this post was submitted on 11 Dec 2024
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I highly recommend reading Digital Minimalism, which deals with exactly what you are talking about. It's a great and inspiring read, even if you don't actually go through with it.
From what I remember, it mostly talks about how to approach any kind of technology as a tool, though a pretty simple process - honestly think about what your goal is (networking, getting information about new topics, keeping up to date on events...), and properly decide whether the technology is actually The Best way how to do it, while minimalizing any drawbacks.
Some examples I remember are:
Most of the arguments in the book were thought-provoking, and from what I've tried implementing, it has made my life a lot better. For example, switching my phone to a dumb phone (and carrying a powered off smarthphone that I can make a hotpost for, if I really need an app for something) made my away-from-computer life a lot better and peacful, and it was really easy to get used to that. Once you start considering anything you do on a computer from the pragmatic point of view, and ask yourself what your goal is, and if there isn't a better way - the answer usually is yes, there is.
I've seen a few people recommend that book, I should check it out.
A way of thinking about tech that I've found interesting is what philosopher Bernard Stiegler refers to as "φάρμακον", or "pharmakon" (the greek root from where we get "pharmacy"). He uses the greek not just to be a pretentious arse, but because whilst it most directly translates to "medicine", pharmakon also can mean a poison or toxin. Stiegler argues that technology can be both helpful and harmful, often at once. It depends on how we use it. ^[1]
(I'm reminded here also of Cory Doctorow's discussion of reverse centaurs, because turning people into reverse centaurs is definitely the vibe of "pharmakon as poison". At the core of it, most people aren't being empowered by tech in our lives, and I really feel like we need a collective, radical recalibration around this. Books like "Digital Minimalism" certainly seem to be pushing towards that.
[1]: n.b. I am not a philosopher, nor have I actually directly read Stiegler, just a few people who draw on his work. One such person is Greta Goetz, an academic whose blog is great for people who like dense and wordy philosophy about tech and teaching.