Spectrum of Technological Acceptance

From Open Source Ecology
Revision as of 22:48, 4 March 2026 by Marcin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{| class="wikitable sortable" ! Civilization Position !! Key Features !! Typical Attitude Toward Technology !! Organizational Pattern !! Examples |- | Collapse Acceptance | Belief that industrial civilization is unsustainable or already collapsing; focus on survival, resilience, and adaptation to decline. | Technology seen as fragile or harmful; minimal reliance preferred. | Small survival groups, subsistence networks, resilience communities. | Collapse-focused communiti...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Civilization Position Key Features Typical Attitude Toward Technology Organizational Pattern Examples
Collapse Acceptance Belief that industrial civilization is unsustainable or already collapsing; focus on survival, resilience, and adaptation to decline. Technology seen as fragile or harmful; minimal reliance preferred. Small survival groups, subsistence networks, resilience communities. Collapse-focused communities, survivalist movements, certain peak-oil and collapse theorists.
Cultural Localism Emphasis on local culture, tradition, community cohesion, and small-scale living; revival of place-based identity. Selective acceptance of technology; preference for tools that support local autonomy. Villages, small towns, local cooperatives, religious or cultural communities. Wendell Berry–style agrarianism, some Doomer Optimism circles, intentional rural communities.
Local Production Revival Rebuilding practical production capacity locally (food, crafts, small manufacturing); distributed maker culture. Appropriate technology favored; small-scale machines and open tools. Makerspaces, small workshops, local manufacturing clusters. Maker movement, Fab Labs, community manufacturing initiatives.
Open Source Industrial Civilization Open design commons for civilization infrastructure; modular machines; distributed production with global collaboration. Technology embraced but redesigned to be transparent, repairable, and accessible. Open design networks, distributed enterprises, microfactories, collaborative development ecosystems. Open Source Ecology (OSE), Global Village Construction Set, open hardware ecosystems.
Centralized Industrial Capitalism Large-scale industrial production organized through corporations and global supply chains; proprietary technology. Technology pursued for efficiency, profit, and competitive advantage. Corporations, multinational supply chains, centralized manufacturing. Traditional industrial economy, global manufacturing corporations, proprietary technology firms.
Technological Accelerationism Rapid technological advancement seen as the primary driver of progress; emphasis on automation, AI, and exponential growth. Technology strongly embraced and pushed to the limits of possibility. Venture capital ecosystems, research labs, advanced tech startups. Silicon Valley innovation culture, AI accelerationism, transhumanist movements.