Lee Vinsel, a professor of science, technology, and society, and co-founder of The Maintainers research network, discusses the cultural obsession with innovation that overlooks the importance of maintenance. He emphasizes that neglecting upkeep affects infrastructure, our homes, and even personal health. Vinsel also highlights the challenges of repair rights in consumerism and advocates for a mindset shift that values maintenance alongside technological advancement. His insights push listeners to reconsider their consumption habits and the true cost of possessions.
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insights INSIGHT
Innovation Speak vs. Real Innovation
Our focus on innovation has ironically led to less progress and neglected crucial maintenance.
The constant talk about "innovation" and "disruption" often lacks substance, becoming empty buzzwords.
insights INSIGHT
Innovation vs. Innovation Speak
True innovation introduces new things or processes, but "innovation speak" is just empty hype.
Talking more about innovation doesn't necessarily lead to more actual innovation.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Progress vs. Innovation
Before World War II, "progress" was used instead of "innovation," implying societal improvement.
Post-war, "innovation" replaced "progress," focusing more on technology than societal betterment.
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Humans like starting new things much more than taking care of older things. This is true on both an institutional and individual level: it's more exciting to build a new road than to maintain it; more exciting to lose weight than to keep it off. There's plenty of short-term pleasure and intrinsic motivation when it comes to pursuing something novel, but the effort to keep up unsexy maintenance on what we've already got takes real intent.
My guest today says we've lost that intent and need to revive it. His name is Lee Vinsel and he's a professor of science, technology, and society, the co-founder of The Maintainers, a research network dedicated to the study of maintenance, repair, upkeep, and ordinary work, and the co-author of The Innovation Delusion: How Our Obsession With the New Has Disrupted the Work That Matters Most. Lee and I begin our conversation with how our cultural focus on innovation has come at the expense of attention paid to maintenance and repair, and yet how talking more about innovation hasn't really led to greater progress. We then get into the way the necessity of maintenance, repair, and caretaking has been neglected in business and government, creating a situation where we keep on building new things without investing in the upkeep of our current infrastructure. From there we turn to the way our all too common neglect of maintenance applies not only to big institutions, but also our personal lives, as in the areas of home ownership and health. We discuss how there's less incentive these days to repair things in our disposable society where everything is cheap, and stuff is harder to fix, even when we want to. We end our conversation with how we can revive a maintenance mindset in our culture and individual lives.