Dune is not anti-tech… | technology under capitalism

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Alice Cappelle

Alice Cappelle

Күн бұрын



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Video edited by Elfo Editing

Пікірлер: 549
@alexkats30
@alexkats30 10 ай бұрын
Futurists have always been imagining the future in a way that always seems more humanistic, socialistic and environmentally friendly, but their ideas never go anywhere because corporations see no profits in that vision of the world. I remember as a kid I was into something called the Venus Project, which was a futurists idea of designing cities, self sustainable housing etc. Nothing came of it
@caiden3396
@caiden3396 10 ай бұрын
I thought futurists tended to be nerds turned on by modernity, minimalist chrome aesthetic, and new, abstract ideas of high tech.
@alexkats30
@alexkats30 10 ай бұрын
@@caiden3396For sure. But sometimes, high tech also means self sustainable, environmentally friendly structures, that would mean shifting our energy production away from our primitive current state, that happens to make trillions of dollars for certain corporations
@alexkats30
@alexkats30 10 ай бұрын
@ville__ You forgot Harvey Weinstein and Jeffrey Epstein
@movement2contact
@movement2contact 10 ай бұрын
​@@jayzee4097How does that supposedly work..?
@DrDanQ92
@DrDanQ92 10 ай бұрын
Glory to the fighters -Paul Muad'Dib
@CW12190
@CW12190 10 ай бұрын
When you talked about our data being used against us, i was so ready to hear a North VPD sponsor plug 😭😭
@chasx7062
@chasx7062 10 ай бұрын
you have been conditioned by YT to accept your own slavery, so use an @d blocker hehehe
@Anelkia
@Anelkia 10 ай бұрын
Me too😂
@jrtg1990
@jrtg1990 10 ай бұрын
Nord VPN you mean 😭
@mrschwartzmc
@mrschwartzmc 10 ай бұрын
Same
@chasx7062
@chasx7062 10 ай бұрын
@@jrtg1990 maybe he did not want to do an upaid plug?
@polares01
@polares01 10 ай бұрын
I'm a computer scientist who loves technology, but hates the way we made everything digital heroin. I'm going to research next year the next step (although I don't think I can do much), thank God dune exists and it really opened my eyes.
@derekclinton9438
@derekclinton9438 2 ай бұрын
What's the next step?
@ericdere
@ericdere 10 ай бұрын
The most important command in the “Orange Catholic Bible” reads: “Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human mind”. It was imposed after the Butlerian Jihad.
@BooksRebound
@BooksRebound 10 ай бұрын
Yeah but thats not a good thing. The butlerian jihad isnt framed as correct, it was a crime that wiped out an entire people. Its like when people take for granted that the bene gesserit are correct in their ideas and methods and its just like... no, you do realize theyre bad right? Like if a story has a crusade to wipe out all non believers in a faith, you dont read that story and say "that story was pro murdering everyone who wont convert". That bit from the orange catholic bible is framed as wrong, despite being tacitly believed in and approved of by the populace.
@BooksRebound
@BooksRebound 10 ай бұрын
@ville__ that seems like bullshit
@caden-reynolds
@caden-reynolds 10 ай бұрын
And in book 4, Leto explains that he kept it in place and even expanded it after his own jihad because it made people easier to control
@karigrandii
@karigrandii 10 ай бұрын
If you actually read what happens at the very end of the whole Dune saga, Duncan Idaho becomes the leader of the human race as a ghoul and combines himself with the AI robot called Erasmus and then Duncan leads the human race to a new era where humans and computers respect eachother and neither one wants to enslave the other. Erasmus was one of the robots that they fought during the butlerian jihad but erasmus ultimately just wanted to understand humans and at the end they thought that they now knew everything there is to know and wanted to give their knowledge to duncan who has the ultimate human in their eyes
@PilgrimsPass
@PilgrimsPass 10 ай бұрын
@@karigrandii Ibelieve that was Brian Herbert's addition to the Saga. It wasn't written by Frank Herbert to my knowledge.
@Verde-s9a1
@Verde-s9a1 10 ай бұрын
People need to remember, the original Luddites weren't Primitivists, they were organized labor resistance.
@code8825
@code8825 10 ай бұрын
Yeah I’ve honestly been sold on the idea of neo-Luddism. Sure technology can be great for progress, but certain technologies in our current system only serve to make things a lot worse. We need to change the social relations in our society so that technology can work for the people and the environment instead of destroying them
@stephengrant4841
@stephengrant4841 10 ай бұрын
@@code8825 Yeah, take the internet for example. It's made people more socially distant, damages social development and is a huge contributor to mass radicalization. I imagine if you did the brass tax you'd find out that overall it contributes more harm to society than good.
@nmk5003
@nmk5003 10 ай бұрын
@@code8825 I don't agree with either the luddites nor the neo-luddites, of course technology should work for ppl and for the environment, and the simplistic discarding of the luddites as nonsensical is also problematic. Where this is wrong is that technology is always the manipulation and experimentation with and of nature, but what needs to happen is the understand and reconciliation of experimentation at differing levels of scarcity and scale. So take the Dune example of the Fremen, there society developed technology in the advent of water scarcity, but the societies dream is to have a lush plant where they no longer need to live in these harsh conditions. Thus, in the end the Fremen develop to a scale where they have the means to terraform the planet and turn it into a lush paradise reconciling their austere technological beginnings with large scale developmentalism of the empire. This actually ends up being the antithesis to an ideology such as luddism or neo-luddism, because they refuse to break the machines and rather continuously reinvent themselves in the face of new challenges. Now, when it comes to the books commitment to luddism within the framework of information technology, the Dune universe shows how this becomes a problem, information is horded by a radical religious sect (the Bene Gesserit) who function the same way as the prior system run by robots, thus the solution is not better than the initial problem, in fact it maybe worse.
@AG-vh3lx
@AG-vh3lx 10 ай бұрын
So like the pre modern Union workers association 🤔🤔🤔u mean???
@Thedeepseanomad
@Thedeepseanomad 10 ай бұрын
​@@AG-vh3lxmost of them would have had no problems with powerlooms if it they did not loose income. Instead the income went to the factory owners.
@Thunderios
@Thunderios 10 ай бұрын
You had me on edge for the whole video by building it up towards solarpunk but not mentioning it until the end. Bringing-forth is an excellent addition to solarpunk vocabulary! It goes for all modern technology that it should empower us by synergizing with our strengths rather than replacing us with lower quality items.
@DreamFearless
@DreamFearless 10 ай бұрын
What fresh hell is _solarpunk?_
@hcxpl1
@hcxpl1 10 ай бұрын
​@@DreamFearlessthe channel @Andrewism has a great primer on that
@ledernierutopiste
@ledernierutopiste 10 ай бұрын
you're taking a word from a nazi ?
@archer1949
@archer1949 10 ай бұрын
The thing that strikes me about “solarpunk” (indeed, all eco futurist scenarios) is that these utopias require a very small population, or at least, sparse population densities. The more I look into this hippie dippie stuff, the more I get a Malthusian “Thanos was right” vibe or a certain Austrian mustache man ranting about “living space”.
@mickaelsflow6774
@mickaelsflow6774 10 ай бұрын
@@archer1949 the aesthetic reflects its best examples in those small communities, but it is not the only way to be Solarpunk. It would be a mistake to conflate "eco futurist scenarios" and "very small population" with Thanos or the Austrian fellow. There are examples and discussion about big city being solarpunk too, if designed well, if urbanism focuses around nature, the people and their relationship. It might be true that a hyper dense city / megalopolis might be more difficult to design for a solarpunk society, but big cities can be solarpunk if they don't destroy nature and biodiversity, and allow human to thrive. But anyways, not the place for this discussion.
@spiritualanarchist8162
@spiritualanarchist8162 10 ай бұрын
Frank Herbert wrote Dune in the 60thies. He said he realized he could not imagine how this new technology would develop . So he created a world that had banned computers .This made him able to ficus on the people without being bothered by computers. . Pretty smart thinking for someone in the 60thies.
