Too Long; Didn't Read
Through millions of years of biological design, humans have developed a resistance to paradigmatic change. It makes sense. Anything which we cannot anticipate or imagine is, by definition, a threat to the <a href="http://www.ogilvy.com/topics/tech-innovation/predicting-the-future-of-humanity-with-yuval-noah-harari/" target="_blank">certainty</a> of our line. With almost inscrutable consistency, <em>uncertainty</em> is the cause of our everyday <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/05/opinion/sunday/are-you-in-despair-thats-good.html" target="_blank">stressors</a>. The uncertainty of being late. The uncertainty of losing money. The uncertainty of getting sick. It’s not the hours lying miserably in bed that we fear (which will almost always resolve itself) but rather the not knowing if or when it will happen.