Trust: The Scaling of Intimacy

Trust: The Scaling of Intimacy

When describing the context of the Social Age, I have often called it an evolution of our sociology, more so than a matter purely of technology. Technology is the visible change, but the thing that it changes is what interests me most – and the thing that it changes is us! Through our radical connectivity and rebalancing structures of power, through the proliferation of our communities, and the scaling of trust.

That last one surprises people, because we often talk about trust as if it is eroding (in systems and structures) and absent (in politics). In fact, it seems more likely that the location and nature of trust is what is shifting. Out of the physical and into the virtual, from the local to the global, from an emotive to a partly quantified structure.

My own thinking on Trust has evolved, partly as an outcome of the Landscape of Trust research work, and partly from my broader exploration of the Social Context of our Organisations. Certainly we use the word to describe a range of features, not a single ‘thing’, and perhaps the biggest shift is to understand that Trust is experienced predominantly as a series of systems, judgements, and things.

The ‘Systems’ of trust are both social (our tribal and familial structures), and formal (certain national, organisational, team and community structures). Our ‘Judgements’ of trust are in our gut response to ‘others’, be it at the individual or scaled social level (e.g. me and you, or Democrats vs Republicans). And the ‘Things’ of trust? These are things like seatbelts, medicines, certain digital systems and spaces, places, and events (offices, courts, ibuprofen, uniforms, parks, and electrical insulation).

When considering the evolution of Trust in the context of the Social Age, it is not the neurological foundations of trust that have changed – these are not evolutionary timescales – but rather the social and cultural context of it. The rise of ‘celebrity’ is an example of this: the way we ‘believe’ in people we have never met, form what is essentially a tribal relationship with them, and invest our trust and find a sense of belonging within their communities. The ways we are connected to our music idols, sports heroes, and social activists, at global scale, is best understood as an emergent mode of social connection that was perhaps historically reserved for our relationships with gods and emperors.

Our intimate relationships of identity and belonging now include a scaled feature of heroic, idolised, revered, and believed icons. People with whom we have a ‘relationship’ despite having never met them.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Julian Stodd的更多文章

  • Told to Care

    Told to Care

    A funny thing about humans is that whilst we imagine ourselves to be free thinking and critical in our outlook, we are…

    2 条评论
  • The Planetary: Fragments of Thought

    The Planetary: Fragments of Thought

    This work is early stage #WorkingOutLoud. I spent the weekend amongst a diverse group of thinkers at the Berggruen…

  • Texture

    Texture

    The cold mornings remind us that the season is changing, and that it’s time to break out that warm winter coat, or turn…

  • The Unreconciled Self: A Planetary Philosophy [Update]

    The Unreconciled Self: A Planetary Philosophy [Update]

    I’ve almost completed the manuscript for the book titled ‘The Unreconciled Self: A Planetary Philosophy’, exploring our…

    4 条评论
  • Domains of Disruption #GenerativeAI

    Domains of Disruption #GenerativeAI

    Just sharing some fragments of thought today, with a view on five ‘Domains of Disruption’ through Generative AI. This…

  • Disorientation and Imperfection as Lenses

    Disorientation and Imperfection as Lenses

    Tomorrow I will be having some fun, sharing quite experimental work on Disorientationand Imperfection as a competitive…

    1 条评论
  • A Politics of Interconnection

    A Politics of Interconnection

    It is sometimes easiest to view each other through a lens of difference than to find our islands of commonality. To…

    7 条评论
  • Change and the Socially Dynamic Organisation

    Change and the Socially Dynamic Organisation

    Many of my conversations at the moment seem to concern movement: on the one hand, movements forwards – to ‘unlock’ and…

  • Edges of my Practice

    Edges of my Practice

    I’ve nearly completed the manuscript for a short new book called ‘The Unreconciled Self – A Planetary Philosophy’, and…

    1 条评论
  • Structural and Social Adaptation

    Structural and Social Adaptation

    I’m using this space today to develop ideas around Adaptation, in both Structural and Social terms. In this I am…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了