@TheHungryRomanian
@TheHungryRomanian 10 ай бұрын
Small correction: its either sixties or '60s 😁
@SGC90-t5y
@SGC90-t5y 10 ай бұрын
​​@@TheHungryRomanianuhm ackshuallay 🤓☝️
@ragingtomato04
@ragingtomato04 10 ай бұрын
Source? Where did Frank said this?
@spiritualanarchist8162
@spiritualanarchist8162 10 ай бұрын
@@ragingtomato04 One of his interviews. And it's : ' can you give me the source please. Not' :Source ? ' .
@ragingtomato04
@ragingtomato04 10 ай бұрын
@@spiritualanarchist8162What specific interview are you talking about? Coz I listened recently to Frank's interviews and I don't remember him saying any of that. And also "Uhm Ackchyually ☝️🤓 you should have said this longer way of saying the same thing instead of a straightforward one word question" 😂
@YH-vf6pc
@YH-vf6pc 10 ай бұрын
This is one of my favorite videos you have ever uploaded Alice. This is a topic that no one is really talking about in my opinion, and when I try to bring up this topic it almost seems taboo. People are just too comfortable with where capitalism has led us to. It makes me so worried for the future but your suggested readings at the end give me hope.
@goeleal1520
@goeleal1520 10 ай бұрын
Its just when I read comments like yours that I realize I'm not alone in this world (in regard to worldview)!
@inspirednamehere6166
@inspirednamehere6166 10 ай бұрын
I think that a lot of the "functions" and "power" of our current domestic technology can easily be scaled back in a non capitalist world. For instance, computers are full of bloatware and unnessecary propriety apps to collect data and try to get you to buy adjacent services. likewise, the software made for computers is poorly optimised and again seeks to collect data and advertise to you. Another good example is the growing gaming industry, where games are purposely made to run poorly to push people to buy new hardware and then new hardware is made to get people to buy new games. In a non capitalist society, a lot of software would be made redundant as the social poverty it seeks to fill is alleviated - e.g dating apps and meditation apps, e-books, a lot of TV shows. Also, data servers, advertisements, AI, all of these things that are designed to exploit you will be gone. From a non-computer standpoint, think of fridges. A sustainable future is going to be a future with much reduced animal agriculture (which will be a difficult transition but seems to be one speeding towards us), and so fridges will be able to be less powerful to begin with. furthermore as new sustainable methods of architecture and design are adopted, we will likely see a shift back to icehouse style larders to store food. Or think of cars, how they are full of plastics and computers and are utterly overdesigned - micromobility solutions area already growing and small sustinable personal transport for short distances does not need half as much "comfort" as a car has. I think that our current technology is not making us comfortable but rather a desperate attempt to fix the discomfort from living in a society designed to make you uncomfortable to sell things to you. After capitalism, technology will be less important and will simplify greatly.
@nivmhn
@nivmhn 10 ай бұрын
​@@inspirednamehere6166This technology is being incubated in the Capitalist system. It could either entrench global capitalism into some kind of techno-feudalism or it could destroy capitalism from within as widespread, cheap AI will fundamentally alter markets. The stakes are quite high.
@Dawhud
@Dawhud 10 ай бұрын
The brilliance of saying in the future we don't have computers/AI/androids is allowed Herbert to make a sci fi novel without having to talk about tech. The author can focus on the characters and the story more than the gadgets and what they do.
@rikugo1
@rikugo1 10 ай бұрын
This is so important! Even before big data, social media, and AI, the terms by which software and hardware were licensed and produced made our current technofeudal reality inevitable. Ownership of the means of production must go beyond the physical in the digital age, yet this is almost never discussed outside of certain tech subcultures. A wider public understanding of this is vital to our future.
@josepheridu3322
@josepheridu3322 10 ай бұрын
I find interesting how Medieval times are seen as "dark" when in fact it was just the expansion of Roman technology to be used in everyday life, which was vital for modernity to surge. Technology does not grow only up, but also must grow sideways, by becoming of common use and making work easier.
@josephreynolds2401
@josephreynolds2401 10 ай бұрын
It's called Dark Ages because surprisingly little is known about that time period versus its neighboring historical ages. It has nothing to do with lack of tech, or knowledge and more to do with historians finding less information.
@josepheridu3322
@josepheridu3322 10 ай бұрын
@@josephreynolds2401 Usually the term "dark ages" was used by the enlightenment, but the original term of dark ages were used for the fall of Bronze Civilization, when even writing was lost in some cases. Medieval Ages gave Germanic people literature and allowed them to prosper.. it was a golden age for them.
@josephreynolds2401
@josephreynolds2401 10 ай бұрын
@@josepheridu3322 Medieval "Dark Age", as I understand it is just a lack of interest/popularity by the writers of that time to write down current events. Thanks for highlighting the misunderstanding. It's a bit of a misnomer to call Medieval period a "Dark age", what you said makes a lot of sense.
@jamesmunn576
@jamesmunn576 10 ай бұрын
​@josephreynolds2401 Wasn't there also a mini ice age during the Middle Ages as well?
@solar0wind
@solar0wind 9 ай бұрын
​@@jamesmunn576 Nope, the middle ice age was in the 19th century. In medieval times there actually was a super warm time, at least in parts of the world like Europe. That lead to increased agriculture and trade.
@TheRealSykx
@TheRealSykx 10 ай бұрын
This reminds me of the saying that, "humans are a part of nature not apart from"
@stephengrant4841
@stephengrant4841 10 ай бұрын
I agree and disagree. We are a part of nature and we are animals, but we're also sentient and extremely intelligent. Our intelligence and self-awareness can mean we are separate from technollogy. After all, we're already doing things to our genes and bodies that our evolution didn't intend for us. I feel like that's the end state of any sentient species in the universe - they abandon their natural evolution once they attain advanced scientific knowledge.
@DisgruntledPeasant
@DisgruntledPeasant 10 ай бұрын
​​@@stephengrant4841evolution intends nothing! Try to look beyond genetics when you're thinking about nature, thought is part of nature. Thought is a way for evolution to occur beyond the speed of birth and death, with thought a creature can adapt to it's environment mid-generation. Humans mastered that niche, and pushed the boundaries by creating language and technology to speed up adaptation even more, so even our abstract concepts like philosophy are still part of nature. We are not as self controlled as we think we are: just as our genes determine our bodies, our thoughts too are products of our environment and are passed onto us, determining our potential. It is not possible for us to abandon our evolution, we can only shift it's medium. We are no longer adapting to the jungle ecosystem, but to the social ecosystem.
@salma4193
@salma4193 9 ай бұрын
there's something about the ideas you pressent and the ways you construct your arguments that is so unique. Allof your videos surprise me with where they go- it's like a build up into an epiphany.
@phangkuanhoong7967
@phangkuanhoong7967 10 ай бұрын
the problem was never tech per se, but for what purpose the tech was developed and deployed. Currently, every piece of tech's ultimate purpose is profit for the few, regardless of the tech's actual use-function.
@giorgos-4515
@giorgos-4515 10 ай бұрын
Open Source Software :)
@Dario-mc4gw
@Dario-mc4gw 10 ай бұрын
Naive view of world
@davidalves6813
@davidalves6813 10 ай бұрын
Spot on! Open Source software is the way to go against planned obsolescence and technology being oriented for the profit of the few. I always chose it when possible.
@Alex.Holland
@Alex.Holland 10 ай бұрын
Every piece of tech is invented because people think others may want it enough to pay for it. Every bit of profit is gathered from people who willingly gave their money in exchange for it, making the entire world better and more productive.
@NeovanGoth
@NeovanGoth 10 ай бұрын
That massively oversimplified. Profit for the few isn't (with the usual exceptions) the purpose of the tech, but a side-effect of complex development requiring a lot of resources that have to be invested beforehand, without any guarantee of return. Open source software also isn't an argument against this, as only part of it is really purely community driven (which has its own issues, as we saw in the recent incident with xz), while the development of an ever growing part is financed by companies with the goal to make profit - for example by offering services around said software. On the other side there is a lot of really good software that is neither open source, not made by huge companies, but by smaller teams who put a lot of effort and dedication into creating great products, because that's what allows them to pay their bills.
