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Technological utopianism

Technological utopianism (often called techno-utopianism or technoutopianism) is any ideology based on the premise that advances in science and technology could and should bring about a utopia, or at least help to fulfill one or another utopian ideal.

A techno-utopia is therefore an ideal society, in which laws, government, and social conditions are solely operating for the benefit and well-being of all its citizens, set in the near- or far-future, as advanced science and technology will allow these ideal living standards to exist; for example, post-scarcity, transformations in human nature, the avoidance or prevention of suffering and even the end of death.

Technological utopianism is often connected with other discourses presenting technologies as agents of social and cultural change, such as technological determinism or media imaginaries.[1]

A tech-utopia does not disregard any problems that technology may cause,[2] but strongly believes that technology allows mankind to make social, economic, political, and cultural advancements.[3] Overall, Technological Utopianism views technology's impacts as extremely positive.

In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, several ideologies and movements, such as the cyberdelic counterculture, the Californian Ideology, cyber-utopianism, transhumanism,[4] and singularitarianism, have emerged promoting a form of techno-utopia as a reachable goal. Cultural critic Imre Szeman argues technological utopianism is an irrational social narrative because there is no evidence to support it. He concludes that it shows the extent to which modern societies place faith in narratives of progress and technology overcoming things, despite all evidence to the contrary.[5]

History

From the 19th to mid-20th centuries

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.[6]

19th-century liberals, socialists, and republicans often embraced techno-utopianism. Radicals like Joseph Priestley pursued scientific investigation while advocating democracy. Robert Owen, Charles Fourier and Henri de Saint-Simon in the early 19th century inspired communalists[who?] with their visions of a future scientific and technological evolution of humanity using reason. 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.[6]

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.[6]

Some technological utopians promoted 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.[7]

H.G. Wells in works such as The Shape of Things to Come promoted technological utopianism.

The horrors of the 20th century – namely Fascist and Communist dictatorships and the world wars – caused many to abandon optimism. The Holocaust, as Theodor Adorno underlined, seemed to shatter the ideal of Condorcet and other thinkers of the Enlightenment, which commonly equated scientific progress with social progress.[8]

From late 20th and early 21st centuries

The Goliath of totalitarianism will be brought down by the David of the microchip.

— Ronald Reagan, The Guardian, 14 June 1989

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, especially based around Silicon Valley. The Californian Ideology was a set of beliefs combining bohemian and anti-authoritarian attitudes from the counterculture of the 1960s with techno-utopianism and support for libertarian economic policies. 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.[9][10][11]

This form of techno-utopianism reflected a belief that technological change revolutionizes 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".[9][10][11]

Similar forms of "digital utopianism" has often entered in the political messages of party and social movements that point to the Web or more broadly to new media as harbingers of political and social change.[12] Its adherents claim it transcended conventional "right/left" distinctions in politics by rendering politics obsolete. However, techno-utopianism disproportionately attracted adherents from the libertarian right end of the political spectrum. Therefore, techno-utopians often have a hostility toward 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.[9][10][11]

During the late 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.[10][11]

In the late 1990s and especially during the first decade of the 21st century, technorealism and techno-progressivism are stances that have risen among advocates of technological change as critical alternatives to techno-utopianism.[13][non-primary source needed][14][self-published source?] However, technological utopianism persists in the 21st century as a result of new technological developments and their impact on society. For example, several technical journalists and social commentators, such as Mark Pesce, have interpreted the WikiLeaks phenomenon and the United States diplomatic cables leak in early December 2010 as a precursor to, or an incentive for, the creation of a techno-utopian transparent society.[15] Cyber-utopianism, first coined by Evgeny Morozov, is another manifestation of this, in particular in relation to the Internet and social networking.

Principles

Bernard Gendron, a professor of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, defines the four principles of modern technological utopians in the late 20th and early 21st centuries as follows:[16]

  1. We are presently undergoing a (post-industrial) revolution in technology;
  2. In the post-industrial age, technological growth will be sustained (at least);
  3. In the post-industrial age, technological growth will lead to the end of economic scarcity;
  4. The elimination of economic scarcity will lead to the elimination of every major social evil.

