Monday, May 16, 2011

Has the Magic of Technology Ebbed?

Marketing guru Seth Godin thinks so. He writes, (bold emphasis mine)

Arthur C. Clarke told us, “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

Head back to the 1800s with a Taser or a Prius or an iPad and the townsfolk will no doubt either burn you at the stake or worship you.

So many doors have been opened by technology in the last twenty years that the word “sufficiently” is being stretched. If it happens on a screen (Google automatically guessing what I want next, a social network knowing who my friends are before I tell them) we just assume it’s technology at work. Hard to even imagine magic here.

I remember eagerly opening my copy of Wired every month (fifteen years ago). On every page there was something new and sparkly and yes, magical.

No doubt that there will be magic again one day... magic of biotech, say, or quantum string theory, whatever that is. But one reason for our ennui as technology hounds is that we’re missing the feeling that was delivered to us daily for a decade or more. It’s not that there’s no new technology to come (there is, certainly). It’s that many of us can already imagine it.

The current generation, whom have been key beneficiaries of the transformative technological innovations, may seem to be less appreciative of the contributions of technology to our current welfare. That’s because technology has been giving us constantly more for less.

Thus, the diminishing returns on expectations from the impact of technological progress: the perceived loss of magical touch.

But I think it goes more than that.

Perhaps most people may be a lot less familiar with the antecedent of today’s state of technology. Or, people may have forgotten the roots of today’s progress: our ancestors compounded efforts or actions.

As the great Ludwig von Mises once wrote, (bold highlights mine)

Nobody denies that technological progress is a gradual process, a chain of successive steps performed by long lines of men each of whom adds something to the accomplishments of his predecessors. The history of every technological contrivance, when completely told, leads back to the most primitive inventions made by cave dwellers in the earliest ages of mankind. To choose any later starting point is an arbitrary restriction of the whole tale. One may begin a history of wireless telegraphy with Maxwell and Hertz, but one may as well go back to the first experiments with electricity or to any previous technological feats that had necessarily to precede the construction of a radio network. All this does not in the least affect the truth that each step forward was made by an individual and not by some mythical impersonal agency.

When people forget about history; the contribution of a multitude of individuals in today’s progress through the years, then they became less appreciative of the blessings that has been happening.

Many people today seem to think that the progress from technology is just a given. It is not.

For as long as people are allowed to trade, trade will then function as the main driver of technological progress.

Writers like me will try to keep that magic alive.

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