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Thursday, September 18, 2025

TikTok is the Smallpox of the 2020s

In the 18th and 19th centuries, smallpox was more than a disease—it was a weapon. European colonizers intentionally spread it to weaken and destroy Indigenous populations. The infamous case of Lord Jeffrey Amherst in 1763, when British forces distributed smallpox-infected blankets to Native communities during Pontiac’s War, stands as one of the most notorious examples of biological warfare in history. Smallpox was terrifying not only because of its lethality, but because it struck at the heart of populations with no immunity. It reshaped the demographic and political order of North America for centuries.

Biological warfare did not end with the colonial period. The 20th century brought industrialized efforts: the Japanese Imperial Army’s Unit 731 conducted horrific experiments during World War II, weaponizing plague and anthrax. The United States and the Soviet Union pursued their own offensive bioweapons programs well into the Cold War, stockpiling pathogens with the potential to devastate civilian populations. The logic of such programs was clear—disease could be used to destabilize entire societies more effectively than conventional warfare.

Today, the battleground has shifted from bodies to minds. Social media platforms—TikTok foremost among them—serve as delivery systems for disinformation and psychological contagion. Where smallpox spread through blankets and close contact, TikTok spreads through algorithms designed to maximize engagement. What once took weeks to devastate a community can now happen in hours, with a video or meme reaching millions before fact-checkers or educators can respond.

The analogy is not metaphorical flourish. Both smallpox and social media weaponization exploit vulnerabilities: biological susceptibility in the first case, and cognitive-emotional susceptibility in the second. Both create dependencies: populations weakened by disease became reliant on colonial powers, while users conditioned by TikTok’s endless scroll become dependent on an algorithm that thrives on outrage, spectacle, and division.

Weaponization of social media takes many forms. Disinformation campaigns around elections, climate change, and public health spread faster than corrections. Extremist groups use TikTok’s short-form videos to recruit younger audiences with humor and cultural references. State actors experiment with algorithmic nudges to destabilize adversaries, just as Cold War militaries once experimented with viruses in clandestine labs.

Universities are not insulated from this epidemic. Students now arrive on campus carrying not only smartphones but cognitive frameworks shaped by algorithmic feeds. Professors struggle to compete with the authority of viral influencers. Entire institutions have found themselves dragged into controversy over short clips that strip away context but ignite outrage. The terrain of higher education is increasingly defined by psychological contagion, much as earlier centuries were defined by outbreaks of smallpox.

If smallpox forced the development of public health measures, TikTok and other social media platforms demand the development of new digital immunities: critical media literacy, institutional resilience, and transnational cooperation to blunt the impact of algorithmic manipulation. Without such measures, the scars may not appear on skin, but they will mark a generation in cognition, behavior, and trust.

Just as history judges the weaponization of smallpox as a crime against humanity, it may one day judge the weaponization of social media in the same light. The question is whether societies will act before the damage becomes irreversible.


Sources

  • Alibek, K., & Handelman, S. (1999). Biohazard: The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World. Delta.

  • Crozier, A. (2022). “Colonialism, Contagion, and the History of Smallpox in North America.” Journal of Colonial History, 23(3), 245–268.

  • DiResta, R. (2018). “The Information Wars.” Foreign Affairs, 97(6), 146–155.

  • Lakoff, A. (2017). Unprepared: Global Health in a Time of Emergency. University of California Press.

  • Meselson, M., et al. (2000). “The Sverdlovsk Anthrax Outbreak of 1979.” Science, 266(5188), 1202–1208.

  • Zuboff, S. (2019). The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. PublicAffairs.

Monday, July 21, 2025

Digital Dope: How Internet Addiction Mirrors the Great Crises of Gin, Opium, Meth, and Fentanyl

In the 18th century, gin swept through the working-class neighborhoods of London, offering brief euphoria and long-term devastation. In the 19th century, opium dulled the pain of colonialism and industrial collapse. The 20th century brought methamphetamine and its promise of energy and escape, followed by fentanyl—cheap, potent, and deadly.

Now, in the 21st century, we face a new form of mass addiction: not chemical but digital. The most addictive substances of our time are not smoked, snorted, or injected—they are streamed, swiped, and scrolled.

The internet, once hailed as a revolution in knowledge and communication, has been weaponized into an empire of distraction and dependency. Social media, pornography, and online gambling—backed by surveillance capitalism and unchecked corporate power—are engineered for compulsive use. And like the addictive epidemics of the past, they are eroding individual agency, family life, and the very foundations of civic society.

The Gin Craze and the Algorithmic Binge

In 18th-century Britain, the Gin Craze turned city streets into open-air taverns. Cheap, potent alcohol flooded the market, leading to widespread addiction, crime, and social decay. The state profited from taxes while the poor drowned in despair.

Today’s equivalent is the infinite scroll. Social media platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook—like gin—are engineered to be consumed endlessly. The user is reduced to a set of engagement metrics. Like the gin drinker numbing pain, the social media user seeks validation, escape, or identity in a flood of curated images and outrage. Depression, anxiety, and loneliness have exploded, especially among teens and young adults. Suicides, particularly among girls, have surged in tandem with social media usage.

