How Your Desk Helps You Think
If you love working from home, it’s because of the “extended mind”
A year and a half into remote work, a cultural divide has emerged: Most people either love it or hate it.
A recent survey by the New York Times found 31% of people want to stay home permanently, while 45% want to get back to the office, full-time. (The remainder want a blend of the two).
What gives? Why are people having such radically different experiences? It’s a complex question, obviously, because there are a ton of variables here, such as whether you have kids at home, how much room you’ve got, and your demographic.
But there’s one other intriguing possibility:
Maybe it’s about how our brains outsource our thinking to our environments.
If you prefer working from home, it might be because you’ve been able to create a better cognitive environment than you had at work. If you’re desperate to get back to the office, you may have discovered home is a terrible space in which to think.
I thought of this while reading Annie Murphy Paul’s new book The Extended Mind: The Power of Thinking Outside the Brain. She talks about the field known as “situated cognition” — how we use the objects and buildings around us as tools for thought.