Rushkoff presents us with multiple claims that surround the basic principles of Technological Utopianism:[17]

  1. Technology reflects and encourages the best aspects of human nature, fostering “communication, collaboration, sharing, helpfulness, and community.”[18]
  2. Technology improves our interpersonal communication, relationships, and communities. Early Internet users shared their knowledge of the Internet with others around them.
  3. Technology democratizes society. The expansion of access to knowledge and skills led to the connection of people and information. The broadening of freedom of expression created “the online world...in which we are allowed to voice our own opinions.”[19] The reduction of the inequalities of power and wealth meant that everyone has an equal status on the internet and is allowed to do as much as the next person.
  4. Technology inevitably progresses. The interactivity that came from the inventions of the TV remote control, video game joystick, computer mouse and computer keyboard allowed for much more progress.
  5. Unforeseen impacts of technology are positive. As more people discovered the Internet, they took advantage of being linked to millions of people, and turned the Internet into a social revolution. The government released it to the public, and its “social side effect… [became] its main feature.”[18]
  6. Technology increases efficiency and consumer choice. The creation of the TV remote, video game joystick, and computer mouse liberated these technologies and allowed users to manipulate and control them, giving them many more choices.
  7. New technology can solve the problems created by old technology. Social networks and blogs were created out of the collapse of dot.com bubble businesses’ attempts to run pyramid schemes on users.

Criticisms

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[20] 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).[9][10][11]

In his 2010 study System Failure: Oil, Futurity, and the Anticipation of Disaster, Canada Research Chairholder in cultural studies Imre Szeman argues that technological utopianism is one of the social narratives that prevent people from acting on the knowledge they have concerning the effects of oil on the environment.[5]

Other critics of a techno-utopia include the worry of the human element. Critics suggest that a techno-utopia may lessen human contact, leading to a distant society.

Another concern is the amount of reliance society may place on their technologies in these techno-utopia settings.[20] For example, In a controversial 2011 article "Techno-Utopians are Mugged by Reality", L. Gordon Crovitz of The Wall Street Journal explored the concept of the violation of free speech by shutting down social media to stop violence. As a result of a wave of British cities being looted, former British Prime Minister David Cameron argued that the government should have the ability to shut down social media during crime sprees so that the situation could be contained. A poll was conducted to see if Twitter users would prefer to let the service be closed temporarily or keep it open so they could chat about the famous television show The X-Factor. The end report showed that every respondent opted for The X-Factor discussion. Clovitz contends that the negative social effect of technological utopia is that society is so addicted to technology that humanity simply cannot be parted from it even for the greater good. While many techno-utopians would like to believe that digital technology is for the greater good, he says it can also be used negatively to bring harm to the public.[21] These two criticisms are sometimes referred to as a technological anti-utopian view or a techno-dystopia.

According to Ronald Adler and Russell Proctor, mediated communication such as phone calls, instant messaging and text messaging are steps towards a utopian world in which one can easily contact another regardless of time or location. However, mediated communication removes many aspects that are helpful in transferring messages. As it stands as of 2022, most text, email, and instant messages offer fewer nonverbal cues about the speaker's feelings than do face-to-face encounters.[22] This makes it so that mediated communication can easily be misconstrued and the intended message is not properly conveyed. With the absence of tone, body language, and environmental context, the chance of a misunderstanding is much higher, rendering the communication ineffective. In fact, mediated technology can be seen from a dystopian view because it can be detrimental to effective interpersonal communication. These criticisms would only apply to messages that are prone to misinterpretation as not every text based communication requires contextual cues. The limitations of lacking tone and body language in text based communication are likely to be mitigated by video and augmented reality versions of digital communication technologies.[23][dubious ][dead link]

In 2019 philosopher Nick Bostrom introduced the notion of a vulnerable world, "one in which there is some level of technological development at which civilization almost certainly gets devastated by default", citing the risks of a pandemic caused by a DIY biohacker, or an arms race triggered by the development of novel armaments.[24] He writes that "Technology policy should not unquestioningly assume that all technological progress is beneficial, or that complete scientific openness is always best, or that the world has the capacity to manage any potential downside of a technology after it is invented."[24]

