Technological Utopianism
An ideology that sees social and technological developments as so deeply intertwined that they follow a nearly deterministic path of mutual advancement, often centered on the belief that technological progress will inevitably produce a utopian or near-perfect society. Though always present in modern thought, this ideology has seen notable peaks during the industrial optimism of the late 19th century, the space-age enthusiasm of the mid-20th century, and the present-day technological fervor surrounding artificial intelligence.
Technological Determinism
A theory holding that technological development drives historical change, shaping social structures, cultural values, and human behavior in a largely linear and inevitable way. It assumes technology is the primary force behind civilizational development, while minimizing the role of politics, economics, social or cultural norms, and human agency. This theory of change underpins much of Silicon Valley’s rhetoric, where technology is framed as the sole engine of progress and disruption as a natural, unstoppable force.
Techno-libertarianism
A political and ideological stance that combines a deep faith in technological innovation with libertarian principles of individual freedom and minimal government intervention. Techno-libertarians believe technology, and especially digital networks, can empower individuals, bypass centralized authority, and create decentralized systems that promote autonomy, innovation, and resistance to state control. Its last major peak came with 1990s cyberlibertarianism and the rise of the early internet; today, we are seeing a resurgence in similar ideas through crypto, decentralized platforms, and renewed skepticism of regulatory frameworks for AI, online speech, and technological innovation.
Transhumanism
A philosophical and technological movement that envisions humanity transcending its biological roots by replacing frail bodies and finite minds with synthetic organs, neural implants, and ultimately, digital consciousness. Transhumanism gained its institutional foothold in the 1990s at the University of Southern California, where Max More and two fellow philosophy PhDs helped formalize the movement via its first newsletter, email listserv, and annual conference. Today it is championed by figures like Ray Kurzweil and Nick Bostrom who envision a future in which humans upload their minds to the cloud, merge with AI, and move out into space as digital beings.
Accelerationism
A philosophical and political view that advocates speeding up technological and market processes to bring about radical transformation or rupture. Associated with thinkers like Nick Land and tech figures like Marc Andreessen and Peter Thiel, accelerationists embrace extreme deregulation, the creation of autonomous zones or ‘startup cities’ beyond the reach of traditional governments, and even the replacement of democratic governance with technocratic systems run by engineers, entrepreneurs, or algorithms. Though once fringe, accelerationist thinking now echoes through mainstream tech culture and policy, including the White House’s enthusiastic support for rapid AI development. The movement includes variants like effective accelerationism (e/acc) and defensive accelerationism (d/acc), which interpret, or "fork" its core principles in different ways.
Longtermism
An ethical view, promoted by prominent tech thinkers and philosophers, that the most important moral priority is safeguarding the far future, given the overwhelming number of potential future lives that could exist. One of its key theorists, Nick Bostrom, for example, draws on speculative scenarios and advanced technological projections to argue that delaying space colonization by even one second could result in the irreversible loss of 10¹³ biological human lives or 10²⁹ simulated ones. In the Longtermist view, minimizing the risk of human extinction is more morally urgent than curing cancer, ending poverty, or addressing any present-day concern, because those outcomes pale in comparison to the value of trillions of yet-unborn lives.
Singularitarianism
The belief in the near-term arrival of the technological singularity: a hypothetical future point at which artificial intelligence surpasses human intelligence and begins to improve itself recursively, triggering runaway technological growth. Singularitarians often see this event as both inevitable and transformative, ushering in a post-human era marked by rapid advances in cognition, longevity, and societal reorganization. In Silicon Valley, the technological singularity is almost universally regarded as a foregone conclusion; it is a given and its implications taken so seriously the Singularity University was founded in 2008 to prepare leaders and entrepreneurs for the coming era of exponential technological change.
Proposed Readings
Session One: Techno-utopianism, -determinism, and -libertarianism.
Download all texts for this session as one pdf. [Link]
Read in this order.
- Smith, Merritt Roe. “Technological Determinism in American Culture.” Does Technology Drive History: The Dilemma of Technological Determinism, edited by Merritt Roe Smith and Leo Marx, MIT Press, 1994, pp. 2-8. [Link]
- Hogg, Thomas Jefferson. The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley. E. Moxon, 1858, p. 50. [Link]
- Gannett, Ezra. The Atlantic Telegraph: A Discourse Delivered in the First Church. 1858, p. 13. [Link]
- Fletcher, Curtis. "Cybernetic Utopias: Technology, Freedom, and Control in the 20th and 21st Centuries." Unpublished essay for the Ahmanson Lab Critical AI Reading Group, Aug. 2025. [Link]
- Barlow, John Perry. "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace." Electronic Frontier Foundation, 8 Feb. 1996. Approx. 3 pages. [Link]
Session Two: Transhumanism and Singularitarianism
- Becker, Adam. “Machines of Loving Grace.” More Everything Forever: AI Overlords, Space Empires, and Silicon Valley's Crusade to Control the Fate of Humanity, Basic Books, 2025, pp. 39-90. [Link]
Session Three: Longtermism and Effective Altruism
- Bostrom, Nick. “Astronomical Waste: The Opportunity Cost of Delayed Technological Development,” Utilitas Vol. 15, No. 3 (2003): pp. 308-314. [Link]
- Hao, Karen. Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI. Penguin Press, 2025, pp. 227–234. [Link]
Session Four: Accelerationism