We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
PREDICTIONS WITHOUT FUTURES*.
- Abstract
Modernity held sacred the aspirational formula of the open future: a promise of human determination that doubles as an injunction to control. Today, the banner of this plannable future is borne by technology. Allegedly impersonal, neutral, and exempt from disillusionment with ideology, belief in technological change saturates the present horizon of historical futures. Yet I argue that this is exactly how today's technofutures enact a hegemony of closure and sameness. In particular, the growing emphasis on prediction as AI's skeleton key to all social problems constitutes what religious studies calls cosmograms: universalizing models that govern how facts and values relate to each other, providing a common and normative point of reference. In a predictive paradigm, social problems are made conceivable only as objects of calculative control—control that can never be fulfilled but that persists as an eternally deferred and recycled horizon. I show how this technofuture is maintained not so much by producing literally accurate predictions of future events but through ritualized demonstrations of predictive time.
- Subjects
MODERNITY; TECHNO culture; ARTIFICIAL intelligence; TECHNOLOGICAL innovations; TECHNOLOGY; SOCIAL problems
- Publication
History & Theory, 2022, Vol 61, Issue 3, p371
- ISSN
0018-2656
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/hith.12269