Old by obsolescence: The paradox of aging in the digital era
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
digitalization obsolescence paradox
Date
2024-04-20Referencia bibliográfica
Llorca Albareda, J. & García Barranquero, P. Bioethics. 2024;38:755–762. [https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.13288]
Sponsorship
EthAI+, Grant/Award Number: PID2019‐ 104943RB‐I00; SocrAI+, Grant/Award Number: B‐HUM‐64‐UGR20; JLA has benefited from a research contract FPU (FPU22/03178), funded by the Spanish Ministry of Education; AutAI, Grant/Award Number: PID2022‐137953OBI00; NORMABioMed, Grant/Award Number: PID2021‐128835NB‐I00; GOIA, Grant/Award Number: TED2021‐ 129402B‐C22Abstract
Geroscience and philosophy of aging have tended to focus their analyses on the
biological and chronological dimensions of aging. Namely, one ages with the
passage of time and by experiencing the cellular‐molecular deterioration that
accompanies this process. However, our concept of aging depends decisively on
the social valuations held about it. In this article, we will argue that, if we study
social aging in the contemporary world, a novel phenomenon can be identified:
the paradox of aging in the digital era. If the social understanding of aging today
is linked to unproductivity and obsolescence; then there is a possibility that,
given the pace of change of digital technologies, we become obsolete at an early
chronological and biological age, and therefore, feel old at a younger age. First,
we will present the social dimension of aging based on Rowe and Kahn's model
of successful aging. We will also show that their notion of social aging hardly
considers structural aspects and weakens their approach. Second, departing
from social aging in its structural sense, we will develop the paradox of aging in
the digital era. On the one hand, we will explain how the institutionalization of
aging has occurred in modern societies and how it is anchored in the concepts
of obsolescence and productivity. On the other hand, we will state the kind of
obsolescence that digitalization produces and argue that it can make cohorts of
biologically and chronologically young individuals obsolete, and thus they would
be personally and socially perceived as old.