“Seeing the evil of a technological society”

  • After giv­ing “Pilgrim’s Regress” a bit of a thumbs-down review, I’ve been find­ing that some snatches and excerpts of it keep com­ing back to me. Recently, I was hav­ing to do time-consuming, repet­i­tive chores to get a stack of doc­u­ments to print cor­rectly, and I found myself think­ing of what John’s angelic helper tells him about indus­tri­al­ized soci­ety. It comes from a chap­ter that Lewis sub­ti­tled “See­ing the evil of a tech­no­log­i­cal society.”

    John’s con­science, Vertue, sees the changes wrought in the coun­try­side by fac­to­ries, mech­a­niza­tion and increased tech­nol­ogy and says that there must be some good and last­ing change it will bring, since God allowed it to happen.

    John’s angelic Guide replies (empha­sis mine):

    “To be sure, if the machines did what they promised, the change would be very deep indeed. Their next war, for exam­ple, would change the state of their coun­try from dis­ease to death. They are afraid of this them­selves — though most of them are old enough to know by expe­ri­ence that a gun is no more likely than a tooth­paste or a cos­metic to do the things its mak­ers say it will do.

    It is the same with all their machines. Their labor-saving devices mul­ti­ply drudgery; their aphro­disi­acs make them impo­tent; their amuse­ments bore them; their rapid pro­duc­tion of food leaves half of them starv­ing, and their devices for sav­ing them time have ban­ished leisure from their coun­try. There will be no rad­i­cal change. And as for per­ma­nence — con­sider how quickly all machines are bro­ken and oblit­er­ated. The black soli­tudes will some­day be green again, and of all cities that I have seen, these iron cities will break most suddenly.”

    I can’t think of any more pro­found truth where tech­nol­ogy is con­cerned. Those who are most invested in it exhibit the worst symp­toms, but it can’t help but affect us all.


    Related posts:

    1. Liti­gious Soci­ety update — hol­i­day edition
    2. “The Mind of the Maker” and the prob­lem of evil

One Response and Counting...

  • s-p 02.24.2008

    Yes. On a man­ual type­writer I can type 20 mis­takes a minute, on my com­puter I can type 60 mis­takes a minute. Yay technology.

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