# Task 18: The Luddites Were Right — Historical Technology Resistance Movements ## Executive Summary * **The Luddite Misconception:** Historical research (Merchant, Thompson) proves that the original Luddites were not "anti-technology." They were skilled artisans who used machines themselves but opposed the *exploitative* deployment of technology that bypassed labor laws, depressed wages, and destroyed communities. They fought for "machinery hurtful to commonality." * **The Deskilling Argument:** Resistance often focuses on the loss of human agency and cognitive capacity. Socrates’ critique of writing—that it would destroy memory—was factually correct, even if the trade-off (civilizational knowledge storage) was ultimately accepted. * **Resistance vs. The Ratchet:** While organized resistance often slows adoption or forces safety modifications, it has almost never permanently reversed a technology once it crosses the infrastructure threshold. The "competitive advantage" of the technology consistently out-muscles the social or ethical objection. * **Modern Neo-Luddism:** Contemporary movements (Appropriate Technology, Slow movement, AI artist lawsuits) echo the Luddite demand: technology should be human-scale, locally autonomous, and serve human flourishing rather than just capital efficiency. ## Key Scholars and Works * **Brian Merchant:** *Blood in the Machine* (2023). Recontextualizes Luddism as a labor movement against "Big Tech" of the 19th century. * **E.F. Schumacher:** *Small Is Beautiful* (1973). Founded the Appropriate Technology movement; argued for "intermediate technology" that empowers rather than replaces human skill. * **Jerry Mander:** *Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television* (1978). A landmark Neo-Luddite text arguing that certain technologies have inherent biases that cannot be reformed. * **Calestous Juma:** *Innovation and Its Enemies* (2016). Analyzes why people resist new technologies (coffee, printing press, refrigeration) and how those resistances are eventually overcome. * **Plato (Socrates):** *Phaedrus*. Recorded the first major technological resistance: the argument that writing is a "simulacrum of wisdom" that will atrophy the mind. ## Supporting Evidence * **Luddite Wage Data:** Between 1800 and 1811, weavers' wages dropped from 25 shillings to 14 shillings due to the unregulated introduction of power looms. Their resistance was a rational economic response to immiseration. * **Google Glass:** A rare modern success for technology resistance. Social pressure (the "glasshole" stigma) and privacy bans effectively killed a major consumer product despite massive corporate backing. * **European GMO Resistance:** Sustained public and political resistance has prevented GMOs from reaching the "infrastructure threshold" in Europe, demonstrating that regional "ratchet-stalling" is possible. ## Counterarguments and Critiques * **The "Luddite Fallacy":** Economists argue that technology resistance is misguided because automation ultimately creates more jobs than it destroys by increasing total economic surplus. * **The Whig History of Progress:** Critics of Neo-Luddism argue that resistance is merely "backwards-looking" and that the harms predicted (e.g., electricity being dangerous, telephones destroying social life) are always outweighed by subsequent benefits. * **Elitism in Resistance:** Some argue that the "Appropriate Technology" or "Slow" movements are luxury beliefs available only to those who already benefit from high-technology infrastructure. ## Historical Parallels and Case Studies * **The Swing Riots (1830s):** Agricultural workers destroyed threshing machines that threatened their winter survival. It led to the "Poor Laws" reform—a case of resistance forcing social safety net evolution. * **The Printing Press:** The Catholic Church’s *Index Librorum Prohibitorum* (1559) was a 400-year resistance movement against the "fragmentation" of religious knowledge. It failed because the printing press was too efficient a "unification" tool for competing states and sects. * **Current AI Resistance:** The 2023 Writers Guild of America (WGA) and SAG-AFTRA strikes are "Neo-Luddite" in the original sense: they did not try to ban AI, but to legislate its use so it does not "hurt the commonality" of the creative profession. ## Data Points * **Luddite Execution:** In 1812, the British government made machine-breaking a capital offense and deployed 12,000 troops to suppress the Luddites—more than they sent to fight Napoleon in Spain at the time. * **Television Saturation:** Despite Mander’s "Four Arguments," TV reached 99% of US homes by 1979, illustrating the "ratchet" effect of passive media technology. ## Connections to the Series * **Paper 007 (The Ratchet):** Resistance movements are the "pawl" that tries to stop the ratchet. They often succeed in adding "safety clicks" (regulations, labor laws) but rarely reverse the gear. * **Paper 008 (The Ship of Theseus):** Socrates’ critique of writing is the original "did we cheat?" argument. Every subsequent resistance movement has asked the same question about memory, math, or cognition. * **Paper 003 (Rebuttal):** The history of resistance provides the "falsifiability" test. If a technology *can* be stopped (like Google Glass), it means it hadn't yet reached the "infrastructure threshold" defined in Paper 007. ## Rabbit Holes Worth Pursuing * **The Amish Model:** A deep dive into how the Amish selectively "negotiate" with the ratchet. They don't ban technology; they evaluate whether it "builds or destroys community" before adopting it. * **The "Right to Disconnect":** Modern legislation in France and Portugal as a form of state-level resistance to the constant-connectivity dependency. * **The Butlerian Jihad:** Research the "Dune" backstory as a fictional philosophy of technology resistance ("Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind"). ## Sources * Merchant, B. (2023). *Blood in the Machine: The Origins of the Rebellion Against Big Tech*. Little, Brown. * Schumacher, E. F. (1973). *Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered*. Harper & Row. * Mander, J. (1978). *Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television*. Morrow. * Juma, C. (2016). *Innovation and Its Enemies: Why People Resist New Technologies*. Oxford University Press. * Plato. *Phaedrus*. (c. 370 BC).