decelerationist

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

deceleration +‎ -ist

Noun[edit]

decelerationist (plural decelerationists)

  1. (uncommon) A proponent of slowing down the pace of technological and economic progress; one opposed to accelerationism.
    Synonym: (informal) decel
    Antonym: accelerationist
    • 2014, Jason M. Adams, Occupy Time: Technoculture, Immediacy, and Resistance after Occupy Wall Street, Palgrave Macmillan, →ISBN, page 97:
      The decelerationists, to the contrary, follow E.F. Schumacher, Kirkpatrick Sale and others (including a variety of Protestant denominations) in the belief that slowing down the technocultural and political economic pace, by engaging in local forms of democracy, will render global and national economic structures irrelevant.
    • 2022, Stefan Lorenz Sorgner, We Have Always Been Cyborgs: Digital Data, Gene Technologies, and an Ethics of Transhumanism, Policy Press, →ISBN, page 168:
      Decelerationists have the utopian fantasy that we all could dedicate ourselves to doing pottery in Tuscany all the time, but this is not how life works.