Skip to main content

Science Quote by Edward T. Hall

"Age affects how people experience time"

About this Quote

Hall’s line reads like a calm lab note, but it quietly detonates one of modern life’s favorite myths: that time is a neutral medium we all move through the same way. For a scientist who spent his career mapping culture and communication, “Age affects how people experience time” isn’t a sentimental nod to getting older. It’s a systems claim. Your sense of urgency, patience, boredom, and “enough time” isn’t just personality; it’s conditioned by where you are in the life cycle, what stakes you feel, and how your body and attention metabolize experience.

The intent is pragmatic. Hall is pointing at a variable that changes everything from planning to conflict. If younger people often live in a future-heavy mode (time as runway), older people may treat time as an economy (time as scarce capital). That gap doesn’t just produce generational jokes; it shapes negotiations, workplace expectations, even how advice lands. “Take your time” can sound like freedom or like theft depending on the listener’s clock.

Subtext: time is partly social technology. Age doesn’t only speed up or slow down perception; it can shift which “time system” you inhabit: deadlines versus seasons, novelty versus repetition, ambition versus maintenance. Hall’s broader context matters here. He argued that much miscommunication comes from invisible frameworks (including “monochronic” clock-time and “polychronic” event-time). Age becomes another hidden framework, a built-in bias that makes two people think they’re discussing the same schedule when they’re actually living in different temporal realities.

Quote Details

TopicAging
More Quotes by Edward Add to List
Age affects how people experience time
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Edward T. Hall

Edward T. Hall (May 16, 1914 - July 20, 2009) was a Scientist from USA.

12 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Sandra Bullock, Actress
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe, Writer
Small: Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
Washington Irving, Writer