Spectrum of Technological Acceptance: Difference between revisions

From Open Source Ecology
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{| 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 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.
|}


Pros and Cons included:
Pros and Cons and specific examples included:


{| class="wikitable sortable"
{| class="wikitable sortable"

Revision as of 22:54, 4 March 2026

Pros and Cons and specific examples included:

Civilization Position Key Features Attitude Toward Technology Organizational Pattern Pros Cons Examples (Specific Entities / Movements)
Collapse Acceptance Belief that industrial civilization is unsustainable or already collapsing; emphasis on resilience, survival skills, and adaptation to systemic breakdown. Technology viewed as fragile, dangerous, or unsustainable; minimal reliance preferred. Small survival groups, homesteads, resilience communities. Encourages self-reliance; reduces dependency on fragile global systems; strong survival skills. Often pessimistic; limited ability to maintain complex infrastructure; low productive capacity. Deep Adaptation movement; Dark Mountain Project; certain Peak Oil collapse communities.
Cultural Localism Emphasis on local culture, tradition, place-based identity, and small-scale social cohesion. Selective acceptance of technology; tools allowed if they support community autonomy. Villages, rural communities, intentional cultural or religious communities. Strong community bonds; cultural continuity; resilience against globalization shocks. Limited technological advancement; economic scale constraints; may resist beneficial innovation. Wendell Berry agrarian movement; Doomer Optimism network; Plough magazine communities; Amish society.
Local Production Revival Rebuilding distributed productive capacity locally; revival of crafts, small manufacturing, and repair culture. Favorable toward appropriate technology, small machines, and open tools. Makerspaces, small workshops, cooperative fabrication spaces. Encourages local entrepreneurship; improves technical literacy; short supply chains. Limited industrial scale; difficulty competing with global manufacturing efficiency. Maker Movement; Fab Lab network (MIT Center for Bits and Atoms); Repair Café movement; Open Build Service communities.
Open Source Industrial Civilization Open design commons for core infrastructure; modular machines; distributed manufacturing; collaborative development. Technology embraced but redesigned to be transparent, modular, repairable, and accessible. Global collaboration networks combined with local production enterprises. Rapid innovation through open collaboration; distributed resilience; lower entry barriers to production. Coordination challenges; funding and governance complexity; requires high collaborative literacy. Open Source Ecology (OSE); Global Village Construction Set; Open Source Hardware Association (OSHWA); RepRap open 3D printer community.
Centralized Industrial Capitalism Large-scale production organized by corporations; proprietary technologies; global supply chains. Technology pursued aggressively for productivity, scale, and profit. Multinational corporations, vertically integrated industries. Extremely efficient at scaling production; massive investment capacity; rapid industrial growth. Concentration of power; knowledge monopolies; fragile global supply chains. General Electric; Toyota Production System; Apple manufacturing ecosystem; Amazon logistics network.
Technological Accelerationism Belief that rapid technological advancement should be maximized; emphasis on AI, automation, and exponential innovation. Technology strongly embraced; limits viewed as problems to overcome. Venture capital ecosystems, frontier research labs, deep tech startups. Very high innovation velocity; pushes scientific frontiers; strong investment flows. Can neglect social stability, governance, and equity; risk of runaway technological disruption. Silicon Valley venture ecosystem; Y Combinator; OpenAI; Effective Accelerationism (e/acc) community.