Four Ways to See
the Future (Fonte)
There are four ways to envision the
future, argues James Cascio. As any interpretative
scheme, it sometimes fails to capture
complexity. Why would it not be possible
to hold simultaneously to optimism/pessimism
and realism/idealism. In P2P Theory, that's
precisely what we aim to do.
"It struck me recently, while talking
with my friend Jacob Davies, that the
relative success of WorldChanging and
similar projects could be linked to the
re-invigoration of a worldview combining
optimism (a belief that success
is possible, and can be broadly achieved)
and realism (a belief that global
processes are imperfect and cannot be
perfected, and change happens through
compromise and evolution). Jacob gave
some further thought to this idea, and
elaborated a bit on its implications in
a comment at the Making Light weblog.
The combination of belief sets -- optimism
vs. pessimism, realism vs. idealism --
offer us a matrix for describing divergent
ways of looking at the future.
It's important to note first off that
there isn't a strict correlation here
between politics and foresight worldview.
Both premillennial dispensationalists
(the Left Behind, "rapture ready"
types) and traditional revolutionary Marxists
would be situated in the lower-right Idealist-Pessimist
box, for example. It wouldn't be hard
to find similar pairs of contrasting ideologies
for the other boxes.
Instead, let's populate the matrix with
examples of differing approaches to understanding
a changing world.
In the upper left, Optimist-Realist,
we can put WorldChanging and its fellow-travelers
-- success is possible, but requires a
clear understanding of problems and a
willingness to adapt to meet changing
conditions (use new tools, work with new
allies, etc.). I put myself in this category,
too (unsurprisingly), and I suspect that
a large portion of the new generation
of people doing foresight work would call
this box home.
In the upper right, Pessimist-Realist,
probably the most familiar manifestation
would be the cyberpunk sub-genre of science
fiction, where the world is complex,
change is messy, and the best we can hope
for is staving off the worst of it for
our own (likely small) group. As Jacob
noted, many traditional environmentalists
fall into this box; I'd also put various
critics of technology such as Neil
Postman or Bill
McKibben in this category.
In the lower right, Pessimist-Idealist,
we can find (as noted) the religious revolutionaries,
be they Left Behind-type Christians,
Caliphate-fixated Muslims, or Third Temple-building
Jews, all ready to wash away the unbelievers
and enemies in order to transform the
world. I would also put the "back
to the Pleistocene" Deep Ecologists here,
too, the folks who think that the only
way to save the planet is to wipe out
9/10ths of the population.
Finally, in the lower left, Optimist-Idealist,
are those who see a transcendent, transformative
future available to all. The most visible
manifestation of this worldview can be
found in those who see the advent of a
technological Singularity fixing the world's
problems and giving us all near-infinite
knowledge and power. I don't put all
Transhumanist-type folks here; James Hughes
is an excellent example of someone who
sees both a potential for technology-driven
transformation and the need to work to
make sure the benefits extend beyond a
small group of elites. But anyone who
has read Ray Kurzweil's books The
Age of Spiritual Machines and The
Singularity is Near knows how readily
the Singularitarians can slip into millennialist
language.
For now, this matrix gives us a taxonomy
of futurism, but it may prove to be a
useful tool for understanding heretofore
unexpected alliances (such as the growing
anti-technology coalition between some
environmentalists and some religious conservatives).