Nmherman on Tue, 8 Jan 2002 08:02:02 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Max Herman Speaks Out Re: <nettime> Behind the Blip: Software as Culture |
The book is at once a rescue of philosophy from its status as doomed
elite subculture staffed by the populations of the soon-to-be closed
ghost departments of the universities of Europe, but also as a
restatement of the primary task of philosophy: the invention of
concepts. In order to state their case for this, they need to clear
the decks of other ways in which the term is used. One of the problems
facing their use of this term is, they see, that:
"In successive challenges, philosophy faced increasingly insolent and
calamitous rivals that Plato himself would have never imagined in his
most comic moments. Finally the most shameful moment came when
computer science, marketing, design and advertising, all the
disciplines of communication, seized hold of the word concept itself
and said: 'This is our concern, we are the creative ones, we are the
ideas men! we are the friends of the concept, we put it in our
computers."'17