Silicon Valley’s competing philosophies on tech ethics with The New Yorker’s Andrew Marantz - 2 minutes read
Silicon Valley’s competing philosophies on tech ethics with The New Yorker’s Andrew Marantz – TechCrunch
“If Silicon Valley is going to keep telling itself the story that the only uses of their technology will be the most optimistic, the most hopeful, the most salubrious, the most prosocial,” New Yorker staff writer Andrew Marantz told me in Part 1 of this recent conversation for Extra Crunch, “you can try to rebut that logically, or you can just disprove it by showing a very glaring counterexample. If somebody is going around and saying, ‘all swans are white,’ you can argue against that logically, or you can just show them a black swan.”
Marantz, a brilliant and eclectic writer, has in recent years trained his attention on the tech world and its contribution to social unrest in the United States and beyond. He has just published a new book, “Antisocial: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation“, which, along with recent New Yorker essays expanding on the book’s themes, is sure to provoke debate.
In part 2 of our conversation below, we discuss the Alt-Right and White Nationalists in tech and politics; Silicon Valley spirituality today; competing philosophies of tech ethics; and more.
Greg Epstein: If you look at the alt-right later that year and in 2017, I myself spent a lot of time poring over these figures like Richard Spencer and Gavin McInnes, and their videos, and their writings, and whatever thinking, ‘These guys are really taking over our society right now.
Source: TechCrunch
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Keywords:
Silicon Valley • Philosophy • Technology • Ethics • The New Yorker • TechCrunch • Silicon Valley • Technology • The New Yorker • Black Swan (film) • Rebellion • United States • Anti-social behaviour • Internet • Techno • Utopia • The New Yorker • Alt-right • White nationalism • Politics • Silicon Valley • Spirituality • Philosophy • Ethics • Greg Epstein • Alt-right • Richard B. Spencer • Gavin McInnes •
“If Silicon Valley is going to keep telling itself the story that the only uses of their technology will be the most optimistic, the most hopeful, the most salubrious, the most prosocial,” New Yorker staff writer Andrew Marantz told me in Part 1 of this recent conversation for Extra Crunch, “you can try to rebut that logically, or you can just disprove it by showing a very glaring counterexample. If somebody is going around and saying, ‘all swans are white,’ you can argue against that logically, or you can just show them a black swan.”
Marantz, a brilliant and eclectic writer, has in recent years trained his attention on the tech world and its contribution to social unrest in the United States and beyond. He has just published a new book, “Antisocial: Online Extremists, Techno-Utopians, and the Hijacking of the American Conversation“, which, along with recent New Yorker essays expanding on the book’s themes, is sure to provoke debate.
In part 2 of our conversation below, we discuss the Alt-Right and White Nationalists in tech and politics; Silicon Valley spirituality today; competing philosophies of tech ethics; and more.
Greg Epstein: If you look at the alt-right later that year and in 2017, I myself spent a lot of time poring over these figures like Richard Spencer and Gavin McInnes, and their videos, and their writings, and whatever thinking, ‘These guys are really taking over our society right now.
Source: TechCrunch
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Silicon Valley • Philosophy • Technology • Ethics • The New Yorker • TechCrunch • Silicon Valley • Technology • The New Yorker • Black Swan (film) • Rebellion • United States • Anti-social behaviour • Internet • Techno • Utopia • The New Yorker • Alt-right • White nationalism • Politics • Silicon Valley • Spirituality • Philosophy • Ethics • Greg Epstein • Alt-right • Richard B. Spencer • Gavin McInnes •