This article explores the growing divergence between human biological time and the near-instantaneous processing speeds of artificial intelligence. As the "fracture" between these two temporalities becomes our permanent environment, the paper examines the psychological and societal implications of living in a world governed by machine-driven efficiency. By analyzing how constant acceleration impacts human decision-making and identity, the work questions whether it is possible to maintain a human-centric existence within an increasingly automated reality. The discussion proposes a critical reflection on how we can inhabit this temporal gap without compromising the fundamental qualities of the human experience.
Marco Guarracino (Tue,) studied this question.