See also

References

  1. ^ Natale, Simone; Balbi, Gabriele (2014-04-03). "Media and the Imaginary in History". Media History. 20 (2): 203–218. doi:10.1080/13688804.2014.898904. ISSN 1368-8804. S2CID 55924672.
  2. ^ Segal, Howard P. Imagining Tomorrow: History, Technology and The American Future, "The Technological Utopians", Cambridge: MIT Press, 1986.
  3. ^ Rushkoff, Douglas. EME: Explorations in Media Ecology, “Renaissance Now! Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative”. Hampton Press, 2002, p. 41-57.
  4. ^ Hughes, James (2003). . Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-02-07. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ a b "People Generally Do Not Act on Information on the Effects of Oil on the Environment". ScienceDaily. May 28, 2010. Retrieved 17 Nov 2010.
  6. ^ a b c Hughes, James (2004). Citizen Cyborg: Why Democratic Societies Must Respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future. Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-4198-9.
  7. ^ Haller, Mark Eugenics: Hereditarian attitudes in American thought (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1963)
  8. ^ Adorno, Theodor W. (29 March 1983). Prisms. MIT Press. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-262-51025-7. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
  9. ^ a b c d Borsook, Paulina (1996). . Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-02-06. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  10. ^ a b c d e Borsook, Paulina (2000). Cyberselfish: A Critical Romp Through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High-Tech. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-891620-78-2.
  11. ^ a b c d e Barbrook, Richard; Cameron, Andy (2000). "The California Ideology". Retrieved 2007-02-06. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  12. ^ Natale, Simone; Ballatore, Andrea (2014-01-01). "The web will kill them all: new media, digital utopia, and political struggle in the Italian 5-Star Movement" (PDF). Media, Culture & Society. 36 (1): 105–121. doi:10.1177/0163443713511902. ISSN 0163-4437. S2CID 73517559.
  13. ^ "TECHNOREALISM". technorealism.org.
  14. ^ Carrico, Dale (2005). "Technoprogressivism Beyond Technophilia and Technophobia". Retrieved 2007-01-28.
  15. ^ Mark Pesce (December 13, 2010). "The state, the press and a hyperdemocracy". Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  16. ^ Gendron, Bernard (1977). Technology and the Human Condition. St.Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-78890-2.
  17. ^ Rushkoff, Douglas (2002). "Renaissance Now! Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative". Explorations in Media Ecology. 1 (1): 21–32. doi:10.1386/eme.1.1.41_1.
  18. ^ a b Rushkoff, Douglas (2002). "Renaissance Now! Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative". Explorations in Media Ecology. 1 (1): 26. doi:10.1386/eme.1.1.41_1.
  19. ^ Rushkoff, Douglas (2002). "Renaissance Now! Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative". Explorations in Media Ecology. 1 (1): 24. doi:10.1386/eme.1.1.41_1.
  20. ^ a b Huesemann, Michael H., and Joyce A. Huesemann (2011). Technofix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us or the Environment, New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, British Columbia, Canada, ISBN 0865717044, 464 pp.
  21. ^ Crovitz, L. Gordon (August 15, 2011). "Techno-Utopians Are Mugged by Reality". Wall Street Journal.
  22. ^ Adler & Proctor II, Ronald B. & Russell F. (2011). Looking Out Looking In. Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cenage Learning. p. 203. ISBN 978-0-495-79621-3.
  23. ^ "tcworld.info - technical communication". www.tcworld.info.
  24. ^ a b Bostrom, Nick (2019-09-06). "The Vulnerable World Hypothesis". Global Policy. 10 (4): 455–476. doi:10.1111/1758-5899.12718. ISSN 1758-5880. S2CID 203169705.

