yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Are Smartphones Trapping Us in Anti-Social Bubbles? | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

Solitude is a big part of my story about reclaiming conversation. And some people will say, "Well why is that? I mean solitude, conversation?" Reclaiming conversation begins in solitude and here's why. You need to be able to gather yourself to yourself and have a capacity for solitude before you can turn to someone else and really hear what they have to say.

Because if not, if you don't have a capacity for solitude, you turn to someone else and you're projecting onto them who you need them to be for you and you can't hear who they really are. And instinctively, we shun people like that. Technically they're narcissistic personalities, but we don't need to know their technical name. We just know we're uncomfortable about them because they're not giving us a chance to be us. They're making us be who they need us to be.

And so a capacity for solitude is really the first step in a capacity for relationship. And so solitude and the capacity for relationship, solitude and a capacity for conversation — these go together. Now solitude is one of the things that constantly going to your phone is taking away from us.

There's a study, a dramatic study — I was going to make a bad pun and say a stunning study; I think in Reclaiming Conversation I actually made this pun unintentionally and now I feel I have to apologize for it — where college students are asked to just sit in a chair, the way I'm sitting in a chair, without a book and without a device. And they're told that they're going to be asked to do that for six to 15 minutes and when the study begins they're asked, "Do you think you'll want to give yourself electroshocks during this time?"

And like they say, "Absolutely not. No." After six minutes, they're giving themselves electroshocks rather than sit quietly with their own thoughts. In our culture, so used to being able to go to a device, we treat being alone as a problem that needs to be solved and we want to solve it with technology and we do solve it with technology.

And when people say to me, "Oh there's nothing new under the sun; we've always had books; we've always had television; we've always had something, something, something; you know, isn't this just the same old same old?" I say, "You know what? No. No, actually not."

We've never had a device that could turn us away from other people just by going like this and all of a sudden you're in your own private space with a world of other people on your phone. And we've never had a device where you could be taking a walk in the woods and you didn't need to be taking a walk in the woods. And this is a new challenge for us to recognize how much we need solitude and to reclaim it so that we can reclaim conversation...

More Articles

View All
How the Mojave Desert Compares to Mars | National Geographic
Exploration is a compulsory human trait. We’re the only animal on the planet driven so deeply by curiosity. From the surface of the Earth, the ocean floor, to space. Humans have an insatiable desire for adventure and exploration. These days we’ve been tu…
Small Talk Tip - How To Introduce Yourself To Someone New!
Emma: This is my best small talk tip, how to introduce yourself to someone new. Right now I’m going to teach you my four-step method to make introducing yourself to someone in English easy and enjoyable. You can use these steps to introduce yourself at wo…
Yes, you need a password manager. Here’s why.
So Guemmy, you’re… Which I agree with. You’re telling us to have hard to break into passwords. But then the obvious question is how does a normal human being manage all of these passwords, that don’t have regular words in them? They can’t reuse the same p…
We Can Have Explanations That Reach the Entire Universe
David Deutsch presents at the beginning of The Fabric of Reality this idea that you don’t need to know absolutely every single fact that needs to be known in order to understand fundamentally everything that can be understood. He was presenting this visio…
Mars 101 | National Geographic
[Music] The Babylonians called it Nargal; the Hindus called it Mongala; the Egyptians called it Harder or the Red One. Today, we know it as the Red Planet. For centuries, Mars has aroused our imaginations. The world’s best scientists and people everywhere…
2 step estimation example
We are told a teacher bought 12 sheets of stickers to use on the homework of her students. Each sheet had 48 stickers. At the end of the year, the teacher had 123 stickers remaining. Which is the best estimate for the number of stickers the teacher used? …