I’m not sure which is more bizarre: The view that this unknown technology will somehow be figured out and will save us. Such is the belief, that everything should be based on this blind faith.
Or the belief that everything should return to the pre industrial revolution stage, because on some date in the not too distant future complete and utter breakdown will occur and there will be no fixes.
Of course a lot of these things are psychological. The limit of technology is us and our ability to understand, use and invent it. Who has friends and relatives that cannot program video recorders, work mobile phones and use computers now? The answer is most of us. In a recent study, it was revealed that most people did not understand ‘Geek speak’. If many people cannot grasp technology now, what is our ultimate hope?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4413155.stm
Energy is the next big question.
Is much of this blind faith in technology because of sci-fi books? I’m sure many people get their inspiration from books that describe many impracticable technologies, simply because they sound like a good idea. Flying cars might sound like the ultimate in flexibility and convenience. On the surface a ‘natural progression’, but does anyone really think such a thing is practical or desirable? Think of privacy, terrorist risk, the limits of space, the energy required…that’s just the beginning. On a base level just how is someone that can hardly operate 1970s technology like VCRs be expected to fly mach 2 to the local store?
Scientists agree, most of the big ideas have already been figured out. There are many debates over time travel and technologies like anti-gravity – The latter would defeat the known laws of physics. The former has this awful paradox, the so-called grandfather problem. Yet the debate still goes on – because these ideas are a faith, similar to religion and in the wrong hands just as dangerous.
Have the Geeks: The programmers, economists and accountants taken over?
Will people fall out of love with technology, a sort of new Luddism? There are already signs this is happening with the rejection of GM food, cloning and even nanotech. Technologies other big limit is fear – something else sci-fi writers never take into account. Comparisons with people’s early fear of magnetism are not valid. Once you threaten people’s very way of life and reduce their existence to a bundle of genes ripe for manipulation, the result is outright rejection. People still control the political, safety and societal basis in which we live and operate.
At the other end of the scale is the romanticism of the pre-industrialists. Maybe it is because of readings of the works of George Eliot and JRR Tolkien? Who knows! Although the green side of the story is often put over as a group of ‘Tree hungers’, when really to debate is about practical limits and man’s manipulation of nature.
Eventually each side will get used to the idea of *practical* techno-fixes, because that’s what comes about in the end although mistakes are made.
The debate about right and left is just irrelevant. Montiquest makes some excellent points about this in his book ‘Madmen at the helm’. Essentially the issue is about collectivism or individualism. Again the question must be, is there anyone that seriously believes markets and individuals have all the answers or a complete top-down command and control structure is better, because the people that rise the top are the allegedly the brighter ones? Again we’re back at blind faith, not reality.