Opium Dens and the Porn Empire

The opium den offered oblivion. It soothed pain but eroded will. Victorian elites warned of its moral decay while quietly indulging themselves.

Today, online pornography is the new opium—widely available, hyper-stimulating, and often degrading. Once confined to private spaces, it is now accessible to children, monetized by multi-billion-dollar platforms, and normalized by mainstream culture. The effects—especially on young people—include desensitization, unrealistic expectations, isolation, and difficulty forming real-life relationships.

Research has shown that excessive porn consumption alters brain chemistry similarly to addictive drugs. It hijacks the reward system, rewires sexual expectations, and in many cases, contributes to erectile dysfunction, compulsive behavior, and emotional detachment.

Meth, Fentanyl, and the Speed of the Feed

Meth promised productivity; fentanyl promises relief. Both deliver destruction.

Digital addiction today mimics the frenetic highs of meth and the numbing power of fentanyl. The constant rush of notifications, likes, and headlines overstimulates the brain and crushes attention spans. Apps and games are engineered like slot machines, delivering intermittent reinforcement that keeps users hooked. The average smartphone user touches their phone over 2,500 times a day.

University students struggle to read long texts or concentrate for extended periods. Professors battle declining classroom attention and rising rates of anxiety and burnout. Like meth, the digital feed gives the illusion of efficiency while grinding the mind into dust.

Online Gambling: Casino in Your Pocket

The rise of online sports betting and casino apps has brought Vegas to every dorm room and bedroom. Targeted ads on Instagram and YouTube lure young people into betting with "free" money. Many students—especially young men—develop compulsive behaviors, losing thousands before they graduate. Some turn to credit cards, payday loans, or family bailouts.

States, like governments in the gin and opium eras, have embraced online gambling for its tax revenues. Universities, meanwhile, remain largely silent—even as students destroy their finances and futures through legalized digital addiction.

Higher Education: From Ivory Tower to Digital Trap

Colleges were once sanctuaries of thought and reflection. Today, they are nodes in the digital economy—where learning management systems monitor clicks, and students are nudged toward screens at every turn. Social interaction is filtered through group chats and Reddit threads. Pornography, gambling, and endless scrolling are a click away on the same device used to write term papers and attend virtual lectures.

Even counseling services are digitized. The solution to tech addiction, students are told, is often more tech—apps that monitor screen time, AI chatbots for mental health, or video therapy that feels detached and impersonal.

The Profiteers and the Pushers

In every addiction crisis, there are profiteers: distillers, opium traders, pharmaceutical companies, and cartels. Today, Big Tech plays the same role. Meta, TikTok, YouTube, Pornhub, DraftKings, FanDuel, and hundreds of smaller apps compete for attention with algorithms that exploit human weakness.

Their business model depends on addiction. They study neuroscience, behavioral psychology, and micro-targeted advertising with military-grade precision. Like the drug lords of the past, they deny responsibility while reaping billions.

And just as the poor suffered most in the gin and opioid crises, it is the working class, the unemployed, the chronically ill, and the disconnected who fall hardest into the digital pit.

The Need for Radical Intervention

Digital addiction is not a moral failing—it’s a public health emergency. Like past addiction epidemics, the solution requires:

  • Public awareness campaigns

  • Stricter age and content regulation

  • Taxation on digital vice industries

  • Digital literacy education at all levels

  • Offline spaces and activities that foster real connection and attention

Higher education must lead. Not by digitizing every service, but by teaching students to reclaim their minds, their time, and their agency. Faculty must model mindful engagement and challenge the corporatization of the university by tech companies. Administrators must reconsider their reliance on LMS systems, data harvesting, and digital surveillance.

Will We Wake Up in Time?

In the past, addiction crises forced society to reflect on what was lost: family cohesion, civic virtue, mental clarity, and freedom itself. We stand again at such a crossroads. The digital drug is in every hand, and the overdose is slow—but devastating.

Like gin, opium, meth, and fentanyl, the internet addiction crisis is about more than chemicals—it’s about despair, disconnection, and exploitation. And like those earlier epidemics, it is not an individual failing, but a systemic one. The good news? As with past crises, awareness is the first step toward recovery. The question is: Will we act before another generation is lost?


The Higher Education Inquirer continues to investigate the intersection of capitalism, addiction, and the commodification of human attention. Reach out if you have a story to share.

Monday, July 7, 2025

The LinkedIn Illusion: A Harsh Reality for Job Seekers (Glen McGhee)

 LinkedIn, long marketed as the premier platform for professional networking and career advancement, is failing the vast majority of its users. Far from being a ladder to opportunity, academic research and hard statistics reveal that LinkedIn is more illusion than solution—a social media platform powered by professional anxiety, built on fake engagement, and designed to serve corporate interests rather than individual users.

A peer-reviewed study in the Journal of Applied Psychology cuts through the hype. It found that the more job seekers use LinkedIn, the worse their outcomes. Increased usage leads to depleted confidence, greater frustration, and poorer job search results. LinkedIn encourages toxic upward social comparisons, making people feel inadequate rather than empowered. The platform is not just unhelpful—it is psychologically harmful.