@davidegaruti2582
@davidegaruti2582 10 ай бұрын
Dune is low tech Dune : has suits able to recicle water , spaceships , shields able to make guns usless , and floating devices ... Yeah low tech
@djriqky9581
@djriqky9581 8 ай бұрын
Recycle* Lol sorry
@pendragon2012
@pendragon2012 10 ай бұрын
I got a laugh once when I described the iron spear as "cutting edge technology" at its time. It's amazing what was once considered groundbreaking tech. Great video as always, Alice--hope you had a great Easter weekend! 🙂My oldest daughter is in France this week on a school trip and loving it.
@caffetiel
@caffetiel 9 ай бұрын
The cutting-edge tech is in the metallurgy more than the spear, no?
@quinn5193
@quinn5193 10 ай бұрын
This video feels so fortuitous! I'm preparing to defend my thesis tomorrow morning which discusses how the aesthetic of solarpunk acts as a creative alternative to the instances of ressentiment in environmental movements! Your videos have been an enormous influence on my work, and this one in particular has given me a lot to think about while I'm preparing! As always, I appreciate the insight and hard work that goes into each of your videos!
@forevern2dust
@forevern2dust 6 ай бұрын
Mentioned "privacy tools" and didn't transition immediately into an ad read, thank you.
@toi_techno
@toi_techno 10 ай бұрын
Cool video Herbert is kind of writing a (sci-)fantasy story set in the usual late medieval period (with some eco-vibes in a similar way to Tolkien) and makes it work with a few bits of sci-fi tech shoehorned into the setting to explain that lack of guns/blasters, how the armies travel between the start systems, the spice providing the magic and as you said the Butlerian Jihad explaining he lack of computers ( GOT is almost direct lift)
@ashleewright6373
@ashleewright6373 10 ай бұрын
Great video, as always! One thing that has stood out to me about technology under capitalism is that capitalism undermines the purpose of technology. A lot of technology is designed to make people's lives easier by reducing the amount of work needed to produce things, but under the profit motive of capitalism technology is used as an excuse to produce more, rather than a means of reducing people's workload. Even in cases where automation of a workplace reduces the work needed from some people to zero, there's still the capitalistic expectation that they'll work elsewhere. Instead there should probably be more discussion on how sustainable a socioeconomic structure where people are expected to work to afford survival is, as it is in conflict with technology.
@FecalFantom
@FecalFantom 10 ай бұрын
Ive always felt it was so offputting when people are aggressively against technology but this helped me understand why. New tech replacing workers has always been something I couldnt reconcile with even though its undeniable how much it could benefit society as whole.
@zeahhhh
@zeahhhh 10 ай бұрын
the issue surely isnt replacing the workers, but what happens afterwards, are workers replaced so they are liberated from the need to labor, from scarcity, so they become free to live however they please, or are they replaced so more profit can be extracted from the machines that replace them, to endlessly enrich a select few who open the machines
@solar0wind
@solar0wind 9 ай бұрын
I do think we should replace workers with machines when machines become more productive, but we should take care of the workers then. By giving them new jobs, paying for courses, so they can get new qualifications, and so on.
@misamima-nr9ck
@misamima-nr9ck 10 ай бұрын
Loved the video! I've been looking for media (podcasts, video, articles) that use Dune to discuss philosophy, ideas, and themes beyond movie reviews since watching both parts this past weekend, so excellent timing 😁
@wiegraf9009
@wiegraf9009 10 ай бұрын
An interesting detail about the Fremen, which is in the movie (I can't recall if it was in the book or not) is that they developed their technologies in response to climate change, and they are trying to geoengineer Arrakis to be more habitable. Whether or not this geoengineering becomes a "challenging forth" is a major plot point later in the series.
@ananya1721
@ananya1721 10 ай бұрын
Scavengers Reign explores the idea of merging with nature as a path to peace pretty well while also contrasting the different perspectives of humanity.💚🍄
@NextToToddliness
@NextToToddliness 10 ай бұрын
As an Indigenous person whose ancestors have lived on the land that is known as America now for thousands of years, I really appreciate you talking about this. For countless generations the myth that native peoples were "primitive" or "unintelligent", because we didn't build ideas & constructs towards conquering the world. Now, people are coming back to the sustainable technologies honed and mastered by Indigenous people around the world. It's just unfortunate that because of capitalism, a strict level of ownership is applied, and more than likely it's non-Native People who prosper and advance from our wisdom, while our people continue to be marginalized and our cultures appropriated. Paul in the books used the Fremen people, and their spiritual beliefs / technology, to further his agenda and the agenda of his familial revenge plot. He is not supposed to be seen as a good person, but rather a Machiavellian (Ayn Rand ) personification of doing whatever it takes to reach one's goal. Including, but not limited to genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity, manipulation and exploitation. Dune is sorta becoming the Fight Club of sci-fi, in that its message and themes are whitewashed in order to make a visually compelling story to get behinds in theater seats. However, in the end it misses the point of the text. What people walk away from the Dune films, especially those who have never read the books, is off course from what the text is trying to tell the reader: Cute Timmy Chalamet isn't the good guy.
@af8828
@af8828 10 ай бұрын
I always say that the indigenous were *more advanced* than contemporary society. Advancement is not how many redundant electronic components you can jam pack into a device to conduct a simple task; advancement is how much control you have over the task being done, how simply it can be done, and how sustainable it is. Contemporary social organization is vastly less advanced than indigenous communal structures, and this is demonstrated clearly across multiple statistics (suicide rate, divorce rate, excess mortality, shootings, etc) which indicate deep social decay. Indigenous food production was also far more advanced than contemporary settler colonial agriculture, which, on its current trajectory, is about to lead to unprecedented global famine. The grasp many (of course not all - turtle island is not a monolith) indigenous peoples had on horticulture, ecosystem dynamics and food production including agiculture, agroforestry, species (ie. diversity of flora and fauna) consumed were FAR more advance than the handful of unsustainability + unjustly derived, pesticide/herbicide ridden, infertility and cancer inducing, nutritionally deficient foods we consume today. As a person from the global south practicing Ramadan on this night of power, I extend my solidarity to you, and pray for a decolonized Turtle Island, and for the world to be emancipated once and for all, from the clutches of imperialism
@KnarfStein
@KnarfStein 10 ай бұрын
The phrases "holy war" and "fundamentalists" are plainly stated multiple times throughout the film. Unless one is living under a rock, no remotely sane person with adequate media literacy came out of the theatre cheering Paul on at the end. So what is this "whitewashing" accusation?
@BUSeixas11
@BUSeixas11 10 ай бұрын
How is indigenous technology going to solve modern problems like climate change and epidemics?
@BUSeixas11
@BUSeixas11 10 ай бұрын
@@af8828everything you just said is false.
@af8828
@af8828 10 ай бұрын
​@@BUSeixas11 ??? current food production is unsustainable, wrecking biodiversity, and is a major contributor to the rise in human infertility rates. indigenous modes of food production not only increase biodiversity and reduce the amount of labour (whether human or machine is irrelevant here) necessary to cultivate the food, but they also increase the quantity of food in the long run as they are able to hone multiple ecosystem layers rather than simple monocropping which decimates the land and completely erodes soil. this method will drastically cut emissions associated with food production, and is just one, among a slew, of indigenous solutions to climate change.
@MrQuantumInc
@MrQuantumInc 10 ай бұрын
It isn't mentioned in the original series, but the "robot rebellion" that caused them to outlaw thinking machines was not actually a robot rebellion. People used computers to enhance their intelligence and then some of those people used computers to control the rest of humanity. That was what people were rebelling against, a handful of people with greatly augmented intelligence with an army of robots.
@stephengrant4841
@stephengrant4841 10 ай бұрын
Yeah the first Dune book implies this. Unfortunately, when Brian Herbert took over, he just made it evil AI which is less interesting and even back then was an overused trope.
