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@july
We've forgotten how to carry forward our respect for the power of what technology actually does. It's a tool, and a tool has always been, what? A weapon made for a human hand. Bronze Age: Hand holds axe, splits skull Industrial Age: Hand pulls trigger → bullet splits skull Information Age: Hand clicks mouse → algorithm → drone → missile → skull If you think about it -- I mean really think about it -- all the technological 'tools' that reside in the British Museum, or The National Museum of Ireland -- are, you guessed it, weapons. We've never really stopped making weapons - we've just gotten better at hiding the violence behind intermediary systems. As technology has developed, we've just increased more and more intermediaries that abstracted away the violence further and further. We used to look the deer in the eye, and give our respect to the gods to the deer, feel the weight of taking its life. We choose violence, but we also must respect the consequences of our actions should we choose to do so. Look at the fucking deer in the eye. Look. And respect it. Then do it.
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@feeei
Yes. This gets at the heart of productivity vs ritual convo without the academic speak. There’s another similar split I encountered called thing-making vs life-making, where the former industrial/capital tendency is a “number up” spreadsheet affair but the latter is a qualitative metric that cares whether the process, outcome and legacy of the action co-produces intangible benefits such as “making life meaningful, beautiful, and worth living”
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