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Scientific Technique and the Concentration
of Power
Brent Jessop
Knowledge
Driven Revolution.com
Tuesday January 15, 2008
"So long as the rulers are comfortable, what reason
have they to improve the lot of their serfs?"- Bertrand Russell, 1952
(p61)
Bertrand Russell in his 1952 book The Impact of Science
on Society* he describes the effects of "scientific technique" on
the increasing control of societies by an ever shrinking number of people.
As we will see, "scientific technique" is much more than just the development
and widespread use of new technology, but first some of its effects.
Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell (1872-1970) was a
renowned British philosopher and mathematician who was an adamant internationalist
and worked extensively on the education of young children. He was the
founder of the Pugwash
movement which used the spectre of Cold War nuclear annihilation
to push for world government. Among many other prizes, Russell was awarded
the Nobel
Prize in Literature in 1950 and UNESCO’s (United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization) Kalinga
prize in 1957.
Increasing Organization
From Impact of Science on Society:
"This [the telegraph] had two important consequences: first
messages could now travel faster than human beings; secondly, in large
organizations detailed control from a centre became much more possible
than it had formerly been.
The fact that messages could travel faster than human beings was useful,
above all, to the police..." - 33
"Electricity as a source of power is much more recent than the telegraph,
and has not yet had all the effects of which it is capable. As an
influence on social organisation its most notable feature is the importance
of power stations, which inevitably promote centralisation... as soon
as a community has become dependent upon them for lighting and heating
and cooking. I lived in America in a farm-house which depended entirely
upon electricity, and sometimes, in a blizzard, the wires would be
blown down. The resulting inconvenience was almost intolerable. If
we had been deliberately cut off for being rebels, we should soon
have had to give in." - 35
"But what is of most importance in this connection is the development
of flying. Aeroplanes have increased immeasurably the power of governments.
No rebellion can hope to succeed unless it is favoured by at least
a portion of the air force." - 36
"In industry, the integration brought about by scientific technique
is much greater [than agriculture] and more intimate.
One of the most obvious results of industrialism is that a much larger
percentage of the population live in towns than was formerly the case.
The town dweller is a more social being than the agriculturist, and
is much more influenced by discussion. In general, he works in a crowd,
and his amusements are apt to take him into still larger crowds. The
course of nature, the alternations of day and night, summer and winter,
wet or shine, make little difference to him; he has no occasion to
fear that he will be ruined by frost or drought or sudden rain. What
matters to him is his human environment, and his place in various
organisations especially.
Take a man who works in a factory, and consider how many organisations
affect his life. There is first of all the factory itself, and any
larger organisation of which it may be a part. Then there is the man's
trade union and his political party. He probably gets house room from
a building society or public authority. His children go to school.
If he reads a newspaper or goes to a cinema or looks at a football
match, these things are provided by powerful organisations.
Indirectly, through his employers, he is dependent upon those from
whom they buy their raw material and those to whom they sell their
finished product. Above all, there is the State, which taxes him and
may at any moment order him to go and get killed in war, in return
for which it protects him against murder and theft so long as there
is peace, and allows him to buy a fixed modicum of food." [emphasis
mine] - 44
"The increase of organisation has brought into existence new positions
of power. Every body has to have executive officials, in whom, at
any moment, its power is concentrated. It is true that officials are
usually subject to control, but the control may be slow and distant.
From the young lady who sells stamps in a Post Office all the way
up to the Prime Minister, every official is invested, for the time
being, with some part of the power of the State. You can complain
of the young lady if her manners are bad, and you can vote against
the Prime Minister at the next election if you disapprove of his policy.
But both the young lady and the Prime Minister can have a very considerable
run for their money before (if ever) your discontent has any effect."
[emphasis mine] - 45
"The increased power of officials is an inevitable result of the greater
degree of organisation that scientific technique brings about.
It has the drawback that it is apt to be irresponsible, behind-the-scenes,
power, like that of Emperors' eunuchs and Kings' mistresses in former
times. To discover ways of controlling it is one of the most important
political problems of our time. Liberals protested, successfully,
against the power of kings and aristocrats; socialists protested against
the power of capitalists. But unless the power of officials can
be kept within bounds, socialism will mean little more than the substitution
of one set of masters for another: all the former power of the
capitalist will be inherited by the official. [emphasis mine]" - 47
"As we have seen, the question of freedom needs a completely fresh
examination. There are forms of freedom that are desirable, and that
are gravely threatened; there are other forms of freedom that are
undesirable, but that are very difficult to curb... The resultant
two-fold problem, of preserving liberty internally and diminishing
it externally, is one that the world must solve, and solve soon, if
scientific societies are to survive.
