CONCEPT
The End of Ideology
Bell's 1960 thesis that the great ideological battles of the industrial era had exhausted themselves in the advanced democracies — a claim whose partial truth and partial failure both illuminate the AI governance debate.
Bell's The End of Ideology (1960) argued that the comprehensive political ideologies of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries — Marxism, laissez-faire liberalism, fascism — had lost their capacity to mobilize populations in advanced democracies because the historical conditions that produced them had dissolved. What replaced ideology was technical problem-solving: pragmatic adjustment of welfare-state institutions within a broad consensus on mixed economies. The thesis was partially vindicated by the long post-war consensus and partially falsified by subsequent developments — the New Left, the rise of market fundamentalism, the culture wars, the return of populism. For the AI moment, the framework matters in two ways. It specifies what the technology discourse currently lacks (a coherent ideology adequate to the transformation) and what it currently has (a set of technical prescriptions that assume consensus where none exists).
In The You On AI Field Guide
Bell's thesis was not that political disagreement would disappear but that the terms of disagreement would shift from comprehensive
Keep reading with YOU ON AI
Unlock the full book, 10,000+ field-guide entries, and a 1000+ thinker library. If you have a book code, register now — it takes a minute.