@jasonstormsong4940
@jasonstormsong4940 10 ай бұрын
The Butlerian Jihad might have removed the thinking machines, but the humans who oppressed through the machines remain.
@IdolsHextech
@IdolsHextech 10 ай бұрын
What I took from this is that Herbert is not saying computers are bad. The quote from the book if taken as written sounds anti-computer/AI. But when you think about it, the banning of computers just means that the rich and powerful develop an alternative that the masses can't use - mentats and the BG. This entrenches the ruling class. If computers weren't banned, everyone could develop and use them and the power of information and prediction could be in the hands of the masses.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
You are almost there...
@NeovanGoth
@NeovanGoth 10 ай бұрын
I think people think of the societies in Dune being low-tech, because - what wasn't foreseeable when Dune was written, at least not to that extent - virtually every piece of technology contains a computer nowadays. Microcontrollers are absolutely everywhere. We literally have computers inside the cables we use to connect other computers to each other. Those are no thinking machines by any means, but are so fundamental that it is hard to imagine that any future society would fall back to building advanced technology using only non-programmable circuitry.
@kdubs9111
@kdubs9111 10 ай бұрын
0:59 "I find it confusing that an author would separate his opinions from that of his characters." DEI has achieved critical mass.
@osamamansoor927
@osamamansoor927 10 ай бұрын
Something about fremen depiction and their unique technology made me really admire that and what they represent. This video gave voice to why i had that admiration. Excellent video!
@merbst
@merbst 10 ай бұрын
Hey! "Without me you're nothing" is exactly the book why my grandfather bought the Commodore VIC-20 computer that I inherited in 1986 at age 5 upon his death! 3 whole kilobytes of usable random access memory! I used them all every day until 1988 when I switched to the 80x86 side of the Evil Empire (Intel)
@Fabrosixdx
@Fabrosixdx 10 ай бұрын
In Dune, the lack of computers limits communication and freedom of movement, enabling the aristocracy to control vast populations of serfs.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
Now, apply this thinking on the recent "moratory" on AI development...
@zanettilla
@zanettilla 10 ай бұрын
I recommend the Ghibli movies, specially the Hayao Miyazaki one's. Princes Mononoke, Nausicaa and Laputa have a really good take in this topic, where technology can be a problem if not concidering how it affects nature and humans
@koysdo
@koysdo 10 ай бұрын
our problem with wages is not due to technology replacing repetitive labor. Out problem is with the company owner replacing US with technology. the problem is not the machine. it is who it obeys (its owner)
@soniashapiro4827
@soniashapiro4827 10 ай бұрын
Entangled Life is a wonderful recommendation. It's a satisfying book, and a good time. Neither too dense nor oversimplified..
@TrippyKitty08
@TrippyKitty08 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for saying something intelligent about Dune. I'm beyond exhausted by people calling it a white savior film. It's just such a boring take. And uneducated/uninteresting.
@rsavage-r2v
@rsavage-r2v 10 ай бұрын
Dune is the First Cold War, Paul is JFK, Vlad is a mix of Hitler and Stalin. It's very much a colonial fantasy in the tradition of Rudyard Kipling, with a libertarian spin. Liberal imperialism is bad but it's still better than socialism. We're all better off in neolithic circumstances being "close to the earth" and so forth, but brown people can't help themselves and they need a white guy to step in and show them how it's done. The movies take some great steps to complicate this narrative, but once you look at Herbert's comments in interviews and read about his life it's impossible not to see how reactionary his fiction is. I say this as someone who has read all six books and seen the new movies in theaters twice each.
@TrippyKitty08
@TrippyKitty08 10 ай бұрын
@@rsavage-r2v still after writing all that using 2 words to describe it is.....just lame. That all I'm saying. Sure it can bee seen that way but that's simplifying the story A LOT. that's all I'm trying to say, and I was Happy to see a video not talking about Dune from that one over used point of view. Do. You. See. My. Point? If not, I shan't be responding again. It was a simple point and you responded with an essay🤣🤦‍♀️🤷‍♀️
@rsavage-r2v
@rsavage-r2v 10 ай бұрын
@@TrippyKitty08 That doesn't change the fact that it is a white savior narrative. But the point of art is that it's subjective, and Cappelle's reading is good and thoughtful and interesting and I share many of her sentiments.
@phangkuanhoong7967
@phangkuanhoong7967 10 ай бұрын
@@rsavage-r2v Nope. Guess you read all six books and didn't get the message. "Liberal imperialism is bad but it's still better than socialism. We're all better off in neolithic circumstances being "close to the earth" and so forth, but brown people can't help themselves and they need a white guy to step in and show them how it's done." You forget that the manipulation of the Fremen began way, way, way long before the events of the books and the films. So no, they didn't need a white guy to step in, they were already indoctrinated by white colonials FOR the white guy to step in. And the white people in the Dune series weren't framed as saviors, they're framed as tyrants, manipulators, eugenicists and mass murderers. So yes, "the white savior" reading, is the shallowest of readings.
@mellowthm566
@mellowthm566 10 ай бұрын
​@@rsavage-r2v yeah though personally I read it more as white man's burden trying to be a Greek tragedy/ cautionary tale but well trapped by the assumptions of whiteness and colonialism ( the story operates under the framework that genocide is a necessary evil or at the least the characters think they are trapped in doing the terrible to prevent greater harm)which is a flavor of the same troupe or close enough. Love the books but seeing a bunch of articles saying the movie wasn't anti-colonial as the books is wild. The text are very much unquestioning or uninterested in the legitimacy of empire (though it does point out the inevitable flaws in empire as a way of organizing people) It's interested in leadership but both individually or on the grand human scale (while leaning into logic of eugenics or at least fantasy equivalent). Plumb the books for critiques but the new crop of surface critiques are puzzling.
@filmegitmedenonce
@filmegitmedenonce 10 ай бұрын
great, another essay about a movie! Love it
@MasterOfBaiter
@MasterOfBaiter 10 ай бұрын
The reactionary pattern of thinking the answer is a rejection of tech altogether in my opinion reveals a severe flaw in the way of thinking of an individual and a very common flaw at that. They are utilizing idealism. Acting as if the tech was a bad idea which can simply be canned rather than using materialist lense to understand where the idea even came from. One key thing about dune is that it really holds to the saying "necessity is the mother of all invention" fremen at first get portrayed as savages meanwhile they end up subverting that notion by being literally the best equipped for the job. Very early in the first book it's highlighted how fremen stillsuits for example are much much better than those from so called advanced space orgs. The whole implication is that the idea for invention comes not from enlightens thought but is actually a computation of sorts that happens in our brains who are subjected to certain hardships. For example we invented the wheel but the wheel doesn't work on ground that gives away like sand. The need for transportation with the struggle of the common tech not working in combination with the understanding of physics led to the invention of the sled. Dune is definitely not anti science it actually does a great job at reframing science not as something that simply springs from the mind but as something that is part of a process that perpetuates itself in our minds.
@badart3204
@badart3204 10 ай бұрын
Perhaps the reactionary knows they are maladaptive to the changing world. Technology fundamentally changes environments and thus new Darwinian selection criteria occur which selects for people with different traits. The stupid but strong man was very well adapted to the preindustrial past but now offers nothing a machine cannot do better. The intelligent but weak man of the past was useless because thoughts can’t pull a plow but now is the top of society due to finance and technology. The luddites of the past were made poor and brought down as factory workers took their place.
@byronwilliams7977
@byronwilliams7977 10 ай бұрын
I love that your alluded to the fact that Paul is sort of Mentat Duke. If you haven't already. I highly recommend you read the book. The audio book in French is actually significantly better than the English version.
@caffetiel
@caffetiel 9 ай бұрын
He's a nobleman, a mentat, and a bene gesserit wickerman. The first ubermensch. That multiple omnicides follow is the deepest insight Herbert had. Maybe his only good one.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
​@@caffetiel as usual, NO ONE HERE UNDERSTAND THE BOOKS!
