Apocryphal Technologies [electronic resource].
continent. 2019
Open access content
These past few years, the fairly ancient concept we call “truth” has been bandied about the place quite a bit. Our social trust barometers, for a long time calibrated with “politician” on one side and “scientist” at the other, have been thrust into stormy weather. People like Donald Trump and Richard Dawkins have buried the needle into extremes of rhetorical squall, political uproar and techno-scientific demand, operationalising belief and fact in excessive ways — destructive of both self and others. The rest of us, muddling through this other ancient concept we call “modern life”, try and poise ourselves somewhere in between because, in practice, things are never entirely subject to whim, spurious input or personal opinion, but neither are they always impermeably empirical, tested and proven. Sometimes, we check our references. Living in conditions of technological saturation requires that we negotiate, constantly, the encroachment and/or acceptance of new social trusts that are enabled, subverted and possibly even perverted by technologies. Jacques Ellul famously argued that modern technologies convey “the feeling of the sacred,” as they are “always joined to mystery and magic,” and he diagnosed this quasi-religious faith as an expression of the human “power instinct,” as technologies effectively transform average citizens into “heroes, geniuses, or archangels.” Anthony Giddens similarly argued that our trust in technology tends to increase the more the complexity of technological systems surpasses our understanding, as “faith is sustained in the workings of knowledge of which the lay person is largely ignorant.” However, he also emphasized that our inability to understand these systems can lead to resistance, as “ignorance always provides grounds for scepticism or at least caution.” In other words, users tend to trust technologies that grant them a sense of empowerment, and this trust often resembles a kind of religious conviction when users are dependent on tech
https://www.librarystack.org/apocryphal-technologies/?ref=unknown
Technology and the arts
Art criticism
Art and literature
Critical Theory
Design
Military-industrial complex
Remote-sensing images
User interfaces (Computer systems)
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Jamie Allen
Anthony Enns
Matt Bernico
Jill Galvan
Douglas Kahn
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John Modern
Steven Connor
Tamara Kneese
Zachary Horton
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Everest Pipkin
Laurence Rickels
Nicolas Nova
Peter Moosgaard
Graydon Wetzler
Dan Mellamphy
Félicien Goguey
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