Conclusion? Well, what I think I heard is, 'there's nothing you can do about anything anyway so, don't worry....everything will be okay..... work, be productive, don't worry so much about feeding your brain.... just relax....' I personally found this more than a little disturbing.
Veritasium has quite a wide influence. Besides, I disagree with this. I shouldn't be concerned about the climate going to shit... because I can't influence it?
@@diabl2master If youre able to influence it, then you should focus on your abilities to influence it. Otherwise it is of no interest and a waste of ressources.
Thanks for making this video, Derek. I used to pride myself on how little I allowed myself to get distracted by meaningless nonsense online, but for about the past year I've really been letting myself go. You've reminded me of some of my own values.
I always tell people that i watch usefull things on TH-cam, so i can learn, but it is videos like this that really make me stop and think. All these videos filling my head with ideas, and all these mindless videos that stem from that.... -sigh- my problem is real, and it is very 1st worldly, but the first step is acknowledging my issue. Time to expand my filters on 'stayfocusd' (my chrome extension that limits my distractions)
who has the "answer" what is a waste of time? is a buddhist monk a waste of time? a priest? working? sleeping? meditating? everyone seems to have their own answer as to what is a waste of time! i think i just wasted ten minutes of my time!
My wife suggested we start "Slow Sundays" and use that day to unplug from the net. No phones, not lappies, no internet, cats, listicles, etc. So far so good!
it is remarkable how pleasing it is when you come up with ideas or explanations, which you keep to yourself on account of the tendency of others to shame or deny it given its unique nature, then have it explained and cited/ refereed to with a specific term by a professional
+2veritasium If there is any combination of words I could tell you, that you could read and act base upon, I would say: Do you have an opinion about a man called Steven Greer? He's making a 2nd movie. He is just a doctor. I feel the same honesty you have, emanating from his words, body language and ultimate goal. He interviewed Edgar Mitchell, Nick Pope and 60 other people that I watched on video. ... I have my life on stop until I see what will happen on this planet after his next movie called "Unacknowledged". I will keep holding on to the hope of a reply from you. The last thing one lose is hope. Cheers from the land of Larimar Stones at the Caribbean.(While we still have those mineral, once China is done mining that on this country, it will be officially an extint mineral)
“Most neuroses and some psychoses can be traced to the unnecessary and unhealthy habit of daily wallowing in the troubles and sins of five billion strangers.” ― Robert A. Heinlein, Stranger in a Strange Land
I think it's about the quality of the information you consume that's important. Cutting out all the unnecessary noise seems like a good idea, but I think it's still good to keep yourself updated about the state of the world. Just look through a newspaper every day or two and you're good. I'm a strong proponent on giving the brain some down-time though, and I definitely think that just sitting around and thinking is become less and less common and desirable in a world where constant stimulus is the norm. Handling boredom without resorting to mindless media is an important skill to learn.
I agree. I found a couple sources to get information from that aren't full of the fluff. Now I just condense my information time. If we turn our backs the government would walk all over us.. at least now they do it to our faces.
totally agree with both of you, i think low information "diet" is a good idea to get Onto this sort of thinking/searching, but when what your looking for Actually helps you or you have a general interest in it then its a good use of time. and yeah definitely need that brain downtime xD This video made me think of another thing as well though, it could explain why there are so many comments on videos and forums from people who don't bother to know anything about the subject and 90% of the time don't even care about it :( there just looking for there fill of "information" which then turns out (for them) to not be very informational and they end up getting angry at whoever is agreeing with it. Sort of sad.
If you 'look through a newspaper every day or two', you are exposing yourself to more and more Masonic deception, which becomes deeper ingrained the longer it goes on. The only way to get out of the lie system is to separate yourself from it and understand it, which can only be done by learning about Freemasonry and the Saturn Cube.
Bad enough the media has weaponized information; inundating us with all sorts of propaganda, lies, slander and misinformation for the purposes of making a quick buck and exploiting the masses - and sometimes just to wreak havoc and destruction for fun. Politics and media have figured out how to profit from this Distraction Economy.
But have you considered the implications of this? When you talk about being productive that is relative to your goals. For you that might be scripting a new science program or video for this channel. But to your viewers those things are peripheral. To us, consuming your information instead of producing our own would be considered a distraction, wouldn't it? So then you run into a situation where if everyone followed your advice, then nobody would be left consuming your productions.
yup, I realize the irony. I'd be fine with fewer views if it meant people were leading happier, more fulfilled lives. I also don't want to avoid every source of information, I just want to be more selective with what I consume and when. Hopefully some people would still come to Veritasium as one of their chosen information sources.
Why is it that you think we should be confined to either "you consume" or "you produce" but not be able to do both? We can all produce just as much as we can consume. In other words, using your example we can watch these videos AND produce our own. The problem is that people don't understand balance. So it's not true that if everyone followed his advice, no one would be left consuming. You can consume and produce things, too. Time management.
A good way to implement this is installing a browser addon that lets you block specific websites. Or for youtube i added a few lines of coding to AdBlock so I dont get video recommendations on the right hand side and after the video ended :) It helped me a lot cutting the time of clicking from one vid to the next, ensuring I only watch what I really want to see (my subcription inbox)
vedabou Depends on the browser you use, I use Leechblock on Firefox and Siteblock on Chrome. For TH-cam recommendation block, see youtube.adblockplus.me/
I spend this kind of time listening to TH-cam videos, particularly educational ones to try to gain a better understanding of the world around me. I've benefited from channels like SciShow, Veritasium, MinutePhysics, Kurzgesagt and PBS Space Time in ways that I can't even quantify. In a way this is quite the opposite of what is being suggested in this video. We only have so much time available to us, I would like to use as much if it as possible to enrich my existence in some way. That is why I try to learn new subjects like math and physics rather than checking the news and Facebook.
I think you're right that we should prioritize a reduction of information intake and have more times when you let your brain wonder but we shouldn't let ourselves fall into an extreme either. BALANCE is the most important thing
I think the reason why so many people search for that distraction all the time is just to avoid being confronted with the fact that they could be more productive. Totally opening yourself to all the things you need to do, end all the responsibilities you have can often be just too overwhelming.
This is a HIGHLY respectable outlook, and I want to thank you very much. You're legitimately arguing a point that could potentially have a negative impact on you, but obviously you hold the value of helping others above your own gain. We need people like you to help this crazy world.
I don't think this counts per se because of its informative nature but me saying that feels hypocritical to what was just layed out in the video so hell if I know, happy editing.
I don't view either "diet" to be good or bad. What we do with our time, whatever motivates us and makes us feel happy; that is time well-spent. It is too subjective to state outright for anyone else. What do you want from your time? Productivity is not inherently superior to distraction or entertainment. If it was, then everyone should be productive at all times. But then, what would we be productive for exactly?
***** I'm not a surfer dude, more of a video game geek. But I am self-sufficient. I work to the point I am required to support myself and save a bit of money. But that's it. I don't do more. I don't have any desire to. I'd rather spend my time enjoying life than progressing humanity. No one is required to progress the species if they are, as individuals, happy with where things are. If others are not, then they will attempt to move things forward, and be rewarded for doing so by society. You are given by society what you put in. If you are happy not being given a whole lot, then you are not doing anything wrong. Nor are you objectively inferior to others who do. Again, progress itself is not inherently superior. Why would it be? Accomplishing things in real life is arbitrary too. Ultimately it doesn't mean anymore than an accomplishment in a video game. Not in any large scale sense. There is no purpose. In fact, real life really is just a hardcore mmorpg when you break it down. But the mechanics are messed up, with a ridiculous and lackluster amount of RNG involved. I don't enjoy this. People don't need to do anything. They require to follow what they want. They are individuals first and foremost, and I respect that too much to try and control or judge them because they're too "distracted" or not productive enough. The only time I think you are objectively required to be more productive is if you aren't supporting yourself and are dependent on others. That isn't right. But as long as you are self-sufficient, do whatever you want.
Reminds me of when I was addicted to learning (software) and felt I had to spend all my time doing so, it just burns you out and frankly ends up making you hate whatever it is you're too focused on.
lol you guys have no fucking idea do you, I agree With Tj learning coding is a hell of an addiction. Same as being addicted to learning, watching youtube videos (even educational), drugs, alcohol. It's all the same. I know how it's being addicted to learning, the worse part is that it feels so nice.
The hardest thing for me lately is to work as marketeer and try to remain productive. Our job is, in essence, to be constantly well informed, reading about every new thing, accumulating useless information and creating strategies from that. I feel the need to rest my brain to produce better, but with so much going on in the world simultaneously, and living in this global interconnected hive, I think we still don't have enough processing power in our minds to concatenate so many thoughts, ideas and information.
yeah. but then they'll measure it and use a word like "quantifiable" and then people will start to feel productive because it's already what they want to believe.
If you do this, you are going to flourish! Maybe not publicly, but your life will improve. I took that step about 8-10 years ago (it was gradual). Stop watching ads NOW!!!! And the news so rarely affects my life in ways that I can do something about; news is usually not worth watching. My mom knows to tell me if a hurricane is coming. This disconnect you are considering/doing will free up soooooooo much time and mental processing power that you can take whatever talents/passions you have and develop and expand them, enjoy them and eventually share them (if you wish). People around you might not like the new you as much.... who cares...... they have their lives; you have yours.... Always be honest with yourself and do your best to be honest with those that can accept your honesty or have asked for it..... Yeah, freaking ramble...... Take that!!!!!!!
I have been avoiding the mainstream media (both 4th and 5th estate variants). This has freed me up to read up on Aristotle, Lovecraft, Dawkins, Tolstoy and other various great authors. I've also watched plenty of videos pertaining to philosophical and methodological naturalism (Gary Edwards is very insightful, even if I disagree with him significantly). I also shitpost a plenty, as you can't be in srs business mode all the time; you'll burnout. The internet is a great tool; it's unfortunate that corporate interests and cronyism are poisoning it.
I couldn't agree more. A few years ago I moved to a new country and was living in the countryside - basically off the grid working on a new project. For a couple of years I didn't check news on the internet and rarely checked emails at all or watched TV. I felt more focused, relaxed less distracted and de-stressed than ever before. Sadly my lifestyle has changed back again and I no longer live that way (hence the comments on this video!)....
I'm definitely addicted to political and world news. But I console myself that at least I do not spend any time watching or reading about sports, which is even less useful in life than political news...
100% sure. The only sports I'm interested in, is the sports I myself engage in, not watching others do it. In theory, I might find it interesting to watch professionals play a sport, if I was trying to learn from them. But of all sports activities I like to engage in, I'm not sufficiently high-level, that I could derive any benefit from watching Olympic-level athletes do it.
