douglas kellner on Mon, 22 Mar 1999 06:25:20 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Transmissions of Intelligence |
I enjoyed Ken Wark's review of some recent books and append as attachment my own review of the David Noble book that has a somewhat different critical take on it. Cheers, Doug Kellner At 06:57 PM 3/20/99 +1100, you wrote: >Transmissions of Intelligence >Fom the book to the internet, the way we communicate >shapes the kind of society in which we live, argues McKenzie >Wark. Review of David Noble, The Religion of Technology. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 274 pages; $26.00 hardcover By Douglas Kellner In his classic texts America by Design and Forces of Production, David Noble traces the interconnections between science, technology, and capitalism. He instructs us in these books to look for the economic roots of science and technology and the ways that capitalist economic forces shaped the actual development and forms of science, technology, and industry in a historically specific context. This neo-Marxian optic taught us to look at the economic roots and socio-political functions of science and technology and to develop critical perspectives on these forces, interpreting them as instruments of power and profit, as part of systems of social domination. Noble's recent The Religion of Technology sets out to explode the myth that there is a necessary conflict between religion and technology, that advocates of science and technology are necessarily opponents of religion, and that the two ways of processing the world are at odds and antithetical. Rather, Noble attempts to demonstrate that major figures in the development of modern science and technology were deeply religious and that the search for scientific truth and technological invention were driven by religious motivations of discovering God's order in the universe and of perfecting human life, restoring humans to their Adamic perfection, preparing humans for the Second Coming and creating a higher and better species worthy to enter the Kingdom of God. Noble's argument is that technology is the dominant religion of the present era, that the religion of technology has deep historical roots, and that we should break with this religion in order to cultivate more critical and skeptical attitudes toward technology so as to criticize its costs and benefits, its contributions and limitations. He sets out to demonstrate that the present enchantment with things technological -- the very measure of modern enlightenment -- is rooted in religious myths and ancient imagings. Although today's technologists, in their sober pursuit of utility, power, and profit, seem to set society's standard for rationality, they are driven also by distant dreams, spiritual yearnings for supernatural redemption. However dazzling and daunting their display of worldly wisdom, their true inspiration lies elsewhere, in an enduring, other-worldly quest for transcendence and salvation (3). Noble's analysis purports to explain that the current infatuation with technology and revival of religious fundamentalism are not contradictory phenomena because religion and technology are not at odds as some popular conceptions would have it, but share certain historical roots and aspirations. Noble claims that for over a thousand years promotion of technology and the useful arts and scientific explanation were "inspired by and grounded upon religious expectation" (4). For Noble at bottom, the technological enterprise is a "religious endeavor" and "modern technology and religion have evolved together" so that "as a result, the technological enterprise has been and remains suffused with religious belief" (5). On Noble's account, for the first Christian millennium, technology and transcendence were antithetical and only God's grace could restore fallen man to the divinity and perfection before Adam's fall. But beginning in the early Middle Ages "technology came to be identified more closely with both lost perfection and the possibility of renewed perfection, and the advance of the arts took on new significance, not only as evidence of grace, but as a means of preparation for, and a sure sign of, imminent salvation" (13). Benedictine monks served as advocates of the practical arts as instruments to produce human perfection, making man more godlike, and introduced technologies such as wind and watermills and agricultural technologies. Other theologians, such as Erigena, also valorized the mechanical arts as instruments of human improvement, while the Franciscans and diverse monastic orders likewise praised the industrial arts as a means of restoring humanity's earlier perfection. These theologians promoted exploration of the new worlds, believing that the entire world needed to be converted to Christianity to prepare for the Second Coming of Christ -- a view held, according to Noble, by both the Franciscans and Columbus. In the following chapters, Noble demonstrates the deep religious convictions of major architects of modern science and champions and creators of modern technology, including Kepler, Bacon, Descartes, Newton, Priestly, and Clerk-Maxwell. The order they found in the universe was taken as evidence of the existence of God and modern technology appeared to represent evidence that humans were gaining more power over nature, ready to ascend to godlike perfection during the coming millennium when God would return to earth and restore humanity to its original perfection. Arguing that the scientific and technological revolutions associated with modernity have deep and important roots in the Medieval period, Noble documents how religious preoccupations pervade the history of modern science and technology up to and through today's most advanced technological frontiers, including the space program, the computer revolution, the