Jordan Peterson often centers his argument around competency within social hierarchies.
Another important factor in creating the demoralization of self-worth and perceived competency is the undermining transhumanist effects of technology-regulated biofeedback loops, ‘dependency-injection’, ‘nudging’, privacy destruction, and cognitive degradation resulting from human beings essentially ‘implanting’ a networking device onto their person at all times (‘smart’ phones).
(see comment section) https://thedonald.win/p/GbfTtufp/creatures-of-the-zeitgeist-she-i/c/
This ‘cyborg-like’ attachment has the effect of outsourcing a part of their identity and thought processes (and thus autonomy) into a connected node of a greater invisible swarming multiagent system, while simultaneously underestimating the power that that external system will influence directly back upon the individual (see Richard Stallman’s idea that “either the users control the program or the program controls the users. If the program controls the users, and the developer controls the program, then the program is an instrument of unjust power.”).
Jordan Peterson often centers his argument around competency within social hierarchies.
Another important factor is creating the demoralization of self-worth and perceived competency is the undermining transhumanist effects of technology-regulated biofeedback loops, ‘dependency-injection’, ‘nudging’, privacy destruction, and cognitive degradation resulting from human beings essentially ‘implanting’ a networking device onto their person at all times (‘smart’ phones).
(see comment section) https://thedonald.win/p/GbfTtufp/creatures-of-the-zeitgeist-she-i/c/
This ‘cyborg-like’ attachment has the effect of outsourcing a part of their identity and thought processes (and thus autonomy) into a connected node of a greater invisible swarming multiagent system, while simultaneously underestimating the power that that external system will influence directly back upon the individual (see Richard Stallman’s idea that “either the users control the program or the program controls the users. If the program controls the users, and the developer controls the program, then the program is an instrument of unjust power.”).
Jordan Peterson often centers his argument around competency within social hierarchies.
Another important factor is creating the demoralization of self-worth and perceived competency is the undermining transhumanist effects of technology-regulated biofeedback loops, ‘dependency-injection’, ‘nudging’, privacy destruction, and cognitive degradation resulting from human beings essentially ‘implanting’ a networking device onto their person at all times (‘smart’ phones).
(*see comment section) https://thedonald.win/p/GbfTtufp/creatures-of-the-zeitgeist-she-i/c/
This ‘cyborg-like’ attachment has the effect of outsourcing a part of their identity and thought processes (and thus autonomy) into a connected node of a greater invisible swarming multiagent system, while simultaneously underestimating the power that that external system will influence directly back upon the individual (see Richard Stallman’s idea that “either the users control the program or the program controls the users. If the program controls the users, and the developer controls the program, then the program is an instrument of unjust power.”).
Jordan Peterson often centers his argument around competency within social hierarchies.
Another important factor is creating the demoralization of self-worth and perceived competency is the undermining transhumanist effects of technology-regulated biofeedback loops, ‘dependency-injection’, ‘nudging’, privacy destruction, and cognitive degradation resulting from human beings essentially ‘implanting’ a networking device onto their person at all times (‘smart’ phones).
This ‘cyborg-like’ attachment has the effect of outsourcing a part of their identity and thought processes (and thus autonomy) into a connected node of a greater invisible swarming multiagent system, while simultaneously underestimating the power that that external system will influence directly back upon the individual (see Richard Stallman’s idea that “either the users control the program or the program controls the users. If the program controls the users, and the developer controls the program, then the program is an instrument of unjust power.”).