Establishing a discourse framework
My academic background is in linguistics, especially applied linguistics and discourse. It is one of the reasons I
want to attentively link technocratic and religious discourse, because I believe they can inform each other.
Without this concern we would be left only with technocratic discourse, which will tend to dominate, simply
because the technical nearly always attracts, and immediately. The religious, based as it is on the grass-like
growth of the Kingdom of God, requires depth and patience to be observed. Technocratic discourse also
threatens democracy in real ways in a globalised world, because it cuts off what is beyond its immediate narrow
interests. It tends to represent the interests of business and technology rather than wisdom, culture, the
environment, 'the other', and much of what the Kingdom of God stands for.
The challenge is to formulate a discourse that assists a Christian formation of good, true and faithful lives in the
light of the rising ascendancy of techno-science as the formative cultural factor. Do I mean a counter discourse?
I mean that telling the story with our Christian vocabulary and grammar may enable other quests for the good
and true, and this is especially so for the young people whom we educate. I am trying to tackle the kind of
question asked by bio-ethicist Ronald Cole-Turner when he asked:
Can theology—that communal process by which the church’s faith seeks to understand—can theology aim at
understanding technology? Can we put the words God and technology together in any kind of meaningful
sentence? Can theology guess what God is doing in today’s technology? Or by our silence do we leave it
utterly godless? Can we have a theology of technology that comprehends, gives meaning to, dares to
influence the direction and set limits to this explosion of new powers?4
I would like to do more than link two discourses. I also think it is important, for this discussion, to critique some
of the existing discourses. In Digital Virtues I made the point that the discourse of 'virtual reality' has
successfully colonized a range of other discourses in the space of 20 years.5 Today it is not virtual reality I am so
much interested in but two other discourses extremely pertinent to our topic: on the one hand the separate but
linked discourses of the Free Software Movement6 and the Open Source Initiative7 which between them offer us
what is tantamount to an ideology concerning issues like the legitimacy of the technocratic society, the
democratization of technology, public discussion of technological policies, freedom, liberty and community; on
the other hand the discourse which one could argue is one of the dominant paradigms of our time – the so-called
'Information Society'.
With regard to the first item, I refer to a discourse analysis study by David M. Berry, researcher and lecturer at
Swansea University UK.8 Berry is actually looking at the way the OSI movement is offering a more effective
order of discourse to the technologist community than the FSF. But he is also saying, in between the lines and
occasionally directly, that we need to be very careful about the master narratives emerging in society through
movements like these. We need to be aware of the threat of neo-liberal discourse colonizing other discourses –
and I include here religious discourse – which employ terms like freedom, liberty, community. It stands to
reason of course, that this would be happening, but discourse is one of the most subtle elements in human
activity and if we are not careful, wholesale colonization of our thinking occurs before we are even aware of it!
4 Ronald ColeTurner, 'Science, Technology and Mission' in The Local Church in a Global era: Reflections for a New
Century, eds. Max L. Stackhouse, Tim Dearborn, and Scott Paeth, Grand Rapids, Win B. Eerdmans, 2000, pp 100112
5 Julian Fox, pp 1819.
6 Chief proponent and indeed founder – Richard Stallman.
7 Chief proponent and founder – Eric Raymond.
8 D.M.Berry, 'The Contestation of Code: a Preliminary Investigation into the Discourse of the Free/Libre and Open Source
Movements', Critical Discourse Studies, Vol 1. No. 1, p.1 2004.
4