If Then: How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Future
Written by Jill Lepore
Narrated by Jill Lepore
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About this audiobook
politics, and disordered knowledge—decades before Facebook, Google, and Cambridge Analytica. Jill Lepore, best-selling author of
These Truths, came across the company’s papers in MIT’s archives and set out to tell this forgotten history, the long-lost backstory
to the methods, and the arrogance, of Silicon Valley.
Founded in 1959 by some of the nation’s leading social scientists—“the best and the brightest, fatally brilliant, Icaruses with
wings of feathers and wax, flying to the sun”—Simulmatics proposed to predict and manipulate the future by way of the computer
simulation of human behavior. In summers, with their wives and children in tow, the company’s scientists met on the beach in Long
Island under a geodesic, honeycombed dome, where they built a “People Machine” that aimed to model everything from buying a
dishwasher to counterinsurgency to casting a vote.
Deploying their “People Machine” from New York, Washington, Cambridge, and even Saigon, Simulmatics’ clients included
the John F. Kennedy presidential campaign, the New York Times, the Department of Defense, and dozens of major manufacturers:
Simulmatics had a hand in everything from political races to the Vietnam War to the Johnson administration’s ill-fated attempt to
predict race riots. The company’s collapse was almost as rapid as its ascent, a collapse that involved failed marriages, a suspicious
death, and bankruptcy. Exposed for false claims, and even accused of war crimes, it closed its doors in 1970 and all but vanished.
Until Lepore came across the records of its remains.
The scientists of Simulmatics believed they had invented “the A-bomb of the social sciences.” They did not predict that it
would take decades to detonate, like a long-buried grenade. But, in the early years of the twenty-first century, that bomb did
detonate, creating a world in which corporations collect data and model behavior and target messages about the most ordinary of
decisions, leaving people across the planet, long before the global pandemic, crushed by feelings of helplessness. This history has a
past; If Then is its cautionary tale
Jill Lepore
Jill Lepore is a professor of American history at Harvard University and a staff writer at The New Yorker. Her books include Book of Ages, a finalist for the National Book Award; New York Burning, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize; The Name of War, winner of the Bancroft Prize; and The Mansion of Happiness, which was short-listed for the 2013 Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Nonfiction. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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Reviews for If Then
65 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Behavioral scientists discover computer aided data analysis in the 1950'sJill Lepore writes very well, and has an interesting but previously obscure story to tell. Simulmatics Corporation was founded to use computers to predict human responses to political and advertising messages, in 1959. The various characters involved were shady, and in one case, bipolar. They obtained contracts initially from politcal campaigns, and John Kennedy's win was tainted by its association with the computer analysis of voting preferences. The corporation became involved in Vietnam, opening an office in Saigon, to try to assess the effectiveness of propaganda. The effort was doomed by the inability of any of the reasearchers to speak Vietnamese, and the reliance on translators who did not accurately render the questionaires to Vietnamese, and were seen as part of the enemy. The corporation went bankrupt in 1970, and its leaders, particularly Ithiel de Sola Pool, were accused by the war protestors of being war criminals. Dr. Lepore describes the furor raised by the proposal for establishing a National Data Bank, a project pushed by Simulmatics, resisted by Congress, but now realized in the multitrillion points of personal data stored and manipulated by Facebook, Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and other corporations. The descriptions and pictures of the punch cards, teletype terminals, and room-filling computers with speeds and memories a million times less powerful than an I-phone are fasicinating. Dr. Lepore had access to letters from wives and women employed by Simulmatics, and thoroughly examined the sexist nature of the times.Quotes:"For a long time, this stuff was known either as propaganda or as psychological warfare (the Nazi version was known as Weltanshauungskrieg, or worldview warfare), but after a swhile, people who worried about how that sounded started calling it the study of "mass communication."" (page 33)[Ithiel de Sola Pool arguing for his security clearance in 1950 quoted Wendel Willkie] "Willkie once said, with reference to his own past, that anyone who is not a socialist at 20 has something wrong with his heart and any one who is still a socialist at 30 has something wrong with his head" (page 53)"(The [U.S. Army] Signal Corps would retire its last pigeon in 1957)" (page 68)[The election of 1960] "Kennedy's electoral margin of victory, 303 to 219, was wide, but the popular vote was close enough to lead to two recounts, efforts led by the Republican National Committee but not endorsed by Nixon, who said, privately, "Our country cannot afford the agony of a constitutional crisis -- and I damn well will not be a party to creating one just to become President or anything else." " (page 124)"On election night, [The New York Times in 1904] it broadcast the results from its building in New York by way of searchlights that could be seen for thirty miles, as if the building itself had become a lighthouse. Steady light to the west meant a Republican victory in the presidential race, steady light to the east a Democratic one; flashing lights in different combinations broadcast the winners of congressional and gubernatorial races. That is what is meant by a news "flash." " (page 149)"The Simulmatics Corporation is a relic of its time ... a casualty of midcentury American liberalism. But the People Machine [Simulmatics algorithm and database] was also hobbled by its time, by the technological limitations of its day: the 1960s threw sand in its gears. Data was scarce. Models were weak. Computers were slow. The machine faltered, and the men who built it could not repair it: the company's behavioral sicentists had very little business sense, its chief mathematician struggled with insanity, its computer scientist fell behind the latest research, it president drank to much, and nearly all their marriages were falling apart. 'They treat their wives like dirt, said Minnow McPhee. The machine sputtered, sparks flying, smoke rising, and ground to a halt, its light blinking, wildly, desperately, before going dark.Simulmatics failed, but not before its scientists built a very early version of the machine in which humanity would in the early twenty-first century find itself trapped, a machine that applies the science of psychological warfare to the affairs of ordinary life, a machine that manipulates opinion, exploits attention, commodifies information, divides voters, fractures communities, alienates individuals, and undermines democracy." (pages 321 to 322)
