Alastair's Adversaria - Digital Liturgies (with Samuel James)

Episode Date: October 4, 2023

'Digital Liturgies: Rediscovering Christian Wisdom in an Online Age' (https://amzn.to/3LNn8Q3) is a new book by Samuel James. Within it he explores some of the ways that the Internet, especially socia...l media, is shaping us and what we might do about this. He joins me to discuss it. If you have enjoyed my videos and podcasts, please tell your friends. If you are interested in supporting my videos and podcasts and my research more generally, please consider supporting my work on Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/zugzwanged), using my PayPal account (https://bit.ly/2RLaUcB), or by buying books for my research on Amazon (https://www.amazon.co.uk/hz/wishlist/ls/36WVSWCK4X33O?ref_=wl_share). You can also listen to the audio of these episodes on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/alastairs-adversaria/id1416351035?mt=2.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello and welcome. I'm joined today by the author of a new book, Digital Litigies, Rediscovering Christian Wisdom in an online age. Samuel James, it's wonderful to have you with me. Thank you, Alastur. It's so good to be here. So Digital Litigies, this book that you've written, is a book by you as an evangelical, principally for evangelicals, about how the internet shapes us. and here's just one passage from the book. When I tell someone that it's about the spiritually formative power of the web, this your book, I can almost always see a mixture of understanding and confusion in their faces. The confusion may owe to the fact that many evangelicals do not intuitively attribute spiritual significance to things.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Objects, places and other material realities don't seem morally or spiritually important. We tend to emphasize the limits of material things, what they are not. The church is not a building. God's word is not a leather-bound book, but the canonical words within that book. Our attention is fixed on the immaterial, often to the exclusion of the material. Evangelicals have tended to historically adopt new technologies very optimistically and to focus very much upon ideas and content as the things. to be wary about and certainly in our approaches to new digital technology, that's for the
Starting point is 00:01:36 most part being the posture that's been taken. Where do you differ from such approaches? And can you give some reasons why, particularly on the basis of evangelical's own convictions and commitments, why we should share some of your concerns about online media? Yeah. So I think in my experience growing up as an evangelical, I think it's a important to remember that all of us just have one sets of experiences and we can't speak for absolutely everyone in a broad tradition. But I do think in the evangelicalism into which I was born and in which I've remained now in my adult life, there has been such an emphasis on the neutrality of material things. So, you know, something is just how you use it. It's not inherently
Starting point is 00:02:30 good, it's not inherently bad, it's simply responsive to the wishes of the person using it. And whether this was talking about, you know, certain medical technologies or television, the logic of that approach definitely, I think, became the dominant way of thinking of the internet among the church culture in which I was raised and myself. Like, we just kind of took it for granted that there was. was nothing about the internet itself that had a particular effect on us. It was simply a tool, like a screwdriver or a drill. Depending on what you want to use it for, it could be good or bad. And I think the problem with that approach is twofold. One, and primarily, and this is, I spent
Starting point is 00:03:25 a good amount of time in the book kind of addressing this. That's, really not the way the Bible talks about the material world. The way the Bible kind of talks about our relationship to creation, our relationship to the things that we construct is more complicated than that. It seems to me in scripture that there is a pretty profound pattern of certain things kind of being, having a spiritual effect on us. And there's lots of positive examples of this. So You know, for example, the people of Israel, they're not simply told the law once a week or a few times a year. They're given festivals. They're given assemblies.
Starting point is 00:04:14 They're given events. They're given certain material things, certain types of clothing, certain types of things that they use to kind of remind themselves of who Yahweh is and who they are as people. And when you read, you know, things like the construction of the temple, there's such an, there's such an attention to detail in those texts that it really raises the question, wait a minute, God sees value, spiritual value in the way things are designed in their particular nature, in their given nature. And so what I am kind of looking to do in the book is to kind of interrogate whether as modern evangelicals, do we have. have a category for that in our own spiritual lives? Do we have a category for the idea that actually something material can have a effect on us beyond the things that we choose to use it for? And the first person that I read, really the most influential person that I read on this issue when it comes to the Internet was Nicholas Carr in his book The Shallows, what the Internet is doing to our brains.
Starting point is 00:05:26 here was a person who was not writing from a spiritual perspective, who wasn't writing from a biblical perspective. But in 2010, he published this book and the results of his research showed very compellingly that the human brain responds to the technology of the internet in a very different way than it responds to analog technology, like a book or a magazine or a piece of printed material. And his point in the book is that the internet creates certain people. kinds of readers simply by virtue of exposing human cognition to this medium. So good, bad, ugly, that's simply what happens, that we have empirical research to testify that internet thinkers are thinking differently than offline thinkers.
Starting point is 00:06:15 And when I finished that book, I asked myself, okay, what's the theological implications of this? because so many of my of well first of me and so many of my peers we're talking about uh scripture and theology online all the time we're talking about contentious issues we're kind of uh talking about what the gospel really means uh if if this medium is actually potentially shaping how we even comprehend these theological questions well that in itself becomes an issue of christian discipleship it becomes an issue of of spiritual formation to understand how is this medium actually affecting the way we think and the way we talk about this. So really, the book is an answer to that question of what is the theological significance of the internet as a medium. And I develop that more later in the book, but the book just kind of starts out by reflecting that, hey, it is possible and it is in fact very biblical to think of material things as having these.
