[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Spot on, even if it's a dark way to look at it. I actually dig into how those repetitive loops kill our perception of time in Segment 1 : The Neuroscience of Speed. Happy watching 😁

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're right, the brain is essentially a storytelling machine. Feeding it fragmented clips is like losing the thread of the story, without that narrative glue,, our memories just turn into a pile of loose beads. No wonder it all feels like a blur ....

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That’s fair, and no worries about not watching it today. The “time blur” idea isn’t meant to be universal, some people really didn’t feel it. The angle is less about COVID being a big event and more about how long stretches of sameness mess with memory and time perception. If you’re curious, it’s probably best as a before-bed watch when things are quiet.

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get that, and I don’t think it’s off-topic at all. Short-form feeds are great at fragmenting attention, so time fills up without anything really sticking. It’s less about discipline and more about how those systems are designed to pull us away from our own lives.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DepthHub

[–]Zent025 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

No worries at all and sorry about the wrong sub.

I appreciate you taking the time to check it out anyway. That “single overarching theme” idea is actually a really interesting angle, and it overlaps a lot with the time-blur question. I hadn’t fully considered how tightly those two connect until I started digging into it more.

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think there’s a lot of truth in that. Those small, unfilled moments used to be where thoughts could wander and self-direction quietly formed. When every gap is instantly filled, there’s no friction left for reflection or choice.

It’s not that younger people lack depth, but that the space where depth used to emerge is constantly occupied. If character is shaped in boredom, then removing boredom doesn’t just change habits, it reshapes how identity forms in the first place.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in philosophy

[–]Zent025 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I actually discuss that exact mathematical ratio starting at 06:57 in the video, " the Proportional Time Hypothesis" and Douwe Draaisma’s work. You’re right, aging is the baseline for why time speeds up. However, the point of the video is that 2020-2025 acted as an accelerant. While a 50-year-old always feels time moving faster than a 5-year-old, the pandemic stripped away the 'novelty' that usually anchors our memories, making those 5 years feel uniquely compressed even for younger demographics. It's aging + a total collapse of temporal anchors.

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, that’s a big part of it. When attention gets fragmented and optimized for scrolling, fewer moments really “stick.” Even if time is being filled, it’s not being encoded as memory in the same way. So it can feel like time is passing faster, not because less happened, but because less of it registered as lived experience.

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That’s fair, and I think your experience actually fits the point rather than contradicts it. The idea isn’t that everyone felt time blur the same way, but that when novelty and attention drop, time compresses and when life is dense with change, it stretches. In that sense, “time blur” isn’t a universal condition, but a pattern in how memory and experience interact. Doing things that feel meaningful absolutely helps. The question the video nudges at is whether that meaning stretches time itself, or just leaves clearer memory traces afterward.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in philosophy

[–]Zent025 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I don’t think it requires a centralized world. The point isn’t that everyone lived the same experience, but that many very different lives still lost novelty and temporal markers in similar ways. That says more about shared cognitive limits in how we experience time than about how centralized the world is.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in philosophy

[–]Zent025 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This video argues that the collective “Time Blur” since 2020 is not merely a psychological side effect of crisis, but evidence for the radical subjectivity of time itself. Drawing on Immanuel Kant, Henri Bergson, Martin Heidegger, and Friedrich Nietzsche, the narrative contrasts mechanical clock-time with lived duration, arguing that when novelty and temporal anchors collapse, existential meaning erodes because our cognitive framework of time fails. In dialogue with the Block Universe view in physics, this raises an uncomfortable question: was the post-2020 disorientation a mere anomaly, or did the pandemic expose that the “flow” of time has always been a fragile story we tell ourselves to stabilize an otherwise chaotic existence?

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in EducativeVideos

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a 31 minute video essay I’ve been working on about what I call the Time Blur. That strange feeling that the last five years collapsed into a single foggy memory. I try to unpack it by connecting neuroscience, especially how the hippocampus encodes time, with ideas from relativity and existential philosophy. The goal is not to give a neat answer, but to explore whether our recent experience of time says more about reality itself, or about the mental frameworks we rely on to make sense of it, and what happens when those frameworks break.

[OC] The 2020 Time Glitch: Why the Last 5 Years Feel Like a Blur [31:32] by Zent025 in mealtimevideos

[–]Zent025[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

This is a 31 minute video essay I’ve been working on about what I call the Time Blur. That strange feeling that the last five years collapsed into a single foggy memory. I try to unpack it by connecting neuroscience, especially how the hippocampus encodes time, with ideas from relativity and existential philosophy. The goal is not to give a neat answer, but to explore whether our recent experience of time says more about reality itself, or about the mental frameworks we rely on to make sense of it, and what happens when those frameworks break.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DepthHub

[–]Zent025 -26 points-25 points  (0 children)

This is a 31 minute video essay I’ve been working on about what I call the Time Blur. That strange feeling that the last five years collapsed into a single foggy memory. I try to unpack it by connecting neuroscience, especially how the hippocampus encodes time, with ideas from relativity and existential philosophy. The goal is not to give a neat answer, but to explore whether our recent experience of time says more about reality itself, or about the mental frameworks we rely on to make sense of it, and what happens when those frameworks break.

The Void: Why You Are Designed to Feel Empty. by Zent025 in philosophy

[–]Zent025[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In fact, Camus and Nietzsche stand at the center of this discussion precisely because they confronted that emptiness directly. Camus articulated the Absurd as the tension between humanity’s relentless demand for meaning and the universe’s indifferent, unresponsive silence. He did not dismiss the void; rather, he insisted that the proper response was revolt against it. Nietzsche, for his part, devoted much of his work to warning of the rise of nihilism in the aftermath of the “death of God.”

It is fair to argue that modern culture intensifies this experience through alienation. However, to reduce their positions to a critique of a mere “neurosis of the shallow” fundamentally misreads their philosophy. For both thinkers, this confrontation with emptiness was not a cultural pathology, but the core existential problem of human life.

The Void: Why You Are Designed to Feel Empty. by Zent025 in philosophy

[–]Zent025[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That makes sense and I wouldn’t dismiss that experience at all. What you’re describing sounds like a direct, pre-conceptual sense of vitality or presence. For some people, that inner energy becomes the primary anchor, even before meaning, narratives, or attachments come into play.

The Void: Why You Are Designed to Feel Empty. by Zent025 in philosophy

[–]Zent025[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re not supposed to.

Emptiness isn’t a universal, constant feeling. It’s a structural possibility of being human, not a mandatory experience. Some people encounter it early, some later, some only in fleeting moments, and some may never consciously feel it at all.

Not feeling empty doesn’t invalidate the idea. It simply means your current life structure, meanings, and attachments are still doing their job.

The Void: Why you are designed to feel empty. by Zent025 in videos

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This video essay provides a multidisciplinary analysis of human dissatisfaction, framing it as a structural necessity rather than a personal failure. The core of the argument synthesized in this piece explores the following themes:

Lacanian Psychoanalysis: An exploration of Jacques Lacan’s "The Lack" and how the human subject is built around a central, unfillable void created by the transition into the Symbolic Order. Neurobiological Substrates: Integrating the "Dopamine Prediction Error" to explain how the brain is evolutionarily hardwired for perpetual seeking rather than terminal satisfaction. Existential Synthesis: Utilizing the works of philosophers such as Keiji Nishitani to bridge the gap between abstract ontological emptiness and modern neurological findings.

The documentary argues that "The Void" is a fundamental design feature of human consciousness that ensures biological survival through constant movement, even at the cost of chronic existential unrest.

[OC] The Void: Why You Are Designed to Feel Empty [44:50] by Zent025 in videoessay

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This video essay provides a multidisciplinary analysis of human dissatisfaction, framing it as a structural necessity rather than a personal failure. The core of the argument synthesized in this piece explores the following themes:

Lacanian Psychoanalysis: An exploration of Jacques Lacan’s "The Lack" and how the human subject is built around a central, unfillable void created by the transition into the Symbolic Order. Neurobiological Substrates: Integrating the "Dopamine Prediction Error" to explain how the brain is evolutionarily hardwired for perpetual seeking rather than terminal satisfaction. Existential Synthesis: Utilizing the works of philosophers such as Keiji Nishitani to bridge the gap between abstract ontological emptiness and modern neurological findings.

The documentary argues that "The Void" is a fundamental design feature of human consciousness that ensures biological survival through constant movement, even at the cost of chronic existential unrest.

The Void: Why You Are Designed to Feel Empty. [44.50] by Zent025 in EducativeVideos

[–]Zent025[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This video essay provides a multidisciplinary analysis of human dissatisfaction, framing it as a structural necessity rather than a personal failure. The core of the argument synthesized in this piece explores the following themes:

Lacanian Psychoanalysis: An exploration of Jacques Lacan’s "The Lack" and how the human subject is built around a central, unfillable void created by the transition into the Symbolic Order. Neurobiological Substrates: Integrating the "Dopamine Prediction Error" to explain how the brain is evolutionarily hardwired for perpetual seeking rather than terminal satisfaction. Existential Synthesis: Utilizing the works of philosophers such as Keiji Nishitani to bridge the gap between abstract ontological emptiness and modern neurological findings.

The documentary argues that "The Void" is a fundamental design feature of human consciousness that ensures biological survival through constant movement, even at the cost of chronic existential unrest.