Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Review of The Sirens' Call: How Attention Became the World's Most Endangered Resource by Christopher L. Hayes

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Book Club Event = Book List (10/11/2025)
Intriguing Connections = 1) War for Your Attention, 2) How To Allocate Resources?



Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“Attention is the substance of life.  Every moment we are awake we are paying attention to something, whether through our affirmative choice or because something or someone has compelled it.  Ultimately, these instants of attention accrue into a life.” – Christopher L. Hayes, Chapter 1: The Sirens’ Call, Page 10

 

“The mental processes of attention exist to screen information because there is too much of it, but what happens when there is too little?  We are finicky creatures, and there’s a tenuous equilibrium where we have just enough to occupy our minds, but not too little and not too much.  When there’s too much, we describe ourselves as distracted or overwhelmed; when there’s too little to pay attention to, we’re bored and restless.” – Christopher L. Hayes, Chapter 3: The Root of Evil, Page 60

 

“Obviously, no farmer can grow new sets of eyeballs to watch our screens, no stores of human attention lie buried in the ground.  There are a certain number of humans, with a certain number of waking hours and a fixed amount of attention to capture.  When attention capitalists want to increase the supply, they have no means of creating it; they much instead find new ways to take it from us.” – Christopher L. Hayes, Chapter 5: Alienation, Page 122


Review

Is This An Overview?

Attention is a resource that each person constantly uses when they are awake.  While information is abundant and grows, attention is an internal scarce resource.  Attention cannot be created on demand, as there is a limited number of people, waking hours, and attention span.  Giving attention to something, enables blindness to other details.  Competing for attention is zero-sum, for a competitor who gains attention, another loses attention.  Competition for limited attention incentivizes behaviors that can be inappropriate, dramatic, and sensationalist as those are features that capture attention.  Attention becomes captured at the expense of the person who gives attention, as taking voluntary attention away from a person is stealing their time. 

 

Attention is a fundamental human need, with much of social life being devoted to the pursuit of attention.  Wealth and power can be derived from obtaining attention from others.  Pleasure can be derived from having attention taken away, but there is an attentional equilibrium.  A person can become distracted or overwhelmed when there is too much demand for their attention.  A person can become bored and restless when there is too little demand for their attention.  Attention can become addictive, as the more pleasure is derived from giving attention, the more attention is needed to get the same pleasure.  With a variety of distractions available to take attention away, cultures can reduce the attention span that makes focus difficult, can make solitude a mental health hazard. 

 

What Are The Types Of Attention?

Voluntary attention is when the person is in control, choosing where to focus.  Involuntary attention is when attention is directed independently of desire.  Social attention is when the person becomes the object of another’s attention, also known as social status. 

 

Caveats?

While claims are made on disapproved techniques that manipulate attention, the author can use the same techniques.  Among the examples and explanations that manipulative techniques are used on, contains a political bias.

 


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•What is attention?
•What is attentional blindness?
•How is attention a resource? 
•How does attention get used?
•What is voluntary attention?
•What in involuntary attention?
•hat is social attention? 
•How does new technology get treated? 
•What has technology done to attention?
•What is a brand?
•What is a news cycle? 
•What happened to Odysseus?
•Would a person do an unpleasant activity or no activity at all?
•What is the problem with boredom?
•How did boredom come to be?
•What is the king’s paradox?
•How is attention addicting?
•What is an infinite entertainment device? 
•What is the worth of advertisement?  
•How does competition affect the quality of information?
•How has the amount of information affected peoples lives?
•What makes an information processing system useful? 
•How did Google change its search engine? 
•What kind of conversation is needed for a functioning democracy?  

Book Details
Publisher:               Penguin Press [Penguin Random House]
Edition ISBN:         9780593653128
Pages to read:          230
Publication:             2025
1st Edition:              2025
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          5
Overall          5