Fortune | FORTUNE 10月25日 03:15
AI能否帮助我们重新定义与时间的关系
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

文章探讨了尽管技术进步,但现代人普遍面临时间匮乏的困境,并指出AI的出现提供了一个重新审视和优化时间利用的机会。作者结合经济学家凯恩斯的预测、个人经历以及心理学研究,强调了“活在当下”和珍惜“有意义的时刻”的重要性。文章认为,AI如果被恰当运用,有望将“时间饥荒”转变为“时间富足”,帮助人们实现更充实、更有意义的生活。

⏳ **时间匮乏的悖论**:尽管经济学家凯恩斯曾预测技术进步将带来充足的闲暇,但现代人普遍面临时间不足的困境,技术效率的提升反而加剧了“时间饥荒”感,成为阻碍“智慧而美好地生活”的主要障碍。

💖 **母亲的教诲与“当下”的价值**:作者通过母亲“不要错过当下”的教诲,强调了全神贯注于一项任务、一次对话或一个瞬间的重要性。沉浸于当下能带来“时间富足感”,而科技产品往往旨在消耗我们的时间和注意力,导致时间感知失真和后悔。

⚖️ **Chronos与Kairos的平衡**:文章区分了古希腊人对时间的两种理解:Chronos(可量度的时间)和Kairos(有意义的、目的与当下对齐的时刻)。文章指出,我们虽然生活在Chronos的框架下,但人生的真正价值体现在Kairos时刻,如亲情、友情和生活中的珍贵瞬间,而非生产力指标。

💡 **AI带来的契机与选择**:AI的出现为解决时间匮乏问题提供了前所未有的机遇。文章提出,关键在于我们如何选择使用AI:是让它进一步剥夺我们的时间,还是利用它来赢回时间和提升生活品质。AI有潜力帮助我们实现凯恩斯的愿景,创造更多Kairos时刻,使生活更有意义。

🎗️ **“Memento Mori”的启示**:通过“Memento Mori”(记住死亡)的哲学,文章强调了认识到时间有限性的重要性。临终者的遗憾多与人际关系和未表达的爱有关,而非职业成就。这提醒我们,即使在日常生活中,也应有意识地审视时间价值,勇敢地跳出忙碌的循环,去关注真正重要的事情。

In 1930, economist John Maynard Keynes delivered his famous lecture, Economic Possibilities for our Grandchildren, predicting that within a century, technological progress would meet humanity’s basic needs. Freed from want, he believed our challenge would be how to spend an abundance of leisure. “For the first time since his creation,” Keynes wrote, “man will be faced with his real, his permanent problem — how to use his freedom from pressing economic cares, how to occupy the leisure… to live wisely and agreeably and well.”

It hasn’t turned out that way. Millions remain far from liberated from economic pressure, and few of us feel burdened by an excess of free time. Our problem today isn’t too much leisure — it’s how to make the most of the little we have.

As our tools have become more efficient, our sense of time famine — the feeling that there’s never enough time — has only intensified. It’s one of the biggest obstacles to living “wisely and well.”

Now, with AI, we face an opportunity unlike any before: to redefine our relationship with time. Whether we use this technology to reclaim our hours or to lose even more of them may be the defining question of the AI revolution. As the compulsive global fascination with the just-released Sora shows, it’s far from clear which way we’ll go.

“Time is our most valuable resource — but we don’t live as if it is,” says Ryan Alshak, founder and CEO of Laurel, which uses AI to help organizations track, analyze, and optimize their time. “We’ve got tools and advisors and software to help us manage our every dollar, and yet we don’t value our time in the same way.”

Of course, there’s no shortage of advice online about “making the most” of every minute — endless life hacks, time trackers, and morning routines. But these often consume more of our attention than they free. The fully optimized, inbox-zero, 4 a.m. life may be productive, but is it fulfilling?

Lessons from my mother

I learned the true value of time not from economists but from my mother. She lived with the rhythm of a timeless world — a child’s rhythm. While I always had the sense that it was later than I thought, she never rushed. She believed that hurrying through life only blinds us to the gifts that come from giving our full attention — to a task, a conversation, a relationship, a moment.

The last time she got angry with me before she died was when she saw me reading my email and talking to my children at the same time. I never forgot that lesson. When she passed, I placed a bench in her garden with the inscription: “Don’t miss the moment.”

The 30-minute ick factor

When we’re deeply present, time seems to stretch — what psychologists call time affluence. Yet much of our technology is designed to do the opposite. As Facebook’s founding president Sean Parker admitted, “The thought process that went into building these applications… was all about: ‘How do we consume as much of your time and conscious attention as possible?’”

Social media doesn’t just steal our time; it distorts our perception of it. Studies show we underestimate how long we’ve been scrolling — hence the “30-minute ick factor,” that moment of regret when we realize half an hour has vanished. It’s not just lost time; it’s lost awareness.

Technology increasingly fragments our attention into smaller and smaller units, leaving us less anchored in our own lives. Research shows that constant task-switching makes us underestimate how long things take — and feeling rushed impairs cognition, increases stress, and even raises the risk of hypertension. In short, our time anxiety is costing us our health.

Will we repeat our old errors, or finally treat time as the precious, finite currency it is — preventing the 30-minute ick factor from becoming a 30-year ick factor.

More productivity, less time

In his 1934 book Technics and Civilization, historian Lewis Mumford wrote that “the clock, not the steam engine, is the key machine of the modern industrial age.” The clock, he argued, synchronized humanity — but also enslaved it.

Nearly a century later, the pattern persists. As technology advances, our time feels scarcer. It’s the productivity paradox in action: the more we optimize, the less spacious life becomes. Surveys show that 60% of people believe there simply aren’t enough hours in the day. Gallup reports that stress has been rising for a decade, describing modern life as “inescapable and, at times, suffocating.”

AI could finally deliver on the promise technology once held — to unburden us, not overwhelm us.

Chronos and Kairos

The ancient Greeks saw time in two dimensions: Chronos, the measurable minutes and hours that govern modern life; and Kairos, the transcendent moments when purpose and presence align.

At funerals, we celebrate Kairos, not Chronos. Eulogies don’t praise the number of emails answered. They honor how we loved, laughed, and lived.

Memento Mori

For millennia, humans have tried to make peace with one ultimate constraint: death. “Memento Mori” — remember death — was not a morbid warning but a guide to presence.

Lydia Sohn, a minister who interviewed congregants in their 90s, found that “Their joys and regrets have nothing to do with their careers, but with their parents, children, spouses and friends.” When asked if he wished he’d accomplished more, one man replied, “No, I wished I loved more.”

Megan Shen, a psychologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, found similar results. Near the end of life, people’s regrets weren’t about productivity but about relationships — what they hadn’t said or shared.

Each yes is a no to something else. But clarity about time’s value doesn’t require the perspective of final days — only the courage to step outside the grind long enough to see what matters.

AI and the promise of time

AI may yet help fulfill Keynes’s vision — if we use it deliberately. Studies show it’s already saving us between three and five hours a week. Yet 83% of those who gained time said they wasted at least a quarter of it.

“The opportunity, then, is not only to give time back — but also to guide how we spend it,” says Alshak. “To use technology not simply to accelerate our work, but to elevate our lives.”

If we live to 80, we get roughly 30,000 days. The question AI forces us to ask is how we’ll spend them. Will we repeat our old errors, or finally treat time as the precious, finite currency it is?

Used well, AI could turn time famine into time affluence — freeing us to build the Kairos moments that make life worth living. That may be the most human innovation of all.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

AI 时间管理 生活哲学 生产力 人工智能 AI Time Management Life Philosophy Productivity
相关文章