We are optimising ourselves to death - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT商学院

We are optimising ourselves to death

A tracker might tell you that you got to bed too late, but it doesn’t tell you that you were busy living your life
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":5.8,"text":"If you were to ask an AI model to spit out a parody of two earnest, do-your-own-research-touting, fitted-black-T-shirt-wearing bro-casters in conversation, it might sound a lot like Steven Bartlett talking to Chris Williamson about alcohol on an episode of the former’s smash hit podcast, Diary of a CEO. (The latter hosts the marginally less popular and equally pontificatory Modern Wisdom.) "}],[{"start":30.75,"text":"“It’s one of those areas where you don’t understand the hidden cost until you really give it up for a while,” Bartlett says soberly, explaining that he had ditched the booze aged 30 (he’s only 33 now) and then tried drinking again a year later. Now he “could really A/B test it”."}],[{"start":47.8,"text":"“I had a couple of glasses of wine, didn’t get drunk — it ruined three days of my life because of the domino effect it caused,” Bartlett explains. “Because I got worse sleep that night, I ate more poorly the next day because my dopamine system or whatever, the cortisol system, was all messed up.” Quite literally stroking his beard, the Love Island star turned modern-day sage Williamson chimes in: “That’s resilience, yeah.” "}],[{"start":72.3,"text":"“And I could track all of this on my Whoop, hashtag ad, hashtag sponsor, hashtag investor, whatever,” Bartlett continues. (A Whoop is, in fact, a fitness-tracking device that sponsors and invests in Bartlett’s show.) "}],[{"start":86.64999999999999,"text":"The exchange, from a podcast episode originally released last December, made headlines this week after a BBC radio host Greg James shared his thoughts on it, in a social media post that was also a plug for his “anti-Bartlett book”, All the Best for the Future. “My issue with it is this endless optimisation and measuring of everything, to the point where it starts to make you feel a bit miserable if you don’t quite hit your own targets,” James said. “Optimisation is killing fun. We need to absolutely rail against that. So phones down today, go and have a nice time. And don’t log it.”"}],[{"start":120.69999999999999,"text":"Hard to disagree with him there. I can’t open X without being confronted by a 20-post thread about what CEOs do between 4am and 7am (it’s not sleep, alas) or how to use AI to make my life more streamlined and productive. I can’t open Instagram without being offered ideas for how to eat my body weight’s worth of protein for breakfast. "}],[{"start":142.85,"text":"It is all rather joyless, self-serving and lonely. And it is, I believe, borne out of late-capitalist, utilitarian thinking (the same sort that gave rise to the “effective altruism” movement — remember Sam Bankman-Fried anyone?). Don’t worry about living your life in a joyful or virtuous way, just focus on the goal even if you never actually get there. If you do, though? Keep optimising! "}],[{"start":168.5,"text":"Anyway, my experience is often the opposite to Bartlett’s: had several martinis, got drunk, and it made my month because of the domino effect that it caused. I’m not the only one. A close friend is about to have a baby with a man she met at a party I hosted in 2023 during which I plied her — and everyone — with white negronis. Would she have had the audacity to ditch the date she had turned up with for the man who would become her partner had she not been absolutely sozzled? She says no: that would have been uncivilised. "}],[{"start":198.25,"text":"I should say this column is not intended as a paean to alcohol. Plenty of friends and family members are living better, healthier, more fulfilling lives having given up drinking. As I write, I am struggling with a hangover brought about by a long liquid lunch promptly followed by a liquid supper, which I slightly regret. "}],[{"start":216.8,"text":"I also think that there are sometimes classist undertones in some of these discussions; it’s not very old-money to give up drinking, or to protein-maxx, or even to go to the gym too often. And turning your body into a lean, mean, muscle machine is one of the few areas in which socio-economic status does not matter. "}],[{"start":235.35000000000002,"text":"But the fact is that we are over-optimising, over-streamlining and forgetting about the things that matter the most. Research suggests that the top regrets of the dying are things like not having spent enough time with loved ones, not having allowed oneself to be happy or authentic and not having worked so hard. Your Fitbit might be able to tell you that you got to bed too late and that you haven’t moved your body for five hours straight, but it doesn’t tell you that you were busy laughing your head off or that you just met the love of your life. "}],[{"start":265.20000000000005,"text":"“No pleasure is worth giving up for the sake of two more years in a geriatric home at Weston-super-Mare,” said the late Kingsley Amis. Quite. And no night out with friends is worth giving up for a couple of extra points on your daily readiness score. "}],[{"start":284.30000000000007,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1780810930_1791.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

从亚里士多德看AI赋能的量化投资

出乎意料的是,据一位经纪人称,答案并非“一无所有”。

联邦安全局如何切断俄罗斯与互联网的连接

多次断网迫使这个全球“触网”最深的国家重新依赖现金、纸质地图和宠物摄像头。

量子计算革命比你想象的更近

许多公司押注这一领域将对制药业、金融服务业和加密货币产生重大影响,但怀疑者担心这只是一场炒作。

德国欲斥资1000亿欧元确保列车准点运行

该国铁路基础设施的更新,将成为检验这一欧洲最大经济体能否扭转多年来下滑局面的首次考验。

美国正按自己的方式重塑足球

大量美元资金涌入,使美国成为这项运动中最具影响力的力量之一。

研究:英国有逾100万个余额超过5万英镑的无息账户

许多储户可能没有意识到,把如此大笔金额存放在无息账户中会损失多少收益。这会使持有人在通胀侵蚀面前暴露无遗。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×