Devices of the Soul

Battling for Our Selves in an Age of Machines
By Steve Talbott
(O'Reilly, 2007)
Digital technology certainly makes us more efficient. But when efficiency is the only goal, we have no way to know whether we’re going in the right or wrong direction.
In this insightful book, author Steve Talbott, software programmer and technical writer turned researcher and editor for The Nature Institute, challenges us to step back and take an objective look at the technology driving our lives. At a time when 65 percent of American consumers spend more time with their PCs than they do with their significant others, according to a recent study, Talbott illustrates that we’re forgetting one important thing—our Selves, the human spirit from which technology stems.
Whether we’re surrendering intimate details to yet another database, eschewing our physical communities for online social networks, or calculating our net worth, we freely give our power over to technology until, he says, “we arrive at a computer’s-eye view of the entire world of industry, commerce, and society at large…an ever more closely woven web of programmed logic.”
Digital technology certainly makes us more efficient. But when efficiency is the only goal, we have no way to know whether we’re going in the right or wrong direction. Businesses replace guiding vision with a spreadsheet’s bottom line. Schoolteachers are replaced by the computer’s dataflow. Indigenous peoples give up traditional skills for the dazzle and ease of new gadgets. Even the Pentagon’s zeal to replace “boots on the ground” with technology has led to the mess in Iraq. And on it goes.
The ultimate danger is that, in our willingness to adapt ourselves to technology, “we will descend to the level of the computational devices we have engineered—not merely imagining ever new and more sophisticated automatons, but reducing ourselves to automatons.”
Cloth, 281 pages.
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