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cover of episode No, There Isn’t a Loneliness Epidemic (And That May Be an Even Bigger Problem)

No, There Isn’t a Loneliness Epidemic (And That May Be an Even Bigger Problem)

2025/3/11
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Brett McKay: 美国人面对面社交的时间大幅减少,但令人惊讶的是,这并没有导致所谓的‘孤独感疫情’,而是出现了‘越来越孤独却并不感到孤独’的新现象。这一现象引发了广泛的讨论,尤其是在年轻人和未婚男性中,社交时间的减少尤为显著。 Derek Thompson: 美国人的社交活动在20世纪下半叶开始减少,21世纪初更是急剧下降,面对面社交减少了20%以上,某些群体甚至减少了40%。这种现象的背后,是汽车、电视和智能手机等技术的普及,它们使人们的社交活动逐渐私密化,导致人们即使在人群中也能独自一人。

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Face-to-face socializing in America has declined by more than 20% nationwide. Among some groups, like young adults and unmarried men, the drop is closer to 40%.

But strangely, this hasn’t led to the loneliness epidemic that you hear so much about. Instead, we’re seeing a new phenomenon: rising aloneness without rising loneliness.

Today on the show, Derek Thompson will help us understand this puzzling disconnect and its profound implications. Derek is a staff writer at The Atlantic who recently wrote a piece entitled “The Anti-Social Century.”) In the first half of our conversation, Derek unpacks the cultural shifts and technological developments — and no, it’s not just the smartphone — that have created what he calls the “convenience curse.” We then get into why even self-described introverts are often happier when forced to socialize, the concerning trend of young men settling further and further into isolating, sedentary leisure, and practical ways we can strengthen our atrophied social muscles to become better, happier people.

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