Steve Jobs and Philosophy: For Those Who Think Different
By Open Court
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About this ebook
The chapters cover vital issues in ethics, business, aesthetics, and technology. They are followed by a fascinating appendix listing all the philosophers mentioned in the book, along with explanations of their lives and key themes in their thoughts. Steve Jobs and Philosophy is aimed at readers interested Jobs himself, in entrepreneurship, in technology, culture, and values.
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Steve Jobs and Philosophy - Open Court
Popular Culture and Philosophy® Series Editor: George A. Reisch
VOLUME 1 Seinfeld and Philosophy: A Book about Everything and Nothing (2000)
VOLUME 2 The Simpsons and Philosophy: The D’oh! of Homer (2001)
VOLUME 3 The Matrix and Philosophy: Welcome to the Desert of the Real (2002)
VOLUME 4 Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Philosophy: Fear and Trembling in Sunnydale (2003)
VOLUME 9 Harry Potter and Philosophy: If Aristotle Ran Hogwarts (2004)
VOLUME 12 Star Wars and Philosophy: More Powerful than You Can Possibly Imagine (2005)
VOLUME 13 Superheroes and Philosophy: Truth, Justice, and the Socratic Way (2005)
VOLUME 19 Monty Python and Philosophy: Nudge Nudge, Think Think! (2006)
VOLUME 25 The Beatles and Philosophy: Nothing You Can Think that Can’t Be Thunk (2006)
VOLUME 30 Pink Floyd and Philosophy: Careful with that Axiom, Eugene! (2007)
VOLUME 33 Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy: Mission Accomplished or Mission Frakked Up? (2008)
VOLUME 35 Star Trek and Philosophy: The Wrath of Kant (2008)
VOLUME 36 The Legend of Zelda and Philosophy: I Link Therefore I Am (2008)
VOLUME 39 Jimmy Buffett and Philosophy: The Porpoise Driven Life (2009) Edited by Erin McKenna and Scott L. Pratt
VOLUME 41 Stephen Colbert and Philosophy: I Am Philosophy (And So Can You!) (2009) Edited by Aaron Allen Schiller
VOLUME 42 Supervillains and Philosophy: Sometimes, Evil Is Its Own Reward (2009) Edited by Ben Dyer
VOLUME 43 The Golden Compass and Philosophy: God Bites the Dust (2009) Edited by Richard Greene and Rachel Robison
VOLUME 44 Led Zeppelin and Philosophy: All Will Be Revealed (2009) Edited by Scott Calef
VOLUME 45 World of Warcraft and Philosophy: Wrath of the Philosopher King (2009) Edited by Luke Cuddy and John Nordlinger
VOLUME 46 Mr. Monk and Philosophy: The Curious Case of the Defective Detective (2010) Edited by D.E. Wittkower
VOLUME 47 Anime and Philosophy: Wide Eyed Wonder (2010) Edited by Josef Steiff and Tristan D. Tamplin
VOLUME 48 The Red Sox and Philosophy: Green Monster Meditations (2010) Edited by Michael Macomber
VOLUME 49 Zombies, Vampires, and Philosophy: New Life for the Undead (2010) Edited by Richard Greene and K. Silem Mohammad
VOLUME 51 Soccer and Philosophy: Beautiful Thoughts on the Beautiful Game (2010) Edited by Ted Richards
VOLUME 52 Manga and Philosophy: Fullmetal Metaphysician (2010) Edited by Josef Steiff and Adam Barkman
VOLUME 53 Martial Arts and Philosophy: Beating and Nothingness (2010) Edited by Graham Priest and Damon Young
VOLUME 54 The Onion and Philosophy: Fake News Story True, Alleges Indignant Area Professor (2010) Edited by Sharon M. Kaye
VOLUME 55 Doctor Who and Philosophy: Bigger on the Inside (2010) Edited by Courtland Lewis and Paula Smithka
VOLUME 56 Dune and Philosophy: Weirding Way of the Mentat (2011) Edited by Jeffery Nicholas
VOLUME 57 Rush and Philosophy: Heart and Mind United (2011) Edited by Jim Berti and Durrell Bowman
VOLUME 58 Dexter and Philosophy: Mind over Spatter (2011) Edited by Richard Greene, George A. Reisch, and Rachel Robison-Greene
VOLUME 59 Halo and Philosophy: Intellect Evolved (2011) Edited by Luke Cuddy
