Paying attention to attention: psychological realism and the attention economy

Synthese 203 (2):1-22 (2024)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

In recent years, philosophers have identified a number of moral and psychological harms associated with the attention economy (Alysworth & Castro, 2021; Castro & Pham, 2020; Williams, 2018). Missing from many of these accounts of the attention economy, however, is what exactly attention is. As a result of this neglect of the cognitive science of attention, many of these accounts are not empirically credible. They rely on oversimplified and unsophisticated accounts of not only attention, but self- control, and addiction as well. Of note are accounts of the attention economy that rely on the ‘brain disease’ rhetoric of addiction and subsequent control failures (Aylsworth & Castro, 2021; Bhargava & Velasquez, 2021), accounts that rely on a strict dichotomy of top-down vs. bottom-up attention (Williams, 2018; Aylsworth & Castro, 2021), and accounts that construe attention as a limited resource (Williams, 2018). Drawing on recent work from the neuroscience and psychology of attention, I demonstrate the shortcomings of these accounts and sketch a way forward for an empirically grounded account of the attention economy. These accounts tend to uphold strict dichotomies of voluntary control (e.g., compulsion versus choice, dual-process models of self-control, and top-down versus bottom-up) that cannot account for the complexities of attentional control, mental agency, and decision-making. As such, these empirically and conceptually impoverished accounts cannot adequately address the current so-called crisis of attention. To better understand the harms associated with the attention economy, we need an empirically responsible account of the nature and function of attention and mental agency.

Similar books and articles

Silence! The Background of Attention as a Battleground.Anette Vandsø - 2023 - Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 32 (65-66).
The Metaphysics of Attention.Christopher Mole - 2011 - In Christopher Mole, Declan Smithies & Wayne Wu (eds.), Attention: Philosophical and Psychological Essays. Oxford University Press. pp. 60-77.
The flame of attention.Jiddu Krishnamurti - 1984 - San Francisco: Harper & Row.
A Phenomenology of the Work of Attention.Hanne Jacobs - 2022 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 36 (2):264-276.
Aesthetic Attention: A Proposal to Pay It More Attention.Kathrine Cuccuru - 2018 - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 55 (2):155-179.
Conceptualizing intellectual attention.Mark Fortney - 2019 - Theory & Psychology 1:1-14.
Attention as bounded resource and medium in cultural memory: A phenomenological or economic approach?Jörg Bernardy - 2011 - Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 2 (2):241-254.
Introduction: Shifting Attention.Nick Seaver, Tero Karppi & Rebecca Jablonsky - 2022 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 47 (2):235-242.
Joint Attention and Communication.Rory Harder - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.

Analytics

Added to PP
2024-01-14

Downloads
244 (#83,067)

6 months
244 (#9,983)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Dylan J. White
University of Guelph

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

Thinking, Fast and Slow.Daniel Kahneman - 2011 - New York: New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
A feature integration theory of attention.Anne Treisman - 1980 - Cognitive Psychology 12:97-136.
Neural mechanisms of selective visual attention.R. Desimone & J. Duncan - 1995 - Annual Review of Neuroscience 18 (1):193-222.

View all 32 references / Add more references