The data is damning. InMail response rates, once a tool of recruiters, have dropped from 30 percent to just 15–18 percent. Connection success rates among sales teams are abysmal, with over 80 percent unable to achieve even a 50 percent success rate. Most job applications submitted through LinkedIn go unanswered—96 percent receive no response, compared to a 20 percent response rate on Indeed. Meanwhile, 76 percent of users report receiving spam or unsolicited sales pitches, often within minutes of accepting new connections.

LinkedIn consumes users’ time without delivering results. Critics have called it a “time-suck,” with users spending an estimated 4 to 6 hours a week on job search and networking activities across social media—yet LinkedIn’s own data shows average engagement is only 17 minutes per user per month. That gap between effort and return is a red flag. People are putting in time, but the system is stacked against them.

The platform’s core issues run deep. Fake accounts, bot-driven connections, and plagiarized influencer content dominate the space. Automated “growth hackers” admit to engineering virality through dishonest tactics, while personal branding influencers peddle fantasy success stories. Nearly 25 percent of influencers on social media, including LinkedIn, have been involved in deceptive engagement practices.

Networking itself has been corrupted. LinkedIn promotes a view of professional relationships as purely transactional—connections are often followed immediately by sales pitches. Metrics that track profile views, endorsements, and connection counts gamify relationships, turning human interactions into status signals. Instead of meaningful collaboration or mentorship, users are trained to see every interaction as a career move.

And then there’s the money. LinkedIn is not a free public service—it is a $15 billion-a-year business model that monetizes professional desperation. Individual users pay between $30 and $120 per month for premium subscriptions that promise visibility and competitive advantage. Companies shell out hundreds or thousands per month for recruiting tools. And advertisers pay LinkedIn over $3 billion a year to access a user base that’s 44 percent composed of professionals earning more than $75,000 annually. Behind the networking façade is a finely tuned engine of data extraction and lead generation.

Microsoft’s $26.2 billion acquisition of LinkedIn in 2016 paid off handsomely. Today, the platform is one of Microsoft’s most profitable divisions. But its profits come not from helping most people find meaningful work—they come from convincing them to keep trying, to keep paying, and to keep feeding the system with their data and their hope.

At its core, LinkedIn is built on a fundamental contradiction. It sells itself as an equalizing tool of professional empowerment while reinforcing elite advantages and monetizing user anxiety. It claims to democratize opportunity while allowing bots, spam, and exaggeration to dominate. It encourages users to “be authentic” while rewarding those who fabricate experience and inflate achievements. It hosts an “influencer economy” where marketing, not merit, is the coin of the realm.

What LinkedIn truly excels at is data collection. Its real value lies in selling access to that data to corporations—recruiters, advertisers, and sales teams. While millions of users struggle to get noticed, LinkedIn is delivering premium insights and leads to those who can pay. It is a social media site masquerading as a merit-based marketplace, a platform where unpaid users supply the content and data that fuel a multi-billion-dollar operation.

The hard truth is that LinkedIn isn’t broken. It’s working exactly as designed. It generates massive profit by promising professional uplift but delivering little more than noise, distraction, and emotional drain for most users. Its real customers are not job seekers or aspiring professionals. They are the corporations paying for recruiting tools, advertising access, and professional intelligence.

For those caught in the churn of LinkedIn’s false promises, it’s time to recognize the platform for what it is: not a community, not a meritocracy, but a highly sophisticated mechanism for monetizing ambition.

Sunday, November 23, 2025

What America’s Declining Happiness Means — and How Higher Education Fits In

A recent report has sounded an alarm: happiness in the United States is falling more sharply than in almost every other developed nation. According to coverage by CBS News, Americans increasingly report loneliness, deep political division, and diminished life satisfaction. While this trend is worrying in itself, a closer look shows that it’s not just a problem of individual melancholy — it reflects a broader weakening of social structures, civic trust, and community cohesion. Historically, these phenomena have been central to the nation’s sense of coherence; now, they may be eroding.

Historical Roots and the Social Capital Framework

To understand the scale of what’s happening, it helps to go back. Over two decades ago, Robert D. Putnam’s seminal Bowling Alone documented a dramatic decline in American “social capital” — the network of associations, civic participation, and interpersonal trust that undergirds a functioning democracy. Putnam traced declines in everything from civic organizations to informal social gatherings, arguing that this fraying of social infrastructure had profound consequences. 

Social capital theory provides a useful lens here: trust between citizens, engagement in local institutions, and time spent in shared civic life are not just feel‑good extras, but foundations for collective resilience.

Later empirical work has revisited these concerns. Weiss, Paxton, Velasco, and Ressler (2018) developed a newer measure of social capital and found evidence that the decline persists. Inequality also appears to play a role: as income gaps widen, interpersonal trust tends to decrease. In research published in Finance & Development, economists found that rising inequality explained a substantial portion of the decline in social trust in the United States.

More recently, political scientists have documented how perceived political polarization erodes social trust. In a nationally representative panel study, Amber Hye‑Yon Lee showed that when people believe their country is deeply divided, their trust in fellow citizens drops — even beyond partisan loyalties. Pew Research Center data further illustrate this generational shift: younger cohorts, raised in a more polarized and atomized society, report lower social trust than earlier generations. 

