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we are amusing ourselves to death video
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TV movies music podcast and on top of
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that constant notifications they're all
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flooding in we are always being
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stimulated and as a result it is killing
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our ability to focus and this isn't just
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something that we've noticed about
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ourselves research backs this up
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attention spans are declining it's easy
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to blame the internet for this problem
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but it's actually much older than that
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though the internet's made it worse and
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if we want to do something about it we
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need to be able to break down the
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problem and really talk about where it
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comes from so that's what we're going to
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do
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today so I'm breaking this problem down
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into three parts and it all begins with
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a shift from books to
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television so in the 1980s Neil Postman
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wrote the book amusing ourselves to
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death and he was primarily interested in
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the cultural effects of a shift from
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using the written word as our primary
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way to transfer information to a shift
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towards mass media and in particular
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television the invention of the printing
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press changed the world suddenly mass
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communication was possible on a scale
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that had previously always been
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impossible and this is how new and
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radical ideas were able to so quickly
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spread so the Protestant Reformation
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probably wouldn't have happened without
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the printing press or the enlightenment
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or the American Revolution but media
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theorist like Postman and here we should
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also mention the work of Marshall mclen
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also tell us that how we communicate
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ideas the media that we use actually
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changes the way that we think mcl's
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favorite phrase here was the the medium
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is the message so Postman uses early
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American culture as an example of what
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he calls the typographic mind this is a
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mind that has been shaped primarily
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through consuming books and that means
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that it's a mind that's used to prolong
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sessions of engaged serious rational
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activity in other words it's a mind
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that's used to focusing so that's the
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first takeaway reading as an activity
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actually helps build your focus and it
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shifts the way that you think but we've
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stopped reading in postman's time more
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people were watching television than
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reading and those numbers have only
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gotten worse when you add screens and
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the internet and phones and all of that
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which we'll talk about later well that
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just exacerbates the problem two famous
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examples from American political history
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actually illustrate this really well the
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first one is the 1858 Lincoln Douglas
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debates these are famous pieces of
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American political rhetoric you should
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read them if you're at all interested
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some sources say that up to 18,000
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people attended these debates and they
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were later printed that's how you can
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read them and it's actually how Lincoln
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became famous in the first first place
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so each debate was 3 hours long and it
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would actually begin with a 60-minute
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opening statement from one of the
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candidates and then there was a highly
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structured format with prolonged
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responses this meant that the audience
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had to be able to stay focused for 3
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hours and also needed to be able to
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follow a single complex thought for up
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to an hour or sometimes 90 minutes at a
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time and Postman says that they're able
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to do this because this audience which
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would have mostly been literate people
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would be used to following long trains
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of thought thought because they had been
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reading books and when you read the
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Lincoln Douglas debates you actually see
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aors speaking in Long complex sentences
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how they speak is actually being
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influenced by the kinds of sentences
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that they would have read but if you
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skip forward to 1960 and the Kennedy
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Nixon debates you see something really
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different because these were the first
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political debates that were on
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television so instead of an hour for an
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opening statement the entire debate was
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only an hour and the open statement that
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each candidate got was only 8 minutes
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this meant that the audience watching at
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home didn't have to worry about
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following one thought for up to an hour
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or 90 minutes instead they just got it
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into small condensed chunks of
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information that they could more easily
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consume and that mirrors their General
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Media consumption that they would get
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from watching television all the time
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the whole debate was only an hour it
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literally was it was one slot of prime
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time television and you know what the
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big takeaway of that debate was was that
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Nixon looked bad on TV that's why people
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say that he lost Kennedy looked better
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on TV Nixon's mom called him to ask him
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if he was sick generally he just didn't
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perform well in front of the camera and
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he lost the election political history
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or probably world history was made
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because of Television so already the
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media that we were consuming was
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changing the way that we were going to
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engage in politics that's a big
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consequential change if you think about
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how much power an American president has
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television was making us used to
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consuming smaller sort of bite-sized
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pieces of information and it also made
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us more concerned with things like the
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appearance of a presidential candidate
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rather than what he was saying and I
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imagine that if they had tried to have a
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three-hour debate on Prime Time
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television ratings would have slowly
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declined people weren't used to focusing
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for 3 hours at a time anymore the media
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that we were consuming was changing our
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ability to think and it was causing our
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ability to focus to atopy focus is a
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skill that you have to develop and if
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we're watching television all the time
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well we aren't training ourselves to be
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deep and reflective thinkers especially
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not in the way that we would if we were
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reading good books so then when it comes
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time to focus on something like trying
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to read a really good book well you
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can't do it you never learned how people
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will often tell me that uh reading books
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nowadays is inefficient and that there
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are just better ways to get information
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and um I'm going to use some slang here
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that I think I'm too old to use
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sincerely but uh this is pure cope
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getting your information from summaries
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or even from YouTube videos like the
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ones that I make is a completely
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different experience than learning from
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a book because in a book you actually
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get to follow an author's Chain of
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Thought So as you read an author
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thoughts in a book you are actually
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thinking with him you're actually
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training yourself to think and as you
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train yourself to think you're training
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yourself to focus you get like a mental
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workout when you read and you're not
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getting that
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elsewhere so you're probably screaming
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at your screen right now because TV
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certainly isn't the most important form
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of media that we encounter nowadays a
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cable news show gets fewer nighttime
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viewers than a really good YouTube video
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these days and maybe the fact that we
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can't focus is due to the internet and
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the constant amount of notifications and
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this like swarm of content that we're
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constantly in or in other words you
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might think that it's this that's to
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blame and I think that's right just like
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we shifted from books to television
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we've now moved from television to the
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internet and that's a different way of
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thinking about information post couldn't
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write about the internet because he was
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writing about in the 80s but another
