Mediator Each event to which we pay attention contains information. The word information must be intended in the widest sense, in fact all the aspects which distinguish the same event that we can perceive while making whatever experience, are all information. Also when it is not definable using the usual cognitive means it is information, which who has made the experience can somehow use. The points of view of the person who lives and explains the experience can be as themselves a cause of subjective distortion of the original information. From this, the responsibility of the person who explaines the same information follows, transforming them in his own conscience. In an ideal system, information should flow directly from the events to our conscience, avoiding every kind of mediators which can only attenuate or dissort the original information. This is particolarly true when we must explaain some messages, i.e. events which describe other events, as a rule not directly lived by the reader of the same messages. Transmitting the messages it seems to be necessary to avoid, if possible, the presence of any mediators among the person who originates the message and the one who explains it. Internet confronts the responsibilities of who prepares the message from who interprets it. |