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Ed Brenegar's avatar

What you are describing is a pattern of behavior. This pattern is a product of a pattern of thinking. That pattern of thinking treats truth is reductive. We know something by breaking it down to its essential parts. This is called Essentialism. One definition that I found described it this way. "The essentialist perspective advocates that individuals in categories such as class, ethnicity, gender, or sex share an intrinsic quality that is verifiable through empirical methods (whether currently known or unknown). Furthermore, essentialism focuses on what individuals are, not who they are and individuals are viewed as inherently a certain way and not developing through dynamic social processes."

The procedural crisis you describe is how a reductive society operates. It is proof that empiricism was always going to be a limited perspective on society and humanity. We know this because now those in power continually cancel people who say they have proof. There is no conversation where this can be discussed. It represents an historic collapse in Western thought. This is the ultimate end point of Enlightenment thought leading to the age of science and industry.

Empiricist reductive thinking meant that we could not see the whole of something. We are not whole beings, but essentially a collection of parts. It is a mechanistic view of society and human life. This means that our agency as human beings is lost. Agency being that capacity of each of us to act on our own. To make choices. To be self-reflective. And to stand apart from some classification, like a job title, that defines us.

I'm glad you posted this. I have been thinking about this very thing for a couple of weeks. It will lead to my next series of posts on holistic systems thinking. It is important that we have these shared conversations. As one of my colleagues and I often say to one another, "another Vulcan mindmeld moment."

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Devaraj Sandberg's avatar

I suspect that, in the backrooms of Western governments, there's been concern that democratic systems may be failing to autocratic ones, not on idealogical grounds, but simply in terms of industrial or military output. I could certainly imagine many Western govs as seeing China in this kind of potential light. So the West has decided that, in order to compete with this potential threat, they need to roll back some democratic freedoms themselves, and use the media to weaponise the minds of as many citizens as possible. Such a decision is of course not the kind of thing you can talk about but to me it seems to fit the bill for what's going on.

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