Information overload
Information Overload is a very big problem in the age of multiple platforms with infinite newsfeeds.
Trying Hard Not To Make It Worse
metaculture tries to solve this problem by delivering the essential information on best practices that you need too make effective life choices in a clear and concise way, and linking it to an overall pattern that helps you relate it to other subjects and create a unified picture of the universe.
Explanations of basic concepts will be provided via links, and the text will be written with the assumption that the reader understands the topics being discussed. This will eliminate the tedious and redundant recitations of basic scientific theories that fill the pages of most popular science books. Another retelling of the Stanford prison experiment or Schrödinger's cat could be potentially coma-inducing.
Curated Information
It is vital that your intake of information be curated to ensure that you are not influenced by misinformation, propaganda, pseudoscience, and grift. Our brain will naturally believe whatever it sees, and it takes significant conscious effort to counter that influence. Even when we try to practice critical thinking it is impossible to apply it to every bit of information you encounter. This is especially true with social media newsfeeds, where you may only spend a split second on each meme. It becomes a self-gish-galloping, where the B.S. comes at you so fast that it can't help muddy the waters of your perception of reality. But it's not a political adversary arguing in bad faith, it is you doing it to yourself!
As people become aware of this and start to reject it, there should be a return to using more long-form media with high production values, journalistic standards, editing, fact-checking, and expert recommendations over algorithms. Those who choose this type of information will be smarter, happier, wealthier, and more ethical than those who do not. With any luck, this will lead to leadership that finds ways to incentivize more people to choose good information, such as banning cell phones in schools, or requiring transparency in social media algorithms.
Negativity Bias
The episode of Hidden Brain: Fighting Despair has an excellent discussion of negativity bias and its impact on our happiness.
The mantra of the news is "if it bleeds it leads" because we are naturally more drawn to bad news, since avoiding death is a much higher priority to evolution than anything else. No point trying to find joy and wonder in the universe when you're dead! Since capitalism significantly incentivizes media companies to fight for our attention, this results in a heavy bias towards bad news.
This has the unfortunate by-product of creating significant amounts of unnecessary fear in the culture, and causes people to avoid many things that would make them happy. It also makes people susceptible to authoritarianism.
God as a Fractal Compression Algorithm
Our brain is designed to find patterns. When a pattern is found, multiple neural pathways can be combined into a single one, freeing up space for the understanding of new concepts. This is similar to how fractal compression algorithms work. Obviously this explanation is simplified and allegorical, but that's why we have links.
The universal pattern of understanding represented by god acts like a fractal compression algorithm for your entire brain, putting everything you see and learn into a common, holistic framework of understanding.
When your understanding of the rules of the universe closely match the actual universe, the number of exceptions to those rules that you have to remember is reduced, memory is freed, and new information is assimilated and understood more easily.
It is very important to be self-aware and avoid confirmation bias once you have developed a god concept, since it becomes so easy to fit new information into the existing pattern that you can ignore areas where they don't actually match. That's why having self-correction at the heart of your belief system is so important.
Information on Information
Yuval Noah Harari's book Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI offers an interesting view of history and society from the perspective of information processing.
Countering Information Overload
While few videos on YouTube relate the topic of information overload to a deity-based fractal compression algorithm, there are many that have good explanations for the information overload we face every day and how to deal with it.