The Anxious Generation Goes to College with Jonathan Haidt

See Jonathan Haidt at the #HxA2024 Conference in Chicago, June 6 - 8 www.heterodoxacademy.org/2024conference
***
From Coddling to Crisis. Today, we trace the trajectory of student fragility from playgrounds to classrooms. Welcome to Heterodox Out Loud. In today's episode, our host, John Tomasi, talks with social psychologist and best-selling author Jonathan Haidt about his new book, The Anxious Generation. The book delves into the increasing levels of anxiety and emotional distress experienced by teens today. During their discussion, Haidt emphasizes the significant shift from a play-based childhood to a smartphone-centric upbringing, which has led to a rise in mental health issues, particularly after the adoption of Instagram in 2012.
The pair will explore how these changes have affected higher education and campus life. They will discuss the reinforcement of emotional reasoning, fragility, and self-censorship fostered in academic settings. Together, they will examine the critical issues and potential pathways for creating robust, supportive, and intellectually vibrant university communities. Join us to learn more about this critical topic.
In This Episode:
• Exploring the Anxious Generation's college experience
• The impact of technology on mental health
• The role of community in university settings
• Challenges of identity and independence in college
• How to foster viewpoint diversity and respectful discourse
About Jonathan:
Jonathan Haidt is a social psychologist at New York University’s Stern School of Business. He obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1992 and taught for 16 years in the Department of Psychology at the University of Virginia. Haidt's research focuses on exploring the intuitive foundations of morality and how it varies across cultures, including the cultures of progressives, conservatives, and libertarians. His aim is to help people understand, live, and work with each other despite their moral differences. Haidt has co-founded several organizations and collaborations that apply moral and social psychology to achieve this goal, including Heterodox Academy, The Constructive Dialogue Institute, and EthicalSystems.org.
Haidt is the author of The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom, as well as The New York Times bestsellers The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion and The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas are Setting Up a Generation for Failure (co-authored with Greg Lukianoff). He has written more than 100 academic articles, which have been cited nearly 100,000 times. In 2019, he was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and was chosen by Prospect magazine as one of the world’s “Top 50 Thinkers.” Haidt has given four TED talks and since 2018, he has been studying the impact of social media on the decline of teen mental health and the rise of political dysfunction. His latest book, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness, was published by Penguin Press on March 26, 2024.
Follow Jonathan on X here: / jonhaidt
Follow Heterodox Academy on:
X/Twitter: bit.ly/3Fax5Dy
Facebook: bit.ly/3PMYxfw
LinkedIn: bit.ly/48IYeuJ
Instagram: bit.ly/46HKfUg
Substack: bit.ly/48IhjNF
Listen to the podcast on:
Apple - apple.co/3PZzplD
Spotify: spoti.fi/3S51uee
Amazon: amzn.to/3ZXQnFL
i-Heart - bit.ly/3M69qYA
Tune-In - bit.ly/3S5oBVR
Pandora - bit.ly/46AaLze
Find out more about Heterodox Academy at: linktr.ee/heterodoxoutloud

Пікірлер: 25

  • @robyost6079
    @robyost607913 күн бұрын

    And a phone-based childhood becomes a phone-based adolescence and a phone-based adulthood. Inability to concentrate for more than a few seconds at a time.... texting while driving... phone in the morning, phone at night, phone every waking hour....

  • @launchpad310
    @launchpad31013 күн бұрын

    College from 2000-04 was Sooooo much fun and I learned a lot!

  • @anarchist_parable
    @anarchist_parable11 күн бұрын

    Growing up millennial was still all about socializing. We grew up outside and we were teenagers whose social capital was entirely dependent on human interaction: who you were dating, who wore the same shirt to school as you, who invited you to a party. When phones came out we were all about other people so they were just a tool to call your friends and tell them where the party was. The internet was on the one family computer at home. You were considered a loser if you added people that you didn't know to your MySpace. Even the things I looked up online were social: dance moves, song lyrics, facts about bands to impress my friends with. We made fun of people with early iPhones and the term "troll" came from "basement troll" because anyone who spent too much time online was a loser who would live in their mom's basement. We didn't WANT to be online all the time, we wanted to go to the mall.

