Humanity lobotomy

Yes, this is definitely related.

I get accused from time to time of being a Technological Determinist. It’s sort of true: I believe that technology affects history. But I don’t believe that we are powerless in the face of our technologies. The whole point of evolution is that it is a creative response to an environmental change.

Computers don’t make us send emails, they allow us to. The fact that we send and receive so many of the damn things is not an inevitable consequence of digital technology, but the fact that we approach it uncritically and strategy-less.

So I guess the central purpose of the book (and this blog) is to underline the notion that it’s impossible to have a useful creative response to change unless you actually understand what’s going on. Ignorance killed the dinosaurs.

In the interests of adaptation to media shift and active resistance to unwanted technological change, please watch this video.

0 Responses to “Humanity lobotomy”


  1. No Comments

Leave a Reply




Now We Are Different

Media are environments. Our media environment has changed radically - and is still changing - due to digital technology.

The name we give to the process of adaptation to a changed environment is 'evolution'. It's not about becoming better - but becoming different as a creative response to external stimuli.

Now We Are Different puts forward the provocation that we are engaged in an evolutionary process that we are virtually oblivious to, but which has progressed to the point now that we are - in mind, body and culture - a new category of human being.

Links

Photo credit

The image used in the header of this blog is cropped from a photo called Inside Cyber Space by Flickr user larskflem, and is used under a Creative Commons Licence.