+Mark Rcca I see what your saying, but now politics, world news, has all been turned into a "team based" activity too...u got your red and blue( Dems and repubs), trump - hillary, establishment,-- anti establishment..
_Mark Rcca - I agree completely. I have been saying this for the longest time. If I'm interested in something I'm going to engage in it. And this year I won't be watching Olympics. Olympics can be inspiring, they can help people discover new sports, and fun in physical activity. There's some purpose to it. But at this point in my life, I don't need to watch it.
Mike Porter aah, true. I'm a bit different from most people though. I'm completely independent of any party. I voted for Republicans and Democrats, for years. Often I vote for the two senators from opposite parties. This year I voted for Bernie Sanders in the primaries, and now I'm going to vote for Donald Trump. I tell my friends that "politically, I'm a total whore". It confuses the heck out of people ;)
Probably the most thoughtful invitation I've heard in many years = "You want to be bored with me? Let's go for a walk." THAT is the way life should play out day by day. THAT gave me a warm smile.
I've been there. It's sort of a hump to get over, where that silence and introspection is overwhelming and hard, but as you let yourself dive into those things and mull over them you start to solve them rather than covering them up with distraction band-aids.
Down-time for someone who is in your situation, with anxiety, is like abstaining and getting abstinances for someone who's alcoholic. Down-time is very good for you, in fact it's the remedy to your situation most likely, as thinking thingds through sincerely will make your mind set into place. It's kinda like having to sort óut a house that hasn't been cleaned and pruned for a good while. If you can't sort the whole house in one day that's fine, but sort a bit at a time, i.e. have some down-time to think through your good things and bad things, angels and demons, and your brain might become easier to deal with in the future. Thinking is the remedy
Generally speaking: sentimentally, our minds rewards us when we experience something that is familiar or known, although negative, because it strengthens existing neural connections. On the other hand, learning new fundamental knowledge leads to psychological and physical stress to create new neural connections, such as learning: to play an instrument, mathematics, taxonomy, a new face, etc. Logically, we can achieve the certainty that productivity is better than procrastination or laziness but the physical - neurological battle always will be present when we have to act. So, when we are not sufficiently determined, motivated, etc. we surrender to what is easier and distraction or evasion is much easier than concentration (cognitive effort).
In the same line, to post a nearby example, instead of taking your time editing your videos -or whatever-, probably (I'm guessing), you wasted some of that time watching news about mass shootings or women devoured by tigers even though you know that these events exist and that these cases are only circumstantial. Therefore, I agree with you that one has to differentiate between fundamental information against circumstantial information; separating the general principle/knowledge from those temporary examples of this general principle/knowledge. But finally, I am also aware that clear productive goals/values are required and that, also, at the moment of truth, a combination of different virtues must be exercised: rationality, integrity, honesty, pride... I wish you the best with your diet!
The brain is wired to seek novel stimuli, but the intensity of those stimuli, the amount of them and type, are variant. Young people are eager for new stimuli, in high intensity, and of different kinds. The older the person is, the more restricted and of lessened intensity it becomes. Teenagers and young adults are "where life stands". Young children are "being prepared for life", and older adults are working to support the teenagers and younger adults. The older a person gets, the more peripheral they become in "life" (or social life). You don't see movies being made with old people as target audience, you don't see music festivals targeted to people over 50 (it is true though, that with technological advances and all, old people became a relevant niche, but that's another issue). The older the person is, the more they value stability, the less productive they become, the less interested in new adventures. Every day is pretty much the same, and that's why most young people find extremely boring and lifeless to hang around old people on a constant basis (unless they're just a small constant factor in the daily life, like a table, a tree, a bird in a cage).
Joel HC Yes, very good point re. circumstantial vs. fundamental. This is really the point that should've been at the heart of this video. Get rid of the former, focus more on reflection, or being productive, while continuing to seek out the latter (which is the basis of such reflectivity and productivity).
This is exactly why I don't have a TV, try to avoid the (always bad) news, am not on facebook, twitter or social media in general, and do not have a smartphone. Its not that I wish to avoid information entirely, I use youtube obviously. But I find the majority of information that pops up first is either negative and fosters fear and anger, or concerning completely frivolous and superficial things. Neither of which are conducive to making me feel good about myself or the world in general. I see the problem is more that people are not selective and conscious enough about the information they access, more than the amount we access. We tend to place our attention on whatever is newest or nearest, regardless of whether it is relevent or useful to us in anyway. It's like junk food for the mind. Fills the void but doesn't give us any nourishment at all. I recently wiped my youtube watch history because the amount of crap that youtube was recommending for me was driving me insane....I knew it was crap that would irritate me and waste my time, yet I still felt tempted to watch a lot of it. I think the majority of people are content to keep filling their mind with shiny junk rather than seek out information that is actually positive and useful to them in a meaningful way. The problem is more that we are not being conscious or active about the kind of information we swallow, not that there is too much of it available to us. Exactly the same principle behind the obesity crisis.
"TH-cam was recommending for me was driving me insane....I knew it was crap that would irritate me and waste my time, yet I still felt tempted to watch a lot of it." I have this problem, I should probably wipe my history as well.
I've been calling it "novelty addiction" for a while. The intermittent, variable reward scheme as a result of constant information streams, generally boring, punctuated with bits that are pleasurable and/or painful. Recognizing it, stepping away from it, and not letting it run the show is definitely a healthier way forward. Thanks for making this video. Put down your phone and enjoy Zurich!
Information is like food for the brain. If you feed it quality information like great audio-books, you thrive. Clicking through top 10 slide-shows is like eating a shitty burger. I think both approaches work when it comes to either avoiding information or obtaining a lot of it. Elon Musk is an information sponge - he is very successful but doesn't seem happy. Richard Branson barely reads at all - he is also successful and seems happier. Boredom is also good for us, so I think having periods where you are cramming your brain with info, and rest periods where you avoid it. Too much of anything is a bad thing. Variation and quality is everything :)
People like Elon Musk are happy too. Their faces just don't express a lot of emotion, which a lot of people, especially extroverts, confuse for less happiness. But you´re right, superficial information probably isn't the most helpful, though I think a lot of that has to do with compensation. They take the serious things in life too serious and then compensate with extremely superficial information.
The parallel of information with food is quite well suited and goes beyond that initial point. People don't become obese just because abundance of food. The body has self-regulatory mechanisms that will make you feel satisfied after a meal. People become obese because fast food is filled with empty calories and no essential nutrients, so ultimately you are not satisfied. The kind of news we are constantly bombarded with is the information equivalent of fast food. Very little information content and very superficial analysis, which leave you craving for more. I can assure you that an in-depth analysis of politics, economics, etc. by someone who knows their shit will actually leave you thinking for a while, not hungry for the next thing.
As weird as it is, and it may not be much, but I would like to offer you my friendship; seriously. I enjoyed this video so much that I felt like taking part in the conversation and that lovely early walk you were having in Zurich. Thanks for sharing.
I find this to be true. In fact, I think it goes even further. As someone with mild/moderate anxiety and sometimes depression, the craving for distraction is much stronger when my mental problems flare. I fear my own thoughts. But the thing is I'm actually more miserable when I don't give my mind the time it needs. I get sluggish (from mental fatigue, probably), and disconnected from reality. I think my mind needs not only to rest, but to be given time to process experiences. If I only experience, but don't process the experiences, they don't seem to belong to me. I think I need to place the experiences into a context, to fit them into my overall world view. Otherwise, they don't feel as real.
What I've found works for me... 1. Keep tabs on the state of the things you care about. Groups survive better than individuals. So we should at the very least be aware of what is going on. Participate when you feel it necessary. 2. Free thinking time allows for you to be creative, to learn, to explore. You can't make progress if your mind is continuously occupied with what others are doing. We wouldn't be where we are now if the inventors of the world cared more about their favorite celebrity than their potential inventions. Moderation is key I guess
I'm in a business school and professors ask us to read to be knowledgeable. It's about culture and understanding of the world you are in they say. It's important for our future jobs.
I've come to the same conclusion as Derek myself over the past few days. To me, it is not about being uninformed so much as it is about spending wasted time reading about subjects that just make me more upset. I don't need to read an hour of news each day to understand that Donald Trump is a racist. But narrowing that down to only 10 minutes of valuable information that helps understand what is going on with the email scandal at the DNC, determine what I believe is the next step forward, and move on. It is possible to get caught up on the news by only reading 10 minutes each day. It doesn't take as much time as we are tempted to spend because of 24 hour news on television, the news apps on our phones, and the endless hours we scroll through comment sections looking for content that both confirms and refutes what we believe..... and here I am.
I completely agree that mindlessly going through our phones during our free time isn't the best use of that time. However, I disagree on your thoughts that it is not important to know about events happening around us. Sure, we may not be able to do anything about a coup in Turkey, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't understand what is going on in the world. And I'm not saying this because it is our "duty as citizens of the world" to be knowledgeable about current events, but because knowing what is happening in the world around us expands our knowledge base that can be funneled into our creations. Saying that knowing about current events isn't important is like saying learning about history isn't important. Great video with insightful commentary that I mostly agree with.
I think it's not about knowing what's going on around the world, but actually obsessing about it. You should make the best use of your time for the things that help you the most. People spend too much time obsessing about things that don't matter in their lives. Perhaps this is what he was really trying to say.
I stopped checking newssites like 2years ago. Together with some other social media. Best decision ever. The news just makes me angry anyway, and most of the things are out of my control, so why bother. For Letting your mind wander I suggest either the shower, or 'on top of the world' (high on a mountain, isolated, just natural sounds etc) those work best for me, my office after closinghours is another place I like to just sit, enjoy the silence and contemplate.
very well. i do not think the problem lies in attempting to assimilate too much information, but rather that we prioritise new information over simply stopping and reflecting upon that which we have experienced, leading us to default towards common patterns instead of really understanding explanations for what is going on around us. Habit and stigma for example, although evolutionary beneficial in the past, nowadays is very much detrimental in an innumerable number of ways. (an interesting prospect for contemplation).this channel tends to elaborate upon logical explanations more so than simply offloading a significant deal of information at once, like a news article or social app. Therefore this video serves to remedy the proposed problem as opposed to amplifying its affect in inciting further thought on the matter and encouraging a possible change away from the aforementioned lifestyle. Dare i say this is but my interpretation and may very well be fallible, so i invite criticism of all kinds.
Ayham Saffar Odd. All I see is another superfluous video that keeps me glued to my electronic device and further distracted from engaging with the reality within a more tangible material proximity to me. Which I thought was the whole point of the video, rather than simply a critique on how information is delivered in a manner that discourages reflection/contemplation, hence my attempted satirical observation.