Starting point is 00:07:23 kind of positive and not necessarily positive in a morally good way, but active effects on this. The title of the book is Digital Liturgies. What do you mean by liturgies? And can you give some examples of what you have in mind by that? Yeah. So in the book, I kind of define liturgies the way that James C.A. Smith defined it in his cultural liturgy's trilogy and then also more popular. in the book, You Are What You Love, which is a wonderful book that I highly recommend. And what Professor Smith does in this work is he understands a cultural liturgy as kind of this competing set of spiritual practices that present a narrative of the good life to a person. So whereas a church liturgy is this kind of set of practices, so public reading of scripture,
Starting point is 00:08:20 the preaching of the gospel, the confession of sin, the announcement of pardon, you know, the fellowship. There's a set of practices that actually drive the plausibility of the gospel deeper into our hearts. The example I like to use with people is that if you shut up to church and all church consisted of was somebody standing at the door saying, the gospel is true, now you may go home. what that person says is factually accurate. What that person says is a true reminder, but that does not create the same heart conditions as the actual liturgy of the church. Because when you put the liturgy of the church in its context,
Starting point is 00:09:04 you come away from that context feeling that the gospel is true in your affections in a way that's simply intellectually being told that it's true doesn't quite get to. And that's what a cultural liturgy is. And so the idea of a digital liturgy is to basically conceptualize the Internet the same way that Professor Smith conceptualized the shopping mall. It's his famous example, that the shopping mall is a competing cultural liturgy because it has advertising and music and a certain set of behaviors and narratives
Starting point is 00:09:39 that all kind of climax in the idea that you will be happier if you buy this product. I think the internet, particularly the social internet, what we call social media and things like that, is in fact similar to the mall in that it's a habitat with a certain kind of plausibility structure attached to it, that the more we are immersed in this digital habitat, the more certain behaviors and certain values feel plausible to our consciences in a way that they might not otherwise. And so that's kind of the way I put together, you know, Nicholas Carr's observations about the cognitive effects of the internet with James K.A. Smith's observations about the affectional effects of cultural liturgies. So if you understand these two concepts together, we come away with the idea of a digital liturgy that is being promulgated by the spaces that we're inhabiting online. So your book particularly focuses upon the social web, things perhaps like Facebook and Twitter, to a lesser extent, Instagram or YouTube. And there's a lot that could go on under the heading of digital media. We might think also of things like Google or Amazon, online gaming, things like that. Can you speak to some of the maybe the family resemblances between these different forms of online,
Starting point is 00:11:06 digital, social media, and also speak to some of the differences and distinctives that really set some off against the others and maybe give them a peculiar character. Yeah, that's a good question. So I think all of them have one thing in common, one important thing in common, and that is that they are disembodied spaces. So there are places that you can go to interact with where you actually don't need to be in a particular place, you don't actually have to exist in this space as an embodied person. So you simply log on, whether that's Google, Amazon, Facebook, YouTube, Reddit, whatever.
Starting point is 00:11:47 No matter the space, you are a member of this commons, you are a member of this environment, simply by virtue of your kind of mental participation and your expression of yourself through digital characters, posts, likes, whatever. So that's one massive thing that all these platforms have in common. I do think that there's connecting tissue between, you know, certain platforms in a way that can be harder to see on the surface. So one of the things I talk about in the book is how the Internet has really created a new way of kind of litigating truth claims, the customer review.
Starting point is 00:12:28 So the customer review has become essentially the primary thing that people of my generation and particularly younger consult when they go to evaluate whether they want to buy a product. I mean, it's almost as instant as finding the product itself. You see a page for it and then you see the customer review or whether that's a product or a restaurant or even a doctor's office, something like that. You want to see what other people are saying about it. the past, in order to know more about this particular product, you had to know somebody personally who had actually experienced it, purchased it, been to that office or been to that restaurant, and you had to communicate with them in a personal way. Well, now, because of the customer review, there's almost this social currency of something is desirable, something is valuable, something
Starting point is 00:13:24 is valuable to the extent that that is reflected on a positive customer review. And if you see the negative customer review, it can turn you away. And that right there is a really profound shift in how we understand how to litigate truth claims. So, for example, if a company has negative customer reviews that maybe fabricate some details about an experience, there are some expensive legal recourses that they could go for, but for the average person seeing that, that doesn't exist. They have no way to tell whether these reviews are truthful or untruthful. It's simply the currency that they're reading. And I think that's true of social media as well.
Starting point is 00:14:11 People talk about the death of expertise. They talk about kind of the flattening of knowledge, the erosion of kind of institutional trust, and credentialism. And these are complex topics that require care. It's not simply a monolithicly bad thing that experts are held more accountable by online swarms. But I do think that's a profound shift in the way we evaluate claims. It's a profound shift in how we make decisions and how we make choices in our personal lives and the things that we consult.
