The cult of information

the folklore of computers and the true art of thinking

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Theodore Roszak: The cult of information (1986, Pantheon)

238 pages

English language

Published Oct. 19, 1986 by Pantheon.

ISBN:
978-0-394-54622-3
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3 editions

marvelous critique from 1986

At the dawn of the Information Age, a prescient rant against conflating information with knowledge, of things that promise everything and so mean nothing, of the political and empirical projects of pushing computers and rational procedural models of thinking into all aspects of education and consumption. Leads to an epistemic argument about the primacy of creative & moral ideas and the role of forgetting in human thinking, but stays grounded as a book of political philosophy opposed to industrial exploitation and social control. Hardly feels dated: though the outlined consumerist and surveillance logic has ground on to deliver us into our late-computer-filled society, so much of what was heralded just around the corner 40 years ago - flourishing of democracy, artificial intelligence, educational wonders - and called out here for the emperor's finery is still relevantly promised to us in exchange for treating trivia as if it were wisdom.

Subjects

  • Computers and civilization