Chris Higgins
Amish Hackers
by Chris Higgins - February 11, 2009 - 5:19 PM

Amish skaterToday’s surprising article: Kevin Kelly on Amish hackers. In a thoughtful article, Kelly explores Amish culture (from an outsider’s perspective, anyway) focusing on their use of technology. Kelly’s thesis is that the Amish aren’t anti-technology per se — they’re just slower to adopt technology, and have a highly developed sense of which technologies they adopt. In Kelly’s visits to Amish territory, he witnessed a people who had carefully selected their technologies, balancing family and community values with technological convenience. This attitude towards technology is in stark contrast to the typical Western practice of adopting whatever is newest or fastest.

Here’s a snippet from Kelly’s article:

…Amish lives are anything but anti-technological. In fact on my several visits with them, I have found them to be ingenious hackers and tinkers, the ultimate makers and do-it-yourselfers and surprisingly pro technology.

…Cruising down the road you may see an Amish kid in a straw hat and suspenders zipping by on roller blades. In front of one school house I spied a flock of parked scooters, which is how the kids arrived there. Not Razors, but hefty Amish varieties. But on the same street a constant stream of grimy mini-vans paraded past the school. Each was packed with full-bearded Amish men sitting in the back. What was that about?

…The Amish are steadily, slow[ly] adopting technology. They are slow geeks. As one Amish man told Howard Rheingold, “We don’t want to stop progress, we just want to slow it down,” But their manner of slow adoption is instructive.

1. They are selective. They know how to say “no” and are not afraid to refuse new things. They ban more than they adopt.

2. They evaluate new things by experience instead of by theory. They let the early adopters get their jollies by pioneering new stuff under watchful eyes.

3. They have criteria by which to select choices: technologies must enhance family and community and distance themselves from the outside world.

4. The choices are not individual, but communal. The community shapes and enforces technological direction.

Read the rest for a thoughtful look at Amish techno-culture (with great photos, too).

(Via Waxy.org. Photo by Dominik Füssel.)

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Comments (3)
  1. everytime i see amish women (and i see them a lot in my area of ohio) on cell phones (and i see that a lot) i die a little inside.

    and they use tractors just like cars. my ten year old son said “what are they against in a car? the radio?”

  2. My dad used to sell scrap metal, and one of his customers was an Amish gentleman who made Dumpsters in a workshop on his property. He had the workshop wired with electricity, but no electricity in the home… except a generator that ran his wife’s sewing machine. He had a phone, but it was mounted to a pole outside, next to the workshop, and he only used it for business. Since the Amish don’t drive, he paid a local Mennonite man to pick up his workers every morning and drive them home at night. They made a pretty clear (but sometimes blurry) distinction: they used modern technology where they felt it was necessary to make a living and support their families, but not for comfort or fun. But they did get a kick out of trying our cell phones.

  3. Bonus fact: The Amish have an expression – “rolling pumpkins” – which means, basically, farting. We went out to visit them once, Dad and I, and went to lunch with them at the local Smorgasbord. On the way home, they informed us that a couple of them were “rolling pumpkins” in the back seat. It was also interesting to watch them eat: one used a knife and fork, another used a knife and spoon, another used a fork and spoon… it didn’t matter, whatever would get the food into their mouths. And boy, did they have amazing appetites.

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