and where to be and how to do so. There are
social norms that presume to inhibit
our opinions. That is culture. Yet in
Cyberspace, the immaterial existence of
virtual reality (VR), people become
in many ways, the masters of themselves and
writers of the universe. How can
that not be seen as more
appealing?