Nothing is Harder to do Than Nothing

Nothing is harder to do than nothing. In a world where our value is determined by our productivity, many of us find our every last minute captured, optimized, or appropriated as a financial resource by the technologies we use daily. We submit our free time to numerical evaluation, interact with algorithmic versions of each other, and build and maintain personal brands. For some, there may be a kind of engineer’s satisfaction in the streamlining and networking of our entire lived experience. And yet a certain nervous feeling, of being overstimulated and unable to sustain a train of thought, lingers. Though it can be hard to grasp before it disappears behind the screen of distraction, this feeling is in fact urgent. We still recognize that much of what gives one’s life meaning stems from accidents, interruptions, and serendipitous encounters: the “off time” that a mechanistic view of experience seeks to eliminate.

Notes:

Folksonomies: cyberpunk attention economy

Taxonomies:
/technology and computing/internet technology/web search/people search (0.738637)
/business and industrial/business operations/management/business process (0.671871)
/technology and computing/networking (0.628303)

Concepts:
Time (0.878924): dbpedia_resource
Train of thought (0.829074): dbpedia_resource
Technology (0.697123): dbpedia_resource
Philosophy (0.664757): dbpedia_resource
Behind the Screen (0.649129): dbpedia_resource
Education (0.623185): dbpedia_resource
Mind (0.580998): dbpedia_resource
Biology (0.549588): dbpedia_resource

 How to Do Nothing
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Odell, Jenny (2019-05-07), How to Do Nothing, Retrieved on 2023-09-23
Folksonomies: new media cyberpunk