Further reading

  • Dickel, Sascha, and Schrape, Jan-Felix (2017): The Logic of Digital Utopianism. Nano Ethics
  • Huesemann, Michael H., and Joyce A. Huesemann (2011). Technofix: Why Technology Won’t Save Us or the Environment, New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, British Columbia, Canada, ISBN 0865717044, 464 pp.
  • Segal, Howard P. Technological Utopianism in American Culture. Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1985. (ISBN 9780226744360)
  • Segal, Howard P. Technological Utopianism in American Culture: Twentieth Anniversary Edition. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2005. (ISBN 0-8156-3061-1) (Syracuse UP catalog page)
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technological, utopianism, confused, with, techno, progressivism, techno, populism, often, called, techno, utopianism, technoutopianism, ideology, based, premise, that, advances, science, technology, could, should, bring, about, utopia, least, help, fulfill, a. Not to be confused with Techno progressivism or Techno populism Technological utopianism often called techno utopianism or technoutopianism is any ideology based on the premise that advances in science and technology could and should bring about a utopia or at least help to fulfill one or another utopian ideal A techno utopia is therefore an ideal society in which laws government and social conditions are solely operating for the benefit and well being of all its citizens set in the near or far future as advanced science and technology will allow these ideal living standards to exist for example post scarcity transformations in human nature the avoidance or prevention of suffering and even the end of death Technological utopianism is often connected with other discourses presenting technologies as agents of social and cultural change such as technological determinism or media imaginaries 1 A tech utopia does not disregard any problems that technology may cause 2 but strongly believes that technology allows mankind to make social economic political and cultural advancements 3 Overall Technological Utopianism views technology s impacts as extremely positive In the late 20th and early 21st centuries several ideologies and movements such as the cyberdelic counterculture the Californian Ideology cyber utopianism transhumanism 4 and singularitarianism have emerged promoting a form of techno utopia as a reachable goal Cultural critic Imre Szeman argues technological utopianism is an irrational social narrative because there is no evidence to support it He concludes that it shows the extent to which modern societies place faith in narratives of progress and technology overcoming things despite all evidence to the contrary 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 From the 19th to mid 20th centuries 1 2 From late 20th and early 21st centuries 2 Principles 3 Criticisms 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingHistory EditFrom the 19th to mid 20th centuries Edit 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 6 19th century liberals socialists and republicans often embraced techno utopianism Radicals like Joseph Priestley pursued scientific investigation while advocating democracy Robert Owen Charles Fourier and Henri de Saint Simon in the early 19th century inspired communalists who with their visions of a future scientific and technological evolution of humanity using reason 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 6 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 6 Some technological utopians promoted 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 7 H G Wells in works such as The Shape of Things to Come promoted technological utopianism The horrors of the 20th century namely Fascist and Communist dictatorships and the world wars caused many to abandon optimism The Holocaust as Theodor Adorno underlined seemed to shatter the ideal of Condorcet and other thinkers of the Enlightenment which commonly equated scientific progress with social progress 8 From late 20th and early 21st centuries Edit The Goliath of totalitarianism will be brought down by the David of the microchip Ronald Reagan The Guardian 14 June 1989 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 especially based around Silicon Valley The Californian Ideology was a set of beliefs combining bohemian and anti authoritarian attitudes from the counterculture of the 1960s with techno utopianism and support for libertarian economic policies 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 9 10 11 This form of techno utopianism reflected a belief that technological change revolutionizes 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 9 10 11 Similar forms of digital utopianism has often entered in the political messages of party and social movements that point to the Web or more broadly to new media as harbingers of political and social change 12 Its adherents claim it transcended conventional right left distinctions in politics by rendering politics obsolete However techno utopianism disproportionately attracted adherents from the libertarian right end of the political spectrum Therefore techno utopians often have a hostility toward 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 9 10 11 During the late 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 10 11 In the late 1990s and especially during the first decade of the 21st century technorealism and techno progressivism are stances that have risen among advocates of technological change as critical alternatives to techno utopianism 13 non