Doomsaying about new technology helps make it better

While the tech doomsaying might seem repetitive, it’s actually one of the only ways we can shape the world we want to live in, argues The University of Queensland’s Brendan Markey-Towler.

That new technologies could actually be bad for us, by sapping our attention or ruining our memories, is an argument that goes back to Socrates. It’s tempting to summarily dismiss these concerns, but such tech-doomsaying is actually an important part of economic discovery.

Our societies are organised by rules, embedded in our collective knowledge, about the proper way to behave and interact with each other. These rules are worked out over a long, often bitter process of debate and competition between rival ideas about society.

Some of the most important rules we need to discover are about how to use technology and, just as importantly, how not to use it.

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