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It is reasonable to assert that attempts to predict, and manipulate, human behavior using computers is a recent phenomenon, started by companies like Facebook and Cambridge Analytica. According to this book, such an assertion is also very wrong.It was the early 1960's, the days of UNIVAC and ENIAC. A corporation called Simulmatics was part of John F. Kennedy's presidential campaign. They were the first to use computer simulation and prediction to chop the US electorate into hundreds of categories. That way, they could test various campaign slogans and statements, to see how they would work. It led to much speculation about computers taking over America, and about office workers being fired by electronic bosses. In 1961, Simulmatics targeted segmented consumers with customized advertising messages. In 1963, Simulmatics attempted to simulate a developing nation's entire economy, with a view toward halting socialism. The Vietnam War was raging, so, in 1965, Simulmatics opened an office in Saigon. Their intention was to do psychological research as a way to wage war with computer run data analysis (these were also days of Robert McNamara's "whiz kids" in the Pentagon). Back in America, in 1967 and 1968, the company attempted to build a machine to predict race riots. It went bankrupt soon after.This a fascinating book that illuminates a lesser-known bit of American history. Attempts to predict human behavior, with computers, have gone on for many years, even by white liberals (like the employees of Simulmatics). This book is very highly recommended.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Can't recommend. Lepore does not seem to have put in the time to understand the tech that she's writing about, or its implications in terms of "inventing the future", or the how very far it was from anything like "inventing the future". Simulmatics, from what she writes, does not seem like a particularly visionary enterprise. Instead it seems more like the Theranos of its time - a startup founded on some potentially legitimate and interesting ideas and charismatic leadership that absolutely failed to deliver on its technical promises, and probably never actually had the capacity to back up those promises, and which ultimately had little significance for anyone not directly involved.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Everyone accepts that the Big Tech companies have a massive impact on society today and that this impact manifests itself most clearly in behaviour modification through social media. These companies achieve this impact through ubiquitous technology, primarily mobile phones, complex AI-driven so-called ‘algorithms’ that relentlessly select what to show you next, and ‘big data’, access to huge volumes of information about you and everyone else. It is generally believed that this technology was invented and developed from the 2010s onwards. This book from Jill Lepore sets out to debunk that idea.After the Second World War we start to see the emergence of the commercial computing industry and the expansion of this technology into areas outside the purely military. Almost from the very start social and behavioural scientists saw an opportunity to use computers to analyse large volumes of data with the objectives of, firstly, provide reliable classifications of large numbers of people; secondly, using this data to predict the general responses of these people to particular events or stimuli; and, thirdly, to identify ways to affect the behaviour of these people. Of course, the first area to apply these ideas was in politics - analyse the electorate, understand what impact policies have on voting intentions and influence how those votes are cast. Although mistrusted by almost everyone, these early limited attempts were reasonably successful and laid down almost all the key principles that we understand today as making up ‘social media’ and how it operates.Lepore follows the creation and short life of one company, Simulmatics, as it used ‘big data’ and ‘algorithms’ to analyse, predict and alter the behaviour of various groups of people to the benefit of its clients. The company, formed in the late 1950s, applied its behavioural science technology to advertising, presidential electioneering and, most disastrously, to the war effort in Vietnam, before bankruptcy wound the organisation up in the early 1970s.In the 1960s there was a growing awareness of, and antipathy to, the use of this technology and some attempts were made to establish regulatory controls and limits around what ‘privacy’ meant and what could be done with ‘big data’. These failed because everyone was focused on the potential for misuse by government and only a few people, who were ignored, saw the potential for such misuse by commercial companies. So, when private companies started using these technologies to analyse and influence people for profit, there was no regulation to haul them back, and we are where we are.Lepore’s book is interesting, surprising and eminently readable with good research. She has the ability to use well-selected anecdotes to emphasise her points and keep us interested.I think this is an excellent history of technology and an important foundation to understand why behavioural science technology has got us into such a muddle and to indicate how we might get out of it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A very informative study on the infancy of computer research focusing on the first company in that area, Simulmatics Corporation. The book follows a wide array of the companies' founders and families over the years. The first major use of their data was by the Kennedy campaign to help him defeat Richard Nixon. However, their information was only as good as the data they were able to get (through interviews, surveys, etc.). so there will be a colossal failure in their trying to aide our government during the Vietnam War. The book is quite thought provoking about the evolution of computer use up through today.