this post was submitted on 17 Jan 2024
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I actually think that this is part of a larger phenomenon. It's something that Adorno and Horkheimer identified all the way in the 1940s (in "Dialect of Enlightenment," especially in the chapter "The Culture Industry") that is now greatly accelerating because of computers. The result is what I call The Tyranny of Data. The essay isn't that long and most of the length comes from examples, but I'll try to do a super quick tl;dr of my argument. Here's some Adorno and Horkheimer quotes that I cite:
and
Basically, modern society culturally values arguments presented in numbers, especially when expressed in units of currency. I argue that now that we have computers, aka a machine capable of turning everything into numbers very easily, we can easily collapse everything into units of currency. This is a homogenizing and conservative (as in change averse) force (quoting myself):
Because it's so easy to turn things into numbers now, and because we culturally value data-based arguments as superior to other kinds, like moral or ideological, our collective ability to think in other ways is atrophying. As a result, we struggle to take the necessarily irrational risks that we need to take to make real progress, be it social progress, artistic progress, or whatever.
I go through a bunch of examples, like Joe Biden, who I call "a statistically generated median in corporeal form. He's literally a franchise reboot, the single most derivative but fiscally sound cultural product." I specifically talk about digital media too:
Fuck this is a great comment. Thank you.
Thanks! Plenty more like it