Hypertechnologies and Society in the XXI century
A Franciscan Perspective |
Gianfranco Berbenni, ofm cap (Rome)
From an article for the periodical “DLR”,
Die National Koordinationsstelle bei dar Deutsohan Forschungsanstalt
für Luƒs-und Raumƒahrt, Projecturträger
des BMBF ğr
Inƒormationstechnik Abteilung EU-Programmbegleftung.
MD-IT, ËG, Linder Hohe, Postfach 90 60 58. D-51147 Köln
90, Germany
[May 1996] |
The world has entered into a new phase of transformation,
obvious to everyone.
Most observers consider the speedup of transport
(planes, trains, highways) and the computerized globalization
of contacts and communication as two factors of great change,
definable by the concise term of "telematic revolution".
The way we approach the next decade, 1997-2007,
is to be considered in the light of an historical analysis (over
the very long term) and in the context of Franciscan life (austere
and poor by free choice).
Therefore we will analyze our habitat and
our society according to four subject areas:
a) the changes occurring in the last 30 millennia
of history;
b) our current world, challenged by high technology;
c) technological opportunities, managed in a frugal Franciscan
style
in favor of "marginal" territories and cultures.
d) A brief outline of application-oriented projects
realized in a close bond between high technology and the regions.
1. A framework
for the events of the last 30 millennia of human history (30 th
B.C.- 2nd A.D.)
The work of the economic anthropologist Sahlins
led us to inte grate socio-economic data of the "stone age"
with the most meaningful data of the epoch-making changes that
occurred in the first agricultural revolution (8 th -5 th millennia
BC) and the second "industrial" revolution in the 18
th century AD. It offers a close analysis of the steps that led
the ancestral nomadic culture and the economy based on hunting
and gathering to the great transformation of the new productive
agricultural technology and to the new social type of 'fortified
city'.
The latter were built in fluvial plains of
the Fertile Crescent (Mesopotamia-Syria-Palestine-Egypt) thanks
to the new forms of 'organized labor'.
Thus we passed from the 'optimum' society
of the civilization of hunters and gatherers to a society that
was wealthy but, in fact, founded necessarily on the exploitation
of a labor force dedicated to irrigation work and to the production
of new construction materials (worked in clay).
The Hebrew and Christian Bible can be seen
as an xtraordinary book about the contemporary environment and
social reality when we understand that the institutions of the
'Shabbath', the 'sabbatical year', and the 'jubilee' were introduced
to guarantee human dignity to those who would otherwise the object
of total oppression.
In the light of this, the dominion of divine Transcendence
can be seen as effectively protecting a humanity that, with the
multiplied wealth of the great empires and in the great 'cities',
tended to turn in on itself in a wretched and limited management
of the economic and socio-religious opportunities.
A reading of the Pentateuch along these lines is useful for modern
reality.
2. Today's world, "transformed"
by High Technology.
Industrial changes of the 18 th - 19 th century,
the acceleration of scientific innovations in the 20 th and, in
a completely unique way, the recent turning point of 'global computer
science' are ineluctable constituents of contemporary society.
In particular the advent of computerization and
the robotization of industrial production lines, make a unique
phenomenon accessible:
the return to a model of civil society that provides
(as in the stone age preceding the agricultural revolution) a
social model based on a reduced commitment to work, balanced by
consistent "social contracts" for the redistribution
of the enormous wealth and the management of development potential.
What occurred from the 8 th to the 1st millennium
before Christ, must necessarily be brought to the attention of
humanity today.
There are great dangers and, at the same time, immense opportunities
induced by rapid social changes, e.g. the industrial revolution:
We can self-destruct in ever greater conflicts
(between North and South, between rich countries and those below
minimum living standards) or we can initiate a wise distribution
of a wealth that in the future will be multiplied by industrial
robotics.
As much as we rebel against such transformations, their advance
is inevitable.
