The Rise of a Dopamine Culture: Scot McKnight

The Rise of a Dopamine Culture

A recent post by theologian and New Testament scholar Scot McKnight reviews a work by Ted Gioia that looks contextually at the State of Culture. Here, McKnight briefly summarizes how our cultural shifts have pushed out art has been replaced by entertainment and entertainment has been replaced and reduced to one minute-long dopamine drips. Movie makers are losing business while "ceaseless activity reigns." Here is McKnight's review in short:

"Peter Drucker famously said 'culture eats strategy for breakfast.' He was right. I would contend with others that character, which shapes culture and strategy and power, eats culture before it arrives at the table. Discerning these deep dimensions of life and work and society and church brings me to a new Substack essay by Ted Gioia called “The State of the Culture, 2024”(https://substack.com/redirect/f4d8a82b-4356-450a-8376-a0fea62c18bf?j=eyJ1IjoieW5qaGkifQ.-6sFh6nepl8AuKM9I7sCiHKRzLsAupysuLM8-YzrPmM). Please read it.

Gioia gets into what’s going on in our culture today. He claims the 'State of Union' addresses by our presidents are snores and bores because 'All the action now is happening in mainstream culture—which is changing at warp speed.' So he says we need a 'State of the Culture' address and he gives one!

He begins with the claim that the art types that, in the choice between art or entertainment, 'entertainment is dead.' He claims entertainment has consumed and eaten art because 'we’re witnessing the birth of a post-entertainment culture.' On this he’s right, at least as I perceive it:

Consider the movie business:

Music, he says, is in the worst shape. The new musicians are worth far more than the old. What’s happened to art and entertainment is that is being eaten by 'Distraction.' This one is worth digging into a bit. I quote:

'The fastest growing sector of the culture economy is distraction. Or call it scrolling or swiping or wasting time or whatever you want. But it’s not art or entertainment, just ceaseless activity.'

The key is that each stimulus only lasts a few seconds, and must be repeated.

It’s a huge business, and will soon be larger than arts and entertainment combined. Everything is getting turned into TikTok—an aptly named platform for a business based on stimuli that must be repeated after only a few ticks of the clock.

TikTok made a fortune with fast-paced scrolling video. And now Facebook—once a place to connect with family and friends—is imitating it. So long, Granny, hello Reels. Twitter has done the same. And, of course, Instagram, YouTube, and everybody else trying to get rich on social media.

The bigger issue that this distraction mode of life is chemical. The brain loves this sudden, surprising stimulation. It wants more of it. Put as Gioia frames it, Distraction is being eaten by Addiction. Which is where we find ourselves today. We dwell in a Dopamine Culture.

(From Gioia’s post)

'Tech companies want junkies, not intelligent reading or critical thinking.'

Here is his summary:

But wait, there’s more! Apple, Facebook, and others are now telling you to put on their virtual reality headsets—where you are swallowed up by the stimuli, like those tiny fish in my food chain charts. You’re invited to live as a passive recipient of make-believe experiences, like a pod slave in The Matrix.

These companies know what works and they target the young. “Instead of movies, users get served up an endless sequence of 15-second videos. Instead of symphonies, listeners hear bite-sized melodies, usually accompanied by one of these tiny videos—just enough for a dopamine hit, and no more.”

This leads to “anhedonia,” the inability or desire to experience the pleasure. We become sated. He calls it 'Silicon Valley zombification.' And, 'The dopamine cartel is now aggravating our worst social problems—in education, in workplaces, and in private life.'

The so-called internet fasts, he is saying are actually dopamine fasts."

McKnight concludes the review by asking, what are you doing, or trying, about this? What do we as parents, leaders, and mentors do to shape youth in a way that guides them to experience the world fully and wholly? We need to wrestle with this question and determine a course of action. We must not remain on the sidelines.

Scot's Newsletter: https://substack.com/redirect/2b83c049-84cc-475a-9648-0a98003213b3?j=eyJ1IjoieW5qaGkifQ.-6sFh6nepl8AuKM9I7sCiHKRzLsAupysuLM8-YzrPmM

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