At the same time, the digital revolution hasn’t necessarily filled the gap. Sabatini and Sarracino (2014) found that while people are more active on social media, this does not compensate for lost in-person connection — and may even undermine trust. During the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers observed increased remote communication, but also stronger political echo chambers: in a study of 41,000 Americans’ social networks, political homophily (interacting mostly with those who share one’s partisan identity) increased. 

Well-Being, Health, and Mortality

The decline in social trust and cohesion is not just a sociological problem — it is deeply linked to health. A growing body of epidemiological research ties subjective well‑being to longevity and mortality. For instance, a widely cited study by Lawrence, Rogers, and Wadsworth found that lower happiness is associated with higher all‑cause mortality risk in U.S. adults. In another longitudinal study, researchers followed more than 30,000 adults over 14 years and found that individuals with low life satisfaction lived, on average, 8–10 years less than those with high satisfaction — even after controlling for sociodemographic and behavioral variables. 

These findings suggest that declining happiness is not just a matter of mental distress or cultural malaise — it translates into concrete health inequities and life expectancy gaps.

Recent Trends and the Global Context

Over the past decade, the United States has slid in global happiness rankings, according to the World Happiness Report. Some analyses suggest that the U.S. now falls behind peer nations on measures of life evaluation, meaning that Americans are increasingly less satisfied with their lives in a broad, reflective sense. 

Meanwhile, epidemiological studies of happy life expectancy — the number of years people spend in a state of subjective well‑being — show that although well-being improved from 1970–2000, gains were uneven by race and gender. The recent reversal or stagnation in happiness is thus especially alarming in light of these prior gains.

The Role of Higher Education: Past, Present, and Potential Futures

Given this historical and empirical context, higher education institutions have a complex and potentially pivotal role in responding to declining well-being.

On one hand, universities could help rebuild social capital. Institutions of higher learning have unique capacity to foster cross-partisan civic engagement, to embed community-building in pedagogy, and to support students’ social and emotional development. By investing in mental health infrastructure, peer networks, and service-based learning, colleges could act as local laboratories for restoring trust and social cohesion.

Higher education also has a research function: universities can produce evidence about what strengthens well-being, what interventions mitigate loneliness or political fragmentation, and how different models of community engagement impact long-term health outcomes. Through partnerships with public policy institutions, universities can help translate these findings into programs that bolster social infrastructure outside campus walls.

However, higher education also runs risks. If institutions remain fragmented, politically polarized, or focused on prestige rather than public mission, they may contribute to social fragmentation rather than healing it. Elite universities, in particular, may be perceived as disconnected from broader communities, undermining trust rather than reinforcing it. In such a scenario, higher education may reproduce the very inequalities and isolation that are driving declining well‑being.

Moreover, without deliberate strategies, campus networks may reinforce echo chambers: social connections among students may mirror broader partisan divides, especially in environments where political homogeneity is common.

Health Equity Implications

The decline in American happiness intersects directly with issues of health equity. Lower well-being and eroded trust disproportionately affect marginalized communities — those with fewer economic resources, less social support, and weaker civic infrastructure. When universities take an active role in promoting well-being and rebuilding social capital, they not only support individual students but may contribute to reducing structural health disparities.

Conversely, if higher education plays a passive role, or if access to supportive, socially rich campus environments is limited to privileged groups, the decline in happiness may deepen existing inequities. The gap in life expectancy tied to subjective well-being suggests that we cannot ignore the social determinants of happiness: economic inequality, community fragmentation, political polarization, and institutional trust all matter.

A Call to Action

To address this crisis, higher education leaders, policymakers, and public health practitioners should consider the following:

  1. Reinforce community-building: Colleges should invest in programs that promote cross-group interaction, civic participation, and social trust.

  2. Prioritize mental health: Expand counseling, peer support, and proactive well-being initiatives, especially for students who might otherwise fall through the cracks.

  3. Align research with public value: Fund and promote research on social cohesion, well-being interventions, and the relationship between trust and health, and ensure that findings inform public policy.

  4. Foster institutional humility and outreach: Universities should engage with local communities, not as isolated centers of prestige, but as partners in building social infrastructure and resilience.

  5. Measure what matters: Beyond graduation rates and research output, institutions should track well-being metrics — social trust, belonging, mental health — as central indicators of their impact.


It Doesn't Have to Be This Bad 

The decline in happiness across the United States is not a passing phase or a matter of individual pathology. Rather, it reflects deep shifts in social trust, political cohesion, and community infrastructure. Historically, scholars like Putnam sounded the alarm on social capital’s erosion. Today, health researchers warn that falling well‑being shortens lives and exacerbates inequalities.

Higher education, if reoriented toward building connections, purpose, and trust, could play a vital role in reversing this trajectory. But if universities remain inward-looking or inequality-driven, they risk accelerating the very forces that undermine societal well-being. The stakes are high — not only for individual students, but for the future health and cohesion of the nation.


