Felix Stalder on Sat, 16 Sep 2017 10:43:18 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> "Too bad your great ideas will never work." |
On 2017-09-15 07:30, Morlock Elloi wrote: > While one (usually a Marxist) can argue that nothing ever changes, I > think that the exponential rise of the complexity of everyday > technology creates a qualitatively new environment, where smaller and > smaller number of specialists really understand (and therefore have > power over) everyday "objects". I think this is the key point here. We are in the midst of an explosion of complexity that overwhelms our (Western) social, political and, I would argue, cognitive and psychological structures. The ensuing breakdown is most clearly visible on two fronts: The climate crisis that shows us with overwhelming force that the way we have structured our relationship with the biosphere (industrial capitalism based on compound growth) is no longer functional. This, in and of itself, will spell the end of this model and makes Keynesian approaches to crisis (stimulate demand through public spending) unworkable for anything but the short-term, at the price of exacerbating the problem in the medium-term. The second front where the breakdown is visible is the crisis of democracy as it has developed following the French revolution: liberal, representative, parliamentarian, national. The institution based on this model are no longer capable of managing society in a way that produces the necessary degree of coherence and cohesion. This is not just a question of the welfare state, but the absense of a more general sense that there is something like a collective destiny to look forward too. This opened the doors for reactionary and xenophobic forces of Trump, Brexit, AfD, etc that articulate a collective project (even if it's self-destructive). What we are left with are escalating crises to which those with money seek individual solutions (should I sell my beach property before prices collapse? How to staff my prepper retreat?) while the rest see themselves trapped in a struggle over diminishing resources (made worse, of course, by a realignment of geopolitics starting, from demographics upwards). In the mean time, those who are able to manage some aspects of the new complexity are gaining power quickly, and as usual, economic power and political power are meshed in one another, to a degree that there is lots of speculation about Marc Zukerberg running for president in 2020. Also here on nettime. As a result, it seem like where are heading into a "stratification of the society based on particular cognitive abilities", as ME has put it, which would be a kind authoritarian meritocracy. While this might be an apt description for the most dynamic segments of society, we are also entering a situation in which inherited wealth plays a role unlike anything it did over the last 100 years. And getting an inheritance does not require particular cognitive skills. But this situation is far from immutable or a predetermined outcome of technological development. > If the left is to prevail, it must find such currency, integrate > those into its body politic, and dismantle the cognitive > stratification. The currency is not necessarily the cash. It can be > the ideology that is attractive not just to janitors, minorities and > the unemployed. Unbelievable number of very clever and capable > techies wander through various groups (Ethereum, Bitcoin, yoga, > Blockstack, etc.) looking, in vain, for the meaning of life - the > 6-digit salaries are not enough. My hunch is that the two crises can only be addressed simultaneously and within the same framework and that advanced tech will play a key role if we are not taking about a collapse of society and reverting towards the small scales. From a white middle-class perspective, the commons might offer some ways to construct such a framework. We see a lot of activity around this, on all different levels. This is why I think these struggles of the reorganization of basic infrastructures are so interesting. They are not about a simple pendulum swing from the market to the state, as the state and it's institutions are part of the problem. But they are about inventing new public institutions to embody a different pattern how to relate to the biosphere and to each other. And technology, which created much of this complexity, can also be used to render it legible and thus make it politically addressable, if we use it to reinvent and extend democracy. Of course, the white middle-class perspective will not suffice, but rather than seeing new Platonic universals, we need ways of thinking and doing that can be translated into different experience, change their language, but remain some coherence. Felix -- ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| http://felix.openflows.com |OPEN PGP: https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?search=0x0C9FF2AC
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