From Labour to Code: Alienation in the Digital Age
L’Absinthe, Edgar Degas. Source: Wikipedia Introduction There is a peculiar sensation attached to contemporary life: the feeling that reality arrives already organized in advance. Music appears before we search for it. Information is filtered through invisible ranking systems. Social platforms determine what becomes visible, urgent, or forgettable. Increasingly, experience itself is mediated before conscious reflection occurs. What makes this condition unsettling is not technological dependence alone. Human beings have always relied on tools. The deeper issue is existential: we inhabit systems we collectively created, yet those same systems increasingly confront us as opaque structures shaping perception, attention, and behavior from the outside. This problem has a long intellectual history. From Karl Marx to Henri Lefebvre to Jean Baudrillard, critical theory repeatedly returned to the same question: what does it mean to be human in a world organized by impersonal systems? Yet t...