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Yoni Birnbaum

ByYoni Birnbaum, Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

Torah study is real deep work

The ancient text may contain the solution to a very modern problem

June 2, 2017 13:58
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3 min read

According to extensive research, we now have shorter attention spans than at any point in our history. Shorter even, according to some scientists, than that of a goldfish (at nine seconds, they say). The culprit, apparently, is the smartphone.

Back in 2000, just before the smartphone revolution, we could concentrate intently for around 12 seconds. Today, we are down to just eight. Constant distraction from the small machine in our pockets may even be altering the way our brains work, making us marginally better at multi-tasking, but much worse at concentrating on one activity for any decent length of time.

Generally, at this point, you would expect me to talk about the marvel of Shabbat as a weekly “digital detox”. An opportunity to disconnect from technology to reconnect with the real people around us.

And it’s true; the concept of Shabbat is immensely helpful in providing a vital break from our smartphones, proven by the recent widespread popular support for “Technology Sabbaths”.