Indeed, in the past, our grandparents or great-grandparents used to know everyone in the village or town. Everyone knew everyone and everything everyone was doing, and I doubt the word "privacy" existed in their daily vocabulary. So what then, brought about the concept of privacy? When exactly, in the history of mankind, did the idea of separating private from public life spring to existence? I have no answer to that, but my "guestimate" is - and I may well be wrong about this - it probably occurred some time around when paper was invented. When paper technology was invented, it gave us an avenue to jot down whatever ideas, thoughts, opinions, secrets, etc., that we wished to tell others, and pass it down in written form. In the case of which we do not wish to tell others yet needed a way to "get it out of our system", it allows us to do that too, as long as the written words are hidden from others. It is most likely that it goes a lot deeper and is more complicated than this, but for what I'm referring to in this post, this simplistic view should suffice.
My question is, where do you draw the line with regard to when it is appropriate to tell and when it's okay to not tell? Here I'm not talking about those apparent choices that involve legal actions or moral values. I'm referring to those grey areas between friends, family, relatives, coworkers, bosses etc. There's probably no significant impact if you make the "wrong" choice (if there's such a thing as the wrong choice), so it probably doesn't matter much what we choose to do. Indeed, this is more like a rhetorical question. I'm just wondering out loud, if there is a moral implication when we choose not to share some information we believe is rightly ours and which is part of our private lives, whilst the majority of the outside world believe otherwise. Is there?
Pondering. :P
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