New Class On the Technological Sublime! w/ Bryant Macfarlane (ft. Burke, Kant, Nye)

Bryant Macfarlane’s class “On the Sublime and the Beautiful: The Impact of the Technological Sublime” starts April 12, 2023. You can participate by supporting the Maurin Academy at the Worker-Scholar or Salt of the Earth levels on Patreon, or by registering on Eventbrite. Here are the links:

https://www.patreon.com/maurinacademy

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/on-the-sublime-and-the-beautiful-the-impact-of-the-technological-sublime-tickets-468686833937?aff=ebdssbonlinesearchMore New Class On the Technological Sublime! w/ Bryant Macfarlane (ft. Burke, Kant, Nye)

Distribute the Machinery (GK Chesterton 6-Audio)

In the fourth part of The Outline of Sanity, GK Chesterton deals with “Some Aspects of Machinery” in his usual ironic and witty way, making some solid points. I try to update his points and apply them to our current state of technology, noticing with Chesterton along the way that capitalist practices are not the most efficient or equitable way to go. Chesterton proffers his ideas on when to let go of technology and how the machinery we do want (or more accurately the fruits thereof) could be distributed. … More Distribute the Machinery (GK Chesterton 6-Audio)

Distribute the Machinery (GK Chesterton 6-Video)

In the fourth part of The Outline of Sanity, GK Chesterton deals with “Some Aspects of Machinery” in his usual ironic and witty way, making some solid points. I try to update his points and apply them to our current state of technology, noticing with Chesterton along the way that capitalist practices are not the most efficient or equitable way to go. Chesterton proffers his ideas on when to let go of technology and how the machinery we do want (or more accurately the fruits thereof) could be distributed. … More Distribute the Machinery (GK Chesterton 6-Video)

The Sins of the Scientists–Did They Fail Us? (Wark 6 Audio)

Thinking about Ch. 5 in McKenzie Wark’s Capital is Dead: Is This Something Worse?, I dwell on how the scientists and technologists might have been able to make the world truly better rather than more dangerous and polluted. We still look at them as our heroes and saviors. But they’ve done more harm than good, at least arguably. Who or what is responsible for their status as tools of corporate profit-seeking and national security? What light does this unorthodox view of scientists (not as our saviors but as a large part of the problem) have to say about if and how we can deal with our environmental problems. Is there any reason to think that the scientific and technical hacker class can rise to the occasion and use their latent imagination to create pathways to a better way of life? … More The Sins of the Scientists–Did They Fail Us? (Wark 6 Audio)