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Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy
Institute for New Global Politics
24 episodes
4 months ago
As violence against persons and things reaches a slow, catastrophic intensity worldwide; as the political and planetary become profoundly intertwined; as the deformity in our language thwarts our very ability to think about this suicidal moment in global politics and in human affairs as such, the brilliant thinker and scholar Aishwary Kumar (in LA) and editor-interlocutor Payal Puri (in New Delhi) begin a sustained, rigorous excavation of a deceptively simple question: What is up with democracy? Taking as our starting point the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet, we create an alphabet of global political thought; a rigorous recuperation of the words and concepts without which we cannot grasp the power and the fragility of the democratic promise. Never has a podcast attempted to compress, in just 52 words — two for every letter of the alphabet — the human condition itself.
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As violence against persons and things reaches a slow, catastrophic intensity worldwide; as the political and planetary become profoundly intertwined; as the deformity in our language thwarts our very ability to think about this suicidal moment in global politics and in human affairs as such, the brilliant thinker and scholar Aishwary Kumar (in LA) and editor-interlocutor Payal Puri (in New Delhi) begin a sustained, rigorous excavation of a deceptively simple question: What is up with democracy? Taking as our starting point the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet, we create an alphabet of global political thought; a rigorous recuperation of the words and concepts without which we cannot grasp the power and the fragility of the democratic promise. Never has a podcast attempted to compress, in just 52 words — two for every letter of the alphabet — the human condition itself.
Show more...
Courses
Education,
Society & Culture,
News,
Politics
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T | TECHNOCRACY
Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy
1 hour 48 minutes 49 seconds
4 months ago
T | TECHNOCRACY
It is undeniable that technology has disrupted democracy, that algorithms have begun to threaten human agency and deform identity, and that artificial intelligence, deeply enmeshed in politics, harbors a brazen potential to blur the very line between the human and non-human, between truth and fabrication.  But what might shift in our perspective if we made room for the possibility that the greatest threat to democracy ensues not from the fact that technology has become too powerful but instead from the fact that we have simply forgotten what technology is, and in that forgetting, surrendered the very force—the bond between life and technique—that makes democratic politics possible? “The question we must ask about technology cannot be confined to the realm of the technological. We must turn away from the maze of contemporary confusions and anxieties about algorithms, surveillance, media, and digital platforms,” says Aishwary. “Because in relying on them, we are simply asking the neo-technocrats to justify themselves and prove the usefulness of their shiny objects.” Technocrats are mutants. They today combine in themselves, in creative and destructive ways, the classical figures of engineer, oligarch, monarchist, and clown. Whatever else might drive their nihilism or theology, they genuinely believe that technology is a life-giving thing, an alluring product, an object of lore. “But technology is not a thing,” Aishwary argues. “It is a limit. It is the extremity at which the human encounters its wholly other. Only now it does so inside of itself. Technology is the extremity at which our humanity becomes a technique of living and dying at one and the same time. Technology is to life what violence is to humanity, more an organ now than an instrument. It is an apparatus of grafting and transplanting, of amputating and prostheticizing, of surviving and killing.” This proximity with practices of life-death gives the neo-technocrats not only their delusions of omnipotence—and impunity—but a desire to conquer time and thus their mortality itself. “The techniques of domination and cruelty that the tech oligarchs today deploy are as old as the first human technique, the hand that rose to cover its own nakedness; as enduring as the many ways of executing the death penalty; as archaic as the human will to punish others,” Aishwary points out. In thinking of our technocratic age as unprecedented, therefore, we mistake its mutation for newness. The oligarchs who traffic in promises of intergalactic travel—or escape from the “hell” that the earth is—have not invented new forms of power; they have simply sharpened the art of convincing willful democratic majorities to surrender their agency in exchange for the promise of technological salvation. "We have today come to trust a group of men—products of neocolonial segregation and racial apartheid, all of them—who have delusions of conquering space and who have come to believe they bear in themselves the metaphysical secrets of transcendence.” The monarchist desires of these technocrats represents something far more fundamental than the capture of political influence. It marks the ruinous decline of democratic capacity for making collective, just choices; the public’s concerted ability to give time to the pursuit of truth and examination of facts; the will to resist the theft of a people’s time by the neo-technocracy. “Hannah Arendt long ago recognized technology's capacity to render a vast swathe of humanity superfluous through a simple “majority decision.” Today, this capacity operates through systematic destruction of the time necessary for deliberation, judgment, and beginning of something new together.” Luring us by sheer repetition, technocracy has turned the human into a mutant with infinite variations, whom we now encounter with stale wonder. Perhaps here also lies the opening for radical democratic recovery. "Technology is...
Mutant: Dialogues at the End of Democracy
As violence against persons and things reaches a slow, catastrophic intensity worldwide; as the political and planetary become profoundly intertwined; as the deformity in our language thwarts our very ability to think about this suicidal moment in global politics and in human affairs as such, the brilliant thinker and scholar Aishwary Kumar (in LA) and editor-interlocutor Payal Puri (in New Delhi) begin a sustained, rigorous excavation of a deceptively simple question: What is up with democracy? Taking as our starting point the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet, we create an alphabet of global political thought; a rigorous recuperation of the words and concepts without which we cannot grasp the power and the fragility of the democratic promise. Never has a podcast attempted to compress, in just 52 words — two for every letter of the alphabet — the human condition itself.