"THE TECHNO REBELS
The magnitude of such an advance - its importance for the future
of evolution itself - makes it critically necessary that we begin to
guide it. To adopt a hands-off, damn-the-torpedoes approach could
spell doom for ourselves and our children. For the power, scale, and
speed of the change is like nothing before in history, and our minds
are still fresh with news of the near-catastrophe at Three Mile
Island, the tragic DC-10 crashes, the hard-to-plug massive oil spill
off the Mexican coast, and a hundred other technological horrors.
Faced with such disasters, can we permit the development and
combination of tomorrow's even more powerful technologies to be
controlled by the same shortsighted and selfish criteria used during
the Second Wave era?
The basic question asked of new technologies during the past
three hundred years, in both capitalist and socialist nations, have
been simple: do they contribute to economic gain or military clout?
These twin criteria are clearly no longer adequate. New technologies
will have to pass far stiffer tests - ecological and social as well
as economic and strategic.
When we look closely at what a report to the U.S. National
Science Foundation has called "technology and social shock"
- a catalog of technological calamaties in recent years - we discover
that most of them are associated with Second Wave, not Third Wave
technologies. The reason is obvious: Third Wave technologies have
not yet been deployed on a grand scale. Many are still in their
infancy. Nevertheless, we can already glimpse the dangers of
electronic smog, information pollution, combat in outer space,
genetic leakage, climatic intervention, and what might be called
"ecological warfare" - the deliberate induction of
earthquakes, for example, by triggering vibrations from a distance.
Beyond this lies a host of other perils associated with the advance
to a new technological base.
Under these circumstances it is no surprise that recent years
have seen massive, almost indiscriminate, public resistance to new
technology. The early period of the Second Wave also saw attempts to
block new technology. As early as 1663, London workers tore down the
new mechanical sawmills that threatened their livelihood. In 1676
ribbon workers smashed their machines. In 1710 rioters protested the
newly introduced stocking frames. Later, John Kay, inventor of the
flying shuttle used in textile mills, saw his home wrecked by an
infuriated mob and ultimately fled England altogether. The most
publicized example came in 1811 when machine wreckers calling
themselves Luddites destroyed their textile machines in Nottingham.
Yet this early antagonism to the machine was sporadic and
spontaneous. As one historian notes, many of the cases "were
not so much the result of hostility to the machine itself as a method
of coercing an obnoxious employer." Unlettered workingmen and
women, poor, hungry, and desperate, saw in the machine a threat to
their individual survival.
Some fanatics among them, given the chance, might well employ
Luddite tactics. It doesn't take much to imagine the bombing of a
computer installation or a genetic laboratory or a partially
constructed nuclear reactor. One can even more easily picture some
particularly hideous technological disaster triggering a witch-hunt
for the white-coated scientists who "caused it all." Some
demagogic politician of the future may well rise to fame by
investigating the "Cambridge Ten" or the "Oak Ridge
Seven."
However, most of today's techno-rebels are neither bomb-throwers
nor Luddites. THey include thousands of people who are themselves
scientifically trained - nuclear engineers, biochemists, physicians,
public health officials, and geneticists as well as millions of
ordinary citizens. Again, unlike the Luddites, they are well
organized and articulate. They publish their own technical journals
and propaganda. They file lawsuits and draft legislation, as well as
picket, march, and demonstrate.
This movement, often attacked as reactionary, is actually a
vital part of the emerging Third Wave. For its members are the
leading edge of the future in a three-way political and economic
battle that parallels, in the field of technology, the struggle over
energy that we have described earlier.
Here too, we see Second Wave forces on one side, First Wave
reversionists on the other, and Third Wave forces struggling against
both. Here the Second Wave forces are those who favor the old,
mindless approach to technology: "If it works, produce it. If
it sells, produce it. If it makes us strong, build it." Imbued
with obsolete, indust-real notions of progress, many of these
adherents of the Second Wave past have vested interests in the
irresponsible application of technology. They shrug off the dangers.
On the other side, we find once more a small, vocal fringe or
romantic extremists hostile to all but the most primitive First Wave
technologies, who seem to favor a return to medieval crafts and hand
labor. Mostly middle-class, speaking from the vantage point of a
full belly, their resistance to technological advance is as blindly
indiscriminate as the support of technology by Second Wave people.
They fantasize about a return to a world that most of us - and most
of them - would find abhorrent.
Ranged against both these extremes is an increasing number of
people in every country who form the core of the techno-rebellion.
They are, without knowing it, agents of the Third Wave. They begin
not with technology but with hard questions about what kind of future
society we want. They recognize that we now have so many
technological opportunities we can no longer fund, develop, and apply
them all. They argue, therefore, the need to select more carefully
among them and to choose those technologies that serve long-range
social and ecological goals. Rather than letting technology shape
our goals, they wish to assert social control over the larger
directions of the technological thrust.
