THE PROMETHEAN GAP
The Promethean Gap killed humanity. Technology ended livelihood. Hiroshima is everywhere today. "Will We Live?" is the current crisis.
The Promethean Gap, used by German philosopher Günther Anders in the 1950s, is a disconnect between human technological capabilities and the ability to manage their results. Technology, advanced faster than human imagination. Anders used as a stark example the experiments of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This gap manifests in many forms: between our production and ability to imagine its effects, technological creation and human needs, our actions, and our capacity to process them. This leads to "Promethean shame," where humans become inferior to the machines and become blind to anticipate catastrophic results. The destruction of nuclear warfare is the symptom of this gap. The term draws from the Greek myth of Prometheus, who stole fire from the gods to advance humanity and faced bad outcomes. Artificial Intelligence, social media, and other technologies echo this.
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