Care in the Digital Age: From Relational Loops to Feedback Collapse examines how the digital transformation of communication has disrupted the traditional feedback loops of human connection—especially those rooted in women’s historical role as relational communicators. Drawing from the works of Deborah Tannen, Carol Gilligan, Sherry Turkle, and Byung-Chul Han, this article traces the transition from embodied, synchronous care-based communication to algorithmically filtered, delayed, and quantified feedback systems. It introduces the concept of “feedback collapse”—a paradox in which the volume of digital expression grows exponentially while genuine empathy and mutual attunement diminish. Through the lens of care ethics, the paper reinterprets modern forms of online expression—such as public boundary-setting, affirmation posts, and performative identity statements—not as vanity or narcissism but as adaptive strategies to restore presence and connection in an attenuated feedback environment. The article further explores three applied domains of this phenomenon: Adolescent development, where empathy declines under screen immersion; Family relationships, where device-mediated detachment erodes presence and emotional reciprocity; Female mate selection, where algorithmic visibility replaces community-based feedback, reshaping courtship and trust dynamics. Ultimately, this study argues that digital communication has not ended the ethic of care but forced its evolution. Understanding these adaptive behaviors as intelligent responses to structural change can guide both ethical reflection and the redesign of social technologies toward more empathetic, presence-oriented systems. Keywords: care ethics; relational communication; digital media; empathy; feedback loops; female identity; adaptation; social ecology.
Guo Xiang-yu (Mon,) studied this question.