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The Ghost in the Machine: How Power Became Performance and Governance Vanished - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

The Ghost in the Machine: How Power Became Performance and Governance Vanished - The Deeper Thinking Podcast

Episode 146 Published 1 year, 1 month ago
Description

Ghost in the Machine: How Power Became Performance and Governance Vanished

The Deeper Thinking Podcast

For anyone unsettled by the vanishing visibility of governance—and the rise of spectacle in its place.

We still vote. We still participate in democracy. But the machinery of governance has become difficult to see. No longer debated in the public square, decisions now emerge through algorithmic systems, bureaucratic flows, and opaque influence architectures. We are not commanded, but steered. Not forced, but shaped. The state, once embodied in leaders and laws, now acts through automation, nudges, and invisible preferences.

And yet, we sense its presence. Not through oppression—but through absence. Something has slipped from view. What remains is performance: the theatre of governance without its substance. As Guy Debord once observed, spectacle replaces engagement. Authority no longer insists on being visible—it prefers to be felt, inferred, mimicked.

This episode explores what happens when power hides in plain sight—when its appearance matters more than its operation. We trace the shift from deliberation to automation, from governance to guidance. And we ask: what becomes of democracy when participation is absorbed into performance?

Reflections

Here are some of the ideas that emerged during this episode:

  • Governance now feels ambient—less a force, more a condition we live inside.
  • The appearance of transparency often conceals deeper forms of control.
  • Performance is no longer the domain of politics—it is politics.
  • We long for clarity, but clarity is often traded for legibility by machines.
  • When spectacle governs, dissent becomes aesthetic rather than structural.
  • Influence often precedes law, scripting our behaviour before we even decide.
  • Power is not what compels us—it is what shapes what feels natural.

Why Listen?

  • Explore how power has become ambient, invisible, and algorithmic
  • Examine how governance is performed rather than practiced
  • Understand why spectacle now replaces accountability
  • Engage with Debord, Zuboff, Han, Agamben, and Scott on the invisible mechanics of modern power

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Bibliography

  • Zuboff, Shoshana. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. PublicAffairs, 2019.
  • Han, Byung-Chul. The Transparency Society. Stanford University Press, 2015.
  • Agamben, Giorgio. Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life. Stanford University Press, 1998.<
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