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Loneliness in the Age of Connection: Why Modern People Feel Unseen Despite Infinite Contact
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8233568961
- EAN9798233568961
- Date de parution07/01/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurLinda Balsamo
Résumé
Loneliness in the Age of Connection By Rowan S. Halberg Never in human history have we been so connected-and yet so profoundly alone. We inhabit a world of infinite contact. We are constantly visible, perpetually reachable, and endlessly "friended." Yet, beneath the digital noise, a quiet epidemic is spreading: a feeling of being surrounded but unseen, of having an audience but no community, of possessing connection but lacking communion.
In Loneliness in the Age of Connection By Rowan S. Halberg explores the modern paradox of proximity. This is not a book about physical isolation, but about emotional invisibility. It is a deep dive into why our technological triumphs have left our hearts hungry for a depth that a "like" or a text cannot provide. Drawing on the insights of philosophers from Kierkegaard to Heidegger, and the sociological data of the digital age, this book examines: The Myth of the Networked Self: Why curated vulnerability and life-as-content lead to the exhaustion of perpetual self-display.
The Vanishing Conversation: How we traded the art of patient dialogue for the exchange of digital fragments. Intimacy Without Touch: The rise of virtual closeness and the erosion of embodied belonging. The Spiritual Vacuum: How loneliness reveals a metaphysical starvation that self-help and algorithms cannot heal. Moving beyond simple critique, Loneliness in the Age of Connection offers a constructive vision for recovery.
It is a call to a "quiet revolution of presence"-a guide to reclaiming the discipline of attention, the risk of sincerity, and the beauty of being truly known. Thoughtful, lyrical, and intellectually rigorous, this is an essential roadmap for anyone seeking to rediscover meaning and belonging in a fragmented world.
In Loneliness in the Age of Connection By Rowan S. Halberg explores the modern paradox of proximity. This is not a book about physical isolation, but about emotional invisibility. It is a deep dive into why our technological triumphs have left our hearts hungry for a depth that a "like" or a text cannot provide. Drawing on the insights of philosophers from Kierkegaard to Heidegger, and the sociological data of the digital age, this book examines: The Myth of the Networked Self: Why curated vulnerability and life-as-content lead to the exhaustion of perpetual self-display.
The Vanishing Conversation: How we traded the art of patient dialogue for the exchange of digital fragments. Intimacy Without Touch: The rise of virtual closeness and the erosion of embodied belonging. The Spiritual Vacuum: How loneliness reveals a metaphysical starvation that self-help and algorithms cannot heal. Moving beyond simple critique, Loneliness in the Age of Connection offers a constructive vision for recovery.
It is a call to a "quiet revolution of presence"-a guide to reclaiming the discipline of attention, the risk of sincerity, and the beauty of being truly known. Thoughtful, lyrical, and intellectually rigorous, this is an essential roadmap for anyone seeking to rediscover meaning and belonging in a fragmented world.