VOLUME 60 SpongeBob SquarePants and Philosophy: Soaking Up Secrets Under the Sea! (2011) Edited by Joseph J. Foy
VOLUME 61 Sherlock Holmes and Philosophy: The Footprints of a Gigantic Mind (2011) Edited by Josef Steiff
VOLUME 62 Inception and Philosophy: Ideas to Die For (2011) Edited by Thorsten Botz-Bornstein
VOLUME 63 Philip K. Dick and Philosophy: Do Androids Have Kindred Spirits? (2011) Edited by D.E. Wittkower
VOLUME 64 The Rolling Stones and Philosophy: It’s Just a Thought Away (2012) Edited by Luke Dick and George A. Reisch
VOLUME 65 Chuck Klosterman and Philosophy: The Real and the Cereal (2012) Edited by Seth Vannatta
VOLUME 67 Breaking Bad and Philosophy: Badder Living through Chemistry (2012) Edited by David R. Koepsell and Robert Arp
VOLUME 68 The Walking Dead and Philosophy: Zombie Apocalypse Now (2012) Edited by Wayne Yuen
VOLUME 69 Curb Your Enthusiasm and Philosophy: Awaken the Social Assassin Within (2012) Edited by Mark Ralkowski
VOLUME 71 The Catcher in the Rye and Philosophy: A Book for Bastards, Morons, and Madmen (2012) Edited by Keith Dromm and Heather Salter
VOLUME 72 Jeopardy! and Philosophy: What Is Knowledge in the Form of a Question? (2012) Edited by Shaun P. Young
VOLUME 73 The Wire and Philosophy: This America, Man (2013) Edited by David Bzdak, Joanna Crosby, and Seth Vannatta
VOLUME 74 Planet of the Apes and Philosophy: Great Apes Think Alike (2013) Edited by John Huss
VOLUME 75 Psych and Philosophy: Some Dark Juju-Magumbo (2013) Edited by Robert Arp
VOLUME 77 Boardwalk Empire and Philosophy: Bootleg This Book (2013) Edited by Richard Greene and Rachel Robison-Greene
VOLUME 79 Frankenstein and Philosophy: The Shocking Truth (2013) Edited by Nicolas Michaud
VOLUME 80 Ender’s Game and Philosophy: Genocide Is Child’s Play (2013) Edited by D.E. Wittkower and Lucinda Rush
VOLUME 81 How I Met Your Mother and Philosophy (2014) Edited by Lorenzo von Matterhorn
VOLUME 82 Jurassic Park and Philosophy: The Truth Is Terrifying (2014) Edited by Nicolas Michaud and Jessica Watkins
VOLUME 83 The Devil and Philosophy: The Nature of His Game (2014) Edited by Robert Arp
VOLUME 84 Leonard Cohen and Philosophy: Various Positions (2014) Edited by Jason Holt
VOLUME 85 Homeland and Philosophy: For Your Minds Only (2014) Edited by Robert Arp
VOLUME 86 Girls and Philosophy: This Book Isn’t a Metaphor for Anything (2015) Edited by Richard Greene and Rachel Robison-Greene
VOLUME 87 Adventure Time and Philosophy: The Handbook for Heroes (2015) Edited by Nicolas Michaud
VOLUME 88 Justified and Philosophy: Shoot First, Think Later (2015) Edited by Rod Carveth and Robert Arp
VOLUME 89 Steve Jobs and Philosophy: For Those Who Think Different (2015) Edited by Shawn E. Klein
IN PREPARATION:
Dracula and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Nicolas Michaud and Janelle Pötzsch
It’s Always Sunny and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Roger Hunt and Robert Arp
Orange Is the New Black and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Richard Greene and Rachel Robison-Greene
More Doctor Who and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Paula Smithka and Courtland Lewis
Divergent and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Courtland Lewis
Downton Abbey and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Adam Barkman and Robert Arp
Hannibal Lecter and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Joseph Westfall
The Princess Bride and Philosophy (2015) Edited by Richard Greene and Rachel Robison-Greene
Perry Mason and Philosophy (2016) Edited by Heather Rivera and Robert Arp
For full details of all Popular Culture and Philosophy® books, visit www.opencourtbooks.com.
