Sunday, May 27, 2012

How to waste time on internet--inconvenient curiosity


Curiosity is a virtue. It is evolutionarily advantagious because it enables human beings to learn new things and to expand the horizon of their living situation. However it's becoming more and more of a hinder for human mind with the advent of internet. The problem is that internet provides too much information—so much that it diverts and distracts us from our task or goal, while feeding our brain with useless information.

Like the gold fish: Gold fish doesn't know what is to be full. If you have a tank of gold fish, and you keep feeding them, they will keep eating until they are so full that their stomach burst and they die, it seems that there is no "threshhold" in their poorly under-evolved nervous system to process what is being "full".

The curiosity of human mind is just like the appetite of gold fish, we will keep absorbing and reading, and getting to know more things as long as they are availble. This trait was very useful in acient times, when knowledge and new information was very scarce so our brains were evoloved to be very readily attracted to new knowledge and information and to get them all. At that time to miss a crucial information could be fatal, like missing the information of which area there are tigers and which area there are food. (and it can't be looked up on internet )

However, the mordern society and internet provides too much of knowledge for our poor brain to absorb for a life time, but the trait of being generally curious still get inherited till now. We still don't want to miss one single information even when there is waayyyy too much information already. That's why we can't drag ourselves away from facebook to get to work, or why we spend endless time jumping from one useless link to another. The reason you clicked on my article, is probably not because you believe there would be valueable source of information (which it is actually :) ), but more because of you see a link and your curious brain start to fire a natural instinct and you clicked on the link without being aware of what you were doing.

The result of this inconvinient curiosity, is tons of time wasted on internet.

The way to deal with this problem, is to train a task-oriented curiosity to replace the general curiosity. So we should learn to be only curious about the information that is related to the goal or task that I have to achieve at hand, and be able to abandon or disregard all the information unrelated to our goal. At the same time, we need a clear perception of what our brain is tricking us to do and a strong will power to not do so when the result is not desired.

I am not sure if I am able to do that, but I can write it down in my silly blog and give my deepest sigh to the fragile and under-evolved human beings.

1 comment:

  1. Life is made of time.
    Now what I always do is spend fair amount of time to make sure that a book is worth reading, or a movie is good enough to watch. And I feel is more and more reasonable, spending time on deciding is more worthy than spending it on doing.
    So before clicking any link, use 1~2 seconds to think whether it's worthy to click.
    BTW, your blog is worth reading too. That's why I'm here :)

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