Is boredom necessary to our survival?
Every emotion has a purpose—an evolutionary benefit," says Sandi Mann, a psychologist and the author of The Upside of Downtime: Why Boredom Is Good. "I wanted to know why we have this emotion of boredom, which seems like such a negative, pointless emotion."
That's how Mann got started in her specialty: boredom. While researching emotions in the workplace in the 1990s, she discovered the second most commonly suppressed emotion after anger was—you guessed it—boredom. "It gets such bad press," she said. "Almost everything seems to be blamed on boredom."
As Mann dived into the topic of boredom, she found that it was actually "very interesting." It's certainly not pointless. Wijnand van Tilburg from the University of Southampton explained the important evolutionary function of that uneasy, awful feeling this way: "Boredom makes people keen to engage in activities that they find more meaningful than those at hand."
"Imagine a world where we didn't get bored," Mann said. "We'd be perpetually excited by everything—raindrops falling, the cornflakes at breakfast time." Once past boredom's evolutionary purpose, Mann became curious about whether there might be benefits beyond its contribution to survival. "Instinctively," she said, "I felt that we all need a little boredom in our lives."
Precede creative tasks with the most intensely boring activities you can devise if you want to have the best ideas.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 03 2017, @11:20PM (1 child)
Oh jesus we can unicode here? Why is slashdot such a neglected clusterfuck?
They won't ban creimer even though he talks about marrying little girls... a clusterfuck of annoying regex filters that won't let you post for looking like ascii art or using too many caps or... who knows? Then there is timothy.
But god forbid the place doesn't look web 3.0 enough.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 04 2017, @12:33AM
Um, what are you talking about, dude?