Starting point is 00:14:48 So I think that's one thing that, you know, whether it's online shopping or YouTube, I think that's one thing that they have in common. And I think one difference, though, is that particularly with social media, because social media is a very personal thing compared to online shopping or compared to streaming Netflix or something like that,
Starting point is 00:15:12 there are elements of commonalities between those platforms, but when you're talking about social media, you're talking about really relationships. You're talking about developing a sense of who you are in a social context versus who this person is. So, you know, whether it's Instagram and you're posting pictures of your family or pictures of your vacation, well, that's something very personal. That's something that, you know, 20 years ago, 30 years ago, you would have only shared with people who could go into your house and see your scrapbook or your photo album or your family photos.
Starting point is 00:15:46 well, now that's a part of your public currency. It's a part of your public identity, who you are. So these are very personal technologies. And I think the personal nature of social media is what kind of takes these spiritual and emotional effects and really amplifies them. But it's one thing to talk about the disembodiment of the web or the decline of trusted institutions or, or the death of expertise. It's one thing to talk about that in the abstract. But all of these effects are weaponized by the fact that we feel like we are existing with each other online.
Starting point is 00:16:26 That this is a real community, that this is a commons, that who I am is out there in some way on social media. So I think that's one thing that kind of separates maybe your more classical, odd word to use, but more kind of typical social media platforms. from other web technologies that may kind of have the same disembodied ethic but are not quite as personal in the way they apply it. So perhaps one of the strongest and most arresting statements in your book is found very early on. You say the internet is a lot like pornography.
Starting point is 00:17:06 No, that's not a typo. I did not mean to say that the internet contains a lot of pornography. I mean to say that the internet itself, i.e., its very nature, is like pornography. There's something about it that is pornographic in its essence. Can you speak a bit to that? It seems quite a strong claim to make, and one that many people, I think, would instinctively resist. What is it about the Internet that makes it pornography-like?
Starting point is 00:17:39 Yeah. So I would say that the best place to start with understanding this is by defining pornography as specifically as possible and as fundamentally as possible. pornography is taking something that can only really be an experience. It's taking something that is an experience shared between subjects, and it's turning it into a consumable commodity for a third party. So you take the experience of sexual union,
Starting point is 00:18:11 and this is meant to be something that is entered into by two people, by a man or woman, and you're creating kind of this, this three-dimensional element to this that doesn't exist to it inherently. You're putting the two subjects in a box, so to speak, in a camera, and you're creating a spectacle out of this experience. And that spectacle is designed to be consumed, to be watched, and then discarded, and move on to the next thing.
Starting point is 00:18:48 So if we understand pornography in that way, then I think it's not hard to conceptualize how the Internet itself tends to have that effect on everything. It's not simply sex that is an experience that tends to become modified. It's everything. It's friendship. It's beauty. It's food. So I give a couple examples in the book where I talk about, you know, on YouTube, there are genres of YouTube videos that get several hundred thousand views.
Starting point is 00:19:22 And you can actually have people in the YouTube video, the content creator, kind of simulate friendship. So they'll talk to the camera as if you're right there. Or they'll watch a video and you'll kind of be watching them watch the video. And it'll kind of give the allure of friendship. It'll be this almost role play where this person on the YouTube screen is pretending to be next to you is pretending to be somebody who knows you. And the idea is that you can capture the essence of friendship in a YouTube video.
Starting point is 00:19:58 And the person streaming a YouTube video can watch someone simulate friendship, and that can be a pleasurable, consumable product for them. Well, that's exactly what happens when someone watches pornography. That's exactly what it is. and whether it's something like YouTube and kind of people role-playing friendship or whether it's even, you know, the way we've attached the word porn to pictures of food and pictures of nature. Now you have things like earth porn or things like food porn. And what that is is that it's pictures of beautiful dishes or beautiful landscapes that are just promulgated to a feed. And the point of the feed is to get as much of these posts out there.
Starting point is 00:20:45 that instead of tasting the food or instead of actually going to the locale, you will consume it online and it'll be like, oh, that was, that was fun. That's a consumable thing. But places don't exist to be looked at via a screen and food doesn't exist to be stared at through a screen. Food exists to be eaten and places exist to go be explored. And so there's a sense in which even with something like food and geography, the internet creates this third-hand experience that feels normal. It feels normal to be experiencing these things, or I shouldn't say experiencing, to be consuming what are properly experiences. So that's kind of what I mean when I say that the internet has a pornographic shape to it.
Starting point is 00:21:31 It's simply that the internet is a novelty machine that can crank out content without ceasing. And this content is consumed in lieu of kind of these. embodied experiences. Seems to me also the relationship that we have with the screen or the presence of the internet more generally in our lives has changed very significantly over the last few decades. So you mentioned in the book that it used to be far more up-in and now it's opt-out, that it's very difficult not to be someone who's online.
