I don’t have any answer, but I have similar-seeming problems (or so I believe). One thing I would like to understand better is whether the problem of “attention span” is really an umbrella term for many different kinds of problems, and understand it in a Kaj Sotala-kind of framework of internal systems. For instance, one can have an attention span problem while reading, because of any of the following reasons (sorry for the long list; please let me know if I am spamming):
1(a) Reading involves effort, which an internal subsystem doesn’t want to expend.
1(b) Reading exposes one’s insecurities regarding one’s clarity of understanding, which some internal subsystem hates confronting.
2(a) Reading triggers various memories and reveries, which some internal subsystem wants to indulge.
2(b) Some narcissistic internal subsystem that wants to explain the newly gathered insight to others and gain brownie points, and starts designing explanation schemes.
3(a) Integrating what one reads into one’s existing knowledge-base requires effort, which an internal subsystem doesn’t want to expend.
3(b) Integrating what one reads into one’s existing knowledge-base requires effort, and an internal subsystem wants to spend extra time with that (i.e., craving a more thorough integration than “normal”) before proceeding to reading the next.
3(c) An internal subsystem that wants to develop more theories or get more insights on the basis of some newly gathered insight overwhelms the knowledge-acquisition subsystem.
Perhaps some of these can be separated into “low-serotonin” vs “dopamine-craving”?
This is exactly the kind of thinking I was hoping to encounter. Do you have any further reading or solution proposals for some of the problems listed here?
I don’t have any answer, but I have similar-seeming problems (or so I believe). One thing I would like to understand better is whether the problem of “attention span” is really an umbrella term for many different kinds of problems, and understand it in a Kaj Sotala-kind of framework of internal systems. For instance, one can have an attention span problem while reading, because of any of the following reasons (sorry for the long list; please let me know if I am spamming):
1(a) Reading involves effort, which an internal subsystem doesn’t want to expend.
1(b) Reading exposes one’s insecurities regarding one’s clarity of understanding, which some internal subsystem hates confronting.
2(a) Reading triggers various memories and reveries, which some internal subsystem wants to indulge.
2(b) Some narcissistic internal subsystem that wants to explain the newly gathered insight to others and gain brownie points, and starts designing explanation schemes.
3(a) Integrating what one reads into one’s existing knowledge-base requires effort, which an internal subsystem doesn’t want to expend.
3(b) Integrating what one reads into one’s existing knowledge-base requires effort, and an internal subsystem wants to spend extra time with that (i.e., craving a more thorough integration than “normal”) before proceeding to reading the next.
3(c) An internal subsystem that wants to develop more theories or get more insights on the basis of some newly gathered insight overwhelms the knowledge-acquisition subsystem.
Perhaps some of these can be separated into “low-serotonin” vs “dopamine-craving”?
This is exactly the kind of thinking I was hoping to encounter. Do you have any further reading or solution proposals for some of the problems listed here?