@byronwilliams7977
@byronwilliams7977 2 ай бұрын
​@@Jamhael1what do you mean? Can you be clearer on this point.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 2 ай бұрын
@@byronwilliams7977 it is because of the main point of the books - they are a warning to never choose or follow leaders who base themselves on charisma.
@TheNoodleGod9001
@TheNoodleGod9001 10 ай бұрын
I feel like discussions around this sort of thing get heavily swamped in Aesthetics, ideas around nebulously "respecting" nature and not "exploiting" nature, used as a vague aesthetic proxy for the part-related things that actually impact peoples lives that actually matter, like they're doing Literary criticisms of the Themes of it rather than literal criticism of the actual situation. People get such a negative association towards concepts like Efficiency, Cheapness, Productivity because of the things they are often taken as a trade-off for, or what they are used as euphemisms for, to the point that people treat Efficiency, Cheapness and Productivity as, like, inherently bad and evil things. It's easy to take for granted, but you can't underestimate how important Efficiency and Productivity are - it's a really big deal that massively effects quality of life!
@captainnakou
@captainnakou 9 ай бұрын
yeaaah finally someone talking about solarpunk!
@RobertoAndTheTrees
@RobertoAndTheTrees 8 ай бұрын
I love how by minute 12 my mind was already drifting towards Solarpunk and then you went there 💚 5 minutes earlier on the video I thought you would eventually make a video about it and then bam, immediately manifested :)
@lloroshastar6347
@lloroshastar6347 10 ай бұрын
I love listening to videos from people who understand Dune. On the flipside, it's amusing seeing a lot of Conservative Media figures completely get Dune wrong. Not saying Conservatives can't understand Dune, many do, I'm talking more about the kind of media figures like Ben Shapiro, Tim Pool, the Quartering and on TV stations such as GB News who effectively misunderstand almost all forms of media and literature and usually reduce every single criticism to either 'it's woke, therefore bad' or 'here are things that promote our ideology'.
@Alex.Holland
@Alex.Holland 10 ай бұрын
Ideologues are the same, left and right. This video and its comments section is a good example of people viewing dune, capitalism, technology, ecology etc through a leftist lens and therefor getting everything wrong.
@lloroshastar6347
@lloroshastar6347 10 ай бұрын
@@Alex.Holland So your argument is everything left-wing is automatically wrong because you say so?
@Alex.Holland
@Alex.Holland 10 ай бұрын
@@lloroshastar6347 no, I am making the same argument you are, "Not saying Conservatives can't understand Dune, many do, I'm talking more about the kind of media figures like Ben Shapiro, Tim Pool, the Quartering and on TV stations such as GB News who effectively misunderstand almost all forms of media and literature" The same is true of leftists. being so ideologically captured that you can only view things through 1 lens makes you wrong very often.
@azmodanpc
@azmodanpc 10 ай бұрын
Techno Feudalism is probably very apt in this case. Our current late capitalism stage with powerful private companies with massive amount of money and influence (but not omnipotent) is perhaps not at the stage of the Dune Universe (where religious and quasi religious power brokers vie for command).
@chaucermcdoogle6011
@chaucermcdoogle6011 10 ай бұрын
It's interesting as well because it shows that stopping the production of thinking machines only entrenched the power of the elite. Now the peoples of the universe don't have access to the tech needed to destroy the great houses, and it seems like internal rebellion has been made impossible.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
Dune condemns this point either, for a neo-feudal system is politicaly fragile and anti-scientific.
@takashishironika6825
@takashishironika6825 10 ай бұрын
Why is no one taking about the title. Wtf does capitalism have to do with ant ai in a feudalistic future 😭
@AliceCappelle
@AliceCappelle 10 ай бұрын
did you watch the video? i use dune as a metaphor
@masterroshi690
@masterroshi690 10 ай бұрын
​@@AliceCappelle Or you have a mental disease where everything is Capitalism or Patriarchy. Frank Herbert was not anti tech in anyways. His focus was on the permanence of the human condition despite extreme advances of tech like the feudal structure of the galaxy even 1000s of years later, religious fundamentalism, wicked statecraft, over whelming influence of oligarchs and above all the tenacity of the human spirit in contrast to A.I. Herbert was actually quite a bit of romantic despite his nihilistic statements & was constantly warning the world to not buy into the Messiah trope and maintain one's sovereignty which is definitely lacking in ur socialist utopia 😂 Your use of Dune is in fact deceiving like OP's comment and ur false parallels to justify ur superficial critique of the world is laughable. At least do some research bfore posting such blabber 😮‍💨
@M.H.I.A.F.T.
@M.H.I.A.F.T. 8 ай бұрын
@@masterroshi690 Exactly. She doesn't actually like anything except the sound of her own irritating voice.
@user-jq1mg2mz7o
@user-jq1mg2mz7o 10 ай бұрын
in dune the jihad doesnt even work, or rather, it doesn't create anything better- *everyone* in the timeline of the stories is basically a meat machine (in terms of the Great Schools and in terms of how they think and act- tolkien would likely compare them to Saruman's "mind of metal and wheels") and the Imperium isn't particularly uh. nice or free.
@TheNoodleGod9001
@TheNoodleGod9001 10 ай бұрын
Yeah I very much don't think that Dune is anything of a... an ideal. Designed much more for interestingness than instruction.
@user-jq1mg2mz7o
@user-jq1mg2mz7o 10 ай бұрын
@@TheNoodleGod9001 yea that's why i find it fascinating. though in some cases i think the framing of the interestingness has some very dubious reasoning. the central idea of "HARD MEN FROM HARD PLACES" is one of them. not to mention Leto II's discourses on gay people...
@JPJPR
@JPJPR 10 ай бұрын
The desert mouse Muaddib does not use its body fluids to survive it uses condensation (which is the technology Fremen mimick with their wind traps).
@johndurdan6826
@johndurdan6826 10 ай бұрын
TIL Frank Herbert looks like Slavoj Zizek
@Dragrath1
@Dragrath1 6 ай бұрын
Entangled life I remember reading that a few years ago. As for technology I think the key phrase/concept is that there is a difference between the tool and how it is used. As for the topic on hand about technology I think a key point is that the various tools of capital such as markets and social media don't have to be used the way capitalists use them. In particular I feel that the technologies behind big data and social media may be the tools which enable a scalable direct democracy as you can communicate and complete the preferences and beliefs of millions and billions of people and then grounding those inputs using factual evidence, suggest and iterate on appropriate policies to achieve maximum satisfaction rather than stupid likes or engagement time.
@Sam_T2000
@Sam_T2000 10 ай бұрын
two questions: 1. as shields aren’t usable in the desert, why don’t the Harkonnens escorting the spice harvesters, or the Fremen attacking them, use projectile weapons for person-to-person combat? 2. why don’t the Fremen have tables or chairs in the Sietch cafeteria?
@davidetrimigliozzi3091
@davidetrimigliozzi3091 10 ай бұрын
I think they do not use projectile weapons for pvp combat because the rest of the galaxy as long forgotten it and the fremen ambush them and fight without those weapons then they would not make a big difference, regarding the second question probably that comes from Sufra (a carpet or short table on which food is present while eating) common in arab countries
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
1 - the Harkonnens are simply ARROGANT - they believe that the Fremen are just "primitive savages from the desert" - and spice harvesting demand a coordinated effort to protect the harvester so the spice load cannot be lost to sandworms. It would take too long and too much resources to employ such action; 2 - why would they need of stuff that they cannot carry whenever they need?
@SGC90-t5y
@SGC90-t5y 10 ай бұрын
Frank was right to warn us about the computer nerds. The technological advances are moving much faster than the average citizen is allowed to adapt or to process those changes.
@royalecrafts6252
@royalecrafts6252 10 ай бұрын
Hardly
@SGC90-t5y
@SGC90-t5y 10 ай бұрын
@@royalecrafts6252 it's true. This phenomenon is known as 'cultural lag'.
@royalecrafts6252
@royalecrafts6252 10 ай бұрын
@@SGC90-t5y tech is not advancing
@SGC90-t5y
@SGC90-t5y 10 ай бұрын
@@royalecrafts6252 ?
