Episode Details

Back to Episodes
Collapse as Protocol: The System Stopped Pretending

Collapse as Protocol: The System Stopped Pretending

Episode 284 Published 8 months, 3 weeks ago
Description

Collapse as Protocol: The System Stopped Pretending

The Deeper Thinking Podcast is digiitally narrated. 

For listeners seeking slow clarity, structural insight, and the human cost of engineered systems.

In a world accelerating toward automation, abstraction, and ambient collapse, what happens when the systems we built to serve begin to discard us? This episode traces how platforms, markets, and institutions now operate less as tools of care or governance—and more as recursive structures of optimization, exclusion, and survival. We examine the eerie quiet of a machine that hasn’t failed, but stopped pretending it was ever meant to help.

Drawing from critical theory, accelerationism, and surveillance capitalism, this episode explores how financial systems detach from need, how automation severs work from meaning, and how collapse has become not a failure—but an interface. With quiet nods to Adorno, Mark Fisher, and Michel Foucault, we interrogate what remains when structure outlives purpose, and when visibility becomes a filter for survival.

This is not a lament. It’s a systems meditation on filtering, optimization, and the logic of recursive harm. It asks what it means to be human inside a loop that monetizes collapse and calls it efficiency. And it wonders: if the system can no longer pretend, what must we stop pretending too?

Reflections

  • Collapse doesn’t always announce itself. Sometimes it arrives as protocol, disguised as progress.
  • Efficiency without care is not speed—it’s erasure.
  • What we call disruption may be displacement refined beyond recognition.
  • When systems stop filtering for meaning, they start filtering for silence.
  • Automation doesn’t kill purpose. It forgets to ask why it mattered.
  • In jackpot culture, you don’t just fail—you disappear.
  • The most dangerous systems aren’t the ones that break. They’re the ones that keep going.

Why Listen?

  • Explore how collapse is increasingly formatted as efficiency
  • Learn why filtering and automation shape not just access, but legibility
  • Understand platform logic through the lens of Foucault and Zuboff
  • Reflect on the philosophical stakes of a world optimized for speed, not care

Listen On:

Support This Work

If this episode stayed with you and you’d like to support the ongoing work, you can do so gently here: Buy Me a Coffee. Thank you for being part of this slower conversation.

Bibliography

  • Fisher, Mark. Capitalist Realism. London: Zero Books, 2009.
  • Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish. New York: Pantheon, 1977.
  • Zubo
Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us