Techno-utopianism

Techno-utopianism

Techno-utopianism or technoutopianism refers to any ideology based on the belief that advanced science and technology will eventually bring about an utopia or, more precisely, a techno-utopia, a future society with ideal living conditions for all its citizens.

History

Techno-utopianism in the 19th century

Karl Marx believed that science and democracy were the right and left hands of what he called the move from the realm of necessity to the realm of freedom. He argued that advances in science helped delegitimize the rule of kings and the power of the Christian Church.cite book| author = Hughes, James| title = Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future| publisher = Westview Press| year = 2004| id = ISBN 0-8133-4198-1]

19th century socialists, feminists and republicans were generally advocates of reason and science. Techno-utopianism, atheism, and rationalism have been associated with the democratic, revolutionary and utopian Left for most of the last two hundred years. Radicals like Joseph Priestley pursued scientific investigation while advocating democracy and freedom from religious tyranny. Robert Owen, Charles Fourier and Henri de Saint-Simon in the early 19th century inspired communalists with their visions of a future scientific and technological evolution of humanity using reason as its secular religion. Radicals seized on Darwinian evolution to validate the idea of social progress. Edward Bellamy’s socialist utopia in "Looking Backward", which inspired hundreds of socialist clubs in the late 19th century United States and a national political party, was as highly technological as Bellamy’s imagination. For Bellamy and the Fabian Socialists, socialism was to be brought about as a painless corollary of industrial development.

Marx and Engels saw more pain and conflict involved, but agreed about the inevitable end. Marxists argued that the advance of technology laid the groundwork not only for the creation of a new society, with different property relations, but also for the emergence of new human beings reconnected to nature and themselves. At the top of the agenda for empowered proletarians was “to increase the total productive forces as rapidly as possible.” The 19th and early 20th century Left, from social democrats to communists, were focused on industrialization, economic development and the promotion of reason, science and the idea of progress.

One such promotion of science and social progress was the promotion of eugenics. Holding that in studies of families, such as the Jukes and Kallikaks, science had proven that many traits such as criminality and alcoholism were hereditary, many advocated the sterilization of those displaying negative traits. Forcible sterilization programs were implemented in several states in the United States. [Haller, Mark "Eugenics: Hereditarian attitudes in American thought" (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1963)]

After Auschwitz, the optimism of positivist views led to more pessimistic conceptions of science. The Holocaust, as Theodor Adorno underlined, seemed to shatter the ideal of Condorcet and others thinkers of the Enlightenment, which commonly equated scientific progress with social progress.Fact|date=February 2007

Techno-utopianism in late 20th century United States

A movement of techno-utopianism began to flourish again in the dot-com culture of the 1990s, particularly in the West Coast of the United States. It was reflected in, reported on, and even actively promoted in the pages of "Wired" magazine, which was founded in San Francisco in 1993 and served for a number years as the "bible" of its adherents.cite paper| author = Borsook, Paulina| title = Cyberselfishness| date = 1996 | url = http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/1996/07/borsook.html?welcome=true| accessdate=2007-02-06] cite book| author = Borsook, Pauline| title = Cyberselfish: A Critical Romp Through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High-Tech| publisher = PublicAffairs| year = 2000| id = ISBN 1-891620-78-9] cite paper| author = Barbrook, Richard; Cameron, Andy| title = The California Ideology| date = 2000 | url = http://www.hrc.wmin.ac.uk/theory-californianideology.html| accessdate=2007-02-06]

This form of techno-utopianism reflected a belief that technological change is revolutionizing human affairs, and that digital technology in particular - of which the Internet was but a modest harbinger - would increase personal freedom by freeing the individual from the rigid embrace of bureaucratic big government. "Self-empowered knowledge workers" would render traditional hierarchies redundant; digital communications would allow them to escape the modern city, an "obsolete remnant of the industrial age".

