Cybernetic Capitalism: A Critical Theory of the Incommunicable

Research output: Book/ReportBookAcademic

Abstract

Cybernetic Capitalism presents a groundbreaking synthesis of Niklas Luhmann's systems theory and critical theory. Overwijk examines how neoliberal capitalism now thrives on the management of incommunicability rather than the pursuit of total communicability, harnessing ecological complexity as its driving force. Contrary to earlier critiques that highlighted capitalism's push to render all social life fully communicable, the current era encourages market incalculability, profits from user unpredictability, and spurs service workers' creativity.
This ecological logic resonates with the extractivist drive of the Anthropocene, reframing our understanding of capitalism as an adaptive, environment-attuned system. Cybernetic Capitalism also exposes how these dynamics intersect with the cultural rise of conspiracy theories and radical-right irrationalism. By illuminating capitalism's paradoxical reliance on both rationalist and irrationalist currents, Overwijk provides a vital new lens for interpreting the complex politics of our time
Original languageEnglish
PublisherFordham University Press
Number of pages240
ISBN (Electronic)9781531508944
ISBN (Print)9781531508937, 9781531508920
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Publication series

NameMeaning Systems
PublisherFordham University Press

Themes from the UHS research agenda

  • Democracy and citizenship
  • Humanism in the 21st century

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