The Psychology of Us
What if the public isn't withdrawing from civic reality, but from the mediated performance of it? This episode examines a structural argument by RJ Starr: legacy news media and national politics have fused into a closed circuit, a self-sustaining loop in which each institution performs for the other while claiming to speak for the public. Political actors produce events designed for visibility. Media converts those events into narrative: crisis, scandal, momentum, moral emergency. Political actors then respond not to the underlying event but to the narrative built around it, and that response becomes the next cycle's raw material. The public is invoked constantly as the moral center of the discussion, yet the actual communication runs inward, institutions speaking to each other while speaking about everyone else. The conversation does not argue that any network is biased or that any party is corrupt. It stays with the mechanism rather than the politics, asking what happens to the mind when public reality arrives through a system that requires constant urgency, conflict, and identity reinforcement to remain economically and psychologically central. At the center is a distinction between information and noise. Noise here is not the absence of content; it is information delivered without usable proportion, signals whose emotional intensity exceeds their practical relevance to ordinary life. When every story is framed with the same urgency regardless of scale, the mind loses its ability to tell what actually matters. From there the episode turns to its central idea: psychologically absent attention. Much of what gets counted as engagement, clicking, watching, scrolling, sharing, may be habitual contact without inward involvement, closer to driving a familiar route on autopilot than to genuine attention. This is not treated as apathy. It is described as a protective adaptation, the mind remaining present enough to be counted while withholding itself from a system that demands more than the actual stakes of daily life justify. That distinction reframes how engagement metrics should be read. Clicks and shares are easy to count and so are treated as evidence of relevance, but a click may express anxiety or habit as easily as interest. The episode explores how these numbers increasingly measure identity confirmation rather than comprehension, people engaging less to learn something new than to confirm which side they belong to. The discussion also introduces parochial attribution, the tendency to interpret unfamiliar information through narrow, preexisting schemas that treat difference as deficiency. Under constant manufactured urgency, the mind relies more heavily on these schemas, sorting people and events into categories faster than it can assess what is happening. The result is not simply polarization, but a deeper narrowing of how information becomes meaningful at all. A structural distinction between coherence and rigidity runs through the analysis: coherence as flexible organization open to new information, rigidity as a defensive stability maintained by excluding whatever would require change. The closed circuit, the conversation argues, systematically rewards rigidity, because certainty travels faster than complexity. The episode closes by considering what this means at scale, not just for individual attention, but for the historical record a society leaves behind when its institutions of public interpretation can no longer distinguish importance from stimulation. This is a structural and psychological analysis, not a partisan one. No party, network, or public figure is named. The subject is the architecture of attention itself, and what it costs to live inside a system built for permanent urgency. Based on the essay "The Performance of Public Life" by RJ Starr, part of the Psychological Architecture framework. Read more at profrjstarr.com. [https://profrjstarr.com]
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