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The Convivial Society
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Life Cannot Be Delegated
The Convivial Society: Vol. 5, No. 15
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L. M. Sacasas's avatar
[10]L. M. Sacasas
Dec 29, 2024
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Welcome to the last installment of the Convivial Society for 2024. Come
January, this iteration of the newsletter will celebrate its fifth year. Its
been a joy to write, and a pleasure to connect with readers over the past five
years. Thank you all. In this short installment, I offer you a principle which
might guide our thinking about technology in the coming year, along with a
couple of year-end traditions tagged on at the end.
Cheers and happy new year,
Michael
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A few weeks ago, I posted about how certain lines or quotations can function as
verbal amulets that we carry with us to ward off the deleterious spirits of the
age. Such words, I suggested, “might somehow shield or guide or console or
sustain the one who held them close to mind and heart.”
One such line for me, which I did not include in that earlier post, comes from
a rather well-known 1964 essay by historian and cultural critic Lewis Mumford,
[15]“Authoritarian and Democratic Technics.”[16]1 Of course, to say it is
“well-known” is a relative statement. I mean something like “well-known within
that tiny subset of people who are interested in technology and culture and who
also happen to care about what older sources might teach us about such
matters.” So, you know, not “well-known” in the sense that most people would
mean the phrase.
That said, the essay should be more widely read. Sixty years later, Mumfords
counsel and warnings appear all the more urgent. It is in this essay that
Mumford warned about the “magnificent bribe” that accounts for why “our age
surrendered so easily to the controllers, the manipulators, the conditioners of
an authoritarian technics.”
Heres how Mumford describes the bargain. Forgive the lengthy quotation, but I
think it will be worth your time if youve not encountered it before.
The bargain we are being asked to ratify takes the form of a magnificent
bribe. Under the democratic-authoritarian social contract, each member of
the community may claim every material advantage, every intellectual and
emotional stimulus he may desire, in quantities hardly available hitherto
even for a restricted minority: food, housing, swift transportation,
instantaneous communication, medical care, entertainment, education. But on
one condition: that one must not merely ask for nothing that the system
does not provide, but likewise agree to take everything offered, duly
processed and fabricated, homogenized and equalized, in the precise
quantities that the system, rather than the person, requires. Once one opts
for the system no further choice remains. In a word, if one surrenders
ones life at source, authoritarian technics will give back as much of it
as can be mechanically graded, quantitatively multiplied, collectively
manipulated and magnified.
Theres a lot to think about in those few lines. For my money, that paragraph,
written sixty years ago, tells us more about the current state of affairs than
a thousand takes we might stumble across as we browse our timelines today.
There is, for instance, just below the surface of Mumfords analysis, a
profound insight into the nature of human desire in late modern societies that
is worth teasing out at length, but Ill pass on that for the time being.[17]2
A little further on, nearing the close of the essay, Mumford tells readers that
they should not mistake his meaning. “This is not a prediction of what will
happen,” he clarifies, “but a warning against what may happen.” More than half
a century later, Im tempted to say that the warning has come perilously close
to reality and the only question now might be what comes next.
But all of this, patient reader, is prelude to sharing the line to which Ive
been alluding.
It is this: “Life cannot be delegated.”
Simply stated. Decisive. Memorable.
Heres a bit more of the immediate context:
“What I wish to do is to persuade those who are concerned with maintaining
democratic institutions to see that their constructive efforts must include
technology itself. There, too, we must return to the human center. We must
challenge this authoritarian system that has given to an under-dimensioned
ideology and technology the authority that belongs to the human
personality. I repeat: life cannot be delegated.”
I say it is simply stated, but it also invites clarifying questions. Chief
among them might be “What exactly is meant by life?” Or, “Why exactly can it
not be delegated?” And, “What counts as delegation anyway?” So lets start
there.
Whatever we take life to mean, we should immediately recognize that we are
speaking qualitatively. Mumford is telling us something about an ideal form of
life, not mere existence.[18]3 Earlier, for example, he had spoken about life
in its “fullness and wholeness.”
