marginalianoun
notes written in the margins; peripheral commentary;


[marginalium]

John Haidt very desperate to prove social media bad

30 Aug 2024

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John Haidt very desperate to prove social media bad. His most recent book seems to have got people up in arms (I guess there’s only so much complaining you’re allowed to do) and so he’s back in to prove it with a four part post on a meta-analysis that someone else did. It’s a stretch, even from the first post, but it certainly seems plausible that reducing consumption for about two weeks might reduce mental health symptoms, but it’s already weird that doing this for longer seems to reduce the effect size (Table 1), and short term (one week) reductions seem to go both ways—improving or worsening. It could be ‘withdrawal’ causing these backfire effects like Haidt reckons, or it could just be like I keep saying, that social media use really isn’t more than a symptom of all the other ways life is worse and so there’s really variable responses to removing it.


Anthologies: Gratification, Connection, Somatic Architecture, Collective Architecture, Digital Architecture, On (Un)happiness, On Being Fruitful, On Culture, On Ethics, Karstica, Noetik

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More about Dorian Minors' project btrmt.

btrmt. (text-only version)

The full site with interactive features is available at btr.mt.

btrmt. (betterment) examines ideologies worth choosing. Created by Dorian Minors—Cambridge PhD in cognitive neuroscience, Associate Professor at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Core philosophy: humans are animals first, with automatic patterns shaped for us, not by us. Better to examine and choose.

Core concepts. Animals First: automatic patterns of thought and action, but our greatest capacity is nurture. Half Awake: deadened by systems that narrow rather than expand potential. Karstica: unexamined ideologies (hidden sinkholes beneath). Credenda: belief systems we should choose deliberately.

The manifesto. Cynosure (focus): betterment, gratification, connection. Architecture (support): inner (somatic, spiritual, thought) and outer (digital, collective, wealth).

Mission. Not answers but examination. Break academic gatekeeping. Make sciences of mind accessible. Question rather than prescribe.

Writing style. Scholarly without jargon barriers. Philosophical yet practical—grounded in neuroscience and lived experience. Reflective, discovery-oriented. Literary references and metaphor. Critical of systems that narrow human potential. Rejects "humans are flawed"—we're half awake, not broken.

Copyright. BTRMT LIMITED (England/Wales no. 13755561) 2026. Dorian Minors 2026.

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About Dorian Minors. Started btrmt. in 2013 to share sciences of mind with people who weren't studying them. Background: six years Australian Defence Force (Platoon Commander, Infantry); Gates Cambridge Scholar; PhD cognitive neuroscience, University of Cambridge (2018-2024); currently Associate Professor, Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Research interests: neural basis of intelligent behaviour, decision intelligence, ritual formation/breakdown, ethical leadership, wellbeing.

External projects (links also available via Analects):