Tuesday 19 November 2019

To make laziness work for you, put some effort into it

If laziness is written into our genes, why not embrace it?

a post by Neel Burton published by AEON [republished by the Big Think blog]

<p><em>Photo by Sabri Tuczu/Unsplash</em></p>
Photo by Sabri Tuczu/Unsplash

We are being lazy if there's something that we ought to do but are reluctant to do because of the effort involved.

We do it badly, or do something less strenuous or less boring, or just remain idle. In other words, we are being lazy if our motivation to spare ourselves effort trumps our motivation to do the right or best or expected thing – assuming, of course, we know what that is.

In the Christian tradition, laziness, or sloth, is one of the seven deadly sins because it undermines society and God's plan and invites the other sins. The Bible inveighs against slothfulness, for example, in Ecclesiastes:
By much slothfulness the building decayeth; and through idleness of the hands the house droppeth through. A feast is made for laughter, and wine maketh merry: but money answereth all things.
Today, laziness is so closely connected with poverty and failure that a poor person is often presumed lazy, no matter how hard he or she actually works.

Continue reading

and if anyone is thinking that I picked this item because of the cat you would be wrong! The Big Think post does not have that cat it has a leopard and the images from Big Think do not copy.


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