Immaturity rising
Maybe we're living longer, maybe we "never stop learning", but maybe there's a downside? This article suggests there's a loss of "psychological maturity" associated with our modern lifestyle:
While the human mind responds to new information over the course of any individual's lifetime, Charlton argues that past physical environments were more stable and allowed for a state of psychological maturity. In hunter-gatherer societies, that maturity was probably achieved during a person's late teens or early twenties, he said.
"By contrast, many modern adults fail to attain this maturity, and such failure is common and indeed characteristic of highly educated and, on the whole, effective and socially valuable people," he said.
"People such as academics, teachers, scientists and many other professionals are often strikingly immature outside of their strictly specialist competence in the sense of being unpredictable, unbalanced in priorities, and tending to overreact."
Charlton added that since modern cultures now favor cognitive flexibility, "immature" people tend to thrive and succeed, and have set the tone not only for contemporary life, but also for the future, when it is possible our genes may even change as a result of the psychological shift.
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Parmeter Jun 26, 2006
I'm not so sure I buy this line of reasoning. Not to mention that the artilces I have read so far on this research don't reveal any details on how "maturity" was measured; Just talking about the conclusions and results. Which is great if you're trying to get attention and funding for your next project...becuase nobody with that much maturity would ever do anything like that.