Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society
Overthink Podcast・8 minutes read
Byung-Chul Han discusses burnout in contemporary society due to the pressure to achieve and society's obsession with productivity, criticizing the excess of positivity and the collapse of negativity that lead to neuronal illnesses like depression. He contrasts the achievement society with the disciplinary society described by Foucault, highlighting the importance of contemplative immersion over hyper attention to avoid fragmented perception and passivity.
Insights
- The societal obsession with achievement and productivity, as discussed by Byung-Chul Han, leads to an excess of positivity and a collapse of negativity, resulting in neuronal illnesses like burnout and depression.
- Byung-Chul Han emphasizes the detrimental effects of hyper attention in an achievement society, hindering deep contemplation and leading to fragmented perception, advocating for the preservation of contemplative immersion to combat passivity and lack of genuine activity.
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Recent questions
What does Byung-Chul Han discuss in "The Burnout Society"?
Burnout in society due to achievement and productivity.
How does Han view depression in society?
As a social consequence of pressure to achieve.
What does Han criticize in an achievement society?
Hyper attention hindering deep contemplation.
Why does Han emphasize the vita contemplativa?
To counteract passivity and lack of genuine activity.
How does Han differentiate between tiredness in society?
Solitary exhaustion versus collective regrouping moments.
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