If you don't teach your children to be alone, they'll only know how to be lonely.
That solitude is the most important developmental achievement of childhood.
Sherry Turkle has been researching the intersection between technology and humanity for a really long time.
She's really turned her focus now towards that little device that most of us hold in our hand for way too much of the day and how it's affecting us.
You know, how does technology, especially our phones, our smartphones, what's it actually doing to us and for us?
And instead of arguing that, you know, we should just give up or walk away from technology, she kind of makes the point that this is a part of our life, it's part of our future, but we really need to understand what this is doing to us, how it's affecting empathy, how it's affecting conversation, how it's affecting the way that we interact with the world and get what we need from the world.
That's the conversation that I'm having with Sheri Terkel in this week's episode.
I'm Jonathan fields.
This is good life project.
Really excited to just be able to spend some time with you.
I've actually been following your work for a number of years now.
So your latest just sort of really brought me deeper into your work, which was new to me over the last three, four years.
But this has been your life's work for a long time now.
Yes.
Yes, it has been my life's work.
I didn't realize it was my life's work when I started it, but I have become really deeply engrossed in this unfolding story of how digital technology doesn't just change what we do, it changes who we are.
And as the technologies have changed, the effects on who we are have changed as well.
And I've changed my mind about some things, too.
So it's an evolving story.
Yeah.