10 results found for: “technocracy”.

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Technocracy

Technocracy is a form of government in which decision-makers appoint knowledge experts in specific domains to provide them with advice and guidance in...

Last Update: 2025-06-10T07:54:34Z Word Count : 4104

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Technocracy movement

The technocracy movement was a social movement active in the United States and Canada in the 1930s which favored technocracy as a system of government...

Last Update: 2025-06-18T04:23:24Z Word Count : 5868

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Technocracy (disambiguation)

Look up technocracy or technocrat in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Technocracy is a form of government by technicians; specifically: management of...

Last Update: 2024-07-07T21:08:11Z Word Count : 174

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Joshua N. Haldeman

and politician. He became involved in Canadian politics, backing the technocracy movement, before moving to South Africa in 1950. Over the course of decades...

Last Update: 2025-06-15T11:36:18Z Word Count : 2335

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Technocracy (EP)

Technocracy is an EP by American heavy metal band Corrosion of Conformity. It was released in 1987 on Metal Blade Records and re-released in 1992 via...

Last Update: 2025-02-12T15:32:33Z Word Count : 111

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Mage: The Ascension

Mages called the Nine Mystical Traditions; the New World Order of the Technocracy, which relies on its technofantasical "paradigms" versus the Marauders...

Last Update: 2025-06-02T06:23:02Z Word Count : 1029

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Elon Musk

American-born Canadian chiropractor, aviator and political activist in the Technocracy movement who moved to South Africa in 1950. Haldeman's anti-government...

Last Update: 2025-06-26T19:42:53Z Word Count : 24852

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Musk family

Haldeman was a notable chiropractor, aviator, and politician who promoted technocracy and South African apartheid. Elon Reeve Musk FRS (/ˈiːlɒn/ EE-lon; born...

Last Update: 2025-06-20T04:23:45Z Word Count : 4324

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Technocracy Study Course

The Technocracy Study Course is a technocratic critique of the price system, written by M. King Hubbert and first published in 1934. It is the ideological...

Last Update: 2015-12-08T22:09:56Z Word Count : 67

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Post-scarcity

Post-scarcity is a theoretical economic situation in which most goods can be produced in great abundance with minimal human labor, so that they become...

Last Update: 2025-06-07T05:02:19Z Word Count : 3353

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Technocracy

Technocracy is a form of government in which decision-makers appoint knowledge experts in specific domains to provide them with advice and guidance in various areas of their policy-making responsibilities. Technocracy follows largely in the tradition of other meritocratic theories and works best when the state exerts strong control over social and economic issues. This system is sometimes presented as explicitly contrasting with representative democracy, the notion that elected representatives should be the primary decision-makers in government, despite the fact that technocracy does not imply eliminating elected representatives. In a technocracy, decision-makers rely on individuals and institutions possessing specialized knowledge and data-based evidence rather than advisors with political affiliations or loyalty. The term technocracy was initially used to signify the application of the scientific method to solving social problems. In its most extreme form, technocracy is an entire government running as a technical or engineering problem and is mostly hypothetical. In more practical use, technocracy is any portion of a bureaucracy run by technologists. A government in which elected officials appoint experts and professionals to administer individual government functions, and recommend legislation, can be considered technocratic. Some uses of the word refer to a form of meritocracy, where the most suitable are placed in charge, ostensibly without the influence of special interest groups. Critics have suggested that a "technocratic divide" challenges more participatory models of democracy, describing these divides as "efficacy gaps that persist between governing bodies employing technocratic principles and members of the general public aiming to contribute to government decision making".


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