Your wandering attention helped humans survive
We’ve spent decades framing distractibility as a deficit. A disorder. Something to medicate and manage. Anne-Laure Le Cunff, a neuroscientist at King’s College London, thinks we have it backwards.
In a compelling new essay for Aeon, Le Cunff makes the case that what we now label ADHD was once an evolutionary advantage. The hypercurious mind, the one that can’t stop scanning the horizon, that gets bored with routine, wasn’t broken. It was built for exploration.
“Human attention did not evolve in an environment saturated with infinite information and algorithmically optimised distraction. For most of our history, novelty was relatively rare and often meaningful; today, exposure to novelty is constant and difficult to escape.”
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