  • @shortminute
    @shortminute6 күн бұрын

    When my 13 year son asked for a flip phone, we immediately went out and got him a flip phone. He’s 14 now and he’s not anxious nor seeking an identity. He still plays video games, and isn’t perfect but he’s out in the world more than his peers. In fact he’s getting a job this Summer and eager to get his learners license. I’m not sure if it’s him or the fact that he doesn’t have a smart phone. I asked him why he wanted a flip phone he said, “ I care about my mental health and I don’t want mental illness. “

  • @konstantinosstavropoulos3605
    @konstantinosstavropoulos36055 сағат бұрын

    good

  • @karenmorris674
    @karenmorris67413 күн бұрын

    Suggestion: For John to work on not interupting as frequently as he did in this post. I found his interupting to be distracting from the points Haidt was trying to make and highlighting.

  • @m.talley1660
    @m.talley166013 күн бұрын

    Mr Haidt describing how social networks have devolved seems to be yet another form of platform decay. Been getting my head around the usual traits of shifts in the design of who is served by for example by search or commerce platforms. When the basis becomes about retention or selling. - I'll describe it as being like a race to the bottom by baiting and switching.

  • @lucydoe1334
    @lucydoe133413 күн бұрын

    Thank you both.

  • @LenandlarSingh1979
    @LenandlarSingh197913 күн бұрын

    A lot of the social media things come from society. Interesting talk.

  • @anarchist_parable
    @anarchist_parable11 күн бұрын

    I also just remembered how our Instagrams were almost entirely food pictures and like occasional blurry bar picks of us and our girls 😂. There was no aesthetic we just wanted people to know we had friends.

  • @sailboat1921
    @sailboat192112 күн бұрын

    I just noticed that you may want to check the spelling of the title (I say this as a humble person who often spells things wrong).

  • @StrongbyLee
    @StrongbyLee13 күн бұрын

    I find a lot in the younger generation have had more exposure to the world through social media, for better or worse. Religion also serves as a strong coping strategy, so when tragedy strikes, we can chalk it up to "God's will". I feel the pendulum has swung too far in the opposite direction.

  • @jonathangilmore3193
    @jonathangilmore319313 күн бұрын

    It’s a convincing argument or claim. My question is whether there’s been an attempt to devise a means by which the claim or findings can be tested for their alleged causality? Thus far, it’s an argument, which is “epidemiological” in nature, and it’s too important to leave there.

  • @ragged_claws_scuttling

    @ragged_claws_scuttling

    11 күн бұрын

    But a convincing argument, or judgement of any system or “a priori relation” of phenomena exists in any rational, or metaphysical, or at least epistemological contradiction to an abstract and empirical concept such as being, or to be, or to occur IN the alleged causality itself or OF the alleged causality itself.

  • @stevenhanson6057
    @stevenhanson605711 күн бұрын

    From Class of ‘72. Students looked like 8th Graders. Now some College students act like 12 year olds. Look at photos from 1900 and High School students look 30.

  • @sailboat1921
    @sailboat192112 күн бұрын

    John Tomasi, we could have used you in plant biology!

  • @spicole2937
    @spicole293710 күн бұрын

    At the expense of trades

  • @moozerk1264
    @moozerk126411 күн бұрын

    The interviewer loves to hear himself talk rather than letting the person being interviewed speak. He CONSTANTLY interrupts him. It is very annoying.

  • @spicole2937
    @spicole293710 күн бұрын

    Give men due process stpp calling predators stop drugging them for not sitting still like good little girls

  • @BlackJar72
    @BlackJar7210 күн бұрын

    All the "decide who you will be" non-sense! In the end you are who you are, and nothing more can or should be said. When I was a student I wanted to earn credentials to make a living, and if were back in that situation again, I'd want it even more; none of the airy-fairy "identity" stuff -- and some very individualistic generation were also among the most successful as a whole, individualism if fundamental to post-enlightenment western society and has served us well, not something to just abandon.