愛(ài)鼓搗的人成就美國(guó)的偉大
??? 縱觀人類(lèi)歷史,人們常常訴諸鬼神和幻想的故事來(lái)解釋許多無(wú)法理解的事物。人生或許是骯臟、粗魯和短暫的,但在某種意義上,這個(gè)容納它的世界卻魅影重重。 ????隨后爆發(fā)了啟蒙運(yùn)動(dòng)。這場(chǎng)運(yùn)動(dòng)強(qiáng)調(diào)理性和科學(xué)高于迷信,從而引發(fā)了“世界的祛魅”(馬克斯·韋伯語(yǔ))。換言之,人們不再譴責(zé)魔鬼,而是開(kāi)始揣摩事物的運(yùn)行方式。好奇心重、擅長(zhǎng)操作機(jī)械的人終于迎來(lái)了自己的好時(shí)光。 ????但在上世紀(jì)中葉的某個(gè)時(shí)候面紗再次垂下。戰(zhàn)后的技術(shù)革命帶給我們激光、計(jì)算機(jī)以及其他一些神秘莫測(cè)的技術(shù)。許多人熱情擁抱它們,但很少有人能夠理解它們、擺弄它們。結(jié)果留給我們一大堆神奇的電子用品(比如iPad),但以自己動(dòng)手為特征的DIY活動(dòng)卻就此式微。這一悠久的傳統(tǒng)形成了一種有益健康的鼓搗文化,與自立和創(chuàng)新等內(nèi)涵更廣泛的美國(guó)傳統(tǒng)密切相連。 ????亞歷克·福奇認(rèn)為,這種鼓搗傳統(tǒng)是美國(guó)的一項(xiàng)核心美德。福奇在他的新著《愛(ài)鼓搗的人成就美國(guó)偉業(yè):業(yè)余愛(ài)好者、DIY愛(ài)好者和發(fā)明家贊歌》(The Tinkerers: The Amateurs, DIYers, and Inventors Who Made America Great)一書(shū)中,對(duì)這種傳統(tǒng)進(jìn)行了毫無(wú)保留的探索。他在書(shū)中寫(xiě)到:“擺弄我們周?chē)臋C(jī)械其實(shí)已經(jīng)成為了一種成年禮。對(duì)于許多人來(lái)說(shuō),這是一種生活方式。” ????福奇認(rèn)為鼓搗有三個(gè)基本特征。第一種特征是,“用我們周?chē)呀?jīng)存在的事物制造出某種全新的東西”;其二,它“最開(kāi)始時(shí)往往沒(méi)有什么目的”;其三,它是“一種破壞性行為,鼓搗者背對(duì)歷史開(kāi)始了一段全新的旅程”。 ????福奇意識(shí)到,鼓搗這種行為既可能發(fā)生在實(shí)體世界,也可能發(fā)生在虛擬空間。比如它有可能涉及移動(dòng)應(yīng)用,就如同它曾經(jīng)涉及化油器一樣。這與他的主旨觀點(diǎn)是一致的——無(wú)論受到怎樣的威脅,鼓搗行為并沒(méi)有在這個(gè)國(guó)家消亡。 ????就這一點(diǎn)而言,他是正確的。從生產(chǎn)新手工藝品的小作坊中,從誠(chéng)摯的年輕學(xué)子對(duì)務(wù)農(nóng)生活(美國(guó)相當(dāng)多的鼓搗行為都發(fā)軔自農(nóng)耕時(shí)代)重燃的興趣中,我們都可以看到這一點(diǎn)。請(qǐng)不要忽視《制造》雜志(Make)和制匯節(jié)(Makers Faires)的成功,也不要對(duì)從東海岸至西海岸星羅棋布的各類(lèi)科技作坊和駭客空間視而不見(jiàn)。 |
????For much of human history, people explained away the many things they couldn't understand by resorting to gods, spirits, and fanciful tales. Life may have been nasty, brutish, and short, but the world that contained it was in some sense enchanted. ????Then came the Enlightenment, with its emphasis on reason and science over superstition, leading to what Max Weber called the "disenchantment of the world." People stopped blaming the devil, in other words, and started figuring out how things worked. It was a great time for the curious and the mechanically inclined. ????But sometime in the middle of the last century, the veil descended once again. The postwar technological revolution served to re-enchant everyday life, giving us lasers and computers and other mysterious technologies that many embraced but few understood or could work on. The result was a great many magical gizmos (iPad, anyone?) but the decline of a long tradition of hands-on, do-it-yourself activity that formed a salutary culture of tinkering -- one linked to such broader American traditions as self-reliance and innovation. ????This tinkering tradition is a core American virtue, in the view of Alec Foege, who explores it, warts and all, in his new book?The Tinkerers: The Amateurs, DIYers, and Inventors Who Made America Great.?"Puttering around with the mechanical devices that surrounded us was practically a rite of passage," he writes, "and for many, a way of life." ????Foege argues that tinkering has three essential characteristics. First, it involves "making something genuinely new out of the things that already surround us." Second, it "happens without an initial sense of purpose." And third, it's "a disruptive act in which the tinkerer pivots from history and begins a new journey." ????Foege recognizes that tinkering can be virtual as well as physical -- that it can involve, say, mobile apps just as it once involved carburetors. That's in keeping with his thesis that tinkering, however threatened, isn't dead in this country. ????He's right about this. We see it in the host of small production runs for new artisanal products, and in the renewed interest of earnest young college graduates in a life of farming, which harks back to the agrarian roots of so much American tinkering. And let's not overlook the success of?Make?magazine and the Makers Faires, or the spread of techshops and hackerspaces from coast to coast. |
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