- RSS FeedSubscribe
- « Previous PostA La Carte (3/12)
- Next Post »Free Stuff Fridays
Of Luddites and iPads
- 03/12/10
- 7
This little reflection, which I wrote yesterday while researching my book, seemed appropriate to post this morning, one day after the 199th anniversary of the birth of Luddism and the very day that the next great technology, the iPad, goes on sale.
*****
Luddites have gotten a bad rap. Synonymous with irrational suspicion toward technology, Luddites were, in reality, not nearly as concerned with technology as we might think. History has not been entirely fair to them.
Early in 1811, the owners of Nottinghamshire weaving mills began to receive angry and threatening letters from General Ned Ludd and his Army of Redressers. It's unlikely that there ever was a Ned Ludd; historians believe that the name was a fictitious name fabricated by workers in the textile industry. And these workers, artisans mainly, had much to concern them. As the nation became increasingly industrialized, machines began to do the jobs previously done by men. The work of skilled craftsmen soon became the work of an apprentice or an unskilled woman operating a machine. Wages plummeted as did quality and even the demand for quality. The craftsmen were quickly becoming obsolete and impoverished. The new machines did inferior work, sure, but it was both fast and cheap--a trade-off most people were willing to make.
Under the banner of Ned Ludd, the old artisans plotted to thwart the factories that appeared bent on destroying them. They first wrote letters threatening harm to factories if they did not rid themselves of the machines. Not surprisingly, the factory owners refused to comply with the demands. And so the Luddites attacked. Within weeks factor raids were a nightly occurrence and hundreds of knitting machines had been destroyed.
Luddism, as it became known, quickly spread from one county to the next and soon the violence came to Yorkshire, Lancashire and beyond. The government reacted by passing the Frame Breaking Act, a bill that made destroying machines a capital offense; the next year, seventeen men were sentenced to death on that basis. For a time the violence continued, even extending to a pitched battle with government troops. But eventually, within just a couple of years really, Luddism came to its end. It petered out more than it was stamped out. It succumbed to the inevitable, unable to stand against the forces of industrialization.
Today Luddite is a disparaging term used to refer to anyone who is opposed to technology or perhaps even wary of it. But Luddites were not, in fact, opposed to technology. It is not the machines themselves that the Luddites feared and reacted against. Rather, they understood something that many of us have yet to grasp--that technology is meant to serve humans, not the other way around. Luddites were not protesting technology itself but the new economic and sociological realities brought about by the machines. In former times, craftsmen had been able to work at their own pace and set their own prices for their goods. But with the dawn of industrialization and mass production, craftsmen fell on hard times and were increasingly forced to work for the hated factories. Suddenly they were answerable not to themselves, but to a factory owner; they had to give up autonomy or starve. They saw what the machines meant to their livelihood, to their very lives. And though for a time they fought back, it was to little avail. Technology won as it nearly always does.
To be a Luddite today is to be a person who fights against technology. Maybe there ought to be a little bit of the Luddite in all of us. Let's not forget that what the Luddites feared most was not the machines, but the effects of those machines on their lives and families. We do well to remember that when machine came into conflict with man, it was the machine that won.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (7)
Thanks for writing about this, Tim.
Very few people understand how the destruction of cottage industry in England changed the course of history and society and greatly impacted the way the Western Church operates. For example, we have the youth ministry we have today (which some, including myself, question) almost entirely because of industrialization in early 19th century England. Industrialization combined with social Darwinism and postmillennialism to permanently alter, for the worse, the way the Church functioned.
Not knowing this history or how we have suffered for poor decisions churchmen made back then is one of the great blind spots of the Western Church. I’ve written about this extensively at Cerulean Sanctum, but it would be great for other bloggers to touch on it now and then.
Again, thanks.
I’ve been fascinated about the interplay between technology and culture since I read Neil Postman’s “Technopoly” in college: http://www.amazon.com/Technopoly-Surrender-Technology-Neil-Postman/dp/06…
He argues, among other things, that we’re turning science and the pursuit of “progress” into a religion. I highly recommend it.
If you want an overview, take a look at his manifesto of sorts, which appears near the end of the book. I posted it to my blog on Wednesday: http://starsandstillness.wordpress.com/2010/03/10/the-magical-power-of-n…
I know this is beside the point, but…
“the next great technology”
Huh? It’s a giant iPod Touch.
Maybe I’m somewhat of a Luddite. I’m a Luddite in particular when it comes to technology driving the way we do church. I am not anti-technology…I was, and still am on the side, a video producer and I love using video and technology to worship God, but I am very disturbed by the multi-site trend in big churches that beams the pastor to various “campuses” in other parts of the country or even world. When I express those concerns I get others who role their eyes at me and claim that I’m just old-fashioned…but I am genuinely concerned at the impact it is having on the church. And some of my favorite preachers do this.
I think there will be many interesting side-effects from this trend that will emerge including a whole mess of people who don’t know what it means to be shepherded by a pastor.
Another trend I’ve noticed in my own church, is that in this day an age where every well known pastor on the planet has a pod-cast, as a pastor I feel that I am always being compared to what “Piper said about that passage,” or what “MacArthur thinks the church should be doing.”
OK, OK…I am a Luddite. But I’m not going to go smash lifechurch.tv’s studios or organize a group to try to shut down Driscoll’s podcasts.
Luddites might have gotten a “wrong” rap, but I can hardly call it a “bad” one. What’s worse than being known for destruction of property and violence? They might have had legitimate grievances, but I can hardly call it preserving their reputation to point out that they weren’t merely anti-technology, but destructive and revolutionary.
Anyway, I don’t hate the iPad because I’m anti-technology or “Luddite” in either popular or historical senses. I hate it because it’s causing the idea of great new computing technology to be associated primarily with entertainment, rather than personal or commercial productivity. Or, to bowdlerize a quote I picked up form some blog or other, “The iPad is a great new invention for people who only use their computers for [playing] around instead of for working.”
One way to avoid being swept away into cultural accomodation is to ponder technological “advances” and their effect on our life with Christ and his church. Postman’s book Amusing Ourselves to Death is a good book for pondering this issue. For evangelicals, I recommend Warren Smith’s book, A Lover’s Quarrel with the Evangelical Church. In the book he tackles that we have been too accomodative toward culture and consider tech methods neutral rather than seeing that the “medium is the message.” Smith takes up other similar issues within the evangelical church in a very interesting read.
I am not a Luddite! Technology is powerful, wonderful, and amazing! … folders, and legal pads would result in one becoming organized. ThanksRegards Apple ipads|Apple Tablet|ipad australia