ruby 27, I think this is an excellent question, and so pertinent to the times we live in.
As we get more technologically sophisticated, we do not automatically see our problems reducing, but we do see our lives being controlled more and more. Employers now have so much control over us, that being accountable for our time and work rate is a pressure that previous generations didn't have to cope with. Maybe as there is a greater realisation that we are nothing more than a number, a, "human resource," a cog in the machine, then there will be a greater yearning for some recognition of our humanity, an overwhelming desire to be treated as people rather than assets, to be worn out and then replaced.
In other words, a spiritual hunger will become more acute, and a recognition that there is another world other than the one associated with deadlines and targets and performance related rewards.
So there, for starters is the beginning of the spiritual hunger, or as you call it, a "gap."
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