Industrial Society and Its Future (Theodore John Kaczynski)

1 year ago
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This famous manifesto, by a man who total rejects technological-industrial society, is a challenge to techno-optimists such as I am—and thus a challenge to Foundationalism. I discuss that here, but regardless, it turns out that Kaczynski was very right about many things in our future.

The written version of this review can be found here:

https://theworthyhouse.com/2021/10/22/industrial-society-and-its-future-theodore-john-kaczynski/

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This and all Worthy House narrations are offered with accurate closed captions (not auto-generated).

"What role should technology—the complex of machines and computers that undergirds our world—play in our future? This is a crucial question, and among thinking people today there exists a distinct split. Some, such as James Poulos in his soon-to-be-released 'Human, Forever,' call for fully accepting that technology exists and is not going away, while refusing to surrender our humanity. Others, such as Paul Kingsnorth, entirely reject what he calls the 'Machine,' and intimate that our technology-dictated future is an anti-human grotesquerie, followed by inevitable total collapse. Theodore Kaczynski falls squarely into this latter category, and this, his famous Manifesto, outlines what should be done—goals he notably took to heart." . . . .

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