all, I think it has violated our sense of privacy. People don't feel like there really is anywhere that they can be safe where they can actually be. I mean, I feel like you need to literally leave your phone at home, but even if you leave your phone at home, you've taken an action that's so unnatural that that in itself conveys important information about what you're going to do. So there's a sense of having lost much of that internal, private, sacred space. And at the same time, a kind of expectation that the external world should conform to your internal subjective experience of it. And there's a kind of rolling disorientation that I feel like we're all living through as a result of that. And I'm curious, I don't know if you agree with that, if that speaks to something that you think's accurate or maybe kind of overshoots. Well, I mean, okay, several things. First of all, the thing you mentioned about turning your phone off, that's really insightful. I mean, I know this guy who (46/57)
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