Starting point is 00:22:09 If you want to even do basic purchases, if you want to be involved in certain aspects of society, even buying a ticket for something, you'll find you need to be online and you need to sometimes have a profile on a particular social media site. You might need to give certain details of your online existence, whatever it is. There is a sense in which it's harder to opt out because a lot of the things that we've formerly and have enjoyed offline are now integrated to our online experience and can't be enjoyed without that. And it seems to me beyond that, there's a sense with the rise of our digital mobile devices, there's a sense of the ubiquity of the internet in a way that there wasn't. It follows us wherever we go. It's in our pockets. And there's no sense
Starting point is 00:23:02 of being offline in the same way, except when we lose connection for a significant period of time, and it can be a source of anxiety for people that they don't know what's going on. They feel disconnected and detached. And then there's also a movement from a more supplemental aspect of our existence, social and otherwise, where you'd go online, the idea of going online, doesn't really have the same significance now when we're always online, but you'd go online and you'd engage in some sort of things in conversation with others. It was detached from regular life and then you come offline and now increasingly it's a simulation in which so much of our lives exist. And then I think on the pornography aspect, the relationship to the screen is also important. There's a
Starting point is 00:23:54 difference between consuming flat images to consuming videos to consuming something that's no longer just consuming a spectacle that's taking place outside of you, but becoming someone who's implicated in that spectacle. And I think increasingly there is a shift in the way that we're relating to our screens. So now we have augmented reality, the reality or the digital reality increasingly is imposed upon our outside reality. Or we have virtual reality, a sort of supplement or substitute for reality. Or we can have artificially generated reality. And in each of these ways, they're tailored to our desires and fantasies, and it's a realm in which we increasingly find ourselves detached from, and also a realm which is an increasing competition with the concrete world of reality.
Starting point is 00:24:54 It seems to me that it's very hard to experience reality in a pure form now, given the way that the internet and online reality increasingly shapes our ways of engaging in, our sense of being connected within, our perspectives upon the world that surrounds us. What does it mean to relate to something that is increasingly becoming an analogy that you use very early in the book, like the water that we swim in? Is it possible to get outside of that water, to halt its progress within our lives? How do we stand outside of that and get some sort of imagine to purchase upon what it is even. Yeah, that's a great question.
Starting point is 00:25:44 So I do think it's possible. And I think it's possible partially because, you know, theologically, I'm convinced that the Lord has put our generation in this particular era for a reason and that none of these technological innovations are beyond, you know, his sanctifying power. So, you know, when Jesus, I mean, the first century Roman world was pretty rough too on Christians. And so when Jesus prays for his disciples, he says, I do not pray that you will take them out of the world, but that you will protect them from the evil one.
Starting point is 00:26:18 So that's our prayer. So foundationally, yes, it is possible to resist these effects. I think at a practical level, though, we have to be pretty realistic about what it might take and the very countercultural ways that we might. have to resist this. I don't think, I don't even know if it's possible to truly feel how revolutionary the smartphone is anymore. Like we've just lost a sense because it's so assumed and it's everywhere. We've lost a sense of just being gobsmacked at how in less than 20 years our relationship to the outside world, our relationship to the web,
Starting point is 00:27:05 our relationship to each other's communications, has been completely redefined. It is a complete redefinition of our existence, really, as modern people that the notification in our pocket so that we can be out in doing something with someone at a restaurant or at a party or maybe on a remote island anywhere, and that our work, our leisure, our hobbies can actually go off in our pocket and that this can actually create this sense of dislocation that I talk about later on in the book.
Starting point is 00:27:41 You know, I'm here. I'm with this person, but I can have in the palm of my hand a completely parallel experience that is millions of miles from here. That is a revolutionary thing in the development of societies, in the development of technology, in the development of technology. And not for any small reason, have sociologists like Gene Twenge and Brad Wilcox and Jonathan Hayt
Starting point is 00:28:10 have shown, I think, very compelling evidence that the rise of the smartphone and the smartphone becomes, I think, ascendant in American culture around 2012. The iPhone releases in 2008. It takes a few years to kind of disseminate in culture, but by 2012, your typical kind of older teenager has a smartphone.
Starting point is 00:28:32 And to look at the research showing reports of anxiety, depression, loneliness, difficulty focusing, severe mental struggles, to look at the reported incidence of those things and the share of the market share for the smartphone is absolutely astonishing. I mean, the two charts essentially overlap. And I think we have to take that seriously, that the smartphone especially is a very powerful, very formative device.
Starting point is 00:29:07 So in terms of how we kind of step outside of that, I think, honestly, Alistair, one of the things that people, I think, are going to do is they're going to reevaluate their relationship with their phones first. They're going to reevaluate their relationship to mobile technology. And I actually think this has potential to become a public policy issue. It would not surprise me at all, given some of the current conversations that Josh Hawley and others in Congress have had on these issues, that there was an attempt to kind of restrict the sale of these devices, even to parents of younger children.
