Seeing like a state

how certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed Yale agrarian studies

Hardcover, 445 pages

English language

Published July 10, 1998 by Yale University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-300-07016-3
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OCLC Number:
191730771

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4 stars (2 reviews)

Examines how (sometimes quasi-) authoritarian high-modernist planning fails to deliver the goods, be they increased resources for the state or a better life for the people.

9 editions

Good Anti-Nerd Datapoints

4 stars

So what you're telling me is that the scourge of society is a bunch of nerds trying to design away all of life's problems and their solutions always seem to involve lower classes working to solve the politburo's problems? And their plans fuck up the environment and destroy community knowledge of how to, y'know, live self-sufficiently and otherwise? And that by now many of us discontents are kinda just doomed because the network we need to survive is actively recuperated and destroyed by the state?

Fucking nerds, I swear to God. The meek will destroy the Earth.

The collection of historical narratives was quite interesting, and the overarching message was essentially archetypical. It's a basic point extremely well-explained even if I simply could not retain anything in my head from the final part. Metis entered my mind. I got that. And then I seemed physically incapable of maintaining my attention.

legibility, high modernism, metis

4 stars

I enjoyed this greatly and I am dyingggg to know about criticisms of big tech and surveillance capitalism that utilize the concepts in this book—particularly around legibility and the mechanization of people/minds. If you see this and you know of any, plz share! Such a good read for those of us in the interstitial spaces between the provably known and the experientially felt, and for those thinking about the pain and problems of objectivity.

Subjects

  • Central planning -- Social aspects
  • Social engineering
  • Authoritarianism