0:00
/
0:00
Preview

Attention Is a Shared Resource We Are Quietly Destroying

You reach for your phone, again. The flicker of a notification, the promise of a new connection, the endless scroll—it feels like a personal failure, a weakness of will. But what if this struggle isn’t yours alone? What if your fractured focus is merely a symptom of a much larger, invisible crisis? French philosopher Yves Citton offers a chilling and liberating diagnosis: our distraction is not a private flaw but a polluted public square, an ecological catastrophe unfolding within the shared atmosphere of our collective mind.

This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

The Diagnosis: From Personal Failure to Ecological Crisis

Yves Citton, a French philosopher and scholar, presents a compelling argument that contemporary distractions are not merely personal failings but rather manifestations of a collective ecological crisis. His work urges a reevaluation of how distractions are understood in the context of digital technology’s pervasive influence on society and individual cognition. Citton posits that the distractions individuals face stem from a complex interplay of societal structures, technological environments, and historical transformations, suggesting that these factors collectively shape our attention and engagement with the world.

Citton’s framework redefines attention from a narrow economic perspective to an ecological one, emphasizing that attention is a shared resource deeply influenced by collective experiences and values. He categorizes attention into four distinct modes—projection, loyalty, alertness, and immersion—each reflecting different forms of engagement with art and culture. This nuanced understanding of attention invites a discussion about its broader implications for community interaction and cultural production, advocating for a shift from individual responsibility to a collective understanding of attentional practices.

User's avatar

Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of Philosopheasy.