Volume 89 in the series, Popular Culture and Philosophy®, edited by George A. Reisch
To order books from Open Court, call toll-free 1-800-815-2280, or visit our website at www.opencourtbooks.com.
Open Court Publishing Company is a division of Carus Publishing Company, dba Cricket Media.
Copyright © 2015 by Carus Publishing Company, dba Cricket Media
First printing 2015
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher, Open Court Publishing Company, 70 East Lake Street, Suite 800, Chicago, Illinois 60601.
ISBN: 978-0-8126-9894-7
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Steve Jobs and philosophy : for those who think different / edited by Shawn E. Klein.
pages cm. — (Popular culture and philosophy ; volume 89)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Business ethics. 2. Entrepreneurship—Moral and ethical aspects. 3. Technological innovations—Moral and ethical aspects. 4. Jobs, Steve, 1955-2011. I. Klein, Shawn.
HF5387.S719 2015
650.01—dc23
2015003865
For my son Sam, whose first movie heroes were Lightning McQueen and Merida and who knew how to use an iPhone even before he could walk or talk
Contents
Acknowledgments
hello.
I The Crazy One
1.The Reality Distortion Field of Steve Jobs
JAMES EDWIN MAHON
2.Counter-Culture Capitalist
CARRIE-ANN BIONDI
3.The Anti-Social Creator
TERRY W. NOEL
4.What Pixar Taught Millennials about Personhood
KYLE MUNKITTRICK
II The Troublemaker
5.How Can We Make Entrepreneurs?
STEPHEN R.C. HICKS
6.The Visionary Entrepreneur
ROBERT F. SALVINO
7.But Steve Jobs Didn’t Invent Anything!
RYAN KRAUSE AND OWEN PARKER
8.What Does Market Success Show?
WILLIAM R THOMAS
III The Rebel
9.Marley and Steve
JASON WALKER
10.The Noble Truths of Steve Jobs
SHAWN E. KLEIN AND DANIELLE FUNDORA
11.Two Sides of Think Different
ROBERT WHITE
12.The Moral Perfectionist
JARED MEYER
13.Does Apple Know Right from Wrong?
JASON IULIANO
IV The Misfit
14.Close Your Eyes, Hold Your Breath, Jump In
PAUL PARDI
15.Did Steve Jobs Live and Work for You?
ALEXANDER R. COHEN
16.Jobs and Heidegger Square Off on Technology
CHRISTOPHER KETCHAM
17.Simplicity Is the Ultimate Sophistication
DENNIS KNEPP
Insanely Great Inspiration
References
The A Players
There’s a Page for That!
Acknowledgments
I first want to thank David Ramsay Steele at Open Court for coming up with the idea of this book in the first place. I also want to thank all the contributors for putting the time and effort into this project. It is their hard work and ideas that make this book what it is. I merely put the pieces together.
Thank you to The Atlas Society for hosting several Online Research Workshops for some of the chapters included in this volume.
Thank you to the Center for Ethics and Entrepreneurship for its support of my work on this volume.
I also want to thank the crew at the Perryville Starbucks in Rockford, Illinois, for always keeping me amply supplied with espressos.
Lastly, and most importantly, I want to thank my wife, Kristen Klein, for always encouraging and supporting me.
hello.
The Apple IIe was my first computer. As with so many Apple products, the look and feel is what I remember most: the beige, rounded box; the rainbow Apple logo; the feel and sound of the keyboard. It didn’t do much, but I liked to fool around with it. I played a few games. I wrote a few school papers on it. Eventually, I started to play around with some BASIC programming. Later, I discovered bulletin boards. It was exciting; it was cool. The Apple IIe would be followed by various Macintoshes and a PowerBook.
But Apple was losing its luster for me. After college, I switched over to a PC. It’s what I used at work and Apple no longer differentiated themselves from the PCs enough to justify the price. But with the introduction of the iPod, I returned as an Apple customer. I remember holding the iPhone for the first time. It was so beautiful and cool. I didn’t need one, but boy, did I want one.
