The psychosis of urban life.
 

 Georg Simmel writing in 1903, in “The Metropolis and Mental Life” 
http://www.altruists.org/static/files/The%20Metropolis%20and%20Mental%20Life%20%28Georg%20Simmel%29.htm:
 
 The same factors which have thus coalesced into the exactness and minute 
precision of the form of life have coalesced into a structure of the highest 
impersonality; on the other hand, they have promoted a highly personal 
subjectivity. There is perhaps no psychic phenomenon which has been so 
unconditionally reserved to the metropolis as has the blasé attitude. The blasé 
attitude results first from the rapidly changing and closely compressed 
contrasting stimulations of the nerves. From this, the enhancement of 
metropolitan intellectuality, also, seems originally to stem. Therefore, stupid 
people who are not intellectually alive in the first place usually are not 
exactly blasé. A life in boundless pursuit of pleasure makes one blasé because 
it agitates the nerves to their strongest reactivity for such a long time that 
they finally cease to react at all. In the same way, through the rapidity and 
contradictoriness of their changes, more harmless impressions force such 
violent responses, tearing the nerves so brutally hither and thither that their 
last reserves of strength are spent; and if one remains in the same milieu they 
have no time to gather new strength. An incapacity thus emerges to react to new 
sensations with the appropriate energy. This constitutes that blasé attitude 
which, in fact, every metropolitan child shows when compared with children of 
quieter and less changeable milieus. … In the blasé attitude the concentration 
of men and things stimulate the nervous system of the individual to its highest 
achievement so that it attains its peak. Through the mere quantitative 
intensification of the same conditioning factors this achievement is 
transformed into its opposite and appears in the peculiar adjustment of the 
blasé attitude. In this phenomenon the nerves find in the refusal to react to 
their stimulation the last possibility of accommodating to the contents and 
forms of metropolitan life. The self-preservation of certain personalities is 
brought at the price of devaluating the whole objective world, a devaluation 
which in the end unavoidably drags one’s own personality down into a feeling of 
the same worthlessness. 

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