Starting point is 00:29:47 we've definitely seen a movement against these in school. So just this week I was seeing that I think it was maybe even in the UK that there's been a lot of momentum for banning these from school entirely. That I think is a movement that's going to simply ascend in strength as people realize just how disruptive these technologies are to everyday living. So that's maybe one way. it's one thing for the web to be opt-in and for the web to kind of be this thing that we can go to. It's a completely different thing for it to be ambi, for it to be in our pockets, for it to be everywhere we go. So to step outside of that reality, I think, requires to re-evaluate technology that lets us go everywhere with it. But then also, I think we have to listen to people like Andy Crouch, who are so helpful in thinking about,
Starting point is 00:30:45 how is your life arranged? So is your life arranged in such a way so that these digital technologies are kind of the center of your home life? And this is convicting to me as a parent of young children. It's convicting to me at person and an individual level. Like is the, is the computer, is the smartphone, is the is the smart television? Are these structured? Are these embedded into our ordinary lives in such a way that if someone were to come into our home and for a couple of days, like they would be able to tell like this is what unifies our family this is what our family has in common this is what we do this is what our household does and so i think part of stepping outside of that of the digital liturgy is of stepping outside of this virtual reality is to take a hard look
Starting point is 00:31:30 at how deeply embedded these are into our everyday life you know is is there i mean the first thing you do in the morning for a lot of people you reach over to your phone that's going off with the alarm you turn off the alarm and you scroll. I mean, that's that's so fundamental to so many of our days. And that right there is an example of kind of how this immersiveness into the digital habitats begins first thing and is so assumed. So I think it really starts there with re-evaluating kind of the structure of our lives to say, hey, are we valuing efficiency and convenience above everything else? And is that giving a foothold to virtual unreality to kind of set the agenda for how we live our lives? You mentioned the experience of raising kids and thinking about the way that your phone
Starting point is 00:32:25 and other devices and play a role within your family life. It seems to me that for many people, that moment when they start to reassess their own practice is often when they're actually having to for mothers. And that experience of raising children will be for many that moment when they start to reconsider their own relationship with their phones and their computers and other devices. It seems to me also that for our generation, we have had some sort of experience prior to the internet, certainly in its current iterations. And so we are not digital natives in quite the same way as our children. And, um, our children. And, um, other generations that are rising up at the moment are.
Starting point is 00:33:12 They've experienced only life within the internet age. Many of them have only been within the age of social media after the 2005 or something like that. Their experience of social media will be a lot less tempered by the ability to imaginatively stand outside of it and see it with the eyes of those who have experienced a different sort of world. Do you feel that there's a narrowing window of opportunity to address some of these questions of formation to establish structures of resistance? Do you think that there's a generation arising that does not know the age before the internet, as it were,
Starting point is 00:33:59 and is no longer going to be able to develop the sort of resistance that maybe our generation has the ability to? Yes, I absolutely do fear that. And I fear perhaps even more that there's going to be a very significant divide between the families and the individuals who have the resources to kind of practically resist these ways of immersion into digital technology and the families and individuals that, for whatever reason, are simply going along with them. that partially because they don't have the resources ready to take up an alternative. And so I think one thing that is positive on that front is, you know, public schools kind of reevaluating these technologies is going to be very important because there's for millions of people, particularly in the United States and England and other places, they're going to be downstream from what the public schools are doing. So if the public schools are giving students an iPad and sending them home and saying, this is yours to use in your room, that's just what they're going to do. They're going to take that for granted.
Starting point is 00:35:20 And so I think it matters tremendously what public education is saying about these technologies, and that's why it's a positive thing that there does seem to be some kind of reevaluation. I do fear that for the, for Gen Z in particular, or I should say, for the, I'm blanking on the generation that comes after Gen Z, Gene 20 names them, but I can't remember what she calls them. So the generation that comes after Gen Z, I fear that because there's not going to be a category for doing school, for doing research, for relating to friends, there's not going to be any kind of existential category for that pre-internet in the way that there was for me and even for parts of Gen Z, probably for them, it's just not going to be a category that
Starting point is 00:36:15 exists. And particularly with the rise of generative AI and things like chat GPT and tools that are likely to be used in an academic context first, the fear there is that this is all going to appear just so intuitive and so fundamental to what it means to be a modern person. that there's not going to be any kind of critical evaluation of, hey, what's the alternative here? Like, is it normal? Is it good that a machine has written all this music that we enjoy and that we're not listening to people who write music anymore? Is it okay that awards are going to AI systems that create art rather than human artists? And the more this becomes kind of just fundamental and assumed, the more it's going to be almost impossible for most people to formulate a reason for this.
Starting point is 00:37:15 And even I worry a little bit, this is slightly off topic, but I worry a little bit about pastors who are being approached by people who are not really wanting to be a part of the Sunday service and they would rather watch the live stream. and when the person asked the pastor, pastor, I don't understand what's the difference. If I can get the singing and the sermon from the live stream, why should I even show up? I'm burden for pastors who aren't able to answer that question, who, you know,
Starting point is 00:37:47 will maybe kind of try to, you know, say, well, you know, Ecclesia means assembly. And that's just, this is not going to resonate at the same level. And so there's a lot of, I think a lot of pastors who I would really love to see, understand not just the meaning of church, quote unquote, but the meaning of technology, the meaning of these digital technologies. And to be able to point their people to the reality
Starting point is 00:38:13 that, hey, look, these technologies mediate the message in such a way so that you're not actually participating in the life of the church in the way you think you might be by not being here. So I think that's those are the thoughts that are foremost on my mind now. It's a hope in the, you know, the resiliency of the word and the power of the Lord to sanctify as people. But it's also a deep concern about as these technologies just become automatically intuitive for a lot of people, can we as Christians formulate the reasons that are necessary for people to to take those active steps of resistance, many of which are going to be very counterintuitive. convenient. The example you give a pastor who has to persuade congregants to attend an actual service makes me think of the way that the internet does not have a Sabbath. There's no natural passage of time online. It's a global technology. We're all on there together and there are many people
Starting point is 00:39:18 who are active, well past normal waking hours. And so there's no sense of the gradual rhythm of a day, let alone the rhythm of a week with the final, with a movement towards rest and a movement from rest that gives you an orientation to some transcendent reality that's beyond the stifling, immediacy and imminence of the internet as a realm. Can you speak to some of the practices that help us to maybe redeem the time, not in the sense of just filling our time with activity, but with orienting our time towards something meaningful and true and good.
