The Nervous System in the Age of Algorithms
Distraction is no longer a flaw. It is infrastructure. We often describe modern life as “busy” or “overstimulated,” but that language softens what is actually happening. Humanity is not merely distracted — it is being neurologically restructured. The battlefield is not geographic. It is cognitive. The human nervous system evolved for rhythm: light and dark, work and rest, conversation and silence. Attention once moved in arcs — sustained, immersive, contemplative. Today it moves in fragments. Notifications interrupt. Feeds refresh. Content scrolls endlessly without resolution. The body remains seated, but the mind sprints. Scroll-speed cognition is not neutral. Neural pathways adapt to repetition. When we train the brain to process in bursts — headline, image, reaction, swipe — we strengthen quick recognition and weaken sustained inquiry. Depth becomes effortful. Reaction becomes automatic. The pause between stimulus and response shrinks. And in that shrinking pause, something essentia...