ABSTRACT
This study explores the rise and fall of Romanian communist futurology between 1960s–1980s, highlighting its unique development as a state-endorsed, cybernetics-driven science of prediction. Romanian futurology emerged at the intersection of global ideological trends and Ceaușescu’s sovereigntist policies, blending managerial discourse, cybernetics, and Marxist revisionism. While inheriting the all-encompassing and supreme science pretensions of 1950s dialectical materialism, Romanian futurology was largely abstract, mathematical, and devoid of dialectical content, functioning as a sort of “Diamat without dialectics.” Its decline in the 1980s mirrored Romania’s economic collapse and political isolation, as pragmatic Realpolitik overtook utopian planning. Romanian futurology, though rooted in Marxist aspirations, abandoned dialectics and historical materialism in favor of a technocratic vision of indefinite, knowledge-based progress.