Starting point is 00:40:03 Yeah, as you were saying that, I was thinking of, you know, just the way that we've read articles now in places like the Atlantic and the New York Times about the decline of time off and the decline of vacation and why people are not using their vacation days and things like that. And when you interview modern people, like, you know, why aren't you taking your vacation days? days and they say, well, I can go on vacation, but I'm just going to get 100 emails while I'm on vacation and I'm going to end up working. That is tragic. That is, that is just a, again, that is, we're losing our ability to be shocked by that, which is truly shocking because we assume this hyper-connectivity that simply links us. And I think you're exactly right. And it's extremely an insightful point that the ethos of the internet is endless connectivity. but also endless work.
Starting point is 00:40:56 We're constantly formulating our identity. We're constantly trying to get our opinion out there. We're trying to build our brand. We're trying to be more efficient or more productive. And that's exactly what the internet culture really is. So in terms of actual practices and redeeming our time, I think one thing that can really help, particularly churches and Christians seek resistance in this age,
Starting point is 00:41:24 is just reaching out to one another and to say, hey, like, you know, I know I could send you an Instagram DM right now. I know I could text you. I'm going to call you. And instead of, instead of just like texting each other through the week, hey, let's get, let's get coffee. Let's sit down for an hour. I think particularly post-COVID, I think going into COVID, I was, I was optimistic that this would make a lot of people so sick of being alone that they would just kind of throw off these technologies, I actually don't think that happened. I think what instead happened was for a lot of people, the social awkwardness of just being with another person was intensified. And so there's a sense of fear and a sense of anxiety. I just know so many people who will text me very personal
Starting point is 00:42:12 things, very things that they're struggling with, things that they need prayer for, and will be very open up in text. And when I see these person in church or in a social setting, it's like those conversations never happened. It's a completely different relational dynamic there. So I think Christians can redeem their time by filling their time with people, with other people. And this sounds cliche and it sounds like, well, duh, of course you do that. But we don't do it. We know we're supposed to and we nod our head and we say like, yeah, yeah, I should reach out more. But everything in our kind of modern culture says, hey, protect your time. you know, sit at your desk, eat your lunch at your desk,
Starting point is 00:42:56 you know, be more efficient so you can go home 30 minutes early and watch Netflix, all this sooner. Like, it takes actual resistance. It takes actual fight to do these types of things. But I think one of the points I make late in the book is that the kind of despair-fueled, addictive reaction that many people have toward the Internet is often. the result of just isolation, of just not feeling a significance to their daily lives, not feeling like anyone knows them. And so what they do is they scroll. Many of us just scroll
Starting point is 00:43:33 to kind of numb the, numb the anxiety and the pain of not really having anything in our life that's giving us meaning and joy and energy. And I think that this is going to be a powerful, this is going to be in a separate podcast. But I think in terms of mental health, the conversation around mental health today is is often concentrated around are you surrounding yourself with positive people who kind of affirm you when it should probably be more about are you surrounding yourself with people at all are you are you is your concept of self-care so digital that you're actually kind of driving deeper into the very despair that you're trying to you're trying to escape um so i i think i think reaching out for for one another is is kind of the place to start
Starting point is 00:44:19 and also to build to build rhythms and to be okay with with missing things. You know, if if I'm not logged on, gosh, I might miss somebody might, you know, somebody might compliment me or somebody might actually send me an important message or something like that. I think being okay to to not occupy multiple spaces at the same time and say, look, I'm here, I'm with my spouse, I'm with my friend, we are here. and I'm okay to not get the dopamine hit from the notification. I think just that recovery of a sense of gratitude to be wherever you are,
Starting point is 00:45:00 to be an embodied person in a particular place and to not feel like you need kind of that novelty and that new hit of discovering what else is out there to function. So maybe two kind of broad answers to that question to how we can, start to actively redeem our time. One term that you use on several occasions within the book that is getting at something really crucial is the idea of social media, particularly, as an epistemological environment,
Starting point is 00:45:36 something that shapes the way that we think. And you talk about the way that technologies that have to do with the word, with speech, with writing and communication, are particularly powerful in reshaping human beings and how we think. because we are speaking beings. And as a result, social media and the internet,
Starting point is 00:45:58 being technologies that have to do a lot with speech and the manner in which we communicate, have a great potential to change the way that we think, the manner in which we coordinate in our thinking, and the patterns and habits of thought that tend to dominate. Can you speak a bit more about that? maybe some of the things that people should, specific things that people need to be aware of in how the internet might be shaping them as an epistemological environment.
Starting point is 00:46:33 Yes, so Nicholas Carr is the one who kind of, for me, introduced the concept of an intellectual technology. So an intellectual technology is a technology that directly impacts language, kind of thought patterns, as opposed to, you know, a screwdriver or wrench, the internet actually talks to you. So the internet actually has this kind of output, this language output. And in its language output, it supplies you with new language. It kind of interacts with you at a human cognitive level that is different from, you know, just kind of hand tools, that type of technology, which are a type of technology, but a much
Starting point is 00:47:15 different. So I think the primary example that I kind of way, and on with the book, right, put weight on in the book is, you know, disembodiment. So the idea that in the internet space, talking about gender issues, talking about sexual issues, whether you're talking about gender roles in the church, you're talking about gender identity, transgender ism in the larger culture, there's often a massive kind of plausibility problem with talking about that online. And the reason is that everyone in an online space exists. as a mental projection.
