This article applies Paul Tillich’s existentialist analysis of the human predicament, particularly what it means to exist and to be fallen, to social media. I argue that social media heightens feelings of alienation and estrangement, supporting this claim with evidence from empirical research in psychiatry and communication studies. Thus, I offer an application of a Tillichian approach to an area of culture previously unexamined in this way. I identify three primary ways social media exacerbates existentialist emotional states: 1) social media allows us to construct artificial versions of ourselves through the use of filters and photo editing software; 2) it provides the means to quantify social approval in groups the size of which the huma...
Social media has covered and permeated the entire human life and also existence of human beings. Soc...
The ubiquity of social media and the varying nature of subjective well-being (SWB) in a culturally h...
As I sit down to write this paper, I cannot help but notice that my Facebook page is open, albeit in...
This interdisciplinary research paper examines how social media interactions impact human ability to...
In the study of criminology, social media has only just emerged as a topic of concern. Of the few ac...
Affect and Social Media is an edited collection of twenty bite sized articles by leading scholars fr...
Digital technology has a growing dominance in social relationships. This opinion paper aims, through...
Filling The Void is a book about how the cultures and psychology of social media use fit within a br...
This article explores the relationship between digital environments and adverse mental health effect...
The Negative Effect of Social Media on Aristotle’s “Good Life”: Psychological, Sociological, and Phi...
At the core of this paper is a psychosocial inquiry into the Marxist concept of alienation and its a...
Americans today worry that modern technology is changing their personalities and their emotions. Is ...
Social media effects may affect self-perception and the way media users live their offline lives. Th...
Social media platforms have become an integral part of society, serving to connect individuals acros...
Millennial lives in the moment where real and unreal, private and public, or natural and illusive ca...
Social media has covered and permeated the entire human life and also existence of human beings. Soc...
The ubiquity of social media and the varying nature of subjective well-being (SWB) in a culturally h...
As I sit down to write this paper, I cannot help but notice that my Facebook page is open, albeit in...
This interdisciplinary research paper examines how social media interactions impact human ability to...
In the study of criminology, social media has only just emerged as a topic of concern. Of the few ac...
Affect and Social Media is an edited collection of twenty bite sized articles by leading scholars fr...
Digital technology has a growing dominance in social relationships. This opinion paper aims, through...
Filling The Void is a book about how the cultures and psychology of social media use fit within a br...
This article explores the relationship between digital environments and adverse mental health effect...
The Negative Effect of Social Media on Aristotle’s “Good Life”: Psychological, Sociological, and Phi...
At the core of this paper is a psychosocial inquiry into the Marxist concept of alienation and its a...
Americans today worry that modern technology is changing their personalities and their emotions. Is ...
Social media effects may affect self-perception and the way media users live their offline lives. Th...
Social media platforms have become an integral part of society, serving to connect individuals acros...
Millennial lives in the moment where real and unreal, private and public, or natural and illusive ca...
Social media has covered and permeated the entire human life and also existence of human beings. Soc...
The ubiquity of social media and the varying nature of subjective well-being (SWB) in a culturally h...
As I sit down to write this paper, I cannot help but notice that my Facebook page is open, albeit in...