June 2020
Beginner
256 pages
5h 38m
English
Has this ever happened to you? You’re traveling to visit friends. It’s two hours to get there and two hours to get back, but the trip there feels much longer than the trip back.
In the interesting book The Time Paradox (2009), Philip Zimbardo and John Boyd discuss how our experience of time is relative, not absolute. There are time illusions, just like there are visual illusions. Zimbardo reports on research that shows that the more mental processing you do, the more time you think has elapsed. Related to the concept of progressive disclosure, discussed earlier in this chapter, if people have to stop and think at each step of a task, they’ll feel that the task is taking too long. The mental processing makes the amount of ...