Saturday, July 20, 2019
Virtual Reality is Reality :: Exploratory Essays Research Papers
      Virtual Reality is Reality                 In his essay, "A Rape in Cyberspace," Julian Dibbell wrote about a violent  event that occurred in LambdaMOO, a virtual reality community. To some, Dibbell  states, this event was nothing more than "spidery flitting of fingers across  standard QWERTY keyboards" (450). On the other hand, to the victims it was much  more. In his essay one of the victims was quoted as saying " ...[I] have thought  about it for days. He hurt us both" (453). The effect that the virtual event had  on the victim was obviously real; thus, this event effected their real life.  According to Heim, the author of "The Essence of VR," virtual reality is "an  event or entity that is real in effect but not in fact" (16). Is it the effect  of a matter or the fact, materiality, of a matter that depicts how real an event  is? If it is the fact, there is a distinct line between virtual reality and real  life. However, if the impact that an event has on a person's life is what makes  an event real, then virtual reality i   s very real and the line between virtual  reality and real life is very faint if it exists at all.                  The use of virtual reality is increasing in many areas of society such as:  communication, business, education, and medicine. Perhaps this increase will  cause the lives of all people, even those who do not use computer technology  which is typically thought of as the medium for virtual reality, to be impacted.  It is important to know if and where the line between virtual reality and real  life exists due to this steady increase of virtual reality use. This essay will  provide evidence focusing on how the line is slowly disappearing as virtual  reality is shaping the way medicine effects our health and livelihood.                 The ways in which virtual reality impacts peoples' lives are rapidly  increasing, especially with the increased use of virtual reality in medicine.  One example of this is in the testing of colon cancer. An article from ABCNews  entitled "The Wonders of Virtual Surgery" states that, "the American Cancer  Society predicts that 96,500 people will get colon cancer in 1998, and 47,700  will die of it.  					    
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