Mindfulness and letting your brain wonder is a common theme to success and mental health (1) Veritasium's other video, "Why Boredom is Good For You" (2) New York Times "Washing Dishes Is a Really Great Stress Reliever, Science Says" I've started to practice this myself and have found myself just more happy in general, I think it is good. I just started cutting things out here and there instead of all at once, basically when I realize I'm spending time on something I'm not enjoying I just try to switch to either doing nothing or something I do enjoy
So you are recommending to ignore politics? Man, that's rubbish. A lot of the stuff that shapes our lives is global nowadays. If I only pay attention to my local circle (as you called it) then how can humanity possibly solve the greater problems of our time? Really, your recommendation leads towards accepting simple answers and ignoring global relationships and thus creates more populism in the world. And frankly, we have enough of that already. I totally agree with you that we spend too much time with stuff that doesn't lead to any useful result (btw, relaxation is a useful result in this regard). But we shouldn't overshoot and totally ignore anything that seems outside our immediate reach. As I said, international politics is hugely important (more than ever before) and even though we have only a small voice in the global context we should still use it instead of just focussing on our local surroundings.
Just to be clear: I don't think your recommendation is entirely wrong. I just think you're going too far. It's not helpful to ignore any news - nor is it to check the news every 5 min. It's a matter of the right mixture. E.g. briefly checking the news once a day. Reading some in-depth articles every now and then. Maybe news-consumption should be less frequent but more deep? Maybe the type of consumption you refer to is the one where we quickly skim over the headlines without really taking the time to think about what we read because we actually aren't really in the mood anyway. And maybe the type of news consumption that I refer to is where we read the news with curiosity. Where we dive deep into the topics because we really want to know more.
More informed to what? I mean honestly all these different media channels, websites, apps, what have you. Are very misleading.. Not to mention one media group has something totally different to say then there counterpart. I don't watch the news not because I don't care. But because it's so misleading. Only thing I'd suggest is since you like to be informed then take the next step and get involved.You have this great channel and others, you know people, and last but not least you're super inteligent. Sir you don't need to be told what's going on you need to be in the know if you're passionate about it. Good luck.
Gotta love extremists... "Let's not take every inactive moment and flood our brains with information" does NOT equal "let's ignore politics and news altogether."
+Markich C Comparing both pokemon and news, the second distractor is better. News doesn't appear every second but pokemon does. I don't find it funy to stare at the phone wasting time on catching some java code.
I had a similar problem a few months ago, but it was with Facebook. I started to ask myself: What am I checking? Why I need to see nothing so often? Instead of become offline in Facebook, I decided to leave it to the weekend. No checking during weekdays. And it worked! I moved the app to a folder in the second screen of my iPhone and when I started to open the app, I perceived what I was doing and close it again. In the end I started reading books and doing more valuable things in free time that I would be on Facebook doing nothing. Maybe stop reading every news is too much for you, maybe you could access news during a certain period in a certain time of the day/week. The most important thing is to know that you are in control and aware of this habit. Just one advice: Do not be mad about yourself. Be mad with the habit! I wish you all the luck.
I can't believe how relevant this video is. I've just started doing this myself. I, like you, used to sit on news sites, hung up on finding out about every new post on BBC or other relevant news sites. About every post on the US election, or global economic policy etc. Really sure, if I worked in a policy role that would be important, but I work in IT, so... Doing this generally made me feel smart, but it overly happy. Ive started taking up some hobbies, and now look up stuff related to that, which is far more relevant to my everyday life and happiness.
@_L30 @Julika7 @MadyWinter I disagree with all of you, you're just trying to inject your own, local accents into his German. The only thing that he's factually pronouncing wrong is the 'v', as OP said. The 'r' is silent in most of Germany, the drawn-out 'a' in 'Wasser' is actually common in Bavaria and Austria, and I don't see what's wrong with his 'ö' at all.
I disagree with your analogy of dead time to an extent. When in a supermarket line, our options are tremendously restricted due to limited space/lack of privacy/noise/people. The whole gist of dead time is that we cannot do much in it, so we might as well do X or Y. As such, you might check your phone for the news when in a supermarket line, but such an act only really stems from the limitations that are imposed upon you by your environment. Our predecessors had considerably less free time. They often spent their lives working, tiring their bodies and minds out, in order to ensure, at the very least, the minimal comfort of their successors. Our world wouldn't be standing in its current revolutionary phase if not for the men and women who dedicated their lives to hard work. The modern human, however, does not need to work as hard. He/she lives in a modern environment that's more welcoming and open-minded, and has more control over it than his/her ancestor. As such, the modern human is by far more of a master of his own time than those who came before him. Add to that the upcoming mass automation of many industries, and it's safe to say time spent out of work is exponentially growing for the average human. Going back to my initial point, I believe that analogy to be irrelevant. Dead time implies restriction, impossibility and boredom. I believe the latter element is responsible for the matter you're discussing. You've claimed earlier in your video the human mind enjoys a mixture of fun and punishment instead of its dichotomous extremes. That's exactly what the problem is; we have too much at our reach. There is no struggle, no harm inflicted for gaining knowledge, except perhaps breaking the bliss of ignorance so many of us unawarely enjoy. There is massive information out there that's available at our reach, yet we simply ignore it. It's paraphrasing your point to an extent. There's no incentive for us to invest time in things that are productive, like most sciences, or working on enhancing our cognitive capacities, because this world, from an evolutionary standpoint, does not reward us for that. Those who are able to spread their genes the most, as depicted in Idiocracy, are slowly taking over the world. This subsequently means social and emotional interaction are being more and more rewarded. That, of course, is not the case for (pseudo-)intellectuals who seek to better themselves from a different perspective. There's just very little incentive in today's world.
"Our predecessors had considerably less free time." Depends on how far you go back but if you research hunter gathering societies, in-between pastoralists and horticulturalists societies and medieval farming peasants they actually worked MUCH less for their needs.
.. until they overpopulated their habitat and began dying from war or famine. I view relative ease of living for any given population as a sign of a rising sustainability bubble. Your population is consuming some finite resource until it reaches an availability tipping point (becomes too expensive to continue consuming), at which time you face a renewed avalanche of unexpected privation. The best way to expend the surpluses of such a bubble is to explore new possibilities and frivolity happens to be an excellent way to make such exploration. Tomorrow's serious survival skills often stem from today's ridiculous leisure experiments. Play is training for war. The surplus needed to allow the least fit (as measured by mortal humans who by definition are unqualified to correctly judge fitness) to survive in a large population of diversity ensures the greatest selection of genes (including new genes borne from mutations given time, perhaps even generations before they find their footing) for the new paradigm of "survival" to choose between once privation begins again. So we are left with the strange result: because of impending privation, the best strategy for handling surplus happens to be the same strategy one would follow with no fear of privation. And that is: do as you'd like. Which includes information diets if that strikes your personal fancy, haha!
Mmm. Actually...I'm not so sure that our predecessors worked harder than we do. Here's an interesting article: www.psychologytoday.com/blog/freedom-learn/200907/play-makes-us-human-v-why-hunter-gatherers-work-is-play "Research studies suggest that hunter-gatherers' work somewhere between 20 and 40 hours a week, on average..." The article goes on to point out that it sort of depends on what you call "work". I think the more relevant point here is that we used to live and 'work' in a social environment...youtube is really a twist on the social environment we've lost by compartmentalizing ourselves into houses with atomic families. Contrary to our ancestors we are in the line for food, by ourselves...with strangers, and we reach to something that easily connects us to our world... Just like we used to do. I do not think we can escape our nature.
This moment has never happened before. It will not happen again. Live it fully now, because it's the only chance you have to live it. Thanks for the awesome video, your quest for simplicity inspires me deeply!
Perhaps a better tactic were to go on a 'reduced fat' information diet. We do not have to read each and every facebot post each "friend" posts, nor must we respond to each tweet sent over the transom. With a bit of time garnered from ignoring that which is - at best - of no positive use, we might read genuinely enriching works: such as the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.
Haven't been either reading any news or watching television for over ten years now and look at me: I'm able to breathe, live and even watch this video! You're the good news, man. Cheers!
3:33 a V in german is pronounced a F, not as a w. like in "Fuck" not as in "want". the ö in your first try was better, the second was more of an o ;) try immitating the vocal from the english word "turn" then you have not a perfect ö but it's close, then you can learn the 100% pronounciation from listening to locals :) cool that you tried it, to learn and be corrected :)
+2veritasium I wish everyone understood the phrase "You gotta go, You gotta go" especially when taking a long exam. By the way keep up the great videos. Love all of the videos you post (on this channel and your main one). The way you present the facts and tell us about the material is just perfect.
+Sean Jamali After hearing what Derek said , Gustavo Sureda said : "First I will start waking up at 5 : 30 " But if you take a closer look , 5:30 in the video is as empty as 5 and a half in the morning XD Which begs the question. What was Veritasium doing at 5 in the morning in this empty store ? xD
This is exactly what I have been thinking about for a while. To stop looking at my phone on an "empty moment" and just contemplate. Take the time to look around and to try and feel closer to the people around me.
I disagree. It might not be up to you to change things, but it is useful to have a sense of what is going on around the globe. Americans in particular have constructed a bubble that they are the best and freest country in the world and completely disregard the rest of the planet. In any case, looking up financial reports of Uganda might be a distraction, but knowing about the Turkish coup is not. Everything must have a balance. Too little or too much is equally destructive.
The news easily manipulates what's "going on in the world" due to constructing their articles to heavily favor their agenda. They'll also stay silent about anything that contradicts their agenda. "News" is the strongest form of mass manipulation. It's probably best to stay away from it entirely.
_" 'News' is the strongest form of mass manipulation._ _It's probably best to stay away from it entirely"_ That problem, I'd say, is best solved through critical thinking and a healthy amount of scepsis (not too much though -- too much is never a good thing) towards all things you are told, whether it be by The News or people you talk to "face to face", rather than avoiding the News altogether.
Ahsim Nreiziev I personally feel all news is entirely unimportant when you know that any aspect of it could be bulllshit, but everyone has their own take on things. Do you, brother.
+Jables To correct that we need people to favor 'alternative' media sources not so in-bed with the establishment or tied to corporate interests. But this is a person to person thing though, some will find themselves energized by greater awareness/understanding of the world whereas others may simply be overcome by weltschmerz.
Jables Any aspect of *anything*, even including such famously non-bullshit things like Science, can be bullshit. So your line of reasoning would mean that nothing is at all important. Well, if there is nothing that is important, why not focus on the unimportant things that interest us, like news for example?
As a 5th Year IT Student and 2 years in the IT workforce, I totally agree that the distraction economy has (probably wrongfully) psychologically taken over the human mind and as a result we're unable to make our best decisions - time/productivity is relative to what we were used to doing before we had this influx of abundant information. So many pointless apps, sites and videos all in the name of wealth or overcoming total boredom! Finding your inner-calling is the real challenge of life.
