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A note on “What Tech Calls Thinking” by Adrian Daub

4 min and 16 sec to read, 1065 words

Adrian Daub’s book on Silicon Valley thinking is intended as a criticism of the ideas that underpin the Silicon Valley-ideology, if there is one. This in itself is a worthwhile project, and teasing out the intellectual underpinnings of different spheres in society is in itself a good form of critical philosophy. It is fair to say that Daub is writing in the tradition of Jacques Ellul, Neil Postman and, more lately, Evgeny Morozov.

The book is divided into different sections dealing with different themes identified by Daub as the core themes in Silicon Valley thinking and in these Daub discusses various subjects, such as the genius cult and the disregard for content that he feels that he can read out of Silicon Valley culture, or, to be precise out of corporate Silicon Valley culture.

The book runs into a problem here. Daub is aware of, and writes extensively about, the counter cultural roots of some of the technology culture that he describes, but he assumes that it is now absorbed into corprorate structures and subverted into meaningless TED talks and empty PR-speak – but that is not entirely true. He, himself, is a professor at Stanford and there is a broad counter cultural community still left in the Bay Area. Look at the recent political shifts in downtown SF or at organizations such as the Foundation for the Long Now — these are signs that the counter culture is alive and well, so what Daub seems to limit himself to is the the way that “Corporate Silicon Valley” speaks.

By missing this distinction, Daub paints his target with too broad a brush and doesn’t engage with the fundamental ideas that still organize a lot of the discourse around technology in the region. That is a pity, because he is clearly very well-read and argues forcefully — so wasting that energy on a strawman version loosely put together seems unnecessary.

It is also part of the current discourse of technology criticism, itself a genre that has become lazy in the face of absolutely no resistance whatsoever.

If we were to critique Daub’s book with the same low-resolution analysis we would end up saying things like this:

We could go on, but let’s not. I think the reality is that this book is an important read. A book that could have been more, and should have been more, than it ended up being. I think Daub should have written that book. In that book we would have had to face harder questions, like questions around how progress and technological innovation really should be coupled in a democratic society or questions around what the Internet should evolve into if we could build it further into the future. It could be a book about the history of ideas clashing here – Ellul, Postman, Winner and on the other side the likes of Herman Kahn, John McCarthy (with his extreme optimism) and Herbert Simon. Or why not a real discussion about the ideas of Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil as key missing elements in the intellectual endeavor undertaken in the Bay Area.

Because this is the thing: a majority of tech leaders are interested in the intellectual debate about their industry and, in my albeit limited experience, committed to understanding how to best solve the fundamental challenges we are facing. That is quite the audience to be addressing – compare that with the leaderships and elites of past decades!

That is, I think, why it is so disappointing to see tech criticism succumb to the formulas and gestures of generic capitalist critiques.

But Daub’s book can be read for the nuggets of constructive criticism it contains as well, and that alone makes it worth your time (some resist this idea of constructive criticism – I remember Morozov telling me in a chat at Google that it was not his job to come with alternatives, that Adorno had it right when he said that the criticism should not engage in alternatives but tear down the edifice and then stand back – I can respect that, but think it, personally, a waste of time).

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