From Tools to Technocracy in Technopoly: the Surrender of Culture to Technology by Neil Postman

pp. 21-39

p. , pages.

24 ¦

Marx Òhand-loom gives feudal lord not which technology gave us a technocrat

21

connecting technological conditions to symbolic life                C.S. Pierce 19th c. = Railway Age

22

dangers that lie ahead are seen more clearly with a taxon of three ages:

  1. Tools                                  pre-and16th cent              hands & eyes
  2. Technocracy                     17-18th cent                        machinery & mechanism
  3. Technopoly                       20th cent                                electronic automation

22-23

spears and cooking utensils – watermills and coal and horsepower – wheeled plow

 

mechanical clock --

23

Òtools did not attach the dignity and integrity of the culture into which they were introduced.Ó

23

dictated the invention of tools and the limited uses to which they were (purposes) put.Ó

eivdence

Innocent II condemned the use of the crossbow when in 12th century it was preferred in Europe.

23

Æ

the character of a tool using culture is not defined by the quantity of available technologies (the way tools fit together to accomplish tasks).

24

Òtool-using cultures may be surprisingly sophisticated.Ó Biblical admonition against graven images – idols -- idolatry

25

Òrelationship in a given culture between tools and the belief system or ideology.Ó

25

Òa high degree of integration between its tools and its worldview (Euro-Medieval)

25

Theology formed the controlling ideology

26

Òtools have a way of intrudingÓ  stirrups—cavalry—land-holding => Feudalism

26

Transformation of the mechanical clock

27

Grinding mills – prostitution, matches and sexual habits of an African tribe.Ó

27

If the introduction of matches changed sexual acts related to privacy (going to a neighborÕs hut to get the fire starting coals) – the rifle is of enormous consequence to accepted modes of behavior.

27-28.

ÒIn a technocracy, tools play a central role in the thought –world of a culture.Ó

28

T-crcy -- roots of which lie in Medieval Europe where ÒtoolsÓ began Òattack the culture.Ó

                 Tradition, mores, myth, politics, ritual and religionÓ all fight -- succumb

28

Three great inventions: clock –typography –telescope –Galileo, Milton, etc.

29

GalileoÕs KeplerÕs or Copernicus intentions were not to disarm their culture

29-30

                 May 24, 1543 death of Copernicus.

                 Òa fool who went against Holy WritÓ Martin Luther of NC

Kepler is similar to NC

30

Kepler took the first significant step toward technocracy

31

Kepler was Lutheran—a man of sincere religious conviction in spite of excom.

32

ÒGalileo did not invent the telescope.Ó also was of extreme religious convictions

                 transformed it Òinto an instrument of scienceÓ

32

                 G. disqualified theologians from being judges of nature based on scripture alone

32-33

GalileoÕs heresy trial of 1633 – telescope, printing, and vernacular language (me) was his great undoing – he had no permission to ÒtellÓ people what tools were available and did!

33

1642 death and birth G – Newton

Newton lit the fuse of the Copernican, Keplerian & Galilean explosives; rocked Europe

                 Newton – Òhis faith in scripture being unshaken.Ó Calc 2d Coming 2060

34

                 ÒAlthough he saw the universes as mechanisticÓ

Ògive me matter and motionÓ and ÒI will construct the world.Ó I.N.

34-35

ÒAll clung to the theology of their age.Ó

Òa late sixteenth century passion for exactitudeÓ

October 23, 4004 BC as the day God Òcreated the Heavens and the Earth.Ó

                 ÒÉlaid the foundation for the emergence of technocraciesÓ

35

Francis Bacon born in 1561, Òfirst saw pure and serene the connectionÓ

ÒÉbetween science and the improvement of the human condition.Ó

35-36

Bacon was no real scientist and a poor investigator – but a brilliant publicist

Progress & Power was the name of his structure that promoted the utilitarian view of knowledge

36

Bacon

Experimental science was not but – Novum Organum was his great success.

Òobserve the force and effect and consequences of discoveriesÓ [inventions].

36

ÒPlaces technological development at the center of the readerÕs attentionÓ (Progress & Power)

37

182 aphorisms & it is in this work that Òhe denounces the famous four idolsÓ

 

                 Idols                       symbolism                          deceit comes from

                                                    Cave                                        deluded by nature (shadows & mirages)

                                                    Tribe                                       deluded by heredity (ethnic prejudice)

                                                    Marketplace                      deluded by words (testimonials, advertising)

                                                    Theatre                                  deluded by dogma -- philosophers (Aristole)

37

ÒRead Bacon todayÓ  Òbe constantly surprised at his modernity.Ó

                 Called for Òa College of InventorsÓ in The Advancement of LearningÓ

38

                

PostmanÕs concluding remarks:

 

Òimpoverished and powerless peasantsÓ – too poor to think

Ã

C. P. Snow, -- believed correctly that:

Òthe industrial revolution of the 19th century was the only hope for the poorÓ

 

Ã

                 In spite of the correctness of

Thomas Carlyle who said Òtrue Deity became mechanismÓ the vast majority

Òwould not have traded their earthly existence for life in a godly-integrated tool using culture.Ó

38-39

 

ÒThe western world had become a technocracy.Ó

39

Ω  PostmanÕs last remark:

 

                                   Say neither in their way

                                   ÒIt is deadly magic and accursed

                                   Nor ÒIt is blest,Ó only Ò It is here.Ó

 

John BrownÕs Body, Stephen Vincent Benet

 

 

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