"(There are) [s]o many pointless apps, sites and videos all in the name of wealth or overcoming total boredom! Finding your inner-calling is the real challenge of life." -Potenti4lz
As a person living in Switzerland, I can tell that your pronunciation of "Wasservögel" was actually quite good. But if you manage it to pronounce the "v" like an "f" in english, it would sound almost perfect imho.
Does that mean we should unsubscribe? perhaps you didn't think that through :) Sure you can try to assimilate too much information and there is a trap in going for instant fixes like snapchat and youtuber videos rather than the 5 year commmitment to greatness. Time management is wise, completely signing out probably isn't. You need information to be productive. Like UFOs. Or homosexuality.
Because despite the actions of provincial minds, they are quite real and it needs to be intelligently acted on, lest we remain sheep. The right knowledge can be exceedingly powerful. Vastly in excess of what you can imagine. The greatest revolution this world has ever seen will happen before all Derek's hairs turn grey. This I know from the information I have diligently gathered. I prefer sooner than later. Indeed I may be the instigator.
i do not think the problem lies in attempting to assimilate too much information, but rather that we do not have enough time to simply stop and reflect on what we have experienced, leading us to default towards common patterns instead of really understanding explanations for what is going on around us. Habit and stigma for example, although evolutionary beneficial in the past, nowadays is very much detrimental in an innumerable number of ways. (an interesting prospect for contemplation). So perhaps it would be a good idea to go on a "low information diet", anyway it is kind of exciting as effectively it is a scientific experiment that is easily done and whose conclusion varies from person to person and so is not entirely predictable.
He definitely knew that he was potentially asking his viewers to consume less of his content when he made this video. But if he thought that his fans were certain to do whatever he asked, I'm sure he would have asked something else of us lol
I'm with you man. I'm a long haul Canadian trucker and I find I'm constantly trying to distract myself and I'm gonna try putting the phone down and actually let my mind wander on its own. Thanks for sharing man.
7 and a half minutes in I'm really enjoying the casual, conversational tone, the themes discussed and how and what you conclude. But man, we have so much power as human beings. It's like, we only set our own limits. Weather you think you can or can't, you're right.
Because of your great video here, I've decided it's time to remove my NEWS bookmark folder to a harder to reach subfolder. I'm sure this will save me from at least 30 min a week of unproductive news checking. Thank you!
I enjoy watching stuff go by in the background, I find it rather calming for some odd reason. It makes the video more enjoyable, plus i enjoy hearing the topics you have to say makes me think more about the world, more about myself, more about everything.
I've started just focusing on my breath, or paying attention to my surroundings during my dead time. A way to calm my mind rather than keep it running during these pauses. It feels great being with myself for once rather than trying to constantly distract myself with entertainment or constant thinking.
this really struck a chord with me. I've now come to a point in my career where I have too much free time that I don't even know what to do with it. thanks for sharing
That washroom anecdote is a good example of utilizing your diffuse mode of thinking after a bout of focused thinking. It's also what I used to do for exams fully unintentionally.
I am doing this since some time now. Things that are important, get the way to you anyway. Everything else doesn't change my live a single bit. Instead its often just bringing me down. I feel a lot better without news reports and scrolling throught news. I disabled all news services on my phone and facebook notifications just some weeks ago after i recognized it just used up too much time that I could use elsewhere. So absolutely thumbs up. People are too scared to spend time thinking about themselves or even nothing.
I should be going to bed but I‘m watching random videos instead. It seems like fate that I stumbled upon this video. Thanks man, this is probably the best channel out there. I‘m deleting my youtube app now.
I went on a short trip recently for 4 days. I didn't bring my laptop and I don't have the habit of using my phone like a computer, so I was totally out of touch with news/youtube/facebook/email. After 4 days of walking around/chatting with friends/sitting to look at mountains and lakes/people watching/reading a book/writing my diary, I then returned home and after washing my clothes immediately turned on my computer and started bookmarking all the youtube videos I had missed while I was away. It took me a couple DAYS to catch up on those videos and really I got absolutely nothing out of them. I don't even know why I bother watching a lot of stuff on youtube, usually I barely pay attention or just forget the information seconds later. I'd kind of much prefer the life I had while I was travelling. Getting back to my hotel was only for showering and sleeping. Not to sit down for 3-4 hours browsing the internet before bed. Even if I wasn't achieving anything while on my trip, it still felt a little bit more meaningful. That's not to say that youtube is totally useless, it's actually a fucking great resource but I think when you overuse it then it starts to negate it's own effects. Information and entertainment overload. If anything I think people should learn not to look at their phones when they are with friends or have a moment to themselves, that's the real life-thief. I've never had Facebook on my phone and never read the news on it either since I used to have a very slow phone. I'm the only one in my friend group who won't pull out their phone at a cafe or restaurant. I literally just sit there watching some friends scrolling through stuff for no reason. Really breaks up the flow of things. Wow I'm still typing. TIEM TO GO OUTSIDE
Thank you for addressing this very important topic that we often overlook in this digital media generation. When technology makes things more convenient and saves us a lot of time, it seems that people nowadays are becoming more and more busy, while complaining how little time they have. Weakened social interaction skills, longer life span but less healthy life style are the problems , while, ironically, technology is designed to eliminate them. The way that people nowadays deal with excessive information is just mindlessly taking in all of it, without digesting to discern the truth from false or skewed info, or “skimming the fat" to take what's useful and valuable. I like that you put thoughts and effort into making this video to educate the audience, or at least remind them to find a balance in time allocation, information, and technology. Although this video probably won't get views and likes as many as videos about celebrity, cats and dogs, funny wtf moments, politics, etc., you truly makes this topic standout and makes a difference in the audience who watched this video. Truly appreciate it!
I just took a week long vacation on a low information diet and I feel re-energised. The whole week I didn't read any news, no Facebook, virtually no internet at all and it honestly it felt nice. For a little while it bothered me but after coming back I realize how nice it actually was
I wholeheartidly applaud your initiative. Information overload is a real problem in my life and i feel the cheap entartainment provided by internet is distracting me from the real life. Well done.
I think you are right. I just watched a video about the correct technique while thrusting with a sword. I DO NOT EVEN HAVE A SWORD.
Love this comment
Dude link? Now I wanna watch! Im failing this diet already
Check out Skallagrim's channel
lolololo
all you need is a pommel to end em rightly
I love these walk and talk videos.
They're always in the loveliest settings
I think you're being distracted ;-)
+Tomas Morales always some European cities
+
+
If I went on a low information diet, I would have never found this.
so true
Spot on
so what's the conclusion
REKT
Conclusion? Well, what I think I heard is, 'there's nothing you can do about anything anyway so, don't worry....everything will be okay..... work, be productive, don't worry so much about feeding your brain.... just relax....'
I personally found this more than a little disturbing.
My professor says , Your circle of concern should not be very much bigger than your circle of influence.
That's actually very profound
Agreed.
This idea comes from the book 'The 7 Habits Of Highly Effective People' by Stephen Covey
Veritasium has quite a wide influence.
Besides, I disagree with this. I shouldn't be concerned about the climate going to shit... because I can't influence it?
@@diabl2master If youre able to influence it, then you should focus on your abilities to influence it. Otherwise it is of no interest and a waste of ressources.
Thanks for making this video, Derek. I used to pride myself on how little I allowed myself to get distracted by meaningless nonsense online, but for about the past year I've really been letting myself go. You've reminded me of some of my own values.
I always tell people that i watch usefull things on TH-cam, so i can learn, but it is videos like this that really make me stop and think.
All these videos filling my head with ideas, and all these mindless videos that stem from that.... -sigh- my problem is real, and it is very 1st worldly, but the first step is acknowledging my issue.
Time to expand my filters on 'stayfocusd' (my chrome extension that limits my distractions)
who has the "answer" what is a waste of time?
is a buddhist monk a waste of time? a priest? working? sleeping?
meditating?
everyone seems to have their own answer as to what is a waste of time!
i think i just wasted ten minutes of my time!
The best balance - create more than you consume.
And when you consume, be picky, unsubscribe from low value streams of information.
Thanks man! That's a really good advice.
But you are part of my information diet !
+
+
mine too. I've been waiting on a new video forever it seems like.
maybe eliminate the rest.. non-fruitful ones
+
Glad the title wasn't "Is The Media Distracting You From The Truth?"
"You wouldn't believe what the media is doing to your mind!"
Top 10 things that the media doesn't want you to know, number 6 will surprise you
6 Ways To Stop Modern Media Making You Less Productive! Clickbait Sites Hate It!
WOW! Now I know!
I mean they are tho
Its been six months since I'm on low information diet and people started calling me "anti-social".But I believe It really helped me.
How are things now?
My wife suggested we start "Slow Sundays" and use that day to unplug from the net. No phones, not lappies, no internet, cats, listicles, etc. So far so good!
Good idea. I think I should apply this.
I love how these vids are full of honesty.
That's it. You've struck why I like these too. He puts voice to the feelings I always try to hide.
it is remarkable how pleasing it is when you come up with ideas or explanations, which you keep to yourself on account of the tendency of others to shame or deny it given its unique nature, then have it explained and cited/ refereed to with a specific term by a professional
+
I'm very glad to hear that - I'll do my best to keep making these videos.
+2veritasium If there is any combination of words I could tell you, that you could read and act base upon, I would say: Do you have an opinion about a man called Steven Greer?
He's making a 2nd movie. He is just a doctor. I feel the same honesty you have, emanating from his words, body language and ultimate goal. He interviewed Edgar Mitchell, Nick Pope and 60 other people that I watched on video.
... I have my life on stop until I see what will happen on this planet after his next movie called "Unacknowledged".
I will keep holding on to the hope of a reply from you.
The last thing one lose is hope.
Cheers from the land of Larimar Stones at the Caribbean.(While we still have those mineral, once China is done mining that on this country, it will be officially an extint mineral)
“Most neuroses and some psychoses can be traced to the unnecessary and unhealthy habit of daily wallowing in the troubles and sins of five billion strangers.”
― Robert A. Heinlein, Stranger in a Strange Land
We liked to go to bathroom too, to find new ideas during exams. And we found them ... but usually because we had books there to help us :D
Or the formula sheet was taped to the back of the cubicle door!
Classic :D
We went to the bathroom to find new ideas during exams. And we found them... in our pockets.
Excellent comment toward this strange human who is either referring to themselves as a daft "multiple system", or royalty.
"...the solution hit me, just kind of bubbled up from somewhere..." not the best choice of words describing bathroom moment ;D
And "I'd been thinking so hard about it, it blocked me from seeing the answer".
Thinking from the gut.