quest for artificial intelligence, and programs of genetic engineering. In the first half of The Religion of Technology, Noble journeys through European and early American history and argues that an apocalyptic millenarianism infused not only major architects of modern science, but explorers like Columbus, champions of technological progress like Ben Franklin and the Freemasons, Comte and the positivists, inventors like Samuel Morse and Thomas Edison, and socialists like Edward Bellamy. In these cases, Noble claims, scientific and technological progress were interpreted as useful instruments preparing humans for the millennium, for the Second Coming, when God would restore humans to a paradisiacal condition. In the second part of his book, Noble demonstrates that major figures associated with the creation of atomic weapons, space exploration, the invention of computers and seekers after artificial intelligence, and genetic engineers also possessed Christian millennial views, often of an apocalyptic sort, associating technological progress with salvation and preparation for the Kingdom of God. For Noble, the religion of technology tends to be elitist and authoritarian, dividing the world into those capable of technological perfection and worthy of the exercise of technological power and those not capable who must be ruled and controlled by the elite. Noble indicates that part of this division is a gender-division, that technological perfection and domination is primarily a male project, that women are historically excluded from the technological elite. Noble suggests that there are religious roots to the patriarchal dimension of technological domination, that harking back to he Biblical story of Adam and Eve, it was Adam who was God's perfect creature, out of whom Eve was created, and thus it is a reversion to the perfect Adam, the restoration of Adamic powers at the Creation before the Fall, that technological creation aims. Lost in religious fantasies of perfection, redemption, and restoration of humanity to the powers it possessed before the Fall, those in the thrall of the technological project, Noble claims, disregard human needs and limitations because the very project of technological perfection is not to meet human needs but to perfect humanity, to create a higher form of human being, that can only occur through transcendence of human limitation and frailty and thus by definition are only open to the chosen and superior (male) few: these technologies have not met basic human needs because, at bottom, they have never really been about meeting them. They have been aimed rather at the loftier goal of transcending such mortal concerns altogether, in such an ideological context, inspired more by prophets than by profits, the needs neither of mortals nor of the earth they inhabit are of any enduring consequences. And it is here that the religion of technology can rightly be considered a menace (206-207) Noble calls for a break with the "thousand-year convergence of technology and transcendence," for a down-to-earth critical skepticism that assesses costs and benefits of technology and the extent to which technologies do or do not meet human needs. Thus, he calls for a critical optic on technology, a break with the religion of technology, and a decoupling of technology from its religious foundations. It is easy to agree with this position, to reject the more fantastic versions of the technological imaginary, and to separate technology from religion. However, Noble's narrative provides the impression that all major scientists, inventors, architects of the nuclear age, avatars of the space program, creators and promoters of artificial intelligence, and biogenetic manipulators of DNA who wish to create artificial life are all deeply imbued with religious motivations, seeking to become like God, to restore humanity to its pristine Adamic innocence, freeing humanity from the limitations of sinful nature and a finite and decaying body. But this story leaves out all of the scientists, inventors, astronauts, and promoters of new technologies who are atheists, driven by Enlightenment-inspired scientism and critical materialism. In Noble's narrative, by contrast, not only is there no conflict between technology and religion, but technological and religious motifs together create a religion of technology and imbue scientific and technological progress with religious motifs. Obviously, this project forces Noble to leave out countervailing evidence and examples that would suggest a conflict within modern culture between those who see science and religion as compatible and those who see them as antithetical. Moreover, there are also indications that Noble distorts the views of the individuals who he presents as advocates of technology as religion, exaggerating their religious motivations and taking quotes from their writings out of context to provide the (mis)impression that they are investing technology with cryptoreligious significance. For instance, Noble writes: The religious rapture of cyberspace was perhaps best conveyed by Michael Benedikt, President of Mental Tech, Inc., a software-design company in Austin, Texas. Editor of an influential anthology on cyberspace, Benedikt argued that cyberspace is the electronic equivalent of the imagined spiritual realms of religion. The "almost irrational enthusiasm" for virtual reality, he observed, fulfills the need "to dwell empowered or enlightened on other, mythic, planes." Religions are fueled by the "resentment we feel for our bodies' cloddishness, limitations, and final treachery, their mortality. Reality is death. If only we could, we would wander the earth and never leave home; we would enjoy triumphs without risks and eat of the Tree and not be punished, consort daily with angels, enter heaven now and not die." Cyberspace, wrote Benedikt, is the dimension where "floats the image of a Heavenly City, the New Jerusalem of the Book of Revelations. Like a bejeweled, weightless palace it comes out of heaven itself... a place where we might re-enter God's graces...laid out like a beautiful equation" (159-160). Knowing Benedikt personally for many years, I can attest that he is a professor of architecture at the University of Texas who has a much more nuanced and complex take on cyberspace than Noble's quotes indicate. The quotes, put in context, first cite what Benedikt notes as the quasi-religious enthusiasms that many invest in cyberspace (i.e. see Michael Benedikt, editor, Cyberspace. