Bio-phobias/techno-philias: Virtual reality exposure as treatment for phobias of 'nature'

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Abstract

In modern society natural objects like spiders or snakes have a primary role as the loci of specific phobias. Drawing on interviews with members of the UK National Phobics Society (NPS) and associated service providers, this paper explores the implications of the increasingly significant role played by new media, particularly Virtual Reality technologies, in the treatment of these 'bio-phobias'. While advanced technological approaches provide new possibilities for individual sufferers to experiment with and control their phobic responses they also exemplify certain aspects of those specifically modern social relations that are the media within which bio-phobic behaviours develop. From a critical sociological perspective the techno-philic move to the medium of cyber-space may actually exaggerate characteristically modern social relations that seek (but never convincingly manage) to assert complete 'cultural' control over the unpredictable 'natural' elements threatening our cultural integrity.

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Davidson, J., & Smith, M. (2003, September). Bio-phobias/techno-philias: Virtual reality exposure as treatment for phobias of “nature.” Sociology of Health and Illness. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.00363

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