'My epiphany', scrubs...
yes
I think it's about the quality of the information you consume that's important. Cutting out all the unnecessary noise seems like a good idea, but I think it's still good to keep yourself updated about the state of the world. Just look through a newspaper every day or two and you're good.
I'm a strong proponent on giving the brain some down-time though, and I definitely think that just sitting around and thinking is become less and less common and desirable in a world where constant stimulus is the norm. Handling boredom without resorting to mindless media is an important skill to learn.
I agree. I found a couple sources to get information from that aren't full of the fluff. Now I just condense my information time. If we turn our backs the government would walk all over us.. at least now they do it to our faces.
totally agree with both of you, i think low information "diet" is a good idea to get Onto this sort of thinking/searching, but when what your looking for Actually helps you or you have a general interest in it then its a good use of time. and yeah definitely need that brain downtime xD
This video made me think of another thing as well though, it could explain why there are so many comments on videos and forums from people who don't bother to know anything about the subject and 90% of the time don't even care about it :( there just looking for there fill of "information" which then turns out (for them) to not be very informational and they end up getting angry at whoever is agreeing with it. Sort of sad.
If you 'look through a newspaper every day or two', you are exposing yourself to more and more Masonic deception, which becomes deeper ingrained the longer it goes on. The only way to get out of the lie system is to separate yourself from it and understand it, which can only be done by learning about Freemasonry and the Saturn Cube.
Bad enough the media has weaponized information; inundating us with all sorts of propaganda, lies, slander and misinformation for the purposes of making a quick buck and exploiting the masses - and sometimes just to wreak havoc and destruction for fun. Politics and media have figured out how to profit from this Distraction Economy.
And nothing stops them from doing it.
But have you considered the implications of this? When you talk about being productive that is relative to your goals. For you that might be scripting a new science program or video for this channel. But to your viewers those things are peripheral. To us, consuming your information instead of producing our own would be considered a distraction, wouldn't it? So then you run into a situation where if everyone followed your advice, then nobody would be left consuming your productions.
yup, I realize the irony. I'd be fine with fewer views if it meant people were leading happier, more fulfilled lives. I also don't want to avoid every source of information, I just want to be more selective with what I consume and when. Hopefully some people would still come to Veritasium as one of their chosen information sources.
Why is it that you think we should be confined to either "you consume" or "you produce" but not be able to do both? We can all produce just as much as we can consume. In other words, using your example we can watch these videos AND produce our own. The problem is that people don't understand balance. So it's not true that if everyone followed his advice, no one would be left consuming. You can consume and produce things, too. Time management.
A good way to implement this is installing a browser addon that lets you block specific websites. Or for youtube i added a few lines of coding to AdBlock so I dont get video recommendations on the right hand side and after the video ended :) It helped me a lot cutting the time of clicking from one vid to the next, ensuring I only watch what I really want to see (my subcription inbox)
Do you have specific recommendations for plug-ins and/or a solution for this recommended-video Problem?
vedabou
Depends on the browser you use, I use Leechblock on Firefox and Siteblock on Chrome. For TH-cam recommendation block, see youtube.adblockplus.me/
This topic is so pertinent and few people recognize it. Thanks for airing an important narrative.
I spend this kind of time listening to TH-cam videos, particularly educational ones to try to gain a better understanding of the world around me. I've benefited from channels like SciShow, Veritasium, MinutePhysics, Kurzgesagt and PBS Space Time in ways that I can't even quantify.
In a way this is quite the opposite of what is being suggested in this video. We only have so much time available to us, I would like to use as much if it as possible to enrich my existence in some way. That is why I try to learn new subjects like math and physics rather than checking the news and Facebook.
I think you're right that we should prioritize a reduction of information intake and have more times when you let your brain wonder but we shouldn't let ourselves fall into an extreme either. BALANCE is the most important thing
Definitely. That's why he said diet rather than boycott or anything to that effect.
I think the reason why so many people search for that distraction all the time is just to avoid being confronted with the fact that they could be more productive. Totally opening yourself to all the things you need to do, end all the responsibilities you have can often be just too overwhelming.
This is a HIGHLY respectable outlook, and I want to thank you very much.
You're legitimately arguing a point that could potentially have a negative impact on you, but obviously you hold the value of helping others above your own gain.
We need people like you to help this crazy world.
i had to pause the video because i thought i had another oneof your videos playing in the background. lel love this video though
Yeah, me too...
hello yeah me too
Same!
I actually clicked on another video of his i saw right at the start and paused it in another tab, I was so confused.
lmao me too
I'm literally editing my next video right now and distracting myself with this video because I saw it in my Recommended.
I don't think this counts per se because of its informative nature but me saying that feels hypocritical to what was just layed out in the video so hell if I know, happy editing.
*per se (by itself)
it's latin
Me: "This was very meaningful."
Also me: *watches 90 more minutes of TH-cam before doing homework*
I don't view either "diet" to be good or bad. What we do with our time, whatever motivates us and makes us feel happy; that is time well-spent. It is too subjective to state outright for anyone else. What do you want from your time? Productivity is not inherently superior to distraction or entertainment. If it was, then everyone should be productive at all times. But then, what would we be productive for exactly?
+
A+
Someone knows what's up
Dang it's like people have different values in life or something
***** I'm not a surfer dude, more of a video game geek. But I am self-sufficient. I work to the point I am required to support myself and save a bit of money. But that's it. I don't do more. I don't have any desire to. I'd rather spend my time enjoying life than progressing humanity.
No one is required to progress the species if they are, as individuals, happy with where things are. If others are not, then they will attempt to move things forward, and be rewarded for doing so by society.
You are given by society what you put in. If you are happy not being given a whole lot, then you are not doing anything wrong. Nor are you objectively inferior to others who do.
Again, progress itself is not inherently superior. Why would it be? Accomplishing things in real life is arbitrary too. Ultimately it doesn't mean anymore than an accomplishment in a video game. Not in any large scale sense. There is no purpose. In fact, real life really is just a hardcore mmorpg when you break it down. But the mechanics are messed up, with a ridiculous and lackluster amount of RNG involved. I don't enjoy this.
People don't need to do anything. They require to follow what they want. They are individuals first and foremost, and I respect that too much to try and control or judge them because they're too "distracted" or not productive enough.
The only time I think you are objectively required to be more productive is if you aren't supporting yourself and are dependent on others. That isn't right. But as long as you are self-sufficient, do whatever you want.
Reminds me of when I was addicted to learning (software) and felt I had to spend all my time doing so, it just burns you out and frankly ends up making you hate whatever it is you're too focused on.
lol, addicted to learning software... xD i wish i had a similar addiction. #sucksAtCoding
Haha yea, but I guess it's a better addiction than most.
lol you guys have no fucking idea do you, I agree With Tj learning coding is a hell of an addiction.
Same as being addicted to learning, watching youtube videos (even educational), drugs, alcohol.
It's all the same. I know how it's being addicted to learning, the worse part is that it feels so nice.
The hardest thing for me lately is to work as marketeer and try to remain productive. Our job is, in essence, to be constantly well informed, reading about every new thing, accumulating useless information and creating strategies from that. I feel the need to rest my brain to produce better, but with so much going on in the world simultaneously, and living in this global interconnected hive, I think we still don't have enough processing power in our minds to concatenate so many thoughts, ideas and information.
Pokémon Go. A new way for billions of man hours to be wasted.
yeah. but then they'll measure it and use a word like "quantifiable" and then people will start to feel productive because it's already what they want to believe.
at least they're outside walking and such
+Pocari Suit that is a point I guess
just because you havent caught yourself a 'rare' pokemon..
saaaave marrrrtha. people need to be tricked into going outside. that's fuckin' great lol
Just say it man, you want us all to stop playing pokemon go.
This is what I was talking about in a lesson this week.
I'm so happy I can tell my students to watch this for some examples of the ideas talked about.
If you do this, you are going to flourish! Maybe not publicly, but your life will improve. I took that step about 8-10 years ago (it was gradual). Stop watching ads NOW!!!! And the news so rarely affects my life in ways that I can do something about; news is usually not worth watching. My mom knows to tell me if a hurricane is coming. This disconnect you are considering/doing will free up soooooooo much time and mental processing power that you can take whatever talents/passions you have and develop and expand them, enjoy them and eventually share them (if you wish). People around you might not like the new you as much.... who cares...... they have their lives; you have yours.... Always be honest with yourself and do your best to be honest with those that can accept your honesty or have asked for it..... Yeah, freaking ramble...... Take that!!!!!!!
... oh, and not that you should care what I think, but your videos are amazing!!!!
Yet here you are commenting on some random youtube video.
I have been avoiding the mainstream media (both 4th and 5th estate variants). This has freed me up to read up on Aristotle, Lovecraft, Dawkins, Tolstoy and other various great authors. I've also watched plenty of videos pertaining to philosophical and methodological naturalism (Gary Edwards is very insightful, even if I disagree with him significantly).
I also shitpost a plenty, as you can't be in srs business mode all the time; you'll burnout.
The internet is a great tool; it's unfortunate that corporate interests and cronyism are poisoning it.
Fantastic video & great idea, I agree & will try it out myself! :)
being bored is honestly brilliant
I couldn't agree more. A few years ago I moved to a new country and was living in the countryside - basically off the grid working on a new project. For a couple of years I didn't check news on the internet and rarely checked emails at all or watched TV. I felt more focused, relaxed less distracted and de-stressed than ever before. Sadly my lifestyle has changed back again and I no longer live that way (hence the comments on this video!)....
Awh):
As they say, ignorance is bliss.
+Cuzeg Spiked kek
I'm definitely addicted to political and world news. But I console myself that at least I do not spend any time watching or reading about sports, which is even less useful in life than political news...
you sure?
100% sure. The only sports I'm interested in, is the sports I myself engage in, not watching others do it. In theory, I might find it interesting to watch professionals play a sport, if I was trying to learn from them. But of all sports activities I like to engage in, I'm not sufficiently high-level, that I could derive any benefit from watching Olympic-level athletes do it.
+Mark Rcca I see what your saying, but now politics, world news, has all been turned into a "team based" activity too...u got your red and blue( Dems and repubs), trump - hillary, establishment,-- anti establishment..
_Mark Rcca - I agree completely. I have been saying this for the longest time. If I'm interested in something I'm going to engage in it. And this year I won't be watching Olympics. Olympics can be inspiring, they can help people discover new sports, and fun in physical activity. There's some purpose to it. But at this point in my life, I don't need to watch it.
Mike Porter aah, true. I'm a bit different from most people though. I'm completely independent of any party. I voted for Republicans and Democrats, for years. Often I vote for the two senators from opposite parties. This year I voted for Bernie Sanders in the primaries, and now I'm going to vote for Donald Trump. I tell my friends that "politically, I'm a total whore". It confuses the heck out of people ;)
Probably the most thoughtful invitation I've heard in many years = "You want to be bored with me? Let's go for a walk." THAT is the way life should play out day by day. THAT gave me a warm smile.
