The Sound of Silence - How Noise is destroying our connection to nature and each other episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 25, 2025 · 51 MIN

The Sound of Silence - How Noise is destroying our connection to nature and each other

from Journal of Biophilic Design · host Vanessa Champion

Julian Treasure gives us a stark warning emerges about humanity's growing disconnection from the natural world - and it's happening through our ears.Julian, renowned for his TED talks, reveals how modern human-generated noise is systematically destroying ecosystems, disrupting animal communication, and fundamentally altering our relationship with the environment. From whales struggling to communicate across oceans due to shipping noise to insects experiencing shortened mating cycles near roadways, the acoustic pollution is devastating."We've become numb to sound," Julian explains. Humans now spend 93% of their lives indoors, sealed away from natural soundscapes of wind, water, and birdsong - sounds our ancestors evolved alongside for hundreds of thousands of years.The consequences extend far beyond environmental damage. Our inability to truly listen is fracturing human society. Julian argues that we've lost the art of compassionate listening, creating dangerous social echo chambers where people only hear opinions that confirm their existing beliefs.Critically, our noise-saturated world is causing serious health problems. Julian highlights that hospitals are 12 times louder than recommended levels, preventing patient recovery. Classrooms bombard children with sound levels that could increase heart attack risks. A billion young people risk hearing damage from excessive headphone use.But there's hope. Julian advocates for radical reimagining of our sonic environments. Simple interventions like playing nature sounds, training medical staff to be quieter, and teaching children listening skills could transform societal outcomes.His upcoming book "Sound Effects" and new online community "The Listening Society" aim to reconnect people with the wonder of sound. He suggests everyone should ask: "What beautiful, natural sounds could improve my living space?"The solution, he believes, lies in embracing biophilia - designing every space with life's wellbeing in mind. Whether in healthcare, education, or urban planning, we must consider sound's impact.Julian's most profound message is simple: listening is an act of respect - to nature, to each other, and to ourselves. In a world increasingly characterized by shouting and division, truly hearing one another might be our most powerful tool for understanding.As he poignantly notes, "The sound of democracy is listening." By rediscovering our acoustic sensitivity, we might just heal our fractured planet - one sound wave at a time.Become a member of The Listening Society which opens its doors on 1st May here: https://listen.thelisteningsociety.community/1mth Sign up to their free newsletter to learn more too.Listen to our previous podcast with Julian https://journalofbiophilicdesign.com/podcast-journal-of-biophilic-design/the-power-of-soundFor more information on Julian and his work and details of his new book visit https://www.juliantreasure.comIf you like this, please subscribe!Have you got a copy of the Journal? You can now subscribe to the digital edition or purchase a copy directly from us at the journalofbiophilicdesign.com or Amazon. If you like our podcast and would like to support us in some way, you can buy us a coffee if you’d like to, thank you xWatch the Biophilic Design Conference on demand herewww.biophilicdesignconference.comCredits: with thanks to George Harvey Audio Production for the calming biophilic soundscape that backs all our podcasts. Did you know our podcast is also on Audible, Amazon Music, Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher, vurbl, podbay, podtail, and most if not all the RSS feeds?Facebook https://www.facebook.com/journalofbiophilicdesign/Twitter https://twitter.com/JofBiophilicDsnLinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/company/journalofbiophilicdesign/Instagram https://www.instagram.com/journalofbiophilicdesign

Julian Treasure gives us a stark warning emerges about humanity's growing disconnection from the natural world - and it's happening through our ears. Julian, renowned for his TED talks, reveals how modern human-generated noise is systematically destroying ecosystems, disrupting animal communication, and fundamentally altering our relationship with the environment. From whales struggling to communicate across oceans due to shipping noise to insects experiencing shortened mating cycles near roadways, the acoustic pollution is devastating. "We've become numb to sound," Julian explains. Humans now spend 93% of their lives indoors, sealed away from natural soundscapes of wind, water, and birdsong - sounds our ancestors evolved alongside for hundreds of thousands of years. The consequences extend far beyond environmental damage. Our inability to truly listen is fracturing human society. Julian argues that we've lost the art of compassionate listening, creating dangerous social echo chambers where people only hear opinions that confirm their existing beliefs. Critically, our noise-saturated world is causing serious health problems. Julian highlights that hospitals are 12 times louder than recommended levels, preventing patient recovery. Classrooms bombard children with sound levels that could increase heart attack risks. A billion young people risk hearing damage from excessive headphone use. But there's hope. Julian advocates for radical reimagining of our sonic environments. Simple interventions like playing nature sounds, training medical staff to be quieter, and teaching children listening skills could transform societal outcomes. His upcoming book "Sound Effects" and new online community "The Listening Society" aim to reconnect people with the wonder of sound. He suggests everyone should ask: "What beautiful, natural sounds could improve my living space?" The solution, he believes, lies in embracing biophilia - designing every space with life's wellbeing in mind. Whether in healthcare, education, or urban planning, we must consider sound's impact. Julian's most profound message is simple: listening is an act of respect - to nature, to each other, and to ourselves. In a world increasingly characterized by shouting and division, truly hearing one another might be our most powerful tool for understanding. As he poignantly notes, "The sound of democracy is listening." By rediscovering our acoustic sensitivity, we might just heal our fractured planet - one sound wave at a time. Become a member of The Listening Society which opens its doors on 1st May here: https://listen.thelisteningsociety.community/1mth Sign up to their free newsletter to learn more too. Listen to our previous podcast with Julian https://journalofbiophilicdesign.com/podcast-journal-of-biophilic-design/the-power-of-sound For more information on Julian and his work and details of his new book visit https://www.juliantreasure.com If you like this, please subscribe! Have you got a copy of the Journal? You can now subscribe to the digital edition or purchase a copy directly from us at the journalofbiophilicdesign.com or Amazon. If you like our podcast and would like to support us in some way, you can buy us a coffee if you’d like to, thank you x Watch the Biophilic Design Conference on demand here www.biophilicdesignconference.com Credits: with thanks to George Harvey Audio Production for the calming biophilic soundscape that backs all our podcasts. Did you know our podcast is also on Audible, Amazon Music, Spotify, iTunes, YouTube, Stitcher, vurbl, podbay, podtail, and most if not all the RSS feeds? Facebook https://www.facebook.com/journalofbiophilicdesign/ Twitter https://twitter.com/JofBiophilicDsn LinkedIn. https://www.linkedin.com/company/journalofbiophilicdesign/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/journalofbiophilicdesign

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The Sound of Silence - How Noise is destroying our connection to nature and each other

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This episode was published on March 25, 2025.

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Julian Treasure gives us a stark warning emerges about humanity's growing disconnection from the natural world - and it's happening through our ears.Julian, renowned for his TED talks, reveals how modern human-generated noise is systematically...

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