Neil Postman aptly described our society as a Technopoly, or what we could also refer to as technocracy – a society fundamentally shaped and ruled by technology. Technology has played a central role civilization from the beginning, but a shift has occurred as technology has passed beyond normal human proportions. Rather than assisting us to perform necessary human actions more efficiently, it has now engendered possibilities and power that exceed the ordinary limits of nature.

Human beings, as rational creatures, can apply intelligence to the natural world to create tools that enable us to shape and manipulate the natural environment more effectively. Tools are individual creations used to facilitate our work. Technology is a more systematic application of tools that shape human activity and life more broadly. God made us to be able to act as co-creators and even tasked us with subduing the earth and exercising dominion over it (though not domination).

When I voice concerns about technology, I often hear people respond emphatically that technology is neutral – simply a tool that can be used for good or ill. That may be true, but the invention of a tool and its systematic application are not neutral endeavors. The tool conditions its own use, shaping or enabling a particular action. More significantly, all things created by God have an intrinsic ordering toward him as their Origin and End–their purpose and goal. Human creations do not contain that same intrinsic ordering to God. A tree always bears the mark of its Creator and finds its purpose in glorifying him. We cannot say the same of a refrigerator, which was created for a limited and more utilitarian purpose. Technology depends upon human intentionality for its ordering and purpose.

Ultimately, technology is not neutral because its use requires human action, which itself is never neutral. If an action is freely chosen using our faculty of reason, then it must be good or evil based on the nature of the action. Aquinas relates this in the Summa: “Human action, which is called moral, takes its species from the object, in relation to the principle of human actions, which is the reason. Wherefore if the object of an action includes something in accord with the order of reason, it will be a good action according to its species” (ST I-II, q. 18, a. 8). Morally speaking, the use of technology constitutes a free choice, with its own particular object, intention, and circumstances, which render this choice either moral or immoral.

When we use technology, we must ask: “what am I choosing to do, why, and in what way?” The object of an action employing technology would be determined generally by the nature of the technology itself. I conform to it by choosing to perform the action enabled by the tool, for the purpose I intend. The claim that technology is intrinsically neutral, or morally indifferent, can be used as an excuse which creates passivity. This can allow technology to determine our action, rather than approaching it with clear deliberation and ordering it to its proper end: the true good of human life, which in turns is directed toward the glory of God. Technology is not good unless we use it well.

Furthermore, the Church teaches that technology is not neutral. In relation to biomedical technology, in particular, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith asserted:

It would on the one hand be illusory to claim that scientific research and its applications are morally neutral; on the other hand one cannot derive criteria for guidance from mere technical efficiency, from research’s possible usefulness to some at the expense of others, or, worse still, from prevailing ideologies. Thus science and technology require, for their own intrinsic meaning, an unconditional respect for the fundamental criteria of the moral law: that is to say, they must be at the service of the human person, of his inalienable rights and his true and integral good according to the design and will of God

Donum Vitae, signed by Josef Cardinal Ratzinger, Feb. 22, 1987, par. 2.

Pope Francis strongly repeated this principle:

We have to accept that technological products are not neutral, for they create a framework which ends up conditioning lifestyles and shaping social possibilities along the lines dictated by the interests of certain powerful groups. Decisions which may seem purely instrumental are in reality decisions about the kind of society we want to build.

Laudato Si’, par. 107.

Francis’ insight reaches further to the use of technology to shape and control human behavior. We have moved beyond the realm of technology as a tool. It forms an artificial environment and its use draws us into a web (if you will) of possibilities, conditions, demands, and restraints. It also subordinates us to a network of political, social, and economic controls and influences of large and increasingly domineering groups. To use technology rightly, in a human fashion, it must become a tool once again. We must withdraw ourselves from the technology that would make us into a tool of the new technocratic paradigm of an inhuman culture.

