CONCEPT
The Pragmatic Test
Brand's empirical disposition—asking of every idea, technology, or intervention: Does it work? What happens when you try it? What does the evidence show?—loyalty to practice over theory.
The pragmatic test is Brand's core intellectual method: the refusal to accept theoretical elegance as substitute for empirical verification, the insistence that ideas prove themselves through outcomes rather than through argumentative force. Brand asks three questions of everything: Does it work? What actually happens when real people use this in real contexts? What does the evidence show after
enough time has passed to see second-order effects? This disposition traces to
cybernetics—
Norbert Wiener's study of how systems
behave rather than what they
should be—and to American pragmatism's conviction that the meaning of an idea lies in its consequences. Applied to AI, the pragmatic test refuses to adjudicate
between utopian and dystopian poles. It asks instead: what happens when developers use
Claude Code? What does the Berkeley ethnography show? Under what conditions does liberation predominate? Under what conditions does exploitation predominate? What can be built to shift the balance? The answers are always contextual, provisional, subject to revision—and always actionable.