Amid debates over internet penetration’s impact on leisure diversity—“macro-level entropy increase” vs. “micro-level entropy reduction”—this study explores their intrinsic link by introducing Shannon’s information entropy theory and constructing a three-tier framework (“micro-individual decision-making—macro-regional growth—macro–micro linkage”). Using microdata from the China General Social Survey and macro data from the China Economic and Financial Research Database, we adopt a multi-method approach (benchmark regression, mediation/nonlinear analysis) to test hypotheses. Key findings: micro-level internet penetration boosts individual leisure entropy; macro-level impact may follow an inverted U-shape, mediated by micro-level internet use; the entropy-increasing effect is strongest for learning-oriented leisure, weakest for social-oriented leisure; education, income, and internet penetration are core configurational conditions. This study contributes a quantitative leisure diversity framework, an integrated macro–micro model, and insights into the nonlinearities of internet penetration.
Li et al. (Wed,) studied this question.