The rise of solutionism

By Gonzalo López Martí / Creative director, etc / LMMIAMI.COM

“The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it is the illusion of knowledge.”
Stephen Hawking

  • Solutionism is increasingly present in the world of marketing and advertising.
  • Two disciplines that used to be humanist crafts with a touch of alchemy are now permeated with growing doses of algorithmic pseudoscience.
  • It is getting out of hand.
  • Methinks we are increasingly witnessing an enormous game of short term thinking, hype, smoke, mirrors and fraud.
  • See, solutionism is a disorder of sorts, a delusion.
  • It leads folks to believe that every single variable and moving part in a given process can be managed to determine the outcome.
  • Pure unadulterated wishful thinking.
  • Solutionists, aka solutionistas, come in all shapes and sizes.
  • Most solutionists are highly educated.
  • There are plenty ignoramuses in the ranks too.
  • Solutionists sell themselves as problem solvers when they are actually problem creators.
  • That urge to build golf courses in the Arizona desert and border walls between nations?
  • Yup, solutionism.
  • Solutionism is particularly pervasive in, but not limited to, mainstream Anglo Saxon Protestant culture.
  • Solutionism is HIGHLY pervasive in Silicon Valley.
  • Silicon Valley worships at the altar of solutionism with fervor and zeal.
  • On the antipodes of this worldview, Latin Catholics, like yours truly, tend to be fatalists.
  • Fatalism, not to be confused with pessimism, is the belief in the inevitability of fate.
  • Once again, it is not pessimism or resignation.
  • Some fatalists are very optimistic.
  • The particularity of fatalism is that it accepts we are just humans who simply cannot foresee, let alone control, all the variables and moving parts in a process.
  • Common sense, if you ask me.
  • At times, all we can do is cross our fingers and push ahead.
  • Trust me, a little fatalism can save you and your healthcare coverage provider a truckload of money in therapy and psychotropic meds.
  • But back to solutionism.
  • At best, the solutionists are just forcing us to cheat at solitary.
  • To believe the hype they believe in and to drink the Kool Aid they are drinking.
  • At worst, they are the pied pipers leading us happily over a cliff.
  • Can we blame them if by lying to themselves they lie to us too?
  • Solutionists fancy themselves big picture strategists when most of the times they are just easily distracted tacticians.
  • Solutionists pride themselves in being curious when, more often than not, they are just dilettantes.
  • Solutionists operate well in the contained abstract environment of academia, where the politics are so vicious because the stakes are so low.
  • Solutionists believe data is king.
  • Of course, they’ll duly ignore data that won’t fit their preconceptions, dogmas and aprioristic theories.
  • Thing is, solutionists, like every other human being, have an agenda: they need to justify their existence and their salaries.
  • To be continued.
  • Meantime, should you want to know more about the solutionist phenomenon, refer to the book “To Save Everything, Click Here: The Folly of Technological Solutionism” by Evgeny Morozov.

 

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