Scholarly Sources:

  • Lee, Amber H. Y. “Social Trust in Polarized Times: How Perceptions of Political Polarization Affect Americans’ Trust in Each Other.” Political Behavior, 2022. PMC

  • Weiss, Inbar, Pamela Paxton, Kristopher Velasco, and Robert W. Ressler. “Revisiting Declines in Social Capital: Evidence from a New Measure.” Social Indicators Research, 2018. PMC

  • Lawrence, Elizabeth M., Richard G. Rogers, and Tim Wadsworth. “Happiness and Longevity in the United States.” Social Science & Medicine, 2015. PMC

  • Study on life satisfaction and mortality (14-year follow-up): PMC

  • Research on income inequality and trust: “In Equality, We Trust” (IMF / Finance & Development) IMF

  • Study of happy life expectancy, 1970–2000: PMC

  • Putnam, Robert D. Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community. (on social capital history) Wikipedia+1

Thursday, December 4, 2025

Therapists Can’t Fix What Society Broke (Steven Mintz)

[Editor's note:  This article first appeared at Steven Mintz's substack.]

What the Classical Social Theorists Knew about the Price We Pay for Progress—and We’ve Forgotten

On a recent flight, a small child in the row behind me shrieked with piercing intensity. The passenger beside me leaned over and whispered, with assurance, “He’s autistic.”

Neither of us knew the child. What we had was a familiar modern reflex: reaching immediately for a diagnostic label.

Yet the scene likely had simpler explanations. Any parent knows toddlers often melt down. They have immature nervous systems, poor emotional regulation, and lack the linguistic tools to express their discomfort.

Air travel makes this exponentially worse: altitude pressure that feels like a drill behind the eardrum, bright lights, crowding, disorientation, loss of routine, confinement in an airplane seat, and helpless parents who cannot walk, rock, or soothe as they ordinarily would.

In such a setting, a screaming child isn’t a clinical puzzle. He or she is a human being overwhelmed by an environment for which their developmental stage is simply unsuited.

But what struck me wasn’t the child’s distress—it was my fellow passenger’s interpretive leap. We now default to pathology. Behaviors that earlier generations would have recognized as overtiredness, frustration, temperament, or physiological misery are now reframed as sensory processing issues, spectrum behaviors, and emotional dysregulation.

A century ago, William James or Émile Durkheim would have been baffled by our eagerness to see ordinary distress as a clinical symptom. They assumed a different relationship between individuals and their environments. They looked first to situational explanations, developmental stages, social settings, and institutional pressures—not to internal pathology.

The classical social theorists were exquisitely attuned to context. They understood that behavior is produced not just by minds but by milieus; not only by individual traits but by social expectations, institutional routines, physical environments, and cultural frames.

They would have asked: What was the situation? What were the constraints? What was the child’s developmental stage? What stresses shaped the parents’ responses? Why do modern societies interpret certain behaviors this way?

Those are the questions we increasingly fail to ask.

The Classroom Mirror

I see this reflex every semester. Many students arrive with formal diagnoses—ADHD, social anxiety, depression, autism spectrum traits—and often understand these labels as central to their identity.

I don’t doubt these conditions are real for many. But far more often than we acknowledge, their struggles stem less from an intrinsic disorder than from a structural mismatch between who they are and the environments we place them in.

Large lecture halls; nonstop digital distraction; relentless assessment; pressure to perform perfectly; overcrowded advising systems; erosion of in-person community; feeling constantly watched and perpetually behind—these aren’t symptoms of personal pathology. They’re central to how colleges are currently designed. They generate anxiety, cognitive overload, disconnection, and inadequacy in perfectly healthy young adults.

Yet in a culture where we no longer know how to talk about situational or structural problems, students understandably look inward. What earlier generations might have described as exhaustion, loneliness, discouragement, confusion, or developmental turbulence is now interpreted as a disorder to be treated.

We diagnose individuals when the real problem lies in the systems, structures, and expectations surrounding them. Classical social theorists understood something we’ve forgotten—that human beings cannot be separated from the worlds they inhabit, and what looks like personal failure is often the predictable result of social arrangements, institutional pressures, and cultural transformations.

Many problems we treat as individual psychology are, in fact, social. What feels personal is often produced by institutions, expectations, and culture.

The Lost Questions

There’s a paradox at the heart of contemporary social analysis. We have more data than ever—surveys tracking happiness, studies measuring loneliness, algorithms predicting behavior, and neuroscience mapping the brain. We can quantify anxiety rates, document declining social trust, and measure screen time to the second.

Yet for all this empirical precision, we seem less able than earlier generations to explain why wealthy, free, technologically advanced societies produce so much unhappiness, alienation, and despair.

Classical social thinkers—from roughly the 1880s through the 1950s—understood something we’ve forgotten. They grasped that modernity wasn’t simply adding new goods (wealth, freedom, and technology) to human life while leaving fundamentals unchanged. It was dissolving the very frameworks, rituals, and structures that had given life meaning, connection, and purpose.

Modernity was a package deal, and the price of its benefits was the loss of much that made life livable.

Contemporary social science has largely abandoned this tragic sensibility. We analyze discrete variables—income inequality, screen time, political polarization—without attending to deeper structural transformations that generate these symptoms.

We prescribe technical fixes—better mental health services, regulated social media, and reformed institutions—without recognizing that problems run deeper than any policy intervention can reach.