Let us consider for a moment the social psychology involved in this
situation.
...The armed forces of one's own nation exist - so each nation asserts
- to prevent aggression by other nations. But the armed forces of
other nations exist - or so many people believe - to promote aggression.
If you say anything against the armed forces of your own country,
you are a traitor, wishing to see your fatherland ground under the
heel of a brutal conqueror. If, on the other hand, you defend a potential
enemy State for thinking armed forces necessary to its safety, you
malign your own country, whose unalterable devotion to peace only
perverse malice could lead you to question...
And so it comes about that, whenever an organisation has a combatant
purpose, its members are reluctant to criticise their officials
and tend to acquiesce in usurpations and arbitrary exercise of power
which, but for the war mentality, they would bitterly resent. It
is the war mentality that gives officials and governments their opportunity.
It is therefore only natural that officials and governments are prone
to foster war mentality." [emphasis mine] - 51
"I incline to think that 'liberty', as the word was understood in
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is no longer quite the right
concept; I should prefer to substitute 'opportunity for initiative'.
And my reason for suggesting this change is the character of a scientific
society." - 68
More Organization is More Power
"The effect of the telegraph was to increase the power
of the central government and diminish the initiative of distant subordinates.
This applied not only to the State, but to every geographically extensive
organization. We shall find a great deal of scientific technique
has a similar effect. The result is that fewer men have executive
power, but those few had more power than such men had formerly." [emphasis
mine] - 35
"We have seen that scientific technique increases the importance
of organisations, and therefore the extent to which authority impinges
upon the life of the individual. It follows that a scientific oligarchy
has more power than any oligarchy could have in pre-scientific times.
There is a tendency, which is inevitable unless consciously combated,
for organisations to coalesce, and so to increase in size, until,
ultimately, almost all become merged in the State. A scientific
oligarchy, accordingly, is bound to become what is called 'totalitarian',
that is to say, all important forms of power will become a monopoly
of the State." [emphasis mine] - 56
"In the first place, since the new oligarchs are the adherents of
a certain creed, and base their claim to exclusive power upon the
rightness of this creed, their system depends essentially upon dogma:
whoever questions the governmental dogma questions the moral authority
of the government, and is therefore a rebel. While the oligarchy is
still new, there are sure to be other creeds, held with equal conviction,
which must be suppressed by force, since the principle of majority
rule has been abandoned. It follows that there cannot be freedom of
the Press, freedom of discussion, or freedom of book publication.
There must be an organ of government whose duty it is to pronounce
as to what is orthodox, and to punish heresy. The history of the Inquisition
shows what such an organ of government must inevitably become. In
the normal pursuit of power, it will seek out more and more subtle
heresies. The Church, as soon as it acquired political power, developed
incredible refinement of dogma, and persecuted what to us appear microscopic
deviations form the official creed. Exactly the same sort of thing
happens in the modern States that confine political power to supporters
of a certain doctrine." - 57
"The completeness of the resulting control over opinion depends in
various ways upon scientific technique. Where all children
go to school, and all schools are controlled by the government, the
authorities can close the minds of the young to everything contrary
to official orthodoxy. Printing is impossible without paper, and all
paper belongs to the State. Broadcasting and the cinema are equally
public monopolies. The only remaining possibility of unauthorised
propaganda is by secret whispers from one individual to another. But
this, in turn, is rendered appallingly dangerous by improvements in
the art of spying. Children at school are taught that it is their
duty to denounce their parents if they allow themselves subversive
utterances in the bosom of the family. No one can be sure that a man
who seems to be his dearest friend will not denounce him to the police;
the man may himself have been in some trouble, and may know that if
he is not efficient as a spy his wife and children will suffer. All
this is not imaginary, it is daily and hourly reality. Nor, given
oligarchy, is there the slightest reason to expect anything else."
[emphasis mine] - 58
What is Scientific Technique?
Scientific technique is much more than just the impact of new technology
on the machinations of society. It is the use of science, in its most
calculating and inhumane ways, to analyze, control and guide societies
in a desired direction. This topic was elaborated on in a couple of
talks given by Alan
Watt (here
and here)
particularly through the writings of Jacques Ellul.
The rest of the articles in this series will also elaborate on other
aspects of scientific technique, especially its application to education
and human
breeding. But first, I will examine Bertrand Russell's views about
the stability
of scientific societies and the possibility of a scientific world
government.
*Quotes from Bertrand Russell, The Impact of Science on Society
(1952). ISBN0-415-10906-X
Note: I first heard about this book from talks given by Alan Watt at
Cutting Through The
Matrix.com, an individual well worth looking into.
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