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Wide-ranging 60s/70s behavioral sci ARPA history; amazing links to modern internet and big data issues; very interesting historical anecdotes and details.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In the 1950s, long before Cambridge Analytica, the Simulmatics Corporation was founded with the hopes of using computers to collect demographic data and predict election outcomes. They fed different scenarios into their computer programs to see how they would impact elections, and offered campaign advice to politicians such as JFK based on those computer simulations. From there, they also realized that their technology had implications for the marketing and advertising industry. And then, even more controversially, they tried to use the same techniques to predict and sway the outcome of the Vietnam War.I found this book both fascinating and disappointing. The history of the Simulmatics Corporation is fascinating, especially with the benefit of hindsight. Long before Silicon Valley or Facebook or Cambridge Analytica, they were already trying to create the future that we have now. The fact that we think we're doing something new by using computers to make predictions based on big data is Silicon Valley's hubris: we aren't doing anything that previous generations haven't failed at within living memory.The book claims to be about Simulmatics, but really it's about one Simulmatics employee, Ithiel de Sola Pool. Pool was a lot of the brains behind Simulmatics, and long before the internet existed, he predicted search engines, email, social networks, and big data. He was one of Stewart Brand's main influences, and Brand is perhaps the most influential mind behind the early years of the internet. Pool's life was complicated - as a child of immigrants trying to get a government job under McCarthy, he had to prove his loyalty to America. He was behind a lot of the misguided data collection and psychological warfare efforts in Vietnam, and was reviled for his role there. I actually wish Lepore had focused more on Pool and less on Simulmatics.The book was disappointing in its lack of focus. For a while, it felt like it was more about the politics of the Democratic Party and Adlai Stevenson than about the rise of big data. There are a lot of people who play very minor roles in the book, yet Lepore spends several pages painting word portraits of them and their backgrounds, only to completely abandon them a few pages later. She spends a lot of time talking about the lives of the wives of Simulmatics board members, and as much as I appreciate the attention paid to the women of the story, that detail doesn't actually have much to do with the matter at hand. In other words, I feel like the book would have really benefited from some heavy editing and better focus.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book is getting the highest possible rating, despite going off-topic at points, because of the importance of the story. I had actually heard of Simulatics before, in the context of the intelligence analysis follies of the Vietnam War, so I felt the need to read it sooner than later. It turns out that strategic analysis was not really the original mission of the company; advertising executive Ed Greenfield was fascinated with the potential of computer simulation in regards to salesmanship, and what he really wanted to sell to the American public was an Adlai Stevenson presidency. Adlai didn't bite, but JFK did, and the firm made a contribution to Kennedy's wafer-thin victory over Nixon; mostly in making a substantive argument that JFK really had to pursue the support of Black voters if he really wanted to have a chance.Here's the problem, even at the time, thoughtful insiders suspected that this trial run of "big data" was ethically and morally dubious, and considering the performance of firms such as Cambridge Analytica and Facebook, this turns out to be prescient. It certainly prevented the firm from receiving a wider embrace in the political world; particularly after the Kennedy brothers soured on the self-promotion of the founders of the firm.The next issue is that Greenfield and his merry men often seemed to be better at padding their expense accounts, rather than offering useful analysis. Part of this is a commentary on the limitations of the behavioral sciences of the time (a topic which Lepore describes with cold venom), and part is that these men might have thought that they were masters of universe (a precursor of Silicon Valley arrogance), but Greenfield could never collect enough resources to really make his vision work. Even before American debate over the value of the Vietnam War turned incandescent, damn few social-science practitioners were prepared to go to Saigon, and those that did seemed to be mediocrities.In the end, the firm collapsed due to mismanagement, and basically wrecked Ed Greenfield's life. While the firm showed the way to the future, about the only person to come well out of the experience was the political scientist, and commentator on technology, Ithiel de Sola Pool, and even he probably wanted to live down his participation. Pool spent quality time dodging the hatred of anti-war protestors at MIT during the late '60s.Besides being an examination of the roots of a controversial major industry, there is also a life and times quality about this book. Some readers are going to be uncomfortable with this, as Lepore writes with real anger about the inadequacies of period, particularly in regards to the irony of how a group of men who proposed to analyze human behavior couldn't even understand their own wives. There's a lot of sadness that acts as the mortar to the building blocks of this story. To Lepore, the glamor of the "New Frontier" was just toxic froth on roiling waters. If Lepore had the right angle, I'd enjoy seeing her write about Talcott Parsons and the vision of the social sciences being as predictive as actual science; in part, I received my undergraduate and graduate education from professors who still bore the scars of that experience.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This traces the rise and fall of Simulmatics Corp., a fascinating slice of political, sociological, and computational history that I had never heard of. Which is interesting because I know a few things about all three sectors, but this data science startup, launched in the 1950s and bankrupt by the end of the '60s, was a new piece of the puzzle for me. And it really is, literally a piece of a lot of bigger things—algorithms, advertising, the big elections of the 1960s, efforts to quantify the Vietnam War and race riots, and the genealogy of big data and Cambridge Analytica, among other aspects. Very, very interesting and engaging.