The classical thinkers knew better. They understood that modernity’s discontents weren’t bugs to be fixed but features of the system itself.

What the Classics Saw

A core insight runs through the writings of Weber, Durkheim, Simmel, Tönnies, Polanyi, and others: modern life systematically dissolves the dense webs of meaning, obligation, and continuity that structured pre-modern existence. This dissolution wasn’t avoidable—it was the necessary condition for everything modernity promised.

Tönnies on the Shift from Community to Society

Ferdinand Tönnies’s distinction between gemeinschaft (community) and gesellschaft (society) captures what changed. Gemeinschaft described life organized around kinship, locality, tradition, and unreflective bonds that made people part of something larger than themselves. You didn’t choose your village, extended family, place in the social order, or obligations to neighbors. These were given, woven into existence’s fabric.

Gesellschaft described modern life organized around contract, choice, rational calculation, and instrumental relationships. You choose your career, residence, and associations. Relationships are voluntary, revocable, and organized around mutual benefit rather than organic solidarity. This brought enormous gains in freedom and opportunity. But it also meant nothing was given, everything was optional, all relationships were contingent rather than fixed.

The real loss wasn’t some sentimental yearning for village life. It was the disappearance of what Robert Nisbet called “intermediate institutions”—the extended families, congregations, civil associations, unions, and community networks that once connected individuals to one another and gave daily life structure, support, and meaning.

Church, guild, neighborhood, extended family, and craft tradition weren’t just social organizations but ontological anchors. They provided identity, purpose, standards of excellence, and narratives connecting past to future. When they dissolved or became voluntary lifestyle choices rather than unchosen obligations, something irreplaceable was lost.

Durkheim on Anomie

Émile Durkheim argued that people need moral frameworks—not in the sense of strict rules or puritanism, but shared expectations that help us decide what goals are reasonable and what counts as “enough.” Without those external standards, our desires have no limits; we keep wanting more without knowing why or to what end.

This breakdown of guiding norms is what Durkheim meant by anomie. It’s not just chaos or “normlessness.” It’s the collapse of the social structures that tell us how to measure success, how to live a meaningful life, and where to direct our ambitions. When those frameworks erode, people feel unmoored—driven by endless wants but with no sense of direction or satisfaction.

In the pre-modern world, Durkheim argued, people lived inside thick webs of meaning that helped them understand who they were, what counted as a good life, and when enough was enough. These frameworks came from many places: religious teachings about one’s duties, craft traditions that defined good work, sumptuary rules that kept status competition in check, seasonal rhythms that shaped time, and life-cycle rituals that marked major transitions.

These systems could certainly be restrictive, but most people experienced them as simply the way life worked—structures that offered direction, limits, and shared expectations.

Modernity dismantled many of these frameworks in the name of individual freedom and social mobility. Suddenly, people could aspire to anything and reinvent themselves entirely. But with old limits gone, desires multiplied. If you can always become more, achieve more, accumulate more, how do you ever know when you’ve done enough? What tells you that you are successful, secure, or “on track”?

The result wasn’t pure liberation. It was a new kind of burden: wanting without an obvious endpoint, striving without clear measures, comparing yourself endlessly to others with no shared standard to anchor the process.

This helps explain why so many people today feel anxious despite rising living standards. Wealth can meet basic needs, but it also fuels comparison—and modern life has stripped away many of the boundaries that once contained those comparisons. In achievement-driven cultures, where people set their own goals and judge themselves against constantly shifting internal standards, nothing ever feels sufficient.

Weber’s Iron Cage

Max Weber’s concept of rationalization captured another major shift in modern life: institutions stopped being guided by tradition, shared judgment, or moral purpose and instead became organized around efficiency, calculation, and technical control.

Decisions that once involved human judgment increasingly followed rules, metrics, and procedures. This made institutions more predictable and effective—but also more rigid and impersonal.

Modern life came to be shaped by what Weber called instrumental rationality: finding the most efficient means to a given end. Bureaucracies, markets, legal systems, and scientific institutions operate this way. The result was extraordinary productivity and administrative capacity. But it also stripped institutions of meaning and moral depth.

Weber called this disenchantment. The world no longer appeared as a moral or spiritual order. It became a set of problems to manage, resources to optimize, and processes to streamline.

His metaphor of the iron cage captured the paradox: we built rational systems to serve human needs, but those systems now constrain us. Bureaucratic procedures, market incentives, and technological imperatives keep operating even when they undermine human flourishing. Individuals become replaceable “human resources,” valued for their functions rather than their purposes.

Simmel on Metropolitan Life

Georg Simmel’s 1903 essay “The Metropolis and Mental Life” reads uncannily like a diagnosis of smartphone culture. Simmel argued that modern city life bombards people with constant sensory and social stimuli. To cope, the urban mind develops a protective numbness—a “blasé attitude”—marked by detachment, indifference, and a shrinking capacity to feel surprise or deep emotion.

Urbanites, he wrote, become more calculating because their social world is crowded with brief, superficial interactions. When you have to navigate countless encounters each day, you evaluate people quickly, in instrumental terms. The result is thinning of relationships: less depth, less intimacy, fewer truly authentic exchanges. The emotional and cognitive energy required for rich connection is already spent fending off overstimulation.