The techno-rebels have not as yet formulated a clear,
comprehensive program. But if we extrapolate from their numerous
manifestos, petitions, statements, and studies, we can identify
several streams of thought that add up to a new way of looking at
technology - a positive policy for managaing the transition to a
Third Wave future.
The techno-rebels start from the premise that the earth's
biospehere is fragile, and that the more powerful our new
technologies become, the higher the risk of doing irreversible damage
to the planet. Thus they demand that all new technologies be
prescreened for possible adverse effects, that dangerous ones be
redesigned or actually blocked - in short, that tomorrow's
technologies be subjected to tighter ecological constraints than
those of the Second Wave era.
The techno-rebels argue that either we control technology or it
controls us - and that "we" can no longer simply be the
usual tiny elite or scientists, engineers, politicians, and
businessmen. Whatever the merits of the antinuclear campaigns that
have erupted in West Germany, France, Sweden, Japan, and the United
States, the battle agaist Concorde, or the rising demands for
regulation of genetic research, all reflect a widespread passionate
demand for the democratization of technological decision-making.
The techno-rebels contend that technology need not be big,
costly, or complex in order to be "sophisticated." The
heavy-handed technologies of the Second Wave seemed more efficient
than they actually were because corporations and socialist
enterprises externalized - transferred to society as a whole - the
enormous costs of cleaning up pollution, of caring for the
unemployed, or dealing with work-alienation. When these are seen as
costs of production, many seemingly efficient machines turn out to be
quite the opposite.
Thus the techno-rebels favor the design of a whole range of
"appropriate technologies" intended to provide humane jobs,
to avoid pollution, to spare the environment, and to produce for
personal or local use rather than for national and global markets
alone. The techno-rebellion has sparked thousands of experiments all
over the world, with just such small-scale technologies, in fields
ranging from fish farming and food processing to energy production,
waste recycling, cheap construction, and simple transport.
While many of these experiments are naive and hark back to a
mythical past, others are more practical. Some reach out for the
latest materials and scientific tools and combine them in new ways
with old techniques. Jean Gimpel, for example, the historian of
medieval technology, has built elegant models of simple tools that
might prove useful in non-industrial countries. Some of these
combine new materials with old methods. A surge of interest in the
airship provides another example - use of a by-passed technology that
can now be made with advanced fabrics or materials that give it much
greater payload capacity. Airships are ecologically sounds and could
be used for slow but cheap and safe transport in regions where there
are no roads - Brazil, perhaps, or Nigeria. Experiments with
appropriate or alternative technologies, especially in energy ield,
suggest that some simple, small-scale technologies can be as
"sophisticated" as complex, large-scale technologies when t
he full range of side effects is taken into account and when the
machine is properly matched to the task.
The techno-rebels are also disturbed by the radical imbalance of
science and technology on the face of the planet, with only 3 percent
of the world's scientists in countries containing 75 percent of the
global population. They favor devoting more technological attention
to the needs of the world's poor, and a more equitable sharing of
resources of outer space and the oceans. They recognize that not
only are the oceans and skies part of the common heritage of the
race, but that advanced technology itself could not exist wihtout the
historic contributions of many peoples, from the Indians and Arabs to
the ancient Chinese.
Finally, they argue that in moving into the Third Wave we must
advance, step by step, from the resource-wasteful,
pollution-producing system of production used during the Second Wave
era toward a more "metabolic" system that eliminates waste
and pollution by making sure that the output and byproduct of each
industry becomes an input for the next. The goal is a system under
which no output is produced that is not an input for another
production process downstream. Such a system is not only more
efficient in a production sense, it minimizes, or indeed eliminates,
damage to the biosphere.
Taken as a whole, this techno-rebel program provides the basis
for humanizing the technological thrust.
The techno-rebels are, whether they recognize it or not, agents
of the Third Wave. They will not vanish but multiply in the years
ahead. For they are as much a part of the advance to a new stage of
civilization as our missions to Venus, our amazing computers, our
biological discoveries, or our explorations of the oceanic depths.
Out of their conflict with the First Wave fantasizers and the
Second Wave advocates of technology uber alles will come sensible
technologies matched to the new, sustainable energy system toward
which we are beginning to reach. Plugging the new technologies into
this new energy base will raise to a wholly new level our entire
civilization. At its heart we will find a fusion of sophisticated,
science-based "high stream" industries, operating withing
much tightened ecological and social controls, with equally
sophisticated, "low-stream" industries that operate on a
smaller, more human scale, both based on principles radically
different from those which governed the Second Wave techno-sphere.
Together, those two layers of industry will form tomorrow's
"commanding heights."
But this is only a detail of a much vaster picture. For at the
same time that we are transforming the techno-sphere we are also
revolutionizing the info-sphere."
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