Reaction

Watched Oppenheimer today in 70mm IMAX. Was worth it to see in that format. Itโ€™s a bigger than life tale so seeing it six stories tall only makes sense.

At one point Oppenheimer says/implies that even though the atom bomb didnโ€™t end up literally starting an uncontrolled ignition of the atmosphere that destroyed the planet, the advent of the nuclear weapon would nevertheless likely conclude in the annihilation of the world anyway.

With smartphones, though people are loathe to admit, weโ€™ve also managed to accidentally arrive at an event of nearly the same import. And weโ€™re just as poorly-prepared for it as when nuclear inferno bloomed in the New Mexico desert in 1945. Just as we were not ready for the implications of nuclear weapons, we are not at all savvy at evaluating at Level 1 cognitohazards as we have no framework for thinking about them outside of science fiction (which is why I very intentionally used the term โ€œcognitohazardโ€).

But we live in a science-fictional world now is the thing. Smartphones compress the world in a way that is novel in human history and transform the entirety of the human collective meta-nous into a very different place than even the internet did. The effects of this โ€” though Ian Welshian type idiots deny it โ€” are absolutely enormous. Weโ€™ve set off an uncontrolled chain reaction in each humanโ€™s mind and that is going about as well as youโ€™d expect.

We live in apocalyptic times, in the ancient Greek sense. That is, a malign revelation is occurring as our minds are tampered with by unaccountable and unknowable techno-deific entities that we have no defense against. Denial of this only increases their power. Their agent is smartphones and their method is subjugating, hegemonizing and homogenizing the human mind with the false idols of convenience, simple answers, and puerile propaganda.

Our cognizance is ashes before these forces, a new nuclear fire obliterating minds screen by screen.