Its adherents claim it transcended conventional "right/left" distinctions in politics by rendering politics obsolete. However, techno-utopianism primarily attracted adherents from the libertarian right end of the political spectrum. Therefore, techno-utopians often have a distaste of government regulation and a belief in the superiority of the free market system. Prominent "oracles" of techno-utopianism included George Gilder and Kevin Kelly, an editor of "Wired" who also published several books.

During the 1990s dot-com boom, when the speculative bubble gave rise to claims that an era of "permanent prosperity" had arrived, techno-utopianism flourished, typically among the small percentage of the population who were employees of Internet startups and/or owned large quantities of high-tech stocks. With the subsequent crash, many of these dot com techno-utopians had to rein in some of their beliefs in the face of the clear return of traditional economic reality.

In the late 1990s and during the 2000s decade, technorealism and techno-progressivism are stances that have risen among advocates of technological change as critical alternatives to techno-utopianism. [cite website|title=Technorealism|url=http://technorealism.org] cite paper| author = Carrico, Dale| title = Technoprogressivism Beyond Technophilia and Technophobia| date = 2005 | url = http://amormundi.blogspot.com/2005/06/technoprogressivism-beyond.html| accessdate=2007-01-28]

Principles

Bernard Gendron, a professor of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, defines the four principles of modern technological utopians as follows:cite book| author = Gendron, Bernard| title = Technology and the Human Condition| publisher = St.Martin's Press| year = 1977| id = ISBN 0-312-78890-8]

#We are presently undergoing a (postindustrial) revolution in technology;
#In the postindustrial age, technological growth will be sustained (at least);
#In the postindustrial age, technological growth will lead to the end of economic scarcity;
#The elimination of economic scarcity will lead to the elimination of every major social evil.

Criticism

Critics claim that techno-utopianism's identification of social progress with scientific progress is a form of positivism and scientism. Critics of modern libertarian techno-utopianism point out that it tends to focus on "government interference" while dismissing the positive effects of the regulation of business. They also point out that it has little to say about the environmental impact of technology and that its ideas have little relevance for much of the rest of the world that are still relatively quite poor (see global digital divide).

ee also

*Neo-luddism
*Singularitarianism
*Technocracy movement
*Technological singularity
*Transhumanism
*Utopian socialism

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Techno-utopia — ] In place of the static perfection of a utopia, some futurists envision an extropia , an evolving open society allowing individuals and voluntary groupings to form the institutions and social forms they prefer.cite paper| author = More, Max|… …   Wikipedia

  • Cyber-utopianism — as a concept was first coined by Evgeny Morozov in his book The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom, this utopianism is a belief that online communication is in itself emancipatory and that the Internet favors the oppressed rather… …   Wikipedia

  • Transhumanism — This article is about the futurist ideology and movement. For the critique of humanism, see posthumanism …   Wikipedia

  • Andrew Orlowski — Infobox Person | name = Andrew Orlowski other names = caption = Orlowski at a going away party in San Francisco. birth date = 1966 birth place = occupation = Columnist for online IT newspaper The Register . spouse = children = relations = website …   Wikipedia

  • Technology — By the mid 20th century, humans had achieved a mastery of technology sufficient to leave the atmosphere of the Earth for the first time and explore space. Technology …   Wikipedia

  • James Hughes — James J. Hughes Ph.D. is a sociologist and bioethicist teaching health policy at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut.cite web | last = Ford | first = Alyssa | authorlink = | title = Humanity: The Remix | work = Utne Magazine | publisher = |… …   Wikipedia

  • Democratic transhumanism — Part of Ideology series on Transhumanism Currents Abolitionism  …   Wikipedia

  • Martine Rothblatt — Martine Aliana Rothblatt Ph.D, MBA, J.D. (born 1954 as Martin Rothblatt) is an American lawyer, author, and entrepreneur. Rothblatt graduated from UCLA with a combined law and MBA degree in 1981, then began work in Washington, D.C., first in the… …   Wikipedia

  • Transhumain — Transhumanisme ██████████ …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Transhumaniste — Transhumanisme ██████████ …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”