We've already seen this with ADHD, a diagnosis that's allocated to some people with limitations that genuinely render them nonfunctional, many people who struggle, & many more who are pathologically(?) unable to stare at spreadsheets all day at work without amphetamines
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Perhaps — similarily to the way that most (if not all) humans are simply not suited to staring at spreadsheets for 4+ hours per day — most humans cannot tolerate a social hierarchy that permits them no upward moves based on mastery or valor because no true "small ponds" remain
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At the same time that their every capacity is compared to, say, that of a remote worker in an arbitrarily low-GDP locale who can be hired for pennies on the dollar, an upcoming raid is inching ever closer AND HEALERS ARE DESPERATELY NEEDED
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These are still largely urban concerns that haven't percolated to e.g. less dense regions of the U.S. But we still see "tech addiction" there, so what gives? I think it tells us that whatever the hierarchy/status-disrupting tech is, it's not some SF subculture issue
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FWIW, my intuition is that to the extent that there's a harmful gaming/social media node dominating, it's actually downwind of the dating apps & the culture that's been forming around them for more than a decade
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Replying to @webdevMason
I think the current younger generations are the first to grow up in this postmodernized “smart people all believe there is no meaning” environment...
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Replying to @Jonathan_Blow @webdevMason
People my age had some exposure to that, but there was still enough remnants of a culture around that believed in things. Outside of churches today (which “smart people aren’t too smart for”), what portions of society actually honestly believe in anything?
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Replying to @Jonathan_Blow @webdevMason
Considering who you are and what you've created, I know you must have some faith in technology as a vector for genuine meaning. Why do you see "tech addiction" as related to a loss of meaning?
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Replying to @mattdiamond @webdevMason
Look at what people are actually doing with their time on these devices. Everyone has in their pocket computers more powerful than the biggest supercomputer in the world when I was in college (not *that* long ago)... are they using these devices to cure cancer?
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Replying to @Jonathan_Blow @webdevMason
“Is it as important as curing cancer?” seems like an abnormally high benchmark for judging the meaningfulness of an activity...
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Dude... if this is going to be your mode of discussion, I can’t participate.
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Replying to @Jonathan_Blow @webdevMason
Matt Diamond Retweeted Matt Diamond
Sorry, I was just perplexed, as it sounded like you were trivializing the use of technology for social/recreational purposes. That would be a pretty strange thing for a game designer to say! But I think I just misunderstood you, as I explained here:https://twitter.com/mattdiamond/status/1151722874543251458 …
Matt Diamond added,
Matt Diamond @mattdiamondReplying to @mattdiamond @Jonathan_Blow @webdevMasonPerhaps what you meant is that it’s about mindless consumption rather than production. If so, that’s a fair critique, though I think that technology still provides plenty of avenues for personal expression, and that can be a source of meaning for people.0 replies 0 retweets 0 likesThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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