Starting point is 00:47:54 So when I'm talking to three people on Twitter about gender roles in the church and why I believe that only men should be ordained elders, it's not simply an issue of making the right argument from the right text of scripture. There's an intrinsic plausibility problem with making that position in an online space where we're not actually relating to each other
Starting point is 00:48:17 as men and women. We're relating to each other as avatars, usernames. And some of those avatars may have feminine sounding names and some of those users may have feminine sounding names. Some might have masculine sounding names. Some might have feminine-looking avatars. Some might have masculine-looking avatars. But there's a radical sense of disembodiment when we meet online. And I think that right there is a plausibility structure. And when we think about kind of the rise of transgender ideology and how the notion that a person could actually be trapped in the wrong body could be kind of this could could could have one set of
Starting point is 00:48:57 sexual anatomy but identify as a completely different gender um we we have to take seriously the possibility that the internet has mediated our experience of the world to such a degree that gender itself no longer feels germane to what it to what it means to be a person we've become so accustomed to learning to communicating to relating to living in a disembodied space like the internet that we no longer feel the reality of our bodies. We simply don't feel like embodied individuals anymore. So that is a, that's a really profound way that I think the internet can operate as a epistemological habitat, even when it's not actively giving us arguments and particular ideas in an explicit way, but simply by virtue of what it is, it's pushing our intuitions
Starting point is 00:49:49 in a certain direction. Beyond that, I'd also say that things like transgenderism are impacted by the fact that the internet is huge. The internet is the city multiplied by a million. The city was the internet before the internet. It was the place where you could go if you had a niche identity and connect with other people who shared that.
Starting point is 00:50:14 The internet is that on a much grander scale and enables you to connect with people who have very niche, understandings of the world. And for many of us, it's been a form of being able to move into ever more elaborate understandings of particular theologies, ways of viewing the world. For others, it's been a means by which you can get into ever more bespoke forms of identity and not have the normal processes of a smaller society that would tend to pull you back towards something more normal.
Starting point is 00:50:51 And without those processes of an ordinary society, the internet is really a great location for radicalizing people or increasing movements into unhealthy or extreme identities of all types. And beyond just the process that I've just described or the disembodying aspect, there's also the way in which, as it goes through different phases, the internet privileges certain sorts of social strategies. And so increasingly the internet ceased with the rise of social media to be a context of detached, impersonal argument,
Starting point is 00:51:34 which could be very combative and privileging of a certain sort of male mode of discourse, to one that was a lot more about approval and inclusion, and social values which are more typically female. And so the sorts of ideologies that thrive within those different environments are very different. And it seems to me that as these sorts of things develop, we are being brought into novel and very weird social conditions that would not usually arise within human society. But now we're being placed into them on a society,
Starting point is 00:52:16 wide international scale. And so the question of how to adapt to these seems to break down the processes of wisdom that are usually related to very, fairly stable forms of life and practice. And so I'll be curious to hear your thoughts on how the internet as a context that collapses all these contexts together as a context that's constantly and very rapidly, evolving can be a context within which wisdom can have a place, wisdom which tends to require an older generation that has understood and wisely related to a fairly stable environment passing on a way of life to those after them. How can that operate in the context of the internet?
Starting point is 00:53:07 Or wisdom as a form of speech that is addressing things in their appropriate contexts, a word in season, and when you're having to be all things to all men simultaneously or speak to all these different contexts, it seems that wisdom just does not have a home in such a world. How can we be wise people and continue traditions of wisdom in a realm that seems to be inherently hostile to wisdom? That's a very good question. As you were talking about the kind of more wild and woolly borders of the Internet
Starting point is 00:53:46 you know, the point emerges that culture has always had a fringe. There's always been a fringe in society. The difference now is that the borders around the fringe have become much more porous. So there's no, it's much easier for the fringe to move toward the middle because of the dissemination of these quote-unquote democratic technologies, which I actually don't think are that democratic actually. But I think that's, I think that's exactly. right. Wisdom is deeply implausible online and I think part of the reason for that is
Starting point is 00:54:24 that as Nicholas Carr points out the internet embodies a certain set of intellectual ethics. So the internet values multitasking and kind of shallow reactive thought because shallow reactive thought empowers more consumption and it empowers more kind of efficient skimming. So the internet and you see this, anyone who's written on online, tried to get writing jobs online, knows that the internet privilege is a certain kind of writing that is very short, very punchy, has a kind of a click-bait-type appeal. And if you try to write something that kind of pushes against that and says, hey, like, actually, this issue is complicated. Let's sit with this for a minute. Let's kind of parse out individual topics. Well, people will become bored of that very quickly and will say, I'm not going to read all.