I got some mad anxiety. Dead time is the devil's playground for my brain. I need my news, pokemon, and family visits to keep me sane.
I've been there. It's sort of a hump to get over, where that silence and introspection is overwhelming and hard, but as you let yourself dive into those things and mull over them you start to solve them rather than covering them up with distraction band-aids.
You need help.
That statement is as useless as "I'll pray for you"
Down-time for someone who is in your situation, with anxiety, is like abstaining and getting abstinances for someone who's alcoholic. Down-time is very good for you, in fact it's the remedy to your situation most likely, as thinking thingds through sincerely will make your mind set into place. It's kinda like having to sort óut a house that hasn't been cleaned and pruned for a good while. If you can't sort the whole house in one day that's fine, but sort a bit at a time, i.e. have some down-time to think through your good things and bad things, angels and demons, and your brain might become easier to deal with in the future. Thinking is the remedy
have you tried inner peace?
Generally speaking: sentimentally, our minds rewards us when we experience something that is familiar or known, although negative, because it strengthens existing neural connections. On the other hand, learning new fundamental knowledge leads to psychological and physical stress to create new neural connections, such as learning: to play an instrument, mathematics, taxonomy, a new face, etc.
Logically, we can achieve the certainty that productivity is better than procrastination or laziness but the physical - neurological battle always will be present when we have to act. So, when we are not sufficiently determined, motivated, etc. we surrender to what is easier and distraction or evasion is much easier than concentration (cognitive effort).
In the same line, to post a nearby example, instead of taking your time editing your videos -or whatever-, probably (I'm guessing), you wasted some of that time watching news about mass shootings or women devoured by tigers even though you know that these events exist and that these cases are only circumstantial.
Therefore, I agree with you that one has to differentiate between fundamental information against circumstantial information; separating the general principle/knowledge from those temporary examples of this general principle/knowledge.
But finally, I am also aware that clear productive goals/values are required and that, also, at the moment of truth, a combination of different virtues must be exercised: rationality, integrity, honesty, pride...
I wish you the best with your diet!
I disagree. I think the brain is wired to continually seek some form of novel stimuli.
The brain is wired to seek novel stimuli, but the intensity of those stimuli, the amount of them and type, are variant. Young people are eager for new stimuli, in high intensity, and of different kinds. The older the person is, the more restricted and of lessened intensity it becomes. Teenagers and young adults are "where life stands". Young children are "being prepared for life", and older adults are working to support the teenagers and younger adults. The older a person gets, the more peripheral they become in "life" (or social life). You don't see movies being made with old people as target audience, you don't see music festivals targeted to people over 50 (it is true though, that with technological advances and all, old people became a relevant niche, but that's another issue). The older the person is, the more they value stability, the less productive they become, the less interested in new adventures. Every day is pretty much the same, and that's why most young people find extremely boring and lifeless to hang around old people on a constant basis (unless they're just a small constant factor in the daily life, like a table, a tree, a bird in a cage).
Joel HC Yes, very good point re. circumstantial vs. fundamental. This is really the point that should've been at the heart of this video. Get rid of the former, focus more on reflection, or being productive, while continuing to seek out the latter (which is the basis of such reflectivity and productivity).
I live in Argentina and here watching something about Economy is more common than a novel or reading a book.
This is exactly why I don't have a TV, try to avoid the (always bad) news, am not on facebook, twitter or social media in general, and do not have a smartphone. Its not that I wish to avoid information entirely, I use youtube obviously. But I find the majority of information that pops up first is either negative and fosters fear and anger, or concerning completely frivolous and superficial things. Neither of which are conducive to making me feel good about myself or the world in general.
I see the problem is more that people are not selective and conscious enough about the information they access, more than the amount we access. We tend to place our attention on whatever is newest or nearest, regardless of whether it is relevent or useful to us in anyway. It's like junk food for the mind. Fills the void but doesn't give us any nourishment at all.
I recently wiped my youtube watch history because the amount of crap that youtube was recommending for me was driving me insane....I knew it was crap that would irritate me and waste my time, yet I still felt tempted to watch a lot of it. I think the majority of people are content to keep filling their mind with shiny junk rather than seek out information that is actually positive and useful to them in a meaningful way. The problem is more that we are not being conscious or active about the kind of information we swallow, not that there is too much of it available to us. Exactly the same principle behind the obesity crisis.
Man you talk like a saint. Very true indeed.
"TH-cam was recommending for me was driving me insane....I knew it was crap that would irritate me and waste my time, yet I still felt tempted to watch a lot of it."
I have this problem, I should probably wipe my history as well.
If you don't use your time for yourself, you use it to suit someone else.
I've been calling it "novelty addiction" for a while. The intermittent, variable reward scheme as a result of constant information streams, generally boring, punctuated with bits that are pleasurable and/or painful. Recognizing it, stepping away from it, and not letting it run the show is definitely a healthier way forward.
Thanks for making this video. Put down your phone and enjoy Zurich!
I say don't just reduce. Remove specifically junk info. Just like getting rid of junk food.
Information is like food for the brain. If you feed it quality information like great audio-books, you thrive. Clicking through top 10 slide-shows is like eating a shitty burger. I think both approaches work when it comes to either avoiding information or obtaining a lot of it. Elon Musk is an information sponge - he is very successful but doesn't seem happy. Richard Branson barely reads at all - he is also successful and seems happier. Boredom is also good for us, so I think having periods where you are cramming your brain with info, and rest periods where you avoid it. Too much of anything is a bad thing. Variation and quality is everything :)
amen to that ! very wise thinking
Very well said!
Why doesn't Elon Musk seem happy?
People like Elon Musk are happy too. Their faces just don't express a lot of emotion, which a lot of people, especially extroverts, confuse for less happiness.
But you´re right, superficial information probably isn't the most helpful, though I think a lot of that has to do with compensation. They take the serious things in life too serious and then compensate with extremely superficial information.
Sponsored by audible? :P
I've used to go to the bathroom in the middle of the exam too, checking my cheat papers ... This strategy really works for me
The parallel of information with food is quite well suited and goes beyond that initial point.
People don't become obese just because abundance of food. The body has self-regulatory mechanisms that will make you feel satisfied after a meal. People become obese because fast food is filled with empty calories and no essential nutrients, so ultimately you are not satisfied.
The kind of news we are constantly bombarded with is the information equivalent of fast food. Very little information content and very superficial analysis, which leave you craving for more. I can assure you that an in-depth analysis of politics, economics, etc. by someone who knows their shit will actually leave you thinking for a while, not hungry for the next thing.
This makes so much sense... often times I find myself googling the comprehensive answers or stories to incomplete or poorly written articles
As weird as it is, and it may not be much, but I would like to offer you my friendship; seriously. I enjoyed this video so much that I felt like taking part in the conversation and that lovely early walk you were having in Zurich. Thanks for sharing.
I find this to be true. In fact, I think it goes even further. As someone with mild/moderate anxiety and sometimes depression, the craving for distraction is much stronger when my mental problems flare. I fear my own thoughts.
But the thing is I'm actually more miserable when I don't give my mind the time it needs. I get sluggish (from mental fatigue, probably), and disconnected from reality. I think my mind needs not only to rest, but to be given time to process experiences. If I only experience, but don't process the experiences, they don't seem to belong to me. I think I need to place the experiences into a context, to fit them into my overall world view. Otherwise, they don't feel as real.
the ironic thing is came to this video through the exact thing derek is trying to avoid
take it as Divine Providence XD
You wrote 'pray' in the description instead of 'prey'. Don't worry, I still love you :)
Aha I was going to point that out as well :) Derek, you're still amazing!
Wow, what a creep
thanks for having my back!
What I've found works for me...
1. Keep tabs on the state of the things you care about. Groups survive better than individuals. So we should at the very least be aware of what is going on. Participate when you feel it necessary.
2. Free thinking time allows for you to be creative, to learn, to explore. You can't make progress if your mind is continuously occupied with what others are doing. We wouldn't be where we are now if the inventors of the world cared more about their favorite celebrity than their potential inventions.
Moderation is key I guess
I'm in a business school and professors ask us to read to be knowledgeable. It's about culture and understanding of the world you are in they say. It's important for our future jobs.
That's unrelated to what Derek was saying.
He was basically saying "don't spend your day polling for news".
I've come to the same conclusion as Derek myself over the past few days. To me, it is not about being uninformed so much as it is about spending wasted time reading about subjects that just make me more upset. I don't need to read an hour of news each day to understand that Donald Trump is a racist. But narrowing that down to only 10 minutes of valuable information that helps understand what is going on with the email scandal at the DNC, determine what I believe is the next step forward, and move on. It is possible to get caught up on the news by only reading 10 minutes each day. It doesn't take as much time as we are tempted to spend because of 24 hour news on television, the news apps on our phones, and the endless hours we scroll through comment sections looking for content that both confirms and refutes what we believe..... and here I am.
Is Donald Trump actually racist, or were you just getting that vibe from your peers? Bandwagon assumptions can be pretty dangerous.
nobody knows. He says something one day and the contrary the day after.
I think he's probably getting that from stuff Trump said.
I completely agree that mindlessly going through our phones during our free time isn't the best use of that time.
However, I disagree on your thoughts that it is not important to know about events happening around us. Sure, we may not be able to do anything about a coup in Turkey, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't understand what is going on in the world.
And I'm not saying this because it is our "duty as citizens of the world" to be knowledgeable about current events, but because knowing what is happening in the world around us expands our knowledge base that can be funneled into our creations.
Saying that knowing about current events isn't important is like saying learning about history isn't important.
Great video with insightful commentary that I mostly agree with.
I think it's not about knowing what's going on around the world, but actually obsessing about it. You should make the best use of your time for the things that help you the most. People spend too much time obsessing about things that don't matter in their lives. Perhaps this is what he was really trying to say.
+Richard Gates Ah, I hear what you're saying. Okay if that's what he was trying to say, I understand what he's getting at.
+Richard Gates Ah, I hear what you're saying. Okay if that's what he was trying to say, I understand what he's getting at.
Henry Wiygul
Once in awhile I have to take a month break from TH-cam, just to digest all the information I've acquired.
I agree, especially him being a youtuber with such a large audience which he could help people through.
I stopped checking newssites like 2years ago. Together with some other social media.
Best decision ever. The news just makes me angry anyway, and most of the things are out of my control, so why bother.
For Letting your mind wander I suggest either the shower, or 'on top of the world' (high on a mountain, isolated, just natural sounds etc) those work best for me, my office after closinghours is another place I like to just sit, enjoy the silence and contemplate.