primary source needed 14 self published source However technological utopianism persists in the 21st century as a result of new technological developments and their impact on society For example several technical journalists and social commentators such as Mark Pesce have interpreted the WikiLeaks phenomenon and the United States diplomatic cables leak in early December 2010 as a precursor to or an incentive for the creation of a techno utopian transparent society 15 Cyber utopianism first coined by Evgeny Morozov is another manifestation of this in particular in relation to the Internet and social networking Principles EditBernard Gendron a professor of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee defines the four principles of modern technological utopians in the late 20th and early 21st centuries as follows 16 We are presently undergoing a post industrial revolution in technology In the post industrial age technological growth will be sustained at least In the post industrial 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 Rushkoff presents us with multiple claims that surround the basic principles of Technological Utopianism 17 Technology reflects and encourages the best aspects of human nature fostering communication collaboration sharing helpfulness and community 18 Technology improves our interpersonal communication relationships and communities Early Internet users shared their knowledge of the Internet with others around them Technology democratizes society The expansion of access to knowledge and skills led to the connection of people and information The broadening of freedom of expression created the online world in which we are allowed to voice our own opinions 19 The reduction of the inequalities of power and wealth meant that everyone has an equal status on the internet and is allowed to do as much as the next person Technology inevitably progresses The interactivity that came from the inventions of the TV remote control video game joystick computer mouse and computer keyboard allowed for much more progress Unforeseen impacts of technology are positive As more people discovered the Internet they took advantage of being linked to millions of people and turned the Internet into a social revolution The government released it to the public and its social side effect became its main feature 18 Technology increases efficiency and consumer choice The creation of the TV remote video game joystick and computer mouse liberated these technologies and allowed users to manipulate and control them giving them many more choices New technology can solve the problems created by old technology Social networks and blogs were created out of the collapse of dot com bubble businesses attempts to run pyramid schemes on users Criticisms EditCritics 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 20 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 9 10 11 In his 2010 study System Failure Oil Futurity and the Anticipation of Disaster Canada Research Chairholder in cultural studies Imre Szeman argues that technological utopianism is one of the social narratives that prevent people from acting on the knowledge they have concerning the effects of oil on the environment 5 Other critics of a techno utopia include the worry of the human element Critics suggest that a techno utopia may lessen human contact leading to a distant society Another concern is the amount of reliance society may place on their technologies in these techno utopia settings 20 For example In a controversial 2011 article Techno Utopians are Mugged by Reality L Gordon Crovitz of The Wall Street Journal explored the concept of the violation of free speech by shutting down social media to stop violence As a result of a wave of British cities being looted former British Prime Minister David Cameron argued that the government should have the ability to shut down social media during crime sprees so that the situation could be contained A poll was conducted to see if Twitter users would prefer to let the service be closed temporarily or keep it open so they could chat about the famous television show The X Factor The end report showed that every respondent opted for The X Factor discussion Clovitz contends that the negative social effect of technological utopia is that society is so addicted to technology that humanity simply cannot be parted from it even for the greater good While many techno utopians would like to believe that digital technology is for the greater good he says it can also be used negatively to bring harm to the public 21 These two criticisms are sometimes referred to as a technological anti utopian view or a techno dystopia According to Ronald Adler and Russell Proctor mediated communication such as phone calls instant messaging and text messaging are steps towards a utopian world in which one can easily contact another regardless of time or location However mediated communication removes many aspects that are helpful in transferring messages As it stands as of 2022 update most text email and instant messages offer fewer nonverbal cues about the speaker s feelings than do face to face encounters 22 This makes it so that mediated communication can easily be misconstrued and the intended message is not properly conveyed With the absence of tone body language and environmental context the chance of a misunderstanding is much higher rendering the communication ineffective In fact mediated technology can be seen from a dystopian view because it can be detrimental to effective interpersonal communication These criticisms