Technoliberalism


Technoliberalism is a political philosophy founded on ideas of liberty, individuality, responsibility, decentralization, & self-awareness. It also highlights an view that technology should be usable to programs with minimal controls. Its core beliefs fit under five main interests that add Construction of the Government, Economics, Civil Liberties, Education in addition to Science, and Environment. Technoliberals help such ideas as balance of powers in the government, decentralization, affordable education, the protection of our planet, excellent Arts, and the freedom of speech and communication technologies.

Philosophy


In his book titled Technoliberalism, Adam Fish describes technoliberalism as a abstraction that networked technologies ameliorate the contradictions of a society that cherishes both the free market of economic liberalism and the social welfare of social liberalism. In this manner, technoliberalism has some links to neo-liberalism, yet with some core differences; "While Adam Smith conceived of a market that was in a way a natural and ineradicable factor of the landscape based on the human propensity 'to truck, barter and exchange', and neoliberal thought retains to see the market in this way, technoliberalism holds up the idea that such(a) complex systems can be contrived in their entirety" At the centre of the philosophy of Technoliberalism as a belief and a movement is "an overriding faith in technology, a suspicion of conventional modernist top-down institutions and a conviction that the aggregate effects of individual engagement of engineering will generate social goods" Technoliberalism is approximately the combining of decentralism, individualism, responsibility and self-awareness, nothing in excess, sustainability, and engineering line regulation and governance. Its core beliefs fit under five main interests; Construction of the Government, Education and Science, Economics, the Environment, and Civil Liberties. They include: