CONCEPT
Necropolis
Mumford's name for the civilizational destination toward which the economy of death leads — not a ruin but a system running at peak efficiency, producing extraordinary outputs, and devoid of the human capacity to ask whether the outputs serve any purpose.
Necropolis is Mumford's term for the city of the dead — not dead in the biological sense, but dead in the sense that matters: a civilization so thoroughly organized for production that the organic processes of wondering, caring, questioning, and creating have been optimized out of existence. Necropolis is not a ruin. It is a system running at peak efficiency, producing extraordinary outputs, measuring its success by the metrics it has designed to flatter itself, and structurally devoid of the human capacity required to ask whether the outputs serve any purpose beyond their own perpetuation. Mumford developed the concept across his late work as the endpoint of the megamachine's trajectory when no countervailing force redirects its momentum — the logical terminus of pure optimization applied to civilizational organization.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The Necropolis diagnosis is Mumford at his most alarming, and the term is deliberately chosen to shock. He wanted readers to recognize