Paradox of "Modern Time”

 The paradox of the environmental crisis and the instantaneous nature of today's schedule. It's offered by Martin that climate change is a polarizing issue that not only has a social and political relevance, but perhaps too is helping today's society, or modernity at large, change their perception on the impact of time. To understand a change in the psyche and shift in the experience of "modern time", one must examine the way time itself is experience. The second, as it were, has become much longer, whereas the year and month has become much shorter and less of a recognizable distance. The advent of technology that distills, summarizes, and condenses has enabled the shortening of dense information and topics to be digested in seconds - a feat that would have taken a much longer time in a "paper" world. 


The age, data, and complexity of climate change has lended itself to be risen to awareness in this “instant era” , but is neither an instantaneous nor imminent threat. “The world not ending tomorrow” is the precise reason why the height of the issue is paradoxical for modern time, as our actions, while significant, are not progressively observable unless presented in the modern light of media. We we 'do' today will not be impactful that same day. The second suddenly becomes shorter and the significance of doing work over months and years begins to again weigh heavy for climate change advocates in the modern world.  Overall, the remedies have the same effect, but different presentations optimized for today. 

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