Have you been watching CGP Grey And Brady's podcasts??
***** Oh yeah, should have thaught of it
listening my friend, to sound one listens.
He's Dirk from Vertistablium, of course he watches their podcast.
www.hellointernet.fm/archive/
You have 66 episodes to catch up on.
hellointernet.fm
Hmm very good. Food for thought...crap I'm consuming again.
i hope your comment is meant to be satirical, for otherwise it is very much misleading and demonstrates lack of understanding.
Your comment hints at a deeper understanding than in the video, but it may be an accident.
Please, continue to elucidate...
very well. i do not think the problem lies in attempting to assimilate too much information, but rather that we prioritise new information over simply stopping and reflecting upon that which we have experienced, leading us to default towards common patterns instead of really understanding explanations for what is going on around us. Habit and stigma for example, although evolutionary beneficial in the past, nowadays is very much detrimental in an innumerable number of ways. (an interesting prospect for contemplation).this channel tends to elaborate upon logical explanations more so than simply offloading a significant deal of information at once, like a news article or social app. Therefore this video serves to remedy the proposed problem as opposed to amplifying its affect in inciting further thought on the matter and encouraging a possible change away from the aforementioned lifestyle. Dare i say this is but my interpretation and may very well be fallible, so i invite criticism of all kinds.
Ayham Saffar Odd. All I see is another superfluous video that keeps me glued to my electronic device and further distracted from engaging with the reality within a more tangible material proximity to me. Which I thought was the whole point of the video, rather than simply a critique on how information is delivered in a manner that discourages reflection/contemplation, hence my attempted satirical observation.
Mindfulness and letting your brain wonder is a common theme to success and mental health
(1) Veritasium's other video, "Why Boredom is Good For You"
(2) New York Times "Washing Dishes Is a Really Great Stress Reliever, Science Says"
I've started to practice this myself and have found myself just more happy in general, I think it is good. I just started cutting things out here and there instead of all at once, basically when I realize I'm spending time on something I'm not enjoying I just try to switch to either doing nothing or something I do enjoy
So you are recommending to ignore politics? Man, that's rubbish. A lot of the stuff that shapes our lives is global nowadays. If I only pay attention to my local circle (as you called it) then how can humanity possibly solve the greater problems of our time? Really, your recommendation leads towards accepting simple answers and ignoring global relationships and thus creates more populism in the world. And frankly, we have enough of that already.
I totally agree with you that we spend too much time with stuff that doesn't lead to any useful result (btw, relaxation is a useful result in this regard). But we shouldn't overshoot and totally ignore anything that seems outside our immediate reach. As I said, international politics is hugely important (more than ever before) and even though we have only a small voice in the global context we should still use it instead of just focussing on our local surroundings.
You're right, watching lots of news makes people more informed, active global citizens. What was I thinking?
Yes you should delete this video and your channel.
Just to be clear: I don't think your recommendation is entirely wrong. I just think you're going too far. It's not helpful to ignore any news - nor is it to check the news every 5 min. It's a matter of the right mixture. E.g. briefly checking the news once a day. Reading some in-depth articles every now and then.
Maybe news-consumption should be less frequent but more deep? Maybe the type of consumption you refer to is the one where we quickly skim over the headlines without really taking the time to think about what we read because we actually aren't really in the mood anyway. And maybe the type of news consumption that I refer to is where we read the news with curiosity. Where we dive deep into the topics because we really want to know more.
More informed to what? I mean honestly all these different media channels, websites, apps, what have you. Are very misleading.. Not to mention one media group has something totally different to say then there counterpart. I don't watch the news not because I don't care. But because it's so misleading. Only thing I'd suggest is since you like to be informed then take the next step and get involved.You have this great channel and others, you know people, and last but not least you're super inteligent. Sir you don't need to be told what's going on you need to be in the know if you're passionate about it. Good luck.
Gotta love extremists...
"Let's not take every inactive moment and flood our brains with information" does NOT equal "let's ignore politics and news altogether."
why were you out at 5:30 am? just woke up or were you playing pokemon GO?
That's one distraction I've been able to avoid!
Just an element of truth!
+
+Markich C Comparing both pokemon and news, the second distractor is better. News doesn't appear every second but pokemon does. I don't find it funy to stare at the phone wasting time on catching some java code.
Pokemon Go the best fitness app ever invented, and news are useless and psychologically damaging.
I had a similar problem a few months ago, but it was with Facebook. I started to ask myself: What am I checking? Why I need to see nothing so often? Instead of become offline in Facebook, I decided to leave it to the weekend. No checking during weekdays. And it worked!
I moved the app to a folder in the second screen of my iPhone and when I started to open the app, I perceived what I was doing and close it again. In the end I started reading books and doing more valuable things in free time that I would be on Facebook doing nothing.
Maybe stop reading every news is too much for you, maybe you could access news during a certain period in a certain time of the day/week. The most important thing is to know that you are in control and aware of this habit.
Just one advice: Do not be mad about yourself. Be mad with the habit! I wish you all the luck.
Hey Derek, this is where I live! Any possibility of a short meet up?
that is the definition of a cringey comment
+Jpkholm Yay if I lived anywhere near Dirk I would beg to meet him so
echt? wie heißt die Stadt denn?
He ain't no Red Riding Hood.
sadly he's on a low information diet. he wont be reading too much comments any more :(
I'm deleting apps. They're too tempting. If I need to see, I'll open my browser.
I can't believe how relevant this video is. I've just started doing this myself. I, like you, used to sit on news sites, hung up on finding out about every new post on BBC or other relevant news sites. About every post on the US election, or global economic policy etc. Really sure, if I worked in a policy role that would be important, but I work in IT, so... Doing this generally made me feel smart, but it overly happy.
Ive started taking up some hobbies, and now look up stuff related to that, which is far more relevant to my everyday life and happiness.
the "v" in "Wasservögel" is pronounced more like an "f", otherwise that was a pretty good try!
and the a in Wasser is shorter..
Also the ö is supposed to sound different but that seems hard for English speakers, like in Schrödinger. ;)
Also there is an "r" after "Wasser", thats not silent :)
vassafoegl as it maybe pronounced for an english person
@_L30 @Julika7 @MadyWinter I disagree with all of you, you're just trying to inject your own, local accents into his German. The only thing that he's factually pronouncing wrong is the 'v', as OP said. The 'r' is silent in most of Germany, the drawn-out 'a' in 'Wasser' is actually common in Bavaria and Austria, and I don't see what's wrong with his 'ö' at all.
I disagree with your analogy of dead time to an extent. When in a supermarket line, our options are tremendously restricted due to limited space/lack of privacy/noise/people. The whole gist of dead time is that we cannot do much in it, so we might as well do X or Y. As such, you might check your phone for the news when in a supermarket line, but such an act only really stems from the limitations that are imposed upon you by your environment.
Our predecessors had considerably less free time. They often spent their lives working, tiring their bodies and minds out, in order to ensure, at the very least, the minimal comfort of their successors. Our world wouldn't be standing in its current revolutionary phase if not for the men and women who dedicated their lives to hard work. The modern human, however, does not need to work as hard. He/she lives in a modern environment that's more welcoming and open-minded, and has more control over it than his/her ancestor. As such, the modern human is by far more of a master of his own time than those who came before him. Add to that the upcoming mass automation of many industries, and it's safe to say time spent out of work is exponentially growing for the average human.
Going back to my initial point, I believe that analogy to be irrelevant. Dead time implies restriction, impossibility and boredom. I believe the latter element is responsible for the matter you're discussing. You've claimed earlier in your video the human mind enjoys a mixture of fun and punishment instead of its dichotomous extremes. That's exactly what the problem is; we have too much at our reach. There is no struggle, no harm inflicted for gaining knowledge, except perhaps breaking the bliss of ignorance so many of us unawarely enjoy. There is massive information out there that's available at our reach, yet we simply ignore it. It's paraphrasing your point to an extent.
There's no incentive for us to invest time in things that are productive, like most sciences, or working on enhancing our cognitive capacities, because this world, from an evolutionary standpoint, does not reward us for that. Those who are able to spread their genes the most, as depicted in Idiocracy, are slowly taking over the world. This subsequently means social and emotional interaction are being more and more rewarded. That, of course, is not the case for (pseudo-)intellectuals who seek to better themselves from a different perspective. There's just very little incentive in today's world.
Well said, Sir
"Our predecessors had considerably less free time."
Depends on how far you go back but if you research hunter gathering societies, in-between pastoralists and horticulturalists societies and medieval farming peasants they actually worked MUCH less for their needs.
.. until they overpopulated their habitat and began dying from war or famine.
I view relative ease of living for any given population as a sign of a rising sustainability bubble. Your population is consuming some finite resource until it reaches an availability tipping point (becomes too expensive to continue consuming), at which time you face a renewed avalanche of unexpected privation.
The best way to expend the surpluses of such a bubble is to explore new possibilities and frivolity happens to be an excellent way to make such exploration. Tomorrow's serious survival skills often stem from today's ridiculous leisure experiments. Play is training for war. The surplus needed to allow the least fit (as measured by mortal humans who by definition are unqualified to correctly judge fitness) to survive in a large population of diversity ensures the greatest selection of genes (including new genes borne from mutations given time, perhaps even generations before they find their footing) for the new paradigm of "survival" to choose between once privation begins again.
So we are left with the strange result: because of impending privation, the best strategy for handling surplus happens to be the same strategy one would follow with no fear of privation.
And that is: do as you'd like. Which includes information diets if that strikes your personal fancy, haha!
This is why I read the comments!
Mmm. Actually...I'm not so sure that our predecessors worked harder than we do. Here's an interesting article:
www.psychologytoday.com/blog/freedom-learn/200907/play-makes-us-human-v-why-hunter-gatherers-work-is-play
"Research studies suggest that hunter-gatherers' work somewhere between 20 and 40 hours a week, on average..."
The article goes on to point out that it sort of depends on what you call "work".
I think the more relevant point here is that we used to live and 'work' in a social environment...youtube is really a twist on the social environment we've lost by compartmentalizing ourselves into houses with atomic families. Contrary to our ancestors we are in the line for food, by ourselves...with strangers, and we reach to something that easily connects us to our world... Just like we used to do. I do not think we can escape our nature.
This moment has never happened before. It will not happen again. Live it fully now, because it's the only chance you have to live it. Thanks for the awesome video, your quest for simplicity inspires me deeply!
Perhaps a better tactic were to go on a 'reduced fat' information diet. We do not have to read each and every facebot post each "friend" posts, nor must we respond to each tweet sent over the transom.