would only apply to messages that are prone to misinterpretation as not every text based communication requires contextual cues The limitations of lacking tone and body language in text based communication are likely to be mitigated by video and augmented reality versions of digital communication technologies 23 dubious discuss dead link In 2019 philosopher Nick Bostrom introduced the notion of a vulnerable world one in which there is some level of technological development at which civilization almost certainly gets devastated by default citing the risks of a pandemic caused by a DIY biohacker or an arms race triggered by the development of novel armaments 24 He writes that Technology policy should not unquestioningly assume that all technological progress is beneficial or that complete scientific openness is always best or that the world has the capacity to manage any potential downside of a technology after it is invented 24 See also EditAccelerationism Creative disruption Crypto anarchism Eschatology Extropianism Historicism Immanentize the eschaton Luddite Millennialism Nanosocialism Neo Luddism Post scarcity Singularitarianism Techno progressivism Technocentrism Technogaianism Technocracy Technological dystopia Technological singularity Technological supremacy Technophilia Technorealism Towards a New Socialism Transhumanism Yellow socialism Jacque FrescoReferences Edit Natale Simone Balbi Gabriele 2014 04 03 Media and the Imaginary in History Media History 20 2 203 218 doi 10 1080 13688804 2014 898904 ISSN 1368 8804 S2CID 55924672 Segal Howard P Imagining Tomorrow History Technology and The American Future The Technological Utopians Cambridge MIT Press 1986 Rushkoff Douglas EME Explorations in Media Ecology Renaissance Now Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative Hampton Press 2002 p 41 57 Hughes James 2003 Rediscovering Utopia Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 02 07 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b People Generally Do Not Act on Information on the Effects of Oil on the Environment ScienceDaily May 28 2010 Retrieved 17 Nov 2010 a b c Hughes James 2004 Citizen Cyborg Why Democratic Societies Must Respond to the Redesigned Human of the Future Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 4198 9 Haller Mark Eugenics Hereditarian attitudes in American thought New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press 1963 Adorno Theodor W 29 March 1983 Prisms MIT Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 262 51025 7 Retrieved 31 March 2011 a b c d Borsook Paulina 1996 Cyberselfishness Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2007 02 06 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c d e Borsook Paulina 2000 Cyberselfish A Critical Romp Through the Terribly Libertarian Culture of High Tech PublicAffairs ISBN 978 1 891620 78 2 a b c d e Barbrook Richard Cameron Andy 2000 The California Ideology Retrieved 2007 02 06 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Natale Simone Ballatore Andrea 2014 01 01 The web will kill them all new media digital utopia and political struggle in the Italian 5 Star Movement PDF Media Culture amp Society 36 1 105 121 doi 10 1177 0163443713511902 ISSN 0163 4437 S2CID 73517559 TECHNOREALISM technorealism org Carrico Dale 2005 Technoprogressivism Beyond Technophilia and Technophobia Retrieved 2007 01 28 Mark Pesce December 13 2010 The state the press and a hyperdemocracy Australian Broadcasting Corporation Gendron Bernard 1977 Technology and the Human Condition St Martin s Press ISBN 978 0 312 78890 2 Rushkoff Douglas 2002 Renaissance Now Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative Explorations in Media Ecology 1 1 21 32 doi 10 1386 eme 1 1 41 1 a b Rushkoff Douglas 2002 Renaissance Now Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative Explorations in Media Ecology 1 1 26 doi 10 1386 eme 1 1 41 1 Rushkoff Douglas 2002 Renaissance Now Media Ecology and the New Global Narrative Explorations in Media Ecology 1 1 24 doi 10 1386 eme 1 1 41 1 a b Huesemann Michael H and Joyce A Huesemann 2011 Technofix Why Technology Won t Save Us or the Environment New Society Publishers Gabriola Island British Columbia Canada ISBN 0865717044 464 pp Crovitz L Gordon August 15 2011 Techno Utopians Are Mugged by Reality Wall Street Journal Adler amp Proctor II Ronald B amp Russell F 2011 Looking Out Looking In Boston MA Wadsworth Cenage Learning p 203 ISBN 978 0 495 79621 3 tcworld info technical communication www tcworld info a b Bostrom Nick 2019 09 06 The Vulnerable World Hypothesis Global Policy 10 4 455 476 doi 10 1111 1758 5899 12718 ISSN 1758 5880 S2CID 203169705 Further reading EditDickel Sascha and Schrape Jan Felix 2017 The Logic of Digital Utopianism Nano Ethics Huesemann Michael H and Joyce A Huesemann 2011 Technofix Why Technology Won t Save Us or the Environment New Society Publishers Gabriola Island British Columbia Canada ISBN 0865717044 464 pp Segal Howard P Technological Utopianism in American Culture Chicago University of Chicago Press 1985 ISBN 9780226744360 Segal Howard P Technological Utopianism in American Culture Twentieth Anniversary Edition Syracuse NY Syracuse University Press 2005 ISBN 0 8156 3061 1 Syracuse UP catalog page Listen to this article 17 minutes source source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 3 November 2018 2018 11 03 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Technological utopianism amp oldid 1132989231, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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