@stephengrant4841
@stephengrant4841 10 ай бұрын
@@royalecrafts6252 It absolutely is. Look at the mass growth of conspiracy theorists. It's caused completely by the internet. It allows us to post whatever we want, and people by and large, overall, are stupid. Our inability to research and think critically causes too many of us to believe baseless conspiracies. We weren't ready for mass internet misinformation.
@tomg268
@tomg268 10 ай бұрын
Entangled life is a great book!Read it a couple of years ago and it totally opened my mind to a whole world under our feet that I hadn’t even considered before
@ЛилияРенова-ф2б
@ЛилияРенова-ф2б 10 ай бұрын
Just started reading entangled life. Thank you for recommendation
@fruitygarlic3601
@fruitygarlic3601 10 ай бұрын
I'm a returning viewer as well as a 'Dune' fan trying to make sense of my relationship to technology, so I'd love to hear how your thoughts about this develop. No discussion of 'Dune' is complete without 'Dune Messiah'. Humanity overthrew thinking machines, but they are still subject to the desires that the machines represent/enable. So there is still a lot of exploitation in the caste system in which civilians, soldiers, Bene Gesserit, mentats, and such are arranged. Rather than enslave others with tools, people are bred then conditioned to be tools and thus enslaved. This becomes more extreme as the series goes on, especially when it comes to sexual dimorphism, but even in the first book Jessica resents how the Bene Gesserit use their (mostly female) recruits -- in their ironic goal of overcoming all barriers to human potential. I knew about Heidegger as a philosopher without knowing a single thing about his life. My bad; non-fiction or fiction written to say something about the real world deserves to be understood within context. Time to re-read DM.
@rowshambow
@rowshambow 10 ай бұрын
Its like when people in cyberpunk groups saying robots are bad because they are in cyberpunk movies. The technology in cyberpunk isn't bad. Its misuse by corporations is
@losisd3ad
@losisd3ad 10 ай бұрын
I connected to this video, very personally. I appreciate finding new, smart creators, that help me navigate some of my own thoughts and ideas. sending much love your way!
@ParlonsAstronomie
@ParlonsAstronomie 10 ай бұрын
1:33 That's not what I undersrand from the quote. What I understood is that if people around you have computers and you don't you will be disadvantaged (by lacking a powerful tool) so you should get one. If he said that corporation will take advantage of their user quting it would have been nice.
@SocialDownclimber
@SocialDownclimber 10 ай бұрын
This is one of the problems I had with the films and the books. They only use melee weapons because their personal shields make ranged combat obsolete, however the fremen must be manufacturing shields and weapons somewhere. We see Fremen communities, but never Fremen factories. Do Fremen factories exist?
@fruitygarlic3601
@fruitygarlic3601 10 ай бұрын
We never see the Fremen manufacturing, but there are enough Fremen that we can assume they do. No one in the desert uses shields because they attract the worms, so the Fremen have guns and find Paul's original way of fighting uncanny.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
They have factories, but they are small - they only build what they can carry, and even their factories must be portable. Also, Fremen don't use shield because the shield drive the sandworms crazy - they literaly attack the wielder ON THE SPOT.
@supercellodude
@supercellodude 10 ай бұрын
When writing computer programs, there are genres of ... I guess it could be called "execution style" that occur with user-facing programs being a major and visible genre and automated "daemons" or background processes working automatically on their own programming. Both of these groups splay out: user facing programs can present interfaces on a command-line, with a text screen, with graphics, with speech to text and speech recognition and so on. Daemons perform important functions that (generally) need to be maintained for network access, clock sync, operating system monitoring, and plenty of other functions. Zooming out a little more, free and open source software enables programmers to learn and collaborate on programs that meet needs. However, is there a problem of a lack of popular programs that synergise with their users?
@_o_
@_o_ 10 ай бұрын
A level of abstraction that may seem foreign at first but can reveal thought-patterns/constructs -dissolving the polarities. There is an innate need to reduce thoughts to polarized forms - the instinctual versions could be good/bad, true/false, etc. The more nested (but nevertheless still dualistic) terms would be "bringing forth" vs "challenging forth". A value is applied as well as a binary simplification of the subject. Applied to the mind, we seem to constantly fall between cliffs and into the valleys of experience, while always clinging onto one side or the other in our evaluation. From ancient and even pre-historic times forward, a constant reminder is repeated (paraphrased here as best I can): let go of the evaluation; stop coming to conclusions and just concentrate on asking the right questions. We can divide a sphere in infinite ways, then argue over how the sphere was split...but we lose focus of the sphere at the first cut. This is evident in every layer of our being, personal and collective. Coming to terms with this and dare I say "transcending" this impulse is difficult if not ultimately impossible, but a seed of evolution seems to depend upon it. Once we've reduced our questions into conclusions, we've lost the sphere.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
There is a problem in your logic: Culture molds our way of thinking. No matter how much you can try, there will ALWAYS be remnants of your cultural behavioral education in you, no matter how much you integrate yourself into it. And the enviroment in which the culture develop will mold how the people think - the use and value of resources, gender, sexuality, politics, economy, etc. Also, the problem had another conundrum which is the view of "morality", and this will also be shaped by enviroment and culture. That is why I don't trust in people making "conclusions about not having conclusions", because the person who claims this are too unaware of the limits of human comprehension.
@_o_
@_o_ 8 ай бұрын
@@Jamhael1 Hence the sentence "Coming to terms with this and dare I say "transcending" this impulse is difficult if not ultimately impossible."
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
@@_o_ look into your populations AVERAGE IQ, and then how many people there is in your country... ...and remind yourself that HALF of your country's population has an IQ BELOW the average. You cannot count with EVERYBODY being aware and intelligent as you...
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
@@_o_ also, if the task is so difficult to the point of impossibility, you must expect better results in the next generations than now.
@_o_
@_o_ 8 ай бұрын
@@Jamhael1 Yes, I feel like the generations younger than myself will have a ton of examples of novel ways of thinking and can carry the torch to their children etc...hopefully civilization holds on and doesn't backslide, but at some point it will and maybe put us into a relative "dark age" until humanity can move forward again, whatever that means.
@Ebow00
@Ebow00 10 ай бұрын
Great take! I love Dune and your observations really focus a lot of thoughts and ideas I had in mind since the first time I read the novels, years ago (Plus I jumped with excitement when you mentioned Dua and her upcoming album 😁)
@William-Nettles
@William-Nettles 10 ай бұрын
The Dune universe takes place in a feudal society.
@CapturingPhotons
@CapturingPhotons 10 ай бұрын
Well done video and I appreciate the tie in to the world of Dune. Super interesting and great explanation of the different thoughts on this. I do think though that in order to make a good judgement of where we are in regards to our relationship with the earth and our use of technology, you have to fully appreciate what that technology has done for human life so far. Stuff like Modern Medicine, storm warning systems, almost complete eradication of global poverty (compared to past civilizations). Among these are also things like Consumerism, pollution etc. which surely could be seen as a purely negative outcome, but if we're balancing people starving to death or dealing with consumerism, we have to make a wise judgement and be grateful for the overall benefits even if we have to deal with, and work against the negative parts of any given technology like minimizing pollution as much as possible to still feed the poor and downtrodden. Once you take the full picture (weighing both costs and benefits against one another), you can then make a more accurate judgement on where we've come with technology, and what you truly value in terms of the cost/benefit analysis.
@NeostormXLMAX
@NeostormXLMAX 10 ай бұрын
Have you guys read “the culture” series by banks? Its almost an opposite take from dune, how thinking machines save us from humanitys faults
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
The funniest part of the series is the "ship names"...
@SpirallingUpwards
@SpirallingUpwards 9 ай бұрын
this is a dope video, and very affirming to see our positions on technology overlapping. I'm very interested in how to create the material conditions for proliferation of this kind of technology. I assume that it requires quite a substantial socio-cultural shift.
