(no subject)
Nov. 5th, 2009 11:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
From the NurtureShock article Why Teenagers Are Growing Up So Slowly Today:
Yeah, that sounds about right.
Here’s a Twilight Zone-type premise for you. What if surgeons never got to work on humans, they were instead just endlessly in training, cutting up cadavers? What if the same went for all adults – we only got to practice at simulated versions of our jobs? Lawyers only got to argue mock cases, for years and years. Plumbers only got to fix fake leaks in classrooms. Teachers only got to teach to videocameras, endlessly rehearsing for some far off future. Book writers like me never saw our work put out to the public – our novels sat in drawers. Scientists never got to do original experiments; they only got to recreate scientific experiments of yesteryear. And so on.
Rather quickly, all meaning would vanish from our work. Even if we enjoyed the activity of our job, intrinsically, it would rapidly lose depth and relevance. It’d lose purpose. We’d become bored, lethargic, and disengaged.
In other words, we’d turn into teenagers.
Yeah, that sounds about right.
no subject
Date: 2009-11-06 02:39 pm (UTC)You could make some entertaining arguments about how impulsiveness and lack of consideration of consequences during one's teenage years are very good things from the point of view of genes desiring to reproduce themselves.