Here's a thought: what if it's less that the rate of change is increasing and more that our mental models of the world tend to solidify as we age such that the perceived rate of change of the world increases. This is more an observation of the "the world was a lot simpler when I was young" mentality rather than a comment on the long range compounding effects of technology though they might be related.
jamiek88|2 years ago
I mean that’s pretty objective.
In my own lifetime (only in my 40’s!) social norms and expectations have rapidly changed as has the constant sense of urgency injected into the zeitgeist by profit making 24hr news and social media.
Propaganda was something you read about in history books (naively) not something you were bombarded with constantly by both anti and pro political positions.
When teens went home they had relief from social pressure now they are never, ever, alone with their thoughts.
Fall asleep clutching their iPhones wake up to 100 missed messages.
Ever seen a normally popular teens phone light up? I got a sense of panic and said ‘what’s wrong? What’s happened?’ And they just looked at me weird. What? This is normal?
My phone only blows up like that when there is a disaster!
ghaff|2 years ago
13of40|2 years ago
wholinator2|2 years ago
wizzwizz4|2 years ago
balaji1|2 years ago
> mental models of the world tend to solidify as we age
Mental models solidifying over time might be true. But "acceleration" is a shared experience for entire generations (of peers). It seems a broad enough experience that it is more than perceived. Like a grandma is content to read books instead of being on top of HN, etc.
Solidified mental models also gives perspective on life and its direction. And people tend to converge on few similar timeless mental models on a meta level.
> long range compounding effects of technology
It's correct, most modern systems are enabled by better tech at its root. But the collective will of humanity (at least right now) is to leverage tech to push it further. Instead of a sinusoid where we take time to fix unintended side-effects we created (like pollution, resource depletion, re-assess education, etc).
ilyt|2 years ago
I also think the fact many people work in not really all that creatively stimulating jobs to begin with have a lot of effect on that. When you are at school you learn something new every day and are occasionally facing different mental challenges, when you work at retail not really.