johnjohn320
Diamond Member
I used to read quite a lot for pleasure; these days I only get thorugh a few books a year at most that I don't have to read for school/work. Even then, those books aren't usually particularly deep or heavy- just some sort of political satire, a short novel, simplistic biographies, etc. The reading that I have to do (I'm in grad school) feels like drudgery and seems to take forever. Even when the material's interesting, my attention wanders continuously.
I once read (ironic, no?) an article that speculated that the internet has killed many of our attention spans for reading. The author's logic was that the internet has delivered such a plethora of information that's so easy to find, that we've become accustomed to "getting to the good stuff" right away. No buildup, no searching, no real commitment is required; only a passing fancy at wanting to know something is needed for us to get the information we desire in 30 seconds or less.
So what do you think? Any validity to this?
edit-and yes, I'm aware that someone will make the joke "I tried to read your post but spaced out halfway through..."
I once read (ironic, no?) an article that speculated that the internet has killed many of our attention spans for reading. The author's logic was that the internet has delivered such a plethora of information that's so easy to find, that we've become accustomed to "getting to the good stuff" right away. No buildup, no searching, no real commitment is required; only a passing fancy at wanting to know something is needed for us to get the information we desire in 30 seconds or less.
So what do you think? Any validity to this?
edit-and yes, I'm aware that someone will make the joke "I tried to read your post but spaced out halfway through..."