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Getting nowhere fast: a teleological conception of socio-technical acceleration

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 11:08 authored by Thomas Sutherland
<p>It has been frequently recognized that the perceived acceleration of life that has been experienced from the Industrial Revolution onward is engendered, at least in part, by an understanding of speed as an end in itself. There is no equilibrium to be reached – no perfect speed – and as such, social processes are increasingly driven not by rational ends, but by an indeterminate demand for acceleration that both defines and restricts the decisional possibilities of actors. In Aristotelian terms, this is a final cause – i.e. a teleology – of speed: it is not a defined end-point, but rather, a purposive aim that predicates the emergence of possibilities. By tracing this notion of telos from its beginnings in ancient Greece, through the ur-empiricism of Francis Bacon, and then to our present epoch, this paper seeks to tentatively examine the way in which such a teleology can be theoretically divorced from the idea of historical progress, arguing that the former is premised upon an untenable ontological privileging of becoming.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Film Media and Journalism (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Time & Society

Volume

23

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

49-68

Publisher

Sage

ISSN

0961-463X

eISSN

1461-7463

Date Submitted

2016-09-27

Date Accepted

2013-03-01

Date of First Publication

2013-09-08

Date of Final Publication

2014-03-07

Date Document First Uploaded

2016-09-26

ePrints ID

24296

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