unSILOed with Greg LaBlanc

633. The Case for Being Human in a Digital World with Christine Rosen

Mar 25, 2026
Christine Rosen, senior fellow and cultural critic who studies how technology reshapes human life. She explores how digital convenience removes friction and weakens real-world social skills. She examines boredom's creative value, how mediation flattens interaction, and why engineered serendipity and simulated connection threaten authentic relationships.
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ANECDOTE

Laptop Ban Revived A Convivial Cafe

  • A D.C. cafe banned laptops to restore convivial conversation and quickly stayed crowded with talkative customers.
  • Rosen contrasts its lively mood with nearby headphone-clad Starbucks to show how norms shape public life.
INSIGHT

Taking Photos Reduces Memory Of Art

  • Photographing museum art often impairs memory of the work because taking a photo signals external storage to the brain.
  • Rosen cites research showing fewer people re‑view photos and advocates sitting and looking instead.
INSIGHT

Illusion Of Control Masks Algorithmic Narrowing

  • Tech provides an illusion of individual control while narrowing real choices through architecture and algorithms.
  • Rosen notes features like infinite scroll and engineered feeds make serendipity feel manufacturable but actually constrain options.
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