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991, p. 6 where he prefaces the passage that Noble quotes with the qualification "some might say"). The latter passages that Noble cites denotes a hypothetical situation in which the key phrase is "if only we could," but Benedikt knows that we cannot (i.e. escape death). The key phrase in the last passage which Noble quotes is "floats an image," expressing the transcendent aims that some devotees attribute to cyberspace. Indeed, Benedikt is developing distinctions between architecture as reality, as creating abodes wherein we live and die, and the quest for transcendence, for building a Heavenly City, a more perfect and lasting domicile and is suggesting that cyberspace for some is of this nature. He is not, as Noble implies, himself celebrating a "religious rapture" of cyberspace, but contextualizing it, in one of its many threads, within a religious framework in addition to several other frameworks that Benedikt deploys to interpret cyberspace (history of technology, architecture, mathematics); further Benedikt himself is author of a 1987 book, referenced in the cyberspace study that Noble cites, For an Architecture of Reality (New York: Lumen Books). One could find much more critical and down to earth quotes as well in Benedikt's extremely detailed and insightful analysis of the many dimensions of cyberspace and ways that various individuals and groups interpret and live it, but Noble chooses to cite, out of context, solely quotes that attribute a religious view to cyberspace. One wonders, therefore, to what extent Noble is exaggerating the religion of technology, in particular the extent to which the technological imaginary is bound up with religious transcendence and fantasies. While from the Middle Ages to the present there was a tendency to interpret technology in relationship to religion, which was after all the dominant frame of reference for many individuals and groups and continues to be in some quarters, many, many other advocates of science and technology explicitly opposed religion and interpreted science and technology in a solely secular and often anti-religious fashion. Given that religion was and continues to be in certain quarters a hegemonic form of culture, it is not surprising that many advocates of science and technology chose to present their views in ways that conformed with dominant religious views, or that they fuse their objects of ultimate concern. Furthermore, I suspect that Noble's coupling of technology with certain specific technological-religious fantasies -- e.g. creating perfection, producing a godlike spiritual transcendence, providing the preconditions for a new millennium and the salvation and redemption of the human-species, and thus the production of a more godlike being -- that this highly extravagant presentation of the technological imaginary provides itself a technophobic myth of the technological imaginary as anti-human, dangerously impractical, and out of touch with human needs and our common humanity. That is, Noble's citations of many who code technology and science in religious terms creates the impression that key figures in the history of modern science and technology are dangerously out of touch with reality, that they live in curious fantasy worlds, that they should not be trusted. Moreover, while it seems likely that at least some religious fantasies inspired many of the technological priesthood, as Noble has documented, it seems a mistake to privilege religious motivations over more mundane concerns such as profit or power as the driving force of technological development and progress. No doubt many of the technological priesthood and elite share some of the religious yearnings and fantasies that Noble documents, but more worldly imperatives toward profit, success, and progress should also not be discounted. It is a bizarre tale that Noble weaves, documenting the extent to which major promoters of science, technology, and technological progress have been driven by religious fantasies and dogma, coding their activity in Christian milleniarian discourse, but this is not the whole story of the genesis and effects of modern science and technology -- as Noble himself has made clear in his earlier books. While the resonance of technological fantasies to the public at large may in part have religious roots -- though Noble does not undertaken such broader sociological analysis himself --, it is the magic of the technologies themselves and their fetishization in the consumer society that accounts in part for the religious awe ascribed to technology, especially high tech, among the general public. Noble is surely right that there is a religious and fetishistic dimension to our fascination with technology, that this religious dimension often blocks critical thinking and assessment, and that some of the religious yearnings driving scientists and technologists are dangerous and fanciful, but his account of the specific Christian-milleniarian dimension exaggerates the religious roots and motivations of the technological project and imaginary at the expense of economic, political, and more broadly cultural roots. Hence, the imaginary of contemporary