When the Luddites got together

The Second Luddite Congress met for three days, in April 1996, in Barnesville, Ohio. It was convened by the conservative Quaker Center for Plain Living, but the 250 “citizen delegates” represented many faiths, and none.

“To make technology responsible—answerable to our needs, careful of the approaching limits of the planet, responsive to conscience—such simple decisions must be replaced by complex ones, that include all the things—family, education, nature, faith, and the long-term future—that technolatry ignores. But in what social space will such decisions be made?

The neo-Luddite answer is that they can only be made in the limited, local community capable of thinking together about common concerns. This is not, of course, a new or surprising answer. But the congress was preoccupied with community, for it seems clear that community offers the conditions for an open, responsible, conscientious examination of social change.”

— Lionel Basney, 1998
English professor and neo-Luddite

Turn to community to decide how to use technology responsibly.

How do you create positive boundaries for yourself around screens?

When have you “opted out” of a new technology that you felt detracted from your life? What was the outcome?

Share your response!

Read the source of today’s quote

Author

  • Lionel Basney

    Lionel Basney (1946 – 1999) was a poet and professor of English at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, MI. Prior to his time at Calvin, Basney taught at Houghton College, where his father also taught before him. Basney was interested in Samuel Johnson, William Shakespeare, and Ned Ludd and the origins of the Luddite movement.

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