Evolution

    Evolution

    Can you see the crab?



    What Technology Wants

    I found “What Technology Wants” by Kevin Kelly a fascinating read because it beautifully connects two of my biggest passions: technology and evolution. The “technium” is this evolving, self-organizing system that represents all technology, past, present, and future. 

    However, unlike species, which can become extinct, he presents the idea that old tech simply finds new purposes or persists quietly in the background. I loved it because I’m constantly repurposing old tech myself.

    A book cover displaying the title What Technology Wants by Kevin Kelly, featuring a graphic of a dandelion against a blue background.

    But what blew my mind was the parallel between evolution and technology. He argues that just as natural selection favors solutions best suited to an environment, the technium’s “natural selection” favors technologies that efficiently address human needs. There are several examples in the book of humans in vastly separated regions facing similar challenges and coming up with responses often with similar designs. Just like how diverse species in similar environments develop comparable traits.

    By the way, that’s the same argument we use when looking for life on other planets. If we find one with similar conditions to Earth, life there might have evolved in similar ways to what happened here.