Apple started as something different than other tech companies. My family didn’t need an Apple IIe, but it was too attractive to pass up. The Macintosh was more expensive and less powerful than its typical PC counterparts, but it was beautiful and friendly. But, as the 1980s became the 1990s, Apple had become just another computer company. Computers all looked about the same; they were uninteresting. PCs were as easy to use as Apples. There really was no reason for Apple anymore (and the stock price showed that).
But then came the colorful, egg-shaped iMac. It didn’t look like the grey boxes everyone else had. It didn’t have a bunch of ugly wires coming out of it. It was beautiful and it was cool. Apple was back. And so was Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs is one of the most iconic figures of the last fifty years. He revolutionized several of the most important contemporary industries: computers, cell phones, music, movies, and publishing. He represents the prototypical entrepreneur. He came from modest means and education. He was bold and brash. He had an inspiring vision of technology and what we all could do with it. He became fantastically wealthy beyond anyone’s wildest dreams.
At the same time, he was known to be petulant, insensitive, and sometimes cruel. He came out of the counterculture of the Sixties and had a long-standing interest in Eastern spirituality. He dabbled in recreational drug use. In these ways, Jobs stands in for a whole range of values and ideas in pluralistic American culture. He was a barefoot billionaire hippy capitalist who changed the world.
Jobs set out to make a ding in the universe
(The Apple Revolution, p. 43). Given how he has done more to change our everyday lives than almost anyone else in the last century, Jobs seems to have succeeded in this goal. Not all the contributors to this book are Apple fans or customers, but we all share an admiration and appreciation of what Steve Jobs accomplished.
Jobs was an outstanding achiever and a complex man with serious faults. This book is neither demonization nor hagiography. It is not intended as indictment or apology. The chapters are thoughtful, mostly philosophical, examinations, from different points of view, of Steve Jobs’s life and work, and their impact on our culture and the way we live. Together, they help us to see Steve Jobs in the context of the great adventure of human experience and reflection.
I
The Crazy One
1
The Reality Distortion Field of Steve Jobs
JAMES EDWIN MAHON
It was all a trap, set by a race of beings who could make a man believe he was seeing anything they wished him to see.
—Star Trek, The Cage,
1964
In the Star Trek universe, the Talosians are a humanoid race with extremely large heads and diminutive bodies who live on the planet Talos IV. They were once a technologically advanced race, but a nuclear holocaust killed off most of them and left their planet almost uninhabitable.
The few surviving Talosians moved underground and became dependent on their ability to create illusions, for themselves and for others. They became addicted to these illusions, and eventually they lost the ability to repair their own technology. They also began to capture travelers and to use the contents of their minds to create new illusions.
In 2236 the SS Columbia crashed on Talos IV. All were killed except a woman, Vina, who was badly injured. Although the Talosians did not know enough about human anatomy to restore her face and body to its original form, and she remained disfigured, they were able to give her the illusion that she was beautiful.
Eighteen years later the Talosians lure the USS Enterprise to their planet with a weak fake distress call from the SS Columbia. A search party led by Captain Christopher Pike beams down on to the planet’s surface. They are given the illusion of having found a group of survivors from the SS Columbia, including a beautiful young woman survivor, Vina.
Using her as bait, the Talosians kidnap Pike and keep him in a cage underground to determine if he is a suitable specimen for breeding a race of human slaves with the actual Vina. However, Pike resists Vina
in a number of illusory forms, and he is able to block the mind-reading power of the Talosians with his primitive human emotions.
Pike manages to escape, and reaches the surface. Threatened by the appearance of the Talosians, Pike, with two other crew members, and Vina, prepare to die rather than become slaves. The Talosians decide to let them go, although the humans are the Talosians’ last chance for survival. They refuse Pike’s offer of opening up diplomatic relations with the Federation in order to get help, telling him Your race would eventually discover our power of illusion and destroy itself, too.
Vina refuses to leave, because on the ship, away from Talos IV, she would appear as she is, horribly disfigured. Pike realizes that the Talosian illusion is necessary for Vina, and lets her stay. However, the Talosians give Vina the illusion that Pike stays behind to live with her, and they show Pike her illusion. The leader of the Talosians, ‘The Keeper’, tells Pike: She has an illusion and you have reality. May you find your way as pleasant
(The Cage,
pilot episode of Star Trek, 1964).