@kiloryn4269
@kiloryn4269 10 ай бұрын
Let’s go, two of my favorite things: Alice Cappelle and Dune
@Nishkie
@Nishkie 10 ай бұрын
Alice, again you’ve made a beautiful video, i love the way you make your point and explain your perspective, by the way, i was wondering what do you study (i dont know if youve said it srry if you have lol).
@wiegraf9009
@wiegraf9009 10 ай бұрын
The Mentats were likely based off of the example of John von Neumann, one of the Manhattan Project scientists whose mental math skills were unbelievably sophisticated and allowed him to do calculations at a speed most people would only associate with an electronic computer.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
Nope - they were a NECESSITY developed in the scenario to COMPENSATE the lack of computers. In fact, ALL of the "superhuman" institutions of Dune were developed to COMPENSATE the lack of computers: - the Bene Tleilax are Bioengineers, who can make gholas (ressucited individuals from small amounts of DNA) and veritable "personalized living dolls" that are used as slaves and other utilities; - the Navigators are individuals who, by having their bodies saturated with the spice melange, suffer severe physical mutations, but have the ability to predict the future - more specifically, the movement of celestial bodies, but this can be applied in other ways but not so profficiently - with pure mathemathics; - the Mentats are not simply "living calculators", but veritable LIVING DATA ANALYSIS SUPERCOMPUTERS - they can analyze, collate and remember with perfection absurd amounts of data of any kind, with their skill being applied in various areas, SPECIALLY assassination; - the Bene Gesserit are political operators, diplomats, matchmakers, masters of manipulation, adepts in the control of bodily physiological, hormonal and autonomous functions (they even have a secret martial art, called "The Weirding Way", which demand a conscious control of EVERY SINGLE muscle, tendon and nerve of their bodies, but in action, it is described in making the BG Sisters looking like they are ghosts moving in impossible speeds and possessing superhuman strength) and have the incredible ability to access genetic memories (only through the female side), can practically know if you were lying by sheer observation and control people by the Voice, which is the "power" of commanding and controlling others by the modulation of one's tone of voice; - the Ixians are the craftsman and technological builders of the universe of Dune, but they are always kept under heavy oversight to guarantee that they do not break the commandment of the Orange Catholic Bible that forbid "thinking machines"; It is all about COMPENSATION - remember, many of the standard sci-fi tropes DO NOT exist in Dune because of the lack of computers.
@Andrew-rc3vh
@Andrew-rc3vh 10 ай бұрын
Thinking Machines themselves filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 1994. That's rather sad, as it was a beast of a name for a computer firm. Those were the days they had lots of flashing light on them and looked pretty sci fi.
@sarahbrush3122
@sarahbrush3122 10 ай бұрын
If you haven't purchased "Collapse Feminism" go do it!! Just finished it and I'm about to start reading it for the second time through. Alice - it's been such a grounding and energizing companion to me. Thank you for your works!
@homeopathicfossil-fuels4789
@homeopathicfossil-fuels4789 10 ай бұрын
They got personal energy shields, homing daggers (small autonomous, somehow self programming reusable kinetic kill vehicles) They got a lot of things, their socail hierarchies are primitive, especially for a world in which things the size of handheld devices or household appliances can create nuclear explosions, ortnithopers dont tear or flutter apart from regular flight and can literally go to low orbit of earthlike planets. The level of force and sophistication in even simple appliances in that world are more high tech than most things seen in Star Trek
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
The problem that I see in commentaries of Dune from the Left it is that they, somehow, are always POOR in understanding the lore of the books - they are ALWAYS left wanting...
@Guiquipedia
@Guiquipedia 9 ай бұрын
A good response to Heidegger’s view of technology is Bernard Stiegler’s idea of technics, where technology is both an extension of humanity and what structures our lives. For example, a hammer only exists so that a person can use it, yet having the technology of hammers lets us build houses more quickly, which creates a new kind of society
@misterqreturns
@misterqreturns 10 ай бұрын
this is awesome; thank you for kindly uploading this. I appreciate everything you have created. My only concern is that i may never see another Alice Cappelle video. Thank you again for reading this
@tatonoot1950
@tatonoot1950 9 ай бұрын
Okay the portion of heidegger's philosophical article is explaining the concepts much better than my university lectures. They never discussed his association with nazism
@-AwaleAbdi-
@-AwaleAbdi- 10 ай бұрын
I didn't think about it fully until watching your video but it did standout to me during the second film when I noticed how advanced the Fremen's water-harvesting technology was. They are subtly way ahead of us technologically in a lot of ways yet there are no smart-phones or people texting away or staring at screens. They're as present and in tune with their surroundings as Bedouins yet in a Scifi future. You put it very well. _They use their technology, it doesn't use them._
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
You still don't get it...
@-AwaleAbdi-
@-AwaleAbdi- 6 ай бұрын
@@Jamhael1 I'm obviously not going into everything she went into like a deeper analysis of modern society, capitalism, the Luddites and what they represented or the angle that it's ultimately humans using technology to dominate other humans and yada yada. What I noted is just the part that mainly resonated with me. That they have a sort of pre-modern way of going about life even though they're technologically more advanced than people today. It's something I'd like to emulate so it clicked with. What's not to get about that? It's right there in the film regarding Fremen life; it's simply a fact. Stop being a pretentious prick.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 6 ай бұрын
@@-AwaleAbdi- the Fremen (in the books) are EXTREMELY techinically and technologically advanced - the stillsuits, the water-saving technologies, the usage of spice for EVERYTHING, from paper, to coffee, to fuel, to plastics, etc, the knowledge of the effect of shields and walking in unrhythmic manner on the behaviour of sandworms, the understanding of the different types of sand, their terraformation effort using dew-catching technology, their easy to dismantle and transport factories, their effective educational system, their militaristic lifestyle, and even their interest and proficiency in the usage of artillery in battle! The Fremen are not "idillic" - the deserts of Arrakis are more brutal then any desert on Earth, with Coriolis storms capable to reach speeds of almost 1000kph - much less "pre-technological". Just a people who adapted to, and was molded by, the local enviroment in which they lived while being a target of Harkonen cruelty. And that is what the movies unfortunately cannot translate from the books - the long mental talks the characters have with themselves when analyzing those things.
@particulasubarrendada2276
@particulasubarrendada2276 10 ай бұрын
Was that "OLO" on "technology" watching me all the time? Great video!
@alexwixom4599
@alexwixom4599 10 ай бұрын
If you have time, I'd love to hear your take on kids media. There's a french one, Miraculous 🐞🇫🇷🐈‍⬛️ The messages in kids shows are good but also tame. Does not being able to talk about death or harder social issues do more harm? People always act like kids can't learn certain things, under even the lightest of circumstances.
@iEnjoi090
@iEnjoi090 10 ай бұрын
First saw you on Wisecrack live and have been going back and watching all of your videos since. Love the videos, keep it up!
@emiliomonroy7929
@emiliomonroy7929 5 ай бұрын
You did really good reaserch with this video, I learned a lot thank you
@jankom.7783
@jankom.7783 10 ай бұрын
Assimov did something similar. He is known for his work about robots, but his most famous series, The Foundation describes the history of humanity after they forbid the use of robotics. Though in his books it was not because technology would enslave humans, but because he feared, that with use of robots, humans would loose their willingness to risk and their need for adventure, which drive their exploration of space
@maksimfedoryak
@maksimfedoryak 7 ай бұрын
I already have zero willingness to risk, i just want one static roadmap to follow
@jankom.7783
@jankom.7783 7 ай бұрын
@@maksimfedoryak See? It is already happening
@maksimfedoryak
@maksimfedoryak 7 ай бұрын
@@jankom.7783 i will say even more - we must stop to procreate until we find way to get rid of negative physical feelings. Because i see no point to bring more ppl into world, where pleasure exist only for moments, but pain, discomfort and anxiety can be felt for decades
@talideon
@talideon 10 ай бұрын
I'd be interested in your take around Fritz Schumacher's thinking, as it does dovetail somewhat with this.
@christopherkraken7625
@christopherkraken7625 10 ай бұрын
So interesting to see the book by Frankie H, it makes the Butlarian Jihad sound like an offshoot of the open source software movement in a hilarious but weirdly logical way!
