Autonomous Technology: Technics-out-of-Control as a Theme in Political Thought
by Langdon Winner
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The truth of the matter is that our deficiency does not lie in the want of well-verified "facts." What we lack is our bearings. The contemporary experience of things technological has repeatedly confounded our vision, our expectations, and our capacity to make intelligent judgments. Categories, arguments, conclusions, and choices that would have been entirely obvious in earlier times are obvious no longer. Patterns of perceptive thinking that were entirely reliable in the past now lead us show more systematically astray. Many of our standard conceptions of technology reveal a disorientation that borders on dissociation from reality. And as long as we lack the ability to make our situation intelligible, all of the "data" in the world will make no difference. ;From the Introduction show lessTags
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Autonomous Technology is an important book in the history of STS, synthesizing many school of technological critique from Ellul, to Weber, to Marx, in search of a way to talk about technology that accurately respects its power and its relationship to human society. The problem is that important is not the same as influential, or even particularly good, and I found this book confused on several critical points: what is the nature of autonomy-necessary for authentic human flourishing, or a sign of a system dangerously out of control? Speaking of control, is it a necessary part of governing technology, or a system by which elites can 'rationally program' society from the center?
Winner's original scholarly contributed is mostly rooted in a show more sense of nostalgia-a nostalgia he writes about in The Whale and the Reactor. It's a longing for a lost boyhood on the California coast, in a small town of orange orchards and sea breezes. That life sounds beautiful, but far to small to encompass human experience-or even the current human population. Winner proposes "epistemological luddism", a stance that people only use tools that they understand fully, with a sense of appropriateness and wisdom. Yet the first part is incompatible with any sort of urban, technological, interdependent life, and 'appropriate' and 'wisdom' are elusive virtues in the simplest of times, let alone gales of a technological revolution. show less
Winner's original scholarly contributed is mostly rooted in a show more sense of nostalgia-a nostalgia he writes about in The Whale and the Reactor. It's a longing for a lost boyhood on the California coast, in a small town of orange orchards and sea breezes. That life sounds beautiful, but far to small to encompass human experience-or even the current human population. Winner proposes "epistemological luddism", a stance that people only use tools that they understand fully, with a sense of appropriateness and wisdom. Yet the first part is incompatible with any sort of urban, technological, interdependent life, and 'appropriate' and 'wisdom' are elusive virtues in the simplest of times, let alone gales of a technological revolution. show less
This book is incredible. Winner takes the thought of Ellul, Mumford, Marcuse, and others and makes their collective insights into the basis for a theory of technological politics that captures exactly what is missing from modern discourse: the effects of the overwhelming influence of modern technology on all forms of human experience. And all this in an academic book that is readable! Highly recommended.
This is a strong critique and synthesis of scholarly positions on technology. Highly recommended.
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- Genres
- Sociology, Nonfiction, Anthropology, Technology, Philosophy, General Nonfiction, Science & Nature, History
- DDC/MDS
- 301.243 — Society, government, & culture Social sciences, sociology & anthropology Sociology and anthropology Formerly: Culture and cultural processes Cultural Anthropology With Respect to Technology
- LCC
- T14.5 .W56 — Technology Technology (General)
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- English
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