In Amartya Sen’s recent reworking of the theory of justice, communication is the site where the lifeworld comparisons that ground claims for injustice get made. As Sen puts it at the end of The Idea of Justice, ‘it is bad enough that the world in which we live has so much deprivation of one kind or another . . . it would be even more terrible if we were not able to communicate, respond, and altercate’ (2009: 415). And yet through the myth of Big Data we are starting to give credence to a working model of social knowledge that operates as if the explanation of human action, and the processes of meaning-making on which such explanation has relied, don’t matter any more.
Well and truly depressed, I do to look for this book too. In a world where we no longer can ( or know how to) communicate skilfully we cannot even 'talk' about injustice?
I also wonder here if dismissal of psychology and searching for evidence that x cannot explain or predict where x is psychology or sociology based has as subtext 'who knows why humans do what they do and who cares when we can measure that they do and monetise it without explanation or meaning...techno-behaviourism!