Mumfords claim is a provocation for us to consider what might be essential to
a life that is full and whole, one in which we might find meaning, purpose,
satisfaction, and an experience of personal integrity. This form of life cannot
be delegated because by its very nature it requires our whole-person
involvement. And by delegation, I take Mumford to mean the outsourcing of such
involvement to a technological device or system, or, alternatively, the embrace
of technologically mediated distraction and escapism in the place of such
involvement.
I also tend to read Mumfords claim through Ivan Illichs concept of thresholds
. Illich invited us to evaluate technologies and institutions by identifying
relevant thresholds, which, when crossed, rendered the technology or
institution counterproductive. This means that rather than declare a technology
or institution either good or bad by its nature, we recognize instead the
possibility that a technology or institution might serve useful ends until it
crosses certain thresholds of scale, volume, or intensity, after which it stops
serving the ends for which it was created and become, first, counterproductive
and then eventually destructive.
So, with regard to the principle that life cannot be delegated, we might
helpfully ask, “What are the thresholds of delegation beyond which what we are
left with is no longer life in its fullness and wholeness?”
This seems to be an especially relevant question as we navigate the
ever-widening field of technologies which invite us to delegate an increasing
range of tasks, activities, roles, and responsibilities. We are told, for
instance, that we are entering an age of LLM-based AI agents, which will be
able to streamline our work and simplify our lives across a wide array of
domains.
[19]
[https]
Perhaps. My point is not to rule out any such possibility.[20]4 Rather, I am
inviting us to critically consider at the outset where the thresholds of
delegation might be for each of us. And these will, in fact, vary person to
person, which is why I tend to traffic in questions rather than prescriptions.
I am convinced that these are matters of practical wisdom. No one can set out a
list of precise and universal rules applicable to every person under all
circumstances. Indeed, the temptation to wish for such is likely a symptom of
the general malaise. We must all think for ourselves, and in conversation with
each other, so that we can arrive at sound judgments under our particular
circumstances and given our particular aims.
The principle “Life cannot be delegated” is simply a guidepost.[21]5 It keeps
before us the possibility that we might, if we are not careful, delegate away a
form of life that is full and whole, rewarding and meaningful. We ought to be
especially careful in the cases where what we delegate to a device, app, agent,
or system is an aspect of how we express care, cultivate skill, relate to one
another, make moral judgments, or assume responsibility for our actions in the
world—the very things, in other words, that make life meaningful.
Perhaps we are tempted to think that care, skill, judgment, and responsibility
are only of consequence when the circumstances are grave, momentous, or
otherwise obviously consequential, which means that we might miss how, in fact,
even our mundane everyday work might be exactly how we care, develop skill,
exercise judgment, and embrace responsibility. (It occurs to me just now, that
the etymology of mundane, usually given a pejorative sense in English, suggests
something that is “of this world.” It is the stuff our world is made of, to
take flight from the mundane is to take flight from the world.)
If youve been reading for a while, you know this is something Ive sought to
articulate at various points in the last few years ([22]for example). So Im
always glad to encounter someone else trying to say the same thing and saying
it well. Recently, I stumbled across this bit of wisdom from Gary Snyder[23]6:
“All of us are apprenticed to the same teacher that the religious
institutions originally worked with: reality. Reality-insight says … master
the twenty-four hours. Do it well, without self-pity. It is as hard to get
the children herded into the car pool and down the road to the bus as it is
to chant sutras in the Buddha-hall on a cold morning. One move is not
better than another, each can be quite boring, and they both have the
virtuous quality of repetition. Repetition and ritual and their good
results come in many forms. Changing the filter, wiping noses, going to
meetings, picking up around the house, washing dishes, checking the
dipstick—don't let yourself think these are distracting you from your more
serious pursuits. Such a round of chores is not a set of difficulties we
hope to escape from so that we may do our practice which will put us on a
path—it is our path.”
