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Techno-Fallacies Techno-Fallacies
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Information Age Techno-Fallacies Information Age Techno-Fallacies
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One Person’s Fallacies Can Be Another’s Truths One Person’s Fallacies Can Be Another’s Truths
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12 Techno-Fallacies of the Information Age
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Published:May 2016
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Abstract
This chapter seeks to identify the broad justifications and often veiled assumptions underlying surveillance policies and practices. Among the nations of the world, the United States most clearly reflects the optimistic, techno-surveillance worldview found within a broader technocratic and commercial celebratory ethos. The satires all reflect this worldview. This chapter examines the ideational environment which nourishes these technologies. In listening to surveillance rhetoric over several decades I often heard things that, given my knowledge and values, sounded wrong, much as a musician hears off key notes. The off key notes involve elements of substance as well as styles of mind and ways of reasoning and the fallacies can be empirical, logical or ethical. The chapter identifies forty-four "information age techno-fallacies." Sometimes these fallacies are frontal and direct; more often they are tacit --buried within seemingly common-sense, unremarkable assertions. It is important to approach the commonplace in a critical fashion—whether we initially agree or disagree with the ideas. Fallacies of some of those critical of current surveillance are also noted.
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