DiscoverThis Sustainable Life827: Chris Berdik: Scientific American loved his book Clamor (so did I)
827: Chris Berdik: Scientific American loved his book Clamor (so did I)

827: Chris Berdik: Scientific American loved his book Clamor (so did I)

Update: 2025-07-17
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Sound pollution is pollution. You know it's been growing for your whole life with little sign of decreasing.

I wish I lived in a world with less sound pollution, but given that I do, I'd rather be aware and conscious of it than not know. Ignorance of how much sound was affecting me wasn't blissful. Noise still affected me. Awareness enables me to act.

But it's not what you think. More decibels doesn't necessarily mean more annoying. Lower decibels doesn't necessarily mean less. Just think of a whiny drone that sounds like a mosquito. I can hear an electric leaf blower as I'm typing these words and while it may be quieter than a two-stroke engine, it's freaking annoying and I can't tune it out.

Chris's book Clamor: How Noise Took Over the World and How We Can Take It Back describes more about sound, noise, how they affect us, how our understanding of them change, and new industries developing on sound design. I start by sharing how just the first chapter of his book illuminated elements of sound I hadn't thought of.

We cover in our conversation many of the topics his book does, not only the facts but the emotional and health responses, what we can do, what others are doing.



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827: Chris Berdik: Scientific American loved his book Clamor (so did I)

827: Chris Berdik: Scientific American loved his book Clamor (so did I)