151: Rising ADHD and the Corruption of Your Attention
Fri Sep 12 2025
Is Modern ADHD a Crisis of Environment? An Exploration of Attention in the Digital Age
I confess to having been sceptical about the rising ADHD diagnoses, suspecting it to be a fad. However, after watching people describe their everyday distractions, my view shifted. The explosion of ADHD-like behaviours seems more about the environment we've created rather than individual faults. This episode explores whether our digital society is an attentional pathogen, meticulously designed to fragment our focus for profit. We debate two paths: whether this crisis is a tragic accident or a deliberate byproduct of the attention economy. We also contemplate two possible responses—personal monasticism and public reform. I challenge you to rethink how we manage our attention and the future direction we want to take.
00:00 Confession and Initial Scepticism
00:44 Do we all have ADHD now?
02:05 The Digital Society as an Attentional Pathogen
02:41 Exploring the Nature of the Pathogen
03:19 Path A: The Accidental Crisis
05:36 Cognitive Artefacts: Complementary vs. Competitive
09:46 Path B: The Deliberate Machine
12:16 Consequences of Fragmented Attention
18:23 Solutions: Personal Monasticism vs. Public Reform
24:21 Conclusion: Balancing Personal and Public Responses
26:04 Final Thoughts and Call to Action
Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/theknowledge/donations
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Is Modern ADHD a Crisis of Environment? An Exploration of Attention in the Digital Age I confess to having been sceptical about the rising ADHD diagnoses, suspecting it to be a fad. However, after watching people describe their everyday distractions, my view shifted. The explosion of ADHD-like behaviours seems more about the environment we've created rather than individual faults. This episode explores whether our digital society is an attentional pathogen, meticulously designed to fragment our focus for profit. We debate two paths: whether this crisis is a tragic accident or a deliberate byproduct of the attention economy. We also contemplate two possible responses—personal monasticism and public reform. I challenge you to rethink how we manage our attention and the future direction we want to take. 00:00 Confession and Initial Scepticism 00:44 Do we all have ADHD now? 02:05 The Digital Society as an Attentional Pathogen 02:41 Exploring the Nature of the Pathogen 03:19 Path A: The Accidental Crisis 05:36 Cognitive Artefacts: Complementary vs. Competitive 09:46 Path B: The Deliberate Machine 12:16 Consequences of Fragmented Attention 18:23 Solutions: Personal Monasticism vs. Public Reform 24:21 Conclusion: Balancing Personal and Public Responses 26:04 Final Thoughts and Call to Action Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/theknowledge/donations