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Amy Letter's avatar

One of the most enduringly influential techno-utopianists is probably Walt Disney. Disney World's attendance numbers rival any World's Fair, and particularly EPCOT (Disney's "experimental prototype city of tomorrow") operates as a kind of year-round eternal world's fair, with a gallery of nation-pavilions, and exhibits and rides centered on science and technology... and of course, its center piece, the "giant golf ball" that houses Spaceship Earth is a "ride" that takes one through a particular version of the history of technology and implies a very positive trajectory for the future. But even setting EPCOT aside, the whole Disney enterprise seems to be to define the bounds of normalcy, establish entertainment-based "shared meaning" for the masses, and promise a future of increased ease, acquisition and amusement -- Vegas for the rest of us. Your essay makes me think that I should set my criticisms of Disney aside and appreciate the service to society -- by giving us *anything* to collectively believe in, we end up in a less chaotic state?

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Tash's avatar

Thank you for this fascinating essay. It’s given me a lot of food for thought.

At times I was having difficulty with what you meant by the religion of technology – this is probably partly due to my not having read those books you mention. I think I have a very particular set of ideas I associate with the concept of ‘religion’ which I couldn’t fully locate in the concept of ‘the religion of technology.’ But I suppose when considered from the angle of ‘faith’ the religiosity becomes apparent – in the examples you mentioned, the world fairs and so on, there was faith, almost blind faith in fact, that technology was a (nearly mystical) uplifting force that would ‘deliver us from evil’ towards a better (fairer, purer, utopian) future.

And so what we’re experiencing now (and repeatedly through history whenever societies experience a shock) is a loss of faith (or what you’re calling a process of secularisation) – if I’m understanding correctly?

To use the analogy of global finance – people have had ‘faith’ in the markets and economic rationalism; they’ve had faith that the financial system will beautifully and magically self-correct as needed – and then there is a shock like the GFC which results in a loss of faith. It brings the whole thing out of the realm of the gods and down into into the realm of the human. There is an abrupt recognition that the financial system is not some perfect preternatural mathematical system but an unwieldy behemoth made by flawed humans and as such must be repaired by flawed humans and effortfully intervened with and redirected according to our values and beliefs.

It's the same with technology, I think. We have the rise of the digital economy, Big Tech, cryptocurrency, AI, etc, all of which can breed a sort of complacent faith in positive progress. And then there are shocks. The rise of surveillance capitalism, the SBF FTX scandal and so on. And those shocks result in a loss of faith. And the loss of faith, I think, results in a recognition that technology does not automatically fall ‘upwards’ towards the good and the just but must be, as above, effortfully intervened with and redirected according to our values and beliefs.

Forgive my waffling! I am probably misunderstanding. But very interesting. Thank you again.

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