 There
have been a few articles lately suggesting that perhaps technology is
running out of meaningful things to do, that we already have all the
technology we need. This reminds me a bit of the articles in the 1950s
that estimated that there was need for at most a dozen or so computers
in the world.
What good is technology anyway? I've argued
before that the purpose of science is to "discover things that are
interesting and sometimes useful". The purpose of technology is to put
those discoveries to use. It is true that in recent years, with most of
the world unable to afford even the necessities of life, a lot of new
technology has been frivolous, providing the very rich and very
powerful with cute trinkets and toys that advertise and secure their
wealth and power. It is equally true that technology can enable
atrocities that would be impossible without it. As John Gray says:
If anything about the present century is certain, it is that the power
conferred on 'humanity' by new technologies will be used to commit
atrocious crimes against it. If it becomes possible to clone human
beings, soldiers will be bred in whom normal human emotions are stunted
or absent. Genetic engineering may enable centuries-old diseases to be
eradicated. At the same time, it is likely to be the technology of
choice in future genocides. Those who ignore the destructive potential
of new technologies can only do so because they ignore history. Pogroms
are as old as Christendom; but without railways, the telegraph and
poison gas there could have been no Holocaust. There have always been
tyrannies, but without modern means of transport and communication,
Stalin and Mao could not have built their gulags. Humanity's worst
crimes were made possible only by modern technology. In an article last year, I solicited those in IT to please get out.
But my argument was not anti-technology, it was rather that IT has
become an organizational ghetto where some of the brightest people in
the world are wasting their talent designing entertainments when what
is really, urgently needed are Science-Based Enterprises addressing
some of the world's most challenging problems.
McLuhan was fond
of saying that technologies are extensions of our bodies, our
appendages and senses, allowing us to do things beyond our physical
capabilities. So technologies don't really do anything substantially different
from what humans do, they allow us to do more of what we already do,
sometimes a lot more than even a large number of humans working in
parallel or in series could do. We can, I think, break these
'capacities' of technology down into five categories:
- The capacity to process and produce more, sometimes even with less material and less expenditure of human time and energy
- The capacity to connect us more with each other
- The capacity to bring us information and sometimes even knowledge
- The capacity to bring us entertainment
- The capacity to give us more control over our own lives (i.e. more control over nature)
Examples
of technologies with these five capacities respectively are: Machines,
Agriculture and the Wheel; Language, Radio & Telephony; Paper and
the Internet; A-V Storage Devices; and Electricity, Drugs & Birth
Control Devices. Like our bodies, these technologies all require
energy, most of which now comes from burning hydrocarbons.
Those
who are dismissive of the need for additional technologies, and
disdainful of the value of technology, are most likely focused on some
of the more wasteful, non-labour-saving technologies of type 1, the
technologies of type 3 that provide us only with non-actionable,
useless, distracting information, and the pandering technologies of
type 4. Most of the problems we currently face on this planet (such as
overpopulation and overconsumption) are due in no small part to some
type 1 and type 5 technologies (such as agriculture and drugs) that, at
the time, were essential to our survival.
Our closest cousins
the bonobos have developed only the first two types of technologies:
They use simple tools to dig out food, and facial, hand and vocal
language to communicate with each other. They have all the time,
information and entertainment they need, so they have not bothered
developing technologies for these purposes, and the only additional
control over their lives they need is a way to fend off human poachers,
farmers and loggers encroaching on their dwindling habitat. They are
unlikely to develop such technologies before they become extinct.
In a recent article I referred to the Lakota doctor who described four essential human capacities:
- The capacity of belonging -- reflecting the need to be recognized
- The capacity of mastery -- reflecting the need to build personal competence
- The capacity of independence -- reflecting the need to know our own power and agency
- The capacity of generosity -- reflecting the need to know our own goodness
We
sometimes use technology to extend these capacities: We join 'virtual'
groups that we could not join without technology. We 'master' video
games (and some of us are perhaps too reliant on such technologies for
our sense of self-esteem, though that is a topic for another article).
We use the Internet to teach ourselves and to give to others.
What new technologies do we really need
today? My answer would be primarily technologies that temper the
unintended harmful effects of existing technologies, or help us devolve
power and support essential social activities:
- We need
technologies that will enable us to reduce human numbers without
suffering or discrimination: Highly-effective, idiot-proof voluntary
birth control technologies with few or no side effects; and, if and
when voluntary measures prove insufficient, safe fertility-reducing
technologies that do not affect other species, that reduce the
fecundity of every human female on the planet equally and that, like
pollution, can be disseminated without political process. I know this
latter idea terrifies many of my readers, and if it were done in any
way that involved political intervention of any kind I too would find
it unacceptable, but we must face the reality that our planet simply
cannot support billions of humans and that we need to find some
painless and non-discriminatory, non-political, non-invasive way to get
our numbers back to sustainable levels.
- We need technologies
that will enable us to produce and deliver both essential and
non-essential goods and services while consuming far fewer resources,
far less energy, and producing zero waste in the process. Specifically,
we need foods that obtain their proteins and nutrients from recycled or
inanimate matter, and clothing and building materials that are durable
and reusable, recyclable and/or biodegradable.
- We need
technologies that will enable people to find the people with whom they
can best, and most happily, live, associate, collaborate, innovate,
create, imagine, find meaning and companionship, make a living, and
establish natural enterprises and intentional communities. We all want
and need more attention and more appreciation, and technology can help
us find the audience and love that will give us these things.
- We
need technologies that will show us (not tell us) how to do things, and
let us practice doing those things that are valuable, meaningful, and
help make us more self-sufficient. We have far too much useless
information and not enough useful, self-esteem building knowledge and
capabilities.
- We need technologies that will help us be more
generous -- donating our time, skills, and free and unneeded
possessions and wealth, to those who can really get benefit from them.
- We
need technologies that will enable greater personal self-expression --
the ability to create works of art, music, film etc., using excellent,
unlimited 'virtual' resources at no cost, and then to collaborate, to
share them, discuss them, improve them, and propagate them.
- We need technologies that will enable the creation and operation of true
free markets where profound human needs can be identified and then met
by collaborative, self-forming solution teams, in a socially and
environmentally responsible way and at the lowest possible cost. And
when that cost is still
unaffordable for those in need, these technologies need to enable
communities to spontaneously coordinate and aggregate the resources
necessary to reduce or finance that cost to the point where it is affordable.
So
the answer to this article's question is that technology is potentially
a great good for our society. All it would take to realize that good is
for the bright underemployed minds to get out from under the
suffocating organizations that waste their talents and drain their
energies, and learn how to create their own businesses, substantial,
networked, adequately-resourced, innovative entrepreneurial businesses
that can give us not what the rich think they might want, but what we
all really need.
Image: Experimental fusion energy machine from Lockheed Martin's 100% government funded Sandia military research corporation. Your tax dollars at work. |