If you swap “metropolis” for “social media,” Simmel’s analysis becomes even more resonant. The endless feed, the pressure to maintain hundreds of shallow ties, the constant performance of the self, the transformation of attention and emotion into metrics—these conditions supercharge the very defenses Simmel described. We become numb to protect ourselves, then wonder why so little feels meaningful anymore.

Polanyi’s Great Transformation

Karl Polanyi’s The Great Transformation (1944) argued that the 19th century’s most radical innovation wasn’t the market—markets had existed for millennia—but the idea of a market society, where land, labor, and money themselves became commodities. This meant pulling these “fictitious commodities” out of the social relationships that once governed them and treating them instead as items to be priced, traded, and regulated entirely by the market.

The result dissolved an older emphasis on reciprocity and the notion of a moral economy. Labor became a commodity to be bought and sold rather than a social relationship with obligations on both sides. Land became real estate to be traded rather than patrimony connecting generations. Social relationships became transactions rather than obligations. This created enormous wealth and flexibility. It also destroyed the social fabric that had made life meaningful.

Polanyi’s key insight was that markets must be politically created and enforced. The “free market” required aggressive state intervention to break up common lands, abolish traditional rights, force people into wage labor, and override local customs limiting commodification. And once created, markets generated such social upheaval that societies repeatedly tried to protect themselves through counter-movements: labor unions, social insurance, land reform, and financial regulation.

Contemporary debates about the gig economy, social safety nets, and the commodification of previously non-market domains (education, healthcare, relationships) still work through Polanyi’s problematic. We keep discovering that some things don’t work well as pure commodities—they need embedding in social relationships and moral frameworks. But market society’s logic keeps pushing toward total commodification.

The Anthropological View

Classical anthropologists—Malinowski, Benedict, Lévi-Strauss—understood that pre-modern societies weren’t simply primitive versions of modern ones, but operated according to different logics. They were organized around ritual, symbol, myth, and kinship rather than instrumental rationality and individual choice.

Rituals weren’t quaint customs but mechanisms for managing life’s fundamental transitions and uncertainties. Birth, maturity, marriage, death—each required ritual marking to integrate individual experience into collective meaning. Seasonal cycles, agricultural rhythms, and religious calendars organized time as qualitatively different moments rather than homogeneous units to be optimized.

Modernity systematically dissolved these meaning-making structures. We still have transitions, but we lack rituals adequate to mark them. We have time, but it’s homogeneous—Monday differs from Sunday only in what we’re scheduled to do. We have choices, but we lack the frameworks that once made choices meaningful rather than arbitrary.

Selfhood as Social

George Herbert Mead, Charles Cooley, and Erving Goffman understood that selfhood isn’t individual but social—it emerges from interaction, from taking on roles, from seeing ourselves through others’ eyes. The self is fundamentally dialogical, constituted through relationships rather than prior to them.

This matters because modernity’s hyperindividualism misunderstands how selfhood actually works. We imagine autonomous individuals choosing identities from an infinite menu. But selves require stable social mirrors—enduring relationships and communities that reflect us back to ourselves consistently over time. When social life becomes fluid, optional, and temporary, selfhood itself becomes unstable and fragmented.

Goffman argued that everyday life works much like a stage. We are all performers who must read cues, manage impressions, maintain face, negotiate interactions, and avoid embarrassment. And this requires constant emotional and cognitive effort.

However, this work becomes exponentially harder when social roles are unclear, when we move among many different audiences (family, coworkers, online strangers), and when norms shift rapidly.

No wonder anxiety is epidemic. We’re constantly performing for audiences whose expectations we can’t know, managing impressions across incompatible contexts, lacking the stable roles that once made social interaction navigable.

Even though thinkers like Durkheim, Weber, Simmel, Polanyi, and Goffman sometimes overstated the contrast between “traditional” and “modern” life, their core insights remain indispensable. They identified pressures built into modern society—pressures we still feel every day.

Why We Forgot

If these thinkers diagnosed our condition so accurately, why did their insights fade from view?

1. Disciplinary tunnel vision: The classic theorists read widely—history, philosophy, psychology, anthropology—and tried to make sense of society as a whole. Today’s social sciences reward narrow specialization. We have far fewer attempts to pull the pieces together into a coherent picture of how modern life works.

2. The dominance of individual-based explanations: Much contemporary research, especially in economics and psychology, explains social problems as the sum of individual choices. That approach misses what the classics understood: that social structures—institutions, norms, incentives—shape what individuals can see, desire, or do. You can’t explain burnout, loneliness, or inequality only by analyzing individuals.

3. Faith in technical fixes: Durkheim and Weber believed modernity involved tragic tradeoffs: more freedom but less stability, more efficiency but less meaning. It’s easier to believe that social problems just need better policy, better design, better apps. The classics remind us that some tensions aren’t solvable; they’re intrinsic parts of the modern condition.

4. The retreat from big-picture thinking: After the 1960s, large theoretical systems fell out of fashion—often for good reasons. But the pendulum swung too far. We became wary of ambitious accounts of how society works. The result: many brilliant micro-studies but fewer frameworks to make sense of the whole.

