Increasing pace of life
- Pace and duration of work
Claim
- The modern age is increasingly characterized by a relentless energy that preys on speed records and shortcuts, unmindful of the past, uncaring of the future, existing only for the present moment and the quick fix. Industrialized societies have quickened the pace of life only to become less patient, less spontaneous and less joyful. People are better prepared to act on the future, but less able to enjoy the present and reflect on the past. Developed societies have learnt how to extract and make things at a faster pace, but with the consequence that people exploit and devalue each other's time at the workplace in order to increase production quotas. The commitment to producing and consuming at a frantic pace has resulted in an increasing depletion of nature's endowment and a degradation of the biosphere.
Counter claim
- Although it is frequently claimed that the increased pace and stress of modern times may lead to a higher incidence of mental illness, this has not been proved by quantitative research. From the information currently available, it would appear that psychoses do not increase although it is possible that psychoneuroses may. Under very difficult conditions, such as disasters, riots, and wars, unusual mental syndromes are observed. Some of these may be temporary and quite normal as part of the organism's readjustment phase after disturbed homeostasis; others may be pathological states precipitated, but probably not actually caused, by severe stress.