In fact, on the contrary, thanks to just
these technological opportunities, contemporary man can, with
great effort, construct the premises for a truly dignified and
just society.
This will be described in the next section.
3. Franciscan poverty
and the socially constructive management of technologies
The element "poverty and austerity",
which characterizes the Franciscan-derived model, gives pause
for thought as we enter the technological society.
It should be remembered how the poor of humanity,
present both in great cities and in rural settlements, are at
the center of an attitude of respect, courtesy, and concrete aid
in the "Weltanschauung" of Francis of Assisi.
If one wants to enter into direct relations
with the hypertechnological transformations of the XXI century,
the Franciscan way of life offers several proposals.
3.1 High technology must become
"light", i.e. portable, for it to be
used even in isolated or decentralized habitats.
In this direction the Franciscan is in tune with
"the people" constantly stimulating both the study of
miniaturization of methodologies and projects that are effectively
applicable
in marginal environments or to small social groups.
From such a prospective, 'poor' Franciscanism very
closely approaches the rigor of aerospace engineering in the style
of work, accustomed always to avoid, as far as possible, the waste
of resources by rigorously applying experimental methods.
3.2 "Voluntary Franciscan poverty" is
a guarantee of the disinterested justice and
non-violent control of the complex mechanisms of a new industrial
society, always pushed towards the unbalanced desire for profit
without end, for unrestrained power and for an elitist culture.
3.3 The Franciscan style of simple concreteness,
balanced between life and word, theory and practice, spirituality
and socialization, and between industry and solidarity,
allows a new kind of dialogue with society and with the macro-industrial
world itself.
3.4 The joyful choice of poverty highlights several
paradoxical methodologies that we bring together
in a clearly distinct manner:
the behavior of one who is very rich and of one
who is voluntarily poor.
For both, work will be organized by a highly rigorous
use of time, of means of communication, and of analytical tools.
Like the billionaire, and perhaps even more than
he, the poor man cannot afford the least waste of resources (which,
moreover, are not his) or the least concession to verbosity and
to curiosity.
3.5 Within the millennial historical framework mentioned
at the beginning, considered action of ethical value, can be an
element of stability and flexibility in the complex society of
tomorrow.
Furthermore several schools of social industrial
thought, present at all levels in the European Union and in other
areas of advanced development, agree on the relevance of values
that guarantee the most important variable in the processes transforming
the world:
the human beings, both as individuals and together.
4. The projects
One strategy for the undertaking
called "InGentibus" provides for three great areas
of operational priority which constitute our initial choices.
The strategy of InGentibus
starts from a view of the world as complex and simple at the same
time:
complex in its cultures,
its continents, nations and regions;
simple in the interactions
of information and socio-economic relations, as well as in the
new awareness of global citizenship.
Our planning of initiatives in
the regions today, has three areas of concrete priority to examine:
- the hydraulic sector, or
projects for a culture of water with applications for the spheres
of restoration (isotopic analyses of mortar and pigments), environmental
protection, an innovative, light micro-industry for:
- the production of building
components;
- robotic intervention
in several repetitive stages of craft work;
- the sector of collecting
and modifying images, using technology software including neural
technology and fuzzy logic with application-oriented outcomes
in the fields of historical-archaeological culture, art cataloguing,
speeding up of feasibility projects, and in the diagnostic stage.
- PicoWorld is the vital part,
and the heart of our contribution to the future of society:
the whole technological world, reduced one million times (:
nano) in its dimensions, is easily replicable and transportable,
thus becoming - in some cases- something that can be easily
understood and managed by ordinary individuals.
5. Conclusion
One hears proposals for various kinds of
"Quality" from all sides (total quality, the quality
of life, product quality, etc.):
If we had to pick up on this kind of concept
we could summarize the Franciscan presence in the world of "hypertechnologies"
as "Paradoxical Quality" weak in structure, strong in
method and, at least in intention, intelligent.
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