science and technology is as much Enlightenment as Christian, as bound-up with more secular worldviews and values as religious ones. In particular, while it is somewhat startling to discover the extent of orthodox Christian millennium fantasies informing the world views, or at least official discourse, of major elites of the technological priesthood, including astronauts and officials of the space program, biologists and promoters of genetic engineering, computer geniuses and avatars of artificial intelligence, and ideologues of the scientific and technological priesthood, another study, dedicated, for example, to showing how the technological elite is dangerously and crassly secular could easily marshall the same array of data and quotes to show that technological progress, as Weber, the Frankfurt School, Ellul, Heidegger, and others have argued, is in the thrall of instrumental rationality, capitalist profit imperatives, and strictly secular values. Noble's analysis, by contrast, provides the impression that major avatars of scientific and technological progress are all driven by religious motives, that technology is fundamentally in the service of religious fantasy, that the dangers of technology out of control result from the excesses of fanciful religious dreams of perfection and divinity, with technology making men like gods and providing godlike powers over man's dominion. Such drives may indeed be part of what constitutes the technological spectacle, but surely part of the religion of technology is the extent to which it is tied up with much more mundane and worldly drives for profit and power. Indeed, part of the problems with the technological imagination is the extent to which to a large extent it is divorced from all moral, spiritual, and religious values. For many, technology has become an end in itself, a demonic force attempting to create an instrumental and secular world in its own image, rather than being a religious force attempting to divinely transfigure the human and transcend worldly and earthly being. Noble neglects the entire literature of technology as instrumental rationality, as an autonomous force that repels other cultural forces, that is part of a highly secular and worldly modernity that displaces tradition and traditional values with its own instrumental and technological devices and ends. While Noble's account indicates the one-sidedness and limitations of this conventional view -- dominant in Weberian and some neo-Marxian currents such as the Frankfurt School --, suggesting that instrumentality and spirituality, immanence and transcendence, are not necessarily antithetical, that they can work hand in hand, and that a traditional, albeit peculiar, religious optic is often part and parcel of the technological imaginary. Such qualifications of the instrumental view and demonstration of the extent of the religious dimension is certainly useful and it is Noble's merit to put in question the dominant view of science and technology purely as forces of a secular modernity, opposed to religious values and theologies. Yet exaggerating the religious dimension covers over the extent to which a secular instrumental and often profit-driven configuration of science, technology, and industry provides a juggernaut of technological progress and domination that is a major force in constituting the contemporary world. In particular, it is surprising that Noble, previously a major figure in neo-Marxian science and technology studies, downplays the imbrication of technology with capitalism and the extent to which our current configuration exhibits what I call technocapitalism, a new stage of capitalism in which technological development and new technologies provides a key role in the constitution of an emergent form of global capitalism. Nonetheless, Noble's study provides important aspects of a broader and more comprehensive view of technology and the need to devote critical energies to critique the religion of technology, to demystify the quasi-religious dimension and claims on behalf of new technologies, to skeptically dissect the varying legitimating ideologies for contemporary technology. There is no question but that technology is one of the major forces of the present era, that it is invested with quasi-religious powers, that individuals project religious fantasies into technology, and that it is often uncritically worshipped and fetishized rather than critically analyzed and appraised. Just as Noble had previously taught us to look for the capitalist imperatives and economic roots of science, industry, and technology, he now instructs us into searching for and critically appraising its religious roots and dimensions. Perhaps in future studies he will demonstrate how these dimensions are interconnected and so provide a critical theory of technology that contributes multiperspectival analysis and critique of this demiurge of the contemporary world with its priesthood, avatars, and elites -- and its instrumental rationality and connection with political power and economic profit. Note 1. For instance, Benedikt writes that cyberspace can be seen either as a "new stage in the etherealization of the world we live in, the real world of people and things and places, or, conversely, as a new stage in concretization of the world we dream and think in, the world of abstractions, memory, and knowledge" (1991: 124). Benedikt then indicates that both positions are "useful," but one-sided and himself proposes more nuanced positions, whereas Noble ascribes to Benedikt a problematic one-sided position that equates cyberspace with religious transcendence and fantasies Douglas Kellner Graduate School of Education Moore Hall Mailbox 951521 UCLA Los Angeles, CA 90095 kellner@ucla.edu Fax: 310 206-6293 Phone: 310 825-0977 --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl