The Book Brief Project
Jonathan Haidt's The Anxious Generation became a number one bestseller and reshaped legislation in three countries within a year of publication. The headline is everywhere: smartphones broke a generation of teenagers. But the book makes a second argument — quieter, harder to legislate, and almost entirely absent from the public conversation around it. An argument that childhood itself was hollowed out a full generation before the iPhone existed. That the play-based childhood, the unsupervised afternoon, the long negotiation between nine-year-olds about whether the ball was out, disappeared in the 1980s and 1990s under the pressure of a parental fear that was statistically unfounded and culturally overwhelming. The phone did not kill that childhood. It moved into the house it left behind. This episode takes Haidt's book seriously on both halves. The strong half — the case for play, for risk, for autonomy, for the developmental work that only happens when adults are not watching — and the more fragile half, where the evidence on screen time is thinner than the book's prose suggests, and where researchers like Candice Odgers and Andrew Przybylski have pushed back on the size of the effect Haidt describes. Along the way, the episode places Haidt next to Neil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death — a book from 1985 that made a similar shape of argument about television, with a fraction of the certainty and twice the patience. Reading them together clarifies what The Anxious Generation gets right, where it overreaches, and what part of it will still matter when the smartphone debate is over. Books, taken seriously. No quick summaries. 00:00 The half of the book nobody talks about 01:30 Who Jonathan Haidt is, and how he got here 03:00 The great rewiring of childhood 05:00 The fear that emptied the streets before the phone arrived 07:00 The Mars analogy — and where it breaks 09:30 What the evidence actually shows 11:30 Neil Postman and the danger of a book that becomes a movement 13:30 The phone walked into an empty room #TheAnxiousGeneration #JonathanHaidt #BookBrief #BooksTakenSeriously
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