Thirteen years later, Pike, now Fleet Captain, is involved in a terrible accident involving delta rays. He is paralyzed and disfigured, and remains confined under medical surveillance in an electric chair at Starbase 11. His former science officer, Spock, kidnaps him and illegally flies him back to Talos IV on the USS Enterprise, pursued by Captain Kirk in another vessel. In the course of a trial for court martial, Spock explains what happened to Pike on Talos IV years ago. With Pike’s agreement, and Kirk’s permission, Pike is beamed down to the planet’s surface. The Talosians, who have continued to maintain an illusion for Vina of her being beautiful, create the illusion for Pike (and Vina) of him being physically able and handsome again. Pike and Vina begin the rest of their life together on Talos IV (The Menagerie,
Parts 1 and 2, episodes 16 and 17, Season One of Star Trek, 1966).
The Trouble with Tribble
It was an Apple Computer, Inc., software engineer working on the Macintosh computer, Guy L. Bud
Tribble, who in 1981 said that Steve Jobs was able to create a reality distortion field
like the Talosians from Star Trek (Steve Jobs, p. 117). That Tribble was a fan of the classic TV show is not surprising, given that one of the most famous episodes of the show is entitled The Trouble with Tribbles.
He attributed this power to Jobs while trying to explain things to Andy Hertzfeld, a software engineer who came on board the Macintosh project to work with him. Tribble told Hertzfeld everything that the two of them had to do, and showed him the schedule for completing the Macintosh in about ten months’ time. Feeling overwhelmed, Hertzfeld said that they couldn’t get it done. As he tells the story:
HERTZFELD: If you know the schedule is off-based, why don’t you correct it?
TRIBBLE: Well, it’s Steve. Steve insists that we’re shipping in early 1982, and won’t accept answers to the contrary. The best way to describe the situation is a term from Star Trek. Steve has a reality distortion field.
HERTZFELD: A what?
TRIBBLE: A reality distortion field. In his presence, reality is malleable. He can convince anyone of practically anything. It wears off when he is not around, but it makes it hard to have realistic schedules.
HERTZFELD: What else?
TRIBBLE: Well, just because he tells you that something is awful or great, it doesn’t necessarily mean he’ll feel that way tomorrow. You have to low-pass filter his input. And then, he’s really funny about ideas. If you tell him a new idea, he’ll usually tell you that he thinks it’s stupid. But then, if he actually likes it, exactly one week later, he’ll come back to you and propose your idea to you, as if he thought of it. (Revolution in the Valley, p. 24)
About this exchange Herzfeld later wrote:
The reality distortion field was a confounding mélange of a charismatic rhetorical style, an indomitable will, and an eagerness to bend any fact to fit the purpose at hand. If one line of argument failed to persuade, he would deftly switch to another. Sometimes, he would throw you off balance by suddenly adopting your position as his own, without acknowledging that he ever thought differently. Amazingly, the reality distortion field seemed to be effective even if you were acutely aware of it, although the effects would fade after Steve departed.
Reality Distortion Field
Steve Jobs had the ability to convince anyone of anything that he believed. He had the ability to distort your perception of reality, at least while he was in your presence, so that it conformed to his reality. Like the Talosians, he could create a reality distortion field around himself. Although other people might believe that something was impossible (such as finishing an incredibly difficult project in a short amount of time), once Steve got going on them, their perception of reality became distorted, so that they came to believe that the impossible was indeed possible, like he did. As Deb Coleman, one of the early Macintosh team members and a long time Jobs insider, once said: You did the impossible, because you didn’t realize it was impossible
(Steve Jobs, p. 119). At least, you didn’t believe it was impossible after Jobs was done talking with you—even if you knew that he was exercising his reality distorting power over you.
Jobs’s ability to distort people’s perception of reality and make them believe what he believed was not limited to employees at Apple. In his keynote presentation speeches at Macworld Expos, Apple Expos, and Worldwide Developers Conferences, colloquially referred to as Stevenotes,
he had the same effect on his audiences. He would get them to abandon all the cynicism that they had, and to believe with him. To quote tech journalist Andrea Dudrow, writing in 2000:
If you’ve ever been to a Macworld trade show, or any other event where Steve jobs has been booked to speak, you know