What We Might Relearn

Returning to classical social theory is about recovering a way of thinking contemporary social science has largely abandoned: structural, historical, synthetic, attuned to modern life’s trade-offs and tragic dimensions.

We need to follow their example, and:

Understand problems as structural, not individual: The therapeutic turn treats unhappiness, anxiety, and alienation as individual psychological problems requiring individual solutions—therapy, medication, mindfulness. The classics understood these as social problems rooted in structural transformations. When Durkheim analyzed suicide, he showed it had social rates that varied systematically. Suicide was individual, but its causes were social. Similarly today: anxiety and depression have individual manifestations, but their epidemic proportions reflect structural conditions.

Recognize trade-offs: The classics saw that you couldn’t have individualism without anomie, rationalization without disenchantment, urban sophistication without blasé indifference. Contemporary discourse often assumes we can have everything—complete individual freedom and strong communities, endless innovation and cultural continuity. The classics suggest we can’t.

Recover a sense of history: The classic thinkers understood something we often forget: modern life is not just “human nature with gadgets.” It’s the result of specific historical changes that dissolved older ways of organizing family life, work, religion, politics, and even the self.

Attend to what can’t be quantified: The classics understood that the most important social realities—meaning, purpose, moral order, authentic community—resist quantification. This doesn’t mean they’re not real, just that they can’t be captured by the metrics contemporary social science favors.

Think about institutions as meaning-making structures: Modern social science often analyzes institutions in narrowly functional terms—schools educate, markets allocate, courts resolve disputes. The classic social theorists saw something deeper: institutions don’t just serve individuals; they form them. They shape our expectations, our aspirations, and even our sense of who we are. They teach us what to value, how to behave, and what kinds of lives are possible.

Making Sense of Our Moment

The classical social thinkers help explain phenomena contemporary frameworks struggle with:

Why Wealth Doesn’t Bring Happiness: Economics assumes that more resources mean more satisfaction. But the classic thinkers saw something different: when moral limits collapse and wants become endless, no amount of wealth brings peace.

Why Freedom Feels Like a Burden: We tend to imagine freedom as pure gain—more choice, more autonomy, more control. The classics remind us that freedom without structure is exhausting. When every commitment is optional, when identities must be invented rather than inherited, and when nothing outside us provides guidance, choice stops feeling liberating and starts feeling overwhelming.

Why Community Keeps Falling Apart: Modern policies try to “build community” through programs, initiatives, and apps. The classics understood that real community doesn’t come from design. It comes from shared obligations, common rituals, unchosen relationships, and continuity over time.

Why Technology Makes Things Worse, Not Better: We keep expecting technology to fix loneliness or rebuild connection. But when technology is built on market incentives and the logic of efficiency, it amplifies the very problems we hope it will solve.

Why Institutions Keep Failing Us: Everywhere we look, institutions feel brittle, ineffective, or hollow. Our reflex is to demand better rules, stronger incentives, more oversight. But the classics point to a deeper issue: institutions designed mainly for efficiency and productivity can’t also provide identity, purpose, or belonging.

Living in Modernity’s Ruins

The classical social theorists don’t give us easy fixes because they knew that none exist. They understood that we cannot slip back into pre-modern forms of community, cannot simply unwind the rationalization that organizes modern life, and cannot restore the thick, taken-for-granted social structures that modernity dissolved.

But what they can give us is clarity: clarity about what has been lost, about why our deepest problems endure despite extraordinary technical progress, and about which tensions are woven into the very fabric of modern life rather than amenable to policy tinkering or therapeutic intervention.

This might seem pessimistic, but there is a kind of liberation in it. If we stop expecting technical fixes to repair what are really cultural contradictions, we may finally learn to cultivate more realistic expectations—and more sustainable forms of flourishing.

And this is where a different kind of hope enters. While we cannot reenchant the world by wishing away modernity’s disenchantment, we can reenchant it through the things that only human beings can make: through art and music, through literature and ritual, through acts of creativity and meaning-making, through humanistic inquiry that deepens understanding, through scientific investigation that expands wonder, and through social scientific insight that clarifies the forces shaping our lives.

These are not substitutes for the old frameworks; they are the means of creating new ones.

The classical social thinkers help us see our moment with uncommon clarity because they stood close enough to modernity’s birth to witness both what was gained and what was lost. They watched the great transformation unfold and grasped its full scope in ways that are hard for us, living inside it, to perceive.

Recapturing their wisdom will require us to recover their tragic sensibility, their structural understanding, and their recognition that modernity’s benefits and costs come bound together.

We are richer, freer, healthier, and longer-lived than any previous generation. We are also more anxious, more isolated, more unmoored, and less certain of what makes life meaningful. The classics saw that these aren’t contradictions but two sides of the same coin.

Understanding this won’t magically make us happy. But it might help us confront our condition honestly—and perhaps learn to reenchant a disenchanted world in the only ways that remain open to us: through imagination, creativity, inquiry, and the hard-earned clarity of seeing things as they really are.

Steven Mintz

Recommend Steven Mintz to your readers

Professor of History, The University of Texas at Austin