this post was submitted on 05 May 2025
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Exactly, often workers of mental labor have a general amount of mental labor they can give to their job per week. They'll try to get that labor done at a pace suiting themselves and attempt to look busy the remainder of the time they're at work. That or they'll try to push themselves and often produce subpar work after a certain point. Good workers self optimize to the best of their ability and comfort. Letting them go home once they've done a day's work can actually improve productivity as they don't have to spend mental energy pretending to work or getting frustrated they aren't finding the solutions and instead can rest or focus on recreational tasks and return refreshed.
Last I checked, and this is as an American, 30-32 hours is a pretty good amount. But labor has the right to fight for conditions better than that.
Sorry, but is anyone here claiming that this "mental labor" is quantifiable? If so, would sound absurd to me.