wtf?One thinker who staked his career & legacy on studying the world "in media res" is Latour. So, yes, let's pretend we do *NOT* know where that peculiar blend of ethnomethodology and Catholicism leads (and where it has led science studies and a good chunk of history of science).
— Evgeny Morozov (evgenymorozov.bsky.social) (@evgenymorozov) December 28, 2024
When, in November, the publisher Stewart Brand was asked about who carries the flag of counterculture today, he pointed to the maker movement. The maker era might not be upon us yet, but the maker movement has arrived. Many promoters of the maker movement believe that personal manufacturing will und...
Is Brand’s hacking revolutionary, or counter-revolutionary? The plentiful recent books that preach hacking as a way of life—“Reality Hacking,” “Hacking Your Education,” “Hacking Happiness”— express devotion at least to the rhetoric of revolt. “Hacking Work,” a business book published in 2010, announces that “you were born to hack” and suggests ways in which one could “hack” work to achieve “morebetterfaster results.” As in most of these books, our hackers aren’t smashing the system; they’re fiddling with it so that they can get more work done.