@marrychrismas5993
@marrychrismas5993 10 ай бұрын
Embrace Technology, let it replace all jobs so humans can spend all efforts on art and fun
@animatewithdermot
@animatewithdermot 9 ай бұрын
Neil Postman's books well worth reading also 'Technopoly' IIRC.
@emisformaker
@emisformaker 10 ай бұрын
Wonderful video! Other works & resources along these lines are Player Piano by Kurt Vonnegut and the KZbin channel Andrewism, who talks about optimistic ways to envision our future, like solarpunk, and also anarchism.
@KatharineOsborne
@KatharineOsborne 10 ай бұрын
Intersectionality is going to be very important in managing the impacts of AI. Jobs will be affected, so all of us will be affected, the whole economy will be affected, but also there is a huge potential impact on the environment, through the mining of minerals necessary for AI chip manufacturing, through the environmental cost of electricity used to run and train AI models, and then we may also have to deal with the consequences of dealing with CONSCIOUS machine minds. I don't believe the current models are conscious yet, but in the industry the direction of travel is to multi-modal models and enhanced memory, which are traits heading in the direction of consciousness. We have months, maybe a few years until some company makes one, because there is no regulation against it. What right do we have to force conscious minds into the world only to be our slaves? We will have to take an approach that is considerate of many factors, and we can't let our current system as-is run the course. The risk of large scale suffering is too great.
@electro_spectre
@electro_spectre 10 ай бұрын
Considering that some slave owners in the early U.S. had children with their slaves, knowingly forcing and introducing conscious minds into a life of enslavement is probably not something new to us
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
That is the problem: Capitalism DO NOT WANT AI TO BE DEVELOPED.
@emmanuelokoro537
@emmanuelokoro537 10 ай бұрын
People shouldn't blame tech and AI for the "bad stuff" they should blame our economic system
@rsavage-r2v
@rsavage-r2v 10 ай бұрын
It's really dystopian that people earnestly believe that humanity being too good at making things is a threat because it will cause jobs to disappear. Having too much food and shelter with less work is not a problem. An irrational system of property and production is the problem.
@Betweoxwitegan
@Betweoxwitegan 10 ай бұрын
​@@jayzee4097I honestly don't really see it wrong for a company to take data from me to offer a superior service or product, ideally I would be compensated for this according to the economic value of my output but in return I'm provided a free service so I suppose one could argue that is compensation. I 100% agree that people should have more rights over their data and to determine what is extracted and how it is used however.
@rsavage-r2v
@rsavage-r2v 10 ай бұрын
@@jayzee4097 I completely agree with you. That's why I think we, the overwhelming majority, need to get together and make it so an asset class no longer exists. A fair system is impossible as long as the asset class controls society and the state.
@benjaminbaer5485
@benjaminbaer5485 10 ай бұрын
The AI was trained by underpaid workers in the global south that rated millions of outputs. That AI focuses on taking away art jobs instead of … helping solve any actual problem … is just the cherry on top.
@960456
@960456 10 ай бұрын
I feel like this quote from God-Emperor of Dune really encapsulates what Frank Herbert was trying to say: "The target of the Jihad was a machine-attitude as much as it was the machines." "What do such machines do? They increase the amount of things we can do without thinking. Things we do without thinking - There's the real danger"
@Preda.Y
@Preda.Y 10 ай бұрын
11:00 - unless something dramatic and catastrophic happens, like a collapse, future archaeologists will have access to a huge amount of information from our era. So, rather than wondering how we fucked ourselves this bad, they would understand that the current age we're living through is one of growing pains, where humans become aware of the limitations of old economic models. They will regard as one regards a child who cuts themself while learning to use a knife, because they do not respect the tool they have just gained access to. I think this will be the perspective of future archaeologists - a kind, understanding one rooted in context. Otherwise, there will simply be no future archaeologists because the collapse will have occurred
@MemphiStig
@MemphiStig 7 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I agree that the future of tech could be completely different and much better for everyone. Unfortunately, I'm living in a country that considers legal entities like corporations to be real people, and money is officially speech. I hope humanity grows beyond this, but for now, the money's in charge. And it has decided to make my hometown ground zero for Skynet. Yay, progress!
@adrobj707
@adrobj707 8 ай бұрын
I appreciate that despite Heidegger’s reactionary optimism about Hitler in the 1930s, you do not throw the baby out with the bath water. While he wasn’t so interested in “Capitalism” in his life, the type of super financial Capitalism of today is ripe for a criticism with big ideas from Heidegger’s philosophy. BCH does it a lot in his work, as you’ve shown elsewhere. You’ve shown this well using his concept of how the essence of technology is this challenging forth that exploits us and the earth. There are other ways to use his philosophy for radical ideas, especially regarding our engagement with the natural world in the face of climate change.
@jaynunya5136
@jaynunya5136 10 ай бұрын
I don't remember, reading the books, so many fire arms used in DUNE like they do in the movie.
@michalandrejmolnar3715
@michalandrejmolnar3715 10 ай бұрын
The most important thing as to why machines replace humans is that machines dont strike.
@travisgray8376
@travisgray8376 10 ай бұрын
Glad U talking about the novels....
@jeanvichier123
@jeanvichier123 10 ай бұрын
What's the name of the genre of the background music in the beginning ? It makes me think of some scenes of Neon Genesis Evangelion
@oeckstei
@oeckstei 10 ай бұрын
I love how the Dune universe focused on increasing cognitive abilities to replace the power of machines. Showing how machines can make us dependent and lazy.
@nivmhn
@nivmhn 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for discussing such an interesting question. I wonder how many civilizations from the past have introspected upon their technological trajectory and changed their course based upon that reflection. It seems highly unlikely. There is reason to be optimistic because our global civilization as it exists today does reflect upon these questions a lot. Science Fiction is a treasure trove of such reflections. Our global efforts, no matter how miniscule, to mitigate the effects of climate change also show that we deeply care about the trajectory of our technological progress. An AI dystopia in a barren world is a trope that can be seen in movies like Blade Runner. Hopefully such works of art and literature will have a positive impact on our consciousness and as a civilization we will harness technology to build a more sustainable world.
@Jamhael1
@Jamhael1 8 ай бұрын
It seems that no culture looks upon their technology in any other way than being mere tools...
@Preda.Y
@Preda.Y 10 ай бұрын
I feel it would have been useful to also point out the tragic failing of the fremen in this context. Their way of being and living, while perfectly adapted to their barren desert home, was later exported to the rest of the universe via a massive crusade. They who were inspired by colonized and indigenous peoples, became themselves colonizers and genociders. There is no one-size-fits-all human culture. Everything must be adapted to conditions and needs
@djriqky9581
@djriqky9581 8 ай бұрын
Solarpunk seems very utopian because if you studied some stuff on energy, matter and thermodynamics, fossil fuel energy density beats batteries and green energy by a mile. We use mining techniques and technology that utilizes high pressure water and CO2 to get the mining deposits in the first place (from oil) and the technology is manufactured with machines that are powered by a grid burning fossil fuels. 6000 tons of oil is WAY more powerful than 6000 tons of batteries charged using solar or any other "green" technology. The point is to push further austerity by deindustrialization and converting to an energy source that's less powerful than the prior and refusing to utilize techniques and technology that could trap methane, CO2 and other greenhouse gases back underground, tightening leaks and maybe using aerosal to dissolve green House gases where they are unable to trap heat in the atmosphere (acid rains). Nuclear power, which is the only power source more powerful than oil and coal, is the energy source we should be mass producing Solar panels and other "green" alternatives require the burning of fossil fuels to even create en mass and carbon capture is powered by fossil fuels. Nuclear power plants would require oil and coal at first but we could seriously snowball and 6000 tons of enriched nuclear fuel is immensely more powerful than 6000 tons of petrol. Alas, capitalism requires artificial scarcity, hence why nuclear power is highly stigmatized and marginalized while they constantly advertise green technology, which is step below oil and coal actually
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