Starting point is 00:55:16 that or that's you're equivocating and so the question of what wisdom looks like in these particular environments will probably mean identifying the intellectual ethics of the internet particularly of the algorithm i i think the algorithm itself is a major source of the incentive to be foolish so if i if i say this if i if i put people on blast or if i if i use this this type of irresponsible language. It's kind of a dog whistle to certain tribes, but I can kind of weasel my way out of it if I'm called on it. If I do this, I will ascend to the top of the algorithm. I will be the first thing that people see when they get on their feeds. And people might realize that I'm talking about Twitter in a very coded way. Twitter is the chief offender here, but Facebook and TikTok have the same
Starting point is 00:56:09 logic to that. The algorithm rewards that which is best at captivating people's negative emotional attention. This is something that, you know, former engineers at Facebook and Google have given interviews about how we designed the algorithm to be able to capture people's outrage, because outrage is the most reliable predictor of engagement. So what wisdom will look like, I think, for people who do have an online presence, is like being able to identify these algorithmic effects and being ready to be a little bit less relevant because we don't follow them, to be okay with being a little bit more obscure because we're not going to do it. And this is easier said than done because if you're a, if you're, for example, a Christian media
Starting point is 00:56:58 organization and someone says, hey, look, if we put out content that says this, I can guarantee 60% more engagement than if we put out content. that is an ethical dilemma. That is a moment of moral choice to say, well, should we go with what's going to potentially boost our ministry more? Or should we go with what is actually more defensible from a truth telling from a wise perspective? And so in the book, I kind of outline, you know, different characteristics of genuinely Christian thinking. So genuinely Christian thinking is careful. We don't rush to judgment. We don't assume that we're right and nobody else can talk us off that ledge was meditating recently on James and how James talks James kind of indicts his uh the
Starting point is 00:57:48 believers that he's addressing uh for for not being reasonable he says the wisdom that comes from above is pure and reasonable and open to reason um that's not the kind of intellectual ethic that is exemplified by the algorithm but that is what's commanded to us in scripture so we simply have to decide in a moment of choice, what we're going to do. And what that might look like, frankly, is being okay to be stepped on, being okay to be ignored, being okay to be lied about. And I'm not saying there's never a time to defend oneself. But we're simply not going to win with wisdom in the moments of the algorithm.
Starting point is 00:58:32 Instead, what we'll have to do, I think, Alistair, is we're going to have to keep a certain type of person clearly in mind. In addition to our own souls, we need to keep in mind that people are actually very burdened with a sense of anxiety, a sense of exhaustion, a sense of this world is not intelligible to them, and they feel like they have no place. And rather than trying to, rather than trying to kind of contort ourselves into online weapons or online juggernauts, I think the way we why we wide, handle truth will appeal to people who need to hear something that is refreshing to their souls.
Starting point is 00:59:15 It may not win the content wars. It may not win the algorithm wars, but it will do the work that the Lord sends out for it, right? The Lord sends his word and it will not return to him void. So I think we need to claim that. And I think we need to think carefully. We need to think communally. We need to be able to be open to correction from other people to be able to say, hey, I got this wrong. And we also need to be able to say things that are truthful, even when they might implicate the people we associate with, or they might implicate ourselves. In conclusion, could you give just some very brief thoughts about how to address the message of the gospel to people who are struggling to inhabit the world of the internet, who feel
Starting point is 01:00:01 malformed by it, to feel that they don't know how to maybe break with their digital habits, to form a healthy identity, to, or maybe even just to imagine what it is to be a Christian in the digital age. What are some maybe the key aspects of the gospel that are most salient within our digital age? I love that question. I think I would have to be. I would have to be a very important. I think I would encourage someone like that to reflect on the reality that God is their creator, that God made them. He did not make them, if you're listening, if you're a human being, God did not make you to be simply a mental projection. You are a person with a body. You are you are a person who was born in a particular place. You are where you are for a particular reason.
Starting point is 01:00:59 And none of that is sheer accident. none of that is just by pure chance. And so for a person who feels exhausted or unsure how to kind of reconnect with reality, I think the message is one of hope. The reality that you may be struggling to inhabit right now is a good reality because it comes from a good creator. So there's a wisdom. There is an overarching wisdom to your life, to who you are, to the kind of
Starting point is 01:01:31 of people that you know, to the kind of people that you are with, to the kind of circumstances that you find yourself in, even if they're extremely painful. There is a design for it. And what people have to realize is that the Lord is good, he's good. Taste and see that the Lord is good. And what he makes is good. And I think what we're looking for when we give ourselves over to digital technologies is we're looking for a promise of a life that's a little bit better than the one we have. Friends that are a little bit more attentive than the ones we have, a platform that's a little bit bigger than the one we have, an image of ourselves that's a little bit prettier than the one we have. And I think the message of the gospel comes in and says,
Starting point is 01:02:16 even if you could, even if you could achieve all of those things, that would satisfy you. That's not what you're created for. You're created not to have this kind of perfect projection of yourself. You're created to actually know the God who made you body and spirit. and whom you belong to by right. So I would hold that forth to them as an invitation, really, to know the true God, know the God of reality, and the promise that he will save and will love everyone who comes to him. Thank you so much for joining me, Samuel.
Starting point is 01:02:52 Thank you, Alastur. Samuel's book is Digital Litigies. I'll put the link to it in the show notes. Thank you very much for listening. Thank you.

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