With a bit of time garnered from ignoring that which is - at best - of no positive use, we might read genuinely enriching works: such as the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.
what are you up to in zurich? :))
Haven't been either reading any news or watching television for over ten years now and look at me: I'm able to breathe, live and even watch this video! You're the good news, man. Cheers!
3:33 a V in german is pronounced a F, not as a w. like in "Fuck" not as in "want". the ö in your first try was better, the second was more of an o ;) try immitating the vocal from the english word "turn" then you have not a perfect ö but it's close, then you can learn the 100% pronounciation from listening to locals :) cool that you tried it, to learn and be corrected :)
You were allowed to leave mid-exam?
I thought the same thing lol. Wish I could leave during the exam haha.
seriously - you gotta go, you gotta go! Exams are three hours long and I think they elevated my blood pressure
+2veritasium I wish everyone understood the phrase "You gotta go, You gotta go" especially when taking a long exam. By the way keep up the great videos. Love all of the videos you post (on this channel and your main one). The way you present the facts and tell us about the material is just perfect.
I think it might have been before smartphone and devices were common lol
You are the older brother that we all needed but didn't have. Thank you for creating these videos
First I will start waking up at 5:30
XD I see what you did there XD
hehe...i dont know if he did that on purpose or not, but I really enjoyed your observation.
I sleep at 5:30 :(
+Κώστας Καραπαπαχατζηδιμιτρακόπουλος what did he do there can you inform me? I actually can't see it
+Sean Jamali After hearing what Derek said , Gustavo Sureda said : "First I will start waking up at 5 : 30 "
But if you take a closer look , 5:30 in the video is as empty as 5 and a half in the morning XD Which begs the question. What was Veritasium doing at 5 in the morning in this empty store ? xD
V is pronounced as F in this case.
This is exactly what I have been thinking about for a while. To stop looking at my phone on an "empty moment" and just contemplate. Take the time to look around and to try and feel closer to the people around me.
I disagree. It might not be up to you to change things, but it is useful to have a sense of what is going on around the globe. Americans in particular have constructed a bubble that they are the best and freest country in the world and completely disregard the rest of the planet. In any case, looking up financial reports of Uganda might be a distraction, but knowing about the Turkish coup is not. Everything must have a balance. Too little or too much is equally destructive.
The news easily manipulates what's "going on in the world" due to constructing their articles to heavily favor their agenda. They'll also stay silent about anything that contradicts their agenda.
"News" is the strongest form of mass manipulation.
It's probably best to stay away from it entirely.
_" 'News' is the strongest form of mass manipulation._
_It's probably best to stay away from it entirely"_
That problem, I'd say, is best solved through critical thinking and a healthy amount of scepsis (not too much though -- too much is never a good thing) towards all things you are told, whether it be by The News or people you talk to "face to face", rather than avoiding the News altogether.
Ahsim Nreiziev
I personally feel all news is entirely unimportant when you know that any aspect of it could be bulllshit, but everyone has their own take on things.
Do you, brother.
+Jables
To correct that we need people to favor 'alternative' media sources not so in-bed with the establishment or tied to corporate interests. But this is a person to person thing though, some will find themselves energized by greater awareness/understanding of the world whereas others may simply be overcome by weltschmerz.
Jables
Any aspect of *anything*, even including such famously non-bullshit things like Science, can be bullshit. So your line of reasoning would mean that nothing is at all important.
Well, if there is nothing that is important, why not focus on the unimportant things that interest us, like news for example?
Why was this on my recommended?? I'm not subscribed!
Maybe so you could try it out! If you were subscribed it would have been in your subscription feed!
Perhaps something else you watched had a similar value according to the youtube recommending algorithms.
because it's how youtube recommended work..it suggest videos that you might have interest in depending on what you watch from the past.
As a 5th Year IT Student and 2 years in the IT workforce, I totally agree that the distraction economy has (probably wrongfully) psychologically taken over the human mind and as a result we're unable to make our best decisions - time/productivity is relative to what we were used to doing before we had this influx of abundant information. So many pointless apps, sites and videos all in the name of wealth or overcoming total boredom! Finding your inner-calling is the real challenge of life.
"(There are) [s]o many pointless apps, sites and videos all in the name of wealth or overcoming total boredom! Finding your inner-calling is the real challenge of life."
-Potenti4lz
As a person living in Switzerland, I can tell that your pronunciation of "Wasservögel" was actually quite good. But if you manage it to pronounce the "v" like an "f" in english, it would sound almost perfect imho.
what the city is it? I want to go there)
Does that mean we should unsubscribe? perhaps you didn't think that through :)
Sure you can try to assimilate too much information and there is a trap in going for instant fixes like snapchat and youtuber videos rather than the 5 year commmitment to greatness. Time management is wise, completely signing out probably isn't.
You need information to be productive. Like UFOs. Or homosexuality.
How's UFOs related lol
Because despite the actions of provincial minds, they are quite real and it needs to be intelligently acted on, lest we remain sheep. The right knowledge can be exceedingly powerful. Vastly in excess of what you can imagine. The greatest revolution this world has ever seen will happen before all Derek's hairs turn grey. This I know from the information I have diligently gathered. I prefer sooner than later. Indeed I may be the instigator.
i do not think the problem lies in attempting to assimilate too much information, but rather that we do not have enough time to simply stop and reflect on what we have experienced, leading us to default towards common patterns instead of really understanding explanations for what is going on around us. Habit and stigma for example, although evolutionary beneficial in the past, nowadays is very much detrimental in an innumerable number of ways. (an interesting prospect for contemplation). So perhaps it would be a good idea to go on a "low information diet", anyway it is kind of exciting as effectively it is a scientific experiment that is easily done and whose conclusion varies from person to person and so is not entirely predictable.
He definitely knew that he was potentially asking his viewers to consume less of his content when he made this video. But if he thought that his fans were certain to do whatever he asked, I'm sure he would have asked something else of us lol
Dan Frederiksen You mean, as in aliens? Or some govt stuff?
I don't think I'll ever forget this message! Brilliant, I forget about the importance and emphasis put on the news.
I'm with you man. I'm a long haul Canadian trucker and I find I'm constantly trying to distract myself and I'm gonna try putting the phone down and actually let my mind wander on its own. Thanks for sharing man.
You are so right Derek, i was coming to exact same conclusion for myself, thanks for the kick-off to be less distracted and more productive. You rock!
7 and a half minutes in I'm really enjoying the casual, conversational tone, the themes discussed and how and what you conclude. But man, we have so much power as human beings. It's like, we only set our own limits. Weather you think you can or can't, you're right.
One information source that I will never get enough of is your videos on this channel
Because of your great video here, I've decided it's time to remove my NEWS bookmark folder to a harder to reach subfolder. I'm sure this will save me from at least 30 min a week of unproductive news checking. Thank you!
I enjoy watching stuff go by in the background, I find it rather calming for some odd reason. It makes the video more enjoyable, plus i enjoy hearing the topics you have to say makes me think more about the world, more about myself, more about everything.
I've started just focusing on my breath, or paying attention to my surroundings during my dead time. A way to calm my mind rather than keep it running during these pauses. It feels great being with myself for once rather than trying to constantly distract myself with entertainment or constant thinking.
this really struck a chord with me. I've now come to a point in my career where I have too much free time that I don't even know what to do with it. thanks for sharing
That washroom anecdote is a good example of utilizing your diffuse mode of thinking after a bout of focused thinking. It's also what I used to do for exams fully unintentionally.
I am doing this since some time now. Things that are important, get the way to you anyway. Everything else doesn't change my live a single bit. Instead its often just bringing me down. I feel a lot better without news reports and scrolling throught news. I disabled all news services on my phone and facebook notifications just some weeks ago after i recognized it just used up too much time that I could use elsewhere. So absolutely thumbs up. People are too scared to spend time thinking about themselves or even nothing.
I agree. Sometimes it is good to not hear any news, or even listen to music. Your mind really can wander, and that can be a good thing.
I should be going to bed but I‘m watching random videos instead. It seems like fate that I stumbled upon this video. Thanks man, this is probably the best channel out there. I‘m deleting my youtube app now.
Watching this really made me feel like I was walking next to you, listening to this interesting theory which I completely agree with. Thanks!
I went on a short trip recently for 4 days. I didn't bring my laptop and I don't have the habit of using my phone like a computer, so I was totally out of touch with news/youtube/facebook/email. After 4 days of walking around/chatting with friends/sitting to look at mountains and lakes/people watching/reading a book/writing my diary, I then returned home and after washing my clothes immediately turned on my computer and started bookmarking all the youtube videos I had missed while I was away. It took me a couple DAYS to catch up on those videos and really I got absolutely nothing out of them. I don't even know why I bother watching a lot of stuff on youtube, usually I barely pay attention or just forget the information seconds later. I'd kind of much prefer the life I had while I was travelling. Getting back to my hotel was only for showering and sleeping. Not to sit down for 3-4 hours browsing the internet before bed. Even if I wasn't achieving anything while on my trip, it still felt a little bit more meaningful. That's not to say that youtube is totally useless, it's actually a fucking great resource but I think when you overuse it then it starts to negate it's own effects. Information and entertainment overload.
If anything I think people should learn not to look at their phones when they are with friends or have a moment to themselves, that's the real life-thief. I've never had Facebook on my phone and never read the news on it either since I used to have a very slow phone. I'm the only one in my friend group who won't pull out their phone at a cafe or restaurant. I literally just sit there watching some friends scrolling through stuff for no reason. Really breaks up the flow of things.
Wow I'm still typing. TIEM TO GO OUTSIDE
never watched a video from this channel before, but this is brilliant. thoughtful and high theory, while also humble and not pretentious
Thank you for addressing this very important topic that we often overlook in this digital media generation. When technology makes things more convenient and saves us a lot of time, it seems that people nowadays are becoming more and more busy, while complaining how little time they have. Weakened social interaction skills, longer life span but less healthy life style are the problems , while, ironically, technology is designed to eliminate them. The way that people nowadays deal with excessive information is just mindlessly taking in all of it, without digesting to discern the truth from false or skewed info, or “skimming the fat" to take what's useful and valuable. I like that you put thoughts and effort into making this video to educate the audience, or at least remind them to find a balance in time allocation, information, and technology. Although this video probably won't get views and likes as many as videos about celebrity, cats and dogs, funny wtf moments, politics, etc., you truly makes this topic standout and makes a difference in the audience who watched this video. Truly appreciate it!
The words that I loved the most in this video are "Our brains are designed..."
I just took a week long vacation on a low information diet and I feel re-energised. The whole week I didn't read any news, no Facebook, virtually no internet at all and it honestly it felt nice. For a little while it bothered me but after coming back I realize how nice it actually was
I wholeheartidly applaud your initiative. Information overload is a real problem in my life and i feel the cheap entartainment provided by internet is distracting me from the real life. Well done.