Ill conclude by offering you a complementary principle to Mumfords: To live
is to be implicated.
I take the language of implication, with its rich connotations, from Steven
Garber, who writes about work and vocation from a religious perspective.
Drawing on Wendell Berry and Václav Havel, Garber argues that we should seek to
live in a manner that implicates us, for loves sake, in the way the world is
and ought to be. In my view, Garbers exhortation echoes Mumfords warning but
in another key. To say that life cannot be delegated is to say that life, lived
consciously and well, will necessarily implicate us in the world. May we have
the courage to be so implicated.
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Years End
It is customary for me to share Richard Wilburs poem [39]“Years End” in the
last installment of the year. Enjoy.
Now winter downs the dying of the year,
And night is all a settlement of snow;
From the soft street the rooms of houses show
A gathered light, a shapen atmosphere,
Like frozen-over lakes whose ice is thin
And still allows some stirring down within.
Ive known the wind by water banks to shake
The late leaves down, which frozen where they fell
And held in ice as dancers in a spell
Fluttered all winter long into a lake;
Graved on the dark in gestures of descent,
They seemed their own most perfect monument.
There was perfection in the death of ferns
Which laid their fragile cheeks against the stone
A million years. Great mammoths overthrown
Composedly have made their long sojourns,
Like palaces of patience, in the gray
And changeless lands of ice. And at Pompeii
The little dog lay curled and did not rise
But slept the deeper as the ashes rose
And found the people incomplete, and froze
The random hands, the loose unready eyes
Of men expecting yet another sun
To do the shapely thing they had not done.
These sudden ends of time must give us pause.
We fray into the future, rarely wrought
Save in the tapestries of afterthought.
More time, more time. Barrages of applause
Come muffled from a buried radio.
The New-year bells are wrangling with the snow.
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[40]
[https]
“The Hunters in the Snow,” Pieter Bruegel the Elder (1565)
[41]1
For a more extensive consideration of this essay, see this excellent discussion
by Zachary Loeb: [42]“Authoritarian and Democratic Technics, revisited.”
[43]2
Heres another paragraph that remains timely: “The inventors of nuclear bombs,
space rockets, and computers are the pyramid builders of our own age:
psychologically inflated by a similar myth of unqualified power, boasting
through their science of their increasing omnipotence, if not omniscience,
moved by obsessions and compulsions no less irrational than those of earlier
absolute systems: particularly the notion that the system itself must be
expanded, at whatever eventual cost to life.”
[44]3
Although I am immediately tempted to add that there is no such thing as mere
existence. Existence itself is a miracle, and the recognition of this fact the
beginning of wonder and thus thought.
[45]4
Although I commend to you Rob Hornings [46]analysis: “Generative AI, [Ben]
Recht argues, always seems to provide the minimal effort path to a passing but
shitty solution, which actually seems like a fairly charitable assessment. But
it is obviously something that worker-users would employ when they dont care
about what they are asking for or how it is presented, for optimized producers
who see research as an obstacle to understanding rather than the essence of it,
for people conditioned to be absent at any presumed moment of communion.
Generative AI is the quintessence of incuriosity, perfect for those who hate
the idea of having to be interested in anything.”
[47]5
Im tentatively planning on following up with two additional posts on related
principles: Life cannot be simulated, and life cannot be accelerated. Well
see!
[48]6
In the original post, I wrote “the late Gary Snyder,” which, as more than one
attentive reader pointed out, was a grave mistake. Snyder is still with us, and
Im not sure how I got it in my head that he had passed. Snyder was the subject
of a recent [49]episode of the wonderful
[50]The Lost Prophets Podcast
. Also, I think the most recent [51]episode with
[52]Dougald Hine
is quite pertinent to the content of this post, and well worth your time.
321
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[63]
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[64]Annie Gottlieb
[65]Dec 30
Gary Snyder is still alive!! Please take out that “late!”
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[69]Melba
[70]Dec 30
Re your 5th footnote, I would love to read those two pieces soon!
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