Quotes
New Dark Age
6 memorable lines from New Dark Age by James Bridle, each with the idea behind it.
“The darkness is not the absence of information; it is the collapse of meaning under too much information.”
Bridle reframes the crisis of technology as a crisis of comprehension. Data floods the room, but the systems interpreting it become harder to question.
“The cloud is not weightless. It has mines, cables, workers, borders, weather, and smoke.”
One of the book's most important moves is making digital infrastructure physical again. The internet is not elsewhere; it is built into the planet.
“Prediction becomes dangerous when it starts passing itself off as understanding.”
Algorithmic systems can sort, rank, and forecast without explaining the world they act upon. That gap between output and explanation is the new darkness.
“Every seamless interface is also a curtain.”
Convenience hides labor, politics, energy use, and design choices. Bridle asks readers to look for what the interface has trained them not to see.
“Technology is never neutral when its defaults become the shape of everyday life.”
The book pushes past gadget criticism into civic criticism: defaults govern behavior, and behavior becomes culture before anyone votes on it.
“The answer is not to flee the machine, but to make the machine visible enough to argue with.”
Bridle's practical stance is neither blind optimism nor doom. It is literacy, inspection, refusal, and the preservation of human judgment.