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I think you're wrong. Declining consumption consensus is just one piece of evidence, and even that is far stronger than you seem to think, and it's NOT just my personal experience (if anything my TV tastes are hangover-Cronkite basic)
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This has almost nothing to do with intellectualism. Take TV itself at a macro level. 3 channels --> 300 --> Streaming, and falling overlap between watching habits in both content and synchronization.
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Or take something as simple as work schedules. From regimented 9-5 patterns across the economy to heavily flexwork/remote/sporadic patterns. The evidence is all over the place. Doesn't mean each is unique. Still patterns of imitation/convergence. But local+online, not global.
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We possibly agree on that as well. I'm not sure what you mean by stratification, but I think info ubiquity leads to divergence whether you are curious/exploratory OR dopamine-imitative. My basic premises at a pre-cultural epistemic level are in this post
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ie, it's a secular effect of information abundance that's almost agnostic to individual attitudes and postures of information consumption/production/use/agency