1. World problems
  2. Boredom

Boredom

  • Banality
  • Boringness
  • Dullness
  • Ennui
  • Sameness
  • Sterility
  • Stuffiness
  • Tedium
  • Tiresomeness
  • Vapidity
  • Wearisomeness
  • Bored people
  • Boring people

Nature

Modern industry, through progressive automation of tasks, has created numerous highly specialized, repetitive job situations which lead to a feeling of boredom in the worker. Workers who formerly actively participated in tasks have come to act as mere observers or checkers. Boredom sets in and sensory acuity is reduced, attention wanders, with serious consequences for efficiency. Employees who experience boredom frequently exhibit low morale.

Many people without regular jobs may also be bored, including the retired, the aged, teenagers, slum dwellers, the unemployed, and students. Boredom in the military is a particular problem and has lead to use of narcotics; thus presenting, among those who operate nuclear weapon systems, missiles, planes, and computers, the possibility of an accident under narcotic influence.

Background

The word "boredom" dates from the 19th century. The state of being bored was defined only when society developed a fascination with the individual. Self-preoccupation is an essential for boredom. (This is why teenagers seem so bored: to be a teenager is to be absorbed in a fog of self-involvement.) Having been named, boredom ceased to be a personal failing for which we were responsible and became something inflicted upon us. We became victims of boredom.

Claim

Individuals and societies take ever greater risks to dispel boredom becoming the greatest threat to survival. Feeding the insatiable appetite to deal with boredom coupled with telling ourselves that disaster will never happen to us leads the individual to putting off visits to a doctor when obvious treatment is required, to not wearing seat belts or to taking greater chances. It leads societies to take greater risks, as did the Jews of Germany, the Americans in Vietnam, and the Europeans and Americans in World War I.

Cyril Northcote Parkinson, famous for his Parkinson's law that work expands to fill the time available, has created another law. The chief product of an automated society is a widespread and deepening sense of boredom.

Counter-claim

Showing that one is bored is a claim of superiority, a sign of one's refined sensibilities.

Narrower

Jaded appetites
Yet to rate
Chronic boredom
Yet to rate
Boredom of youth
Yet to rate

Aggravates

War
Excellent
Suicide
Excellent
Pornography
Excellent
Shoplifting
Presentable
Wasted time
Yet to rate
Moral pretension
Yet to rate
Mental fatigue
Yet to rate

Aggravated by

Loneliness
Excellent
Meaninglessness
Presentable
End of history
Yet to rate

Related

Ignorance
Excellent

Strategy

Tiring out
Yet to rate
Slowing down
Yet to rate
Reducing tedium
Yet to rate
Raising spirits
Yet to rate
Imagining
Yet to rate
Fertilizing
Yet to rate
Dying
Yet to rate
Being banal
Yet to rate

Value

Superficiality
Yet to rate
Stiffness
Yet to rate
Spiritlessness
Yet to rate
Slowness
Yet to rate
Ponderousness
Yet to rate
Inanity
Yet to rate
Deadness
Yet to rate
Tiresomeness
Yet to rate
Vapidity
Yet to rate
Stuffiness
Yet to rate
Weariness
Yet to rate
Boredom
Yet to rate
Tedium
Yet to rate
Sameness
Yet to rate
Ennui
Yet to rate
Sterility
Yet to rate
Banality
Yet to rate
Dullness
Yet to rate

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-beingSustainable Development Goal #8: Decent Work and Economic GrowthSustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(B) Basic universal problems
Subject
  • Biosciences » Growth
  • Individuation » Individuation
  • Life » Death
  • Society » People
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    May 20, 2022