The Voice of Art: Picasso’s Guernica

Although I find most of modern art disturbing, including the works of Picasso, there are, nonetheless, distinctively modern experiences and emotions that modern art captures quite adequately. Picasso’s Guernica is one example, with his formlessness demonstrating technology’s power to strike at the core of person, dismembering not only the individual but the community and our relationship with nature. It depicts the bombing of the Basque town Guernica by Germany and Italy to support Franco in 1937. This large oil painting, twenty-five and a half feet long, finds a way of expressing the terror and inhumanity brought by modern warfare, one of the most barbaric applications of technology.

Picasso, Guernica (1937)

The grotesqueness of Picasso’s cubism fits the dehumanization of the scene. Violence has always plagued humanity–from the very beginning–but modern technology permits a greater degree of disfigurement of form as human beings become subject to a new degree of power over nature. The black and white tones add to the lifelessness; and the absence of ideal beauty, so characteristic of modern art, further portrays the terror that cannot be controlled.

To me, the painting reflects helplessness in front of the modern world’s stripping of humanity down to material pieces as it swallows it in fire (see figure to the right). The light bulb eye, in particular, inspires fear–an artificial sun that witnesses the destruction, contrasted with the candle held by a human witness. This technological eye hints at a new truth and power, which will become even more terrorizing and destructive with the rise of nuclear weapons. We also see the crucial role of media to capture and shape human life with the newspaper script used in the painting.

Picasso undoubtedly encapsulates the horrors of war, but does he also portray the affects of modern technology on human life more generally? Insofar as he expresses human helplessness and confusion before the dark forces that threaten the integrity of nature and life, I think the we should answer in the affirmative. Picasso, perhaps unwittingly, captures the struggle we face to preserve humanity from the forces we ourselves have unleashed that blind us and threaten to consume us.


4 Comments

Chris Reilly · June 28, 2019 at 6:50 am

In World Communication Day addresses, and in other Church documents regarding social media on the internet, the statement is made often that technology is neutral. Your post is important in countering that idea, which I think is a reflection of the Church’s concern that it not be seen as anti-science or anti-technology in their entirety. Pope Francis has taken us very far in understanding that the technological society has become a technocracy with certain atheist and transhumanist ideologies embedded in the technology itself, its distribution and “platforms”, and the slavery of the people to their roles as consumers and as producers of commercially utilized data.

digitallifecenter · July 3, 2019 at 6:25 am

Jared:

Good to see that you’ve started this and, no, technology isn’t
“neutral” — but not for the reasons you cite.

Francis got his ideas about all this (as did Benedict, reflecting
their shared heritage) from Romano Guardini, as footnoted in Chapter 3
of Laudato Si’. Francis had intended to write his PhD on Guardini but
was sent back to Buenos Aries to deal with Liberation Theology among
the Jesuits there instead — making this chapter (which few want to
deal with) the closest he’s come to discussing this so far.
Guardini’s post-WW II Munich lectures, published as “The End of the
Modern World” are very instructive.

Technology is *formal* causality and the key commentary on all this
comes from Marshall McLuhan (himself a convert to the Church at age
25) and not-so-much from his erstwise “protege” Neil Postman. This
has been a problem for the Church at least since the Printing Press
caused the Reformation. McLuhan’s 1962 “Gutenberg Galaxy: The Making
of Typographic Man” might be useful on that account. His 1964
“Understanding Media” and the 1988 “Laws of Media” greatly add to what
we know about all this.

But now we have moved far beyond all that. Today the issues have to
do with Digital technologies and their capability to “shape our
behaviors and attitudes” — which, alas, wasn’t something that Postman
(or many others) ever considered. Some of us are helping the Church
deal with this and I look forward to working with you on this critical
task.

Mark Stahlman
President
Center for the Study of Digital Life
http://www.digitallife.center

    Jared Staudt · July 3, 2019 at 9:39 am

    Thank you, Mark. I’d love to be in touch on this vastly important topic. -Jared

digitallifecenter · July 3, 2019 at 11:20 am

Excellent — please email me at mark@tmtstrategies.com and we can set up a conversation . . . !!

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