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writer has come along to try to pick up
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some of these thoughts and that's
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Nicholas C who wrote the book the
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shallows so if you had to describe one
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word to sort of sum up your experience
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of the internet I have a feeling it
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would be something like chaos the whole
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point of a page on the web is actually
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just to keep you looking at it so if you
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look at like say your YouTube home
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screen you're going to see rows and rows
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of videos then you're going to see
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possibly notifications if you have any
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of those turned on you're going to see a
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search bar that tells you that you could
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go find anything that you wanted if you
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search for a video well then very
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quickly you're going to be given
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recommendations click on one video and
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you're immediately recommended like 12
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more the whole point of that design is
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that if you ever get bored for even a
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second you can click on something else
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so that you can stay engaged we're so
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used to it that it feels normal but it
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it is a chaotic experience and I think
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YouTube is not even the worst offender
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by far I mean look at Tik Tok I don't
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really use Tik Tok but when I've opened
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the app like twice I feel like I got a
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headache almost immediately and I know I
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sound I sound old in this video the idea
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here is to always give you something to
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click on next always so even if you are
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watching a 10-minute video and you think
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it's a really good 10-minute video and
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and you want to finish it until the end
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well if you're bored for even a second
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you have something that could be
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potentially more exciting you could
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click on it and you could see because
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these platforms actually don't really
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care if you keep watching one particular
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video or if you keep reading one
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particular article they just want you to
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stay on the platform Tik Tok wants you
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on Tik Tok YouTube Wants You on YouTube
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The New York Times wants you to stay on
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the New York Times site that's how the
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internet works this medium teaches you
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that information is easy and disposable
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if you're even a little bit bored you
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can move on in fact you should move on
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that's that's implicitly what these
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platforms are telling you in Carr's book
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he really likes to stress the plasticity
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of our brains that's our ability to
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change actually how our brains are
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structured in response to our
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environments our brains actually change
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based on what we do what we need to do
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and what kind of tools we use so look at
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this chart for the average screen time
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for Americans and now ask yourself what
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do you think that is doing to our brains
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well one of the things is it's ruining
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our ability to focus the bad news is
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that yourin bra is plastic so the fact
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that you use your phone all the time or
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that you watch too many YouTube videos
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means that you are slowly ruining your
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ability to focus the good news though is
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that your brain is plastic so you could
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fix this if you made an effort to read
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more books watch less YouTube throw your
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phone into like the fires of mountain
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Doom so it could never bother you again
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well that would actually give you a way
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to save your ability to focus this
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really is a solvable problem but you
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have to remember that there is a war
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going on for your attention
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and it is not a fair fight there are
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large corporations with phds in
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Psychology and the best design Engineers
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that they can find all working to keep
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you engaged and that's why I like to say
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that the internet is a hostile design
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environment so here's a quote from the
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first president of Facebook Sean Parker
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the thought process that went into
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building these applications Facebook
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being the first of them was all about
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how do we consume as much of your time
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and conscious attention as possible and
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that means we need to sort of give a
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little dopamine hit every once in a
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while because someone liked or commented
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on a photo or a post or whatever and
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that's just one very telling admission
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from someone who would know if you
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listen to other people talk about
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designing digital experiences though it
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really is basically the same it's all
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about capturing and really holding on to
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your attention by comparison something
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like this a book it's not that good at
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holding your attention unless you're
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really used to giving your attention to
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it I think that's a nice way of putting
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it book you have to give your attention
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to books but phones screens the internet
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videos they steal your attention that's
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why I say that it's a hostile design
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environment it is a environment that has
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been designed in order to steal your
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attention and thus rob you of your
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ability to focus as much as possible
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because people make money from it I mean
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look I have to even say this if I can
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keep you watching until the end of this
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video I make more money and the people
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who design these platforms they're not
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thinking about what what this does to
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you long term Steve Jobs told the New
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York Times that he wouldn't let his kids
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use an iPad and Mark Zuckerberg and his
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wife don't let their kids use Facebook I
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don't even know if they let their kids
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have phones basically these are people
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who would really know the effects of
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these Technologies they help to design
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and build them and popularize them and
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they know what it does to people and
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they wanted to protect their kids from
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that so I would ask why don't you want
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to protect yourself from that now there
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are things you can do to build your
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focus but they're all easier said than
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done first you you have to turn off your
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phone you have to learn to take long
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breaks from it if you can take dayong
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breaks from it if you can go an entire
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day without looking at your phone then
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you're already well on your way but you
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have to get used to it having something
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in your pocket that can always grab your
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attention with a single sound or a buzz
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or even if you have on silent the
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ability the sort of promise that if you
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just turned it on maybe you would find
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something fun that is going to rob you
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of your ability to focus next you want
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to start consuming media that actually
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demands that you pay attention this
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could even be movies it doesn't always
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have to be books but if you're going to
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watch movies they can't be those new
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Netflix movies because those movies are
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actually being written and produced with
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the intention that you will watch them
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while you're also scrolling on your
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phone like they're made for people who
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are distracted it's already changing the
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way that we make art so watch actual
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good movies go to a movie theater that
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will kick you out if you turn your phone
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on and the Third Way is probably the
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most important get used to not being
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digitally stimulated all the time go on
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morning walks and don't take your phone
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at all just go and be there with your
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thoughts maybe even see how long you can
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go on that walk while you sustain a
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thought in your head you know thinking
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through an idea debating with yourself
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just try it out it can be more fun than
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it sounds the point is to just get used
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to not needing to be stimulated by a
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phone or by a screen all the time and by
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doing that we are going to be training
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our brain
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to actually rewire themselves we're
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actually then encouraging our minds to
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get used to focusing again and maybe we
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can make a little bit of progress and
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we'll actually be able to focus on
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things that we care about