Zero
If you are reading this, as I am writing, in the first
quarter of the 21st century, you live with me in a vast construction
site we call "the Internet," where a new form of human society is being
built. If you are reading later---in or after the last quarter
of the 21st century---it is over. The human race has entered the
fourth era of its history. Humankind is now radically different. No
one alive remembers what it was like to be human in the mid-20th
century, when I was born.
The human race has changed, fundamentally, twice before on the way
here. We have. to be sure, set up all sorts of graduation marks in
the long history of humanity, from
homo habilis to the onset of the
Anthropocene. But, most generally, two things have happened to us.
First, we gained---somewhere along the way that we cannot find in
evidence dug from the ground, but perhaps two hundred thousand years
ago---articulate spoken language. Second, some five thousand years
ago, we began to write.
What has made us who we are is our ability to teach one another. We
have thus ensured the inheritance of acquired characteristics, a
process which defines culture. We have taught ourselves to work
together, flexibly. We have evolved in Lamarckian fashion, at the
speed of light compared to natural selection. Acquiring first speech
and then writing enabled us, in two spectacular jumps, to transform
the social process of teaching. Speech and writing successively
created new sinews holding together the collective body of learning
and behavior in each human community. Writing added durability and
mobility to communication, vastly enlarging the geographic range of
possible social organization. Writing enabled the state.
Now, at the beginning of the 21st century, we are undergoing a third
fundamental alteration in our capacity to transmit knowledge. The
transition to the fourth era of human history will be much more rapid
than our previous leap into writing, just as that jump far
outdistanced the pace at which humans adapted to the onset of complex
articulate speech. The potential of universal persistent
interconnection, as well as the possibility of perfect despotism; the
elimination of ignorance and the transformation of work; the economy
of attention and surveillance; the redefinition of the very purpose of
human thought---all these profound and basic challenges to our
understanding of human identity and society are already before us. We
will be swept into those conundrums before we have fully registered
their existence, let alone comprehended them.
Our modes of transmitting knowledge are also the fundamental
mechanisms of power. We say we "empower" young people when we make
them literate, teach them the skills necessary to make a living and
express their ideas, needs and demands in the world. Those of us who
make our living teaching are particularly aware that the learning
relationship always channels, creates, sometimes abuses, power. But
the most comprehensive and profound structures of power---power of the
few over all others, reinforced by latent or actual violence and
contested by symbolic or physical struggle---is also defined by our
modes of teaching one another. Just as articulate complex speech
turned the forms of primate dominance hierarchies within a small band
of individuals---visible in our near-human cousins like chimp and
bonobo---into the immensely more powerful social organization of the
tribe, and writing then enabled tribes to evolve into states, the
transformation through which we are passing in this lifetime will
ultimately result in a completely new form of social power, within which all
individuals will develop and exist.
Just as even the earliest of states achieved degrees of physical
extent and regulatory complexity literally beyond the imagination of
tribal people unaided by writing, the extent and complexity of the
organizations enabled by the networking of the species now going on
are qualitatively different from the states, empires, and
international organizations humanity has known for the last several
thousand years. Primitive forms of networked organization already
surveil, correlate, analyze and affect the personal behavior of
billions of individuals, by direct intervention, trillions of times a
day. Within two generations, these primitive forms of large-scale
social control will have matured within the species-wide nervous
system we are building. Every human mind will then develop, from
birth to death, in direct connection to the Net. No forms of social
power have ever existed that could aspire to the reach, or the
intensity of effect, the Net itself will then wield, on behalf of
whatever entities control the behavior of the Net that controls us.
Already the largest current wielders of social power---the States with
their monopolies over the use of "legitimate" violence within and
outside their territories---are seeking to dominate the Net, to master
its forthcoming mastery of us all. As I write, less than 10,000 days
into this process, the phrase "digital sovereignty" has become the
symbolic token of the States' determination not to be subsumed.
Unsurprisingly, the States most loudly proclaiming the importance of
this digital sovereignty are the least committed to the
late-developing concerns of the era of civilization: "human rights,"
"civil liberties," and the concept of "civil society" apart from the
State.
This ongoing struggle between the largest aggregations of social
power, new and old, incompletely hides the increasing powerlessness of
the individual. People easily adopt the new forms of networked life,
"empowered" by the services and learning the Net delivers to them so
long as they deliver themselves to it. But even as they experience
the "convenience" of their new mode of life, they feel a hovering
sense of loss of control. Even as the machines collecting their
behavior offer them "a chance to be heard" about whatever they can say
in 280 characters, even as the power of self-expression is
democratized in ways that frighten the States, individuals feel more
and more anxiously---if still indistinctly---that they are part of new
systems beyond their control, or even their comprehension. This
immunological response against "globalization," this initially
low-grade fever in the body politic, has already begun breaking down
the forms of public rationality on which the most cherished human
values of modern democratic civilization depend. In the year 2016,
when I began this book, the world's freest and most privileged
citizens of the most advanced democratic societies began to
wonder---as they will be wondering for a long time to come---why their
politics seemed to be going crazy. But what the deplorers and
"deplorables" shared, and will continue to share, is the sickening
feeling of a world out of their control. Power is shifting, so that
it is at once creepily near and maddeningly remote. We are
experiencing, in our new collective nervous system, the nausea
accompanying metamorphosis.
We are not, however, compelled to undergo a fate that seals the future
of all our progeny and is already beyond our ability to change. Where
my contemporaries and I live today
is a construction site, but not
yet a prison. The Net we are building around ourselves may be already
turning into a Net we do not want---it may already be an agent shaping
the human mind even as the human mind shapes it---but it is an
artifact of our devising, and it is still possible for us to alter.
As we are made of genes, the Net is made of software. Software is
written language made in the human mind, through which we teach both
human beings and machines. Not just collectively, but also
individually, we still possess the power to shape this new divinity to
our human ends. As one of the architects who built the first
fundamental layer of the Internet, my friend Dan Geer, says, "this is
the last generation in which the human race gets a choice."
It is the purpose of this book to explain---as best I can after a
lifetime of preparation for the task---what the choice is, how to
exercise it, and what the stakes are. I have spent half a century
writing software, learning the history of the human race, lawyering
and teaching lawyers how to make things happen in society using words,
watching and learning and trying to affect this epochal process that
some of us foresaw in our youth, and which has now begun transforming
my species before my eyes. I hope that if you---living in
this amazing and frightening moment along with me---will give me a
precious few hours of your time, I can teach you what you need so that
together we can change, by the smallest and yet most crucial
variations, the future of humankind.
For the reader half a century hence, nothing I can say here in this
vein will be of great interest to you: You know how the story came
out. Whatever we did or didn't do, for you human nature is already
different. But this book may be of some use to you nonetheless. It
may be able to map for you the location of something buried, not just
out of sight but beyond mind, something you may not be able even to
imagine without any living human being who can teach it to you. You
want to find it if you can, however. We who lived in the 20th century
cared about it very deeply. Indeed, we loved it with all our hearts,
risked our very lives that those who came after us might have it. We
called it freedom.