Dirk Vekemans on Wed, 18 May 2005 19:40:03 +0200 (CEST) |
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RE: <nettime> The Ghost in the Network |
I am new to this list,please forgive my ignorance and my clumsy wordings, i read this stimulating text by Galloway & Thacker on Rhizome (thanks to Geert). I wanted to respond, tried first on Rhizome, made a mailing mistake there, but i suppose this is the place to do so... On the Ghost in network part, on the rhetoric of freedom in particular (I quote the authors first): "Later, in his elucidation of Castells, he (=Lovink, dv) writes of the opposite, a "freedom hardwired into code" [4]. This gets to the heart of the freedom rhetoric. If it's hardwired is it still freedom? Instead of guaranteeing freedom, the act of "hardwiring" suggests a limitation on freedom. And in fact that is precisely the case on the Internet where strict universal standards of communication have been rolled out more widely and more quickly than in any other medium throughout history. Lessig and many others rely heavily on this rhetoric of freedom." As with any rhetoric, this may be beside the point, and therefore pointing towards it: regardless of the how's why's of software development, regardless of its supposedly 'open-' or 'closedness', all software i know has too much artificiality 'hardwired' into it, not because it efficiently reflects a mechanic ontology and because therefore it is too much of a machine to deal with organic processes, but because it isn't machinic enough (cfr. Deleuze on Leibniz' critique of Descartes, Le Pli, p12) : we are now noticing matter-shape interactions on macro levels (supra human if you want, i hate these metaphores) such as the selforganisation of internet as well as on micro levels ('below' our field of perception, although that topology isn't sustainable either) that point towards a dissolution of that old dualism in favour of multiplicity and Deleuze's 'becoming'. Matter unfolding into its shape and shape folding into its matter. Difference>absence>difference. In the self-inflicted urgency that is very much the essence of software development ( we need better software faster to 'regain' control of a global process running wild, or at least to radically slow down some processes that lead to quasi immediate annihilation), we are perhaps too much focussed on the immediate results the object-oriented approach gives us. In doing so we have ***rightfully***, i do want to stress that, disregarded alternatives. Because we need results fast, ever faster. But in doing so, we are now in a stage where systems need to be developed to run systems to run systems to infinity: we are stuck in a hysteresis of developing cycles feeding itself with ever more need. The 'solution' or escape route offered here ('Unplug from the grid." "Adhocracy will rule") is one that i have given considerable thought in the past but always rejected. I have seen beautiful artistical results come off it. I appreciate its inherent beauty, the arcadian attraction of it. But I do not like the defaitism that goes with it. It is as much a solution as taking out your tent and go camping near the Rocky Mountains for the rest of your life. You cannot unplug from the grid, the grid is taking shape within you, within the micro-economics of your friendly circles, within the micro power balancing within the machine-you. It is not a malignant ghost. It has nothing to do with good or evil and certainly nothing to do with transcendance, although many religious organisations base their very worldly power on that interpretation. Mechanical machines will give us mechanical results, if left running by themselves, i don't see anything 'bad' or devilish there. Machinical machines, on the other hand,in the Deleuzian sense of 'machine', would give us machinical results, and take the 'natural' flow of matter-shape (in)formation along with them into the technology that enables them. I don't see anything 'good' or messianistic there either. It's just that everything i can observe points in that direction, i wouldn't presume to say anything like this with my limited knowledge if that weren't the case. Heck, I just noticed mr Sondheim's work deals with some of the questions i'm working on... So somehow I believe alternatives can be developed into working information systems that could supplement and even unhinge our current critical condition. I'm making some very modest efforts towards that with what i know of programming and the semantical to ontological implications of poetry. Before today,i didn't see where these things were being researched, but i am entertaining hunches that process thought as expressed in the work of the Leibniz-Deleuze-Whitehead trail in ontology could find its reflection in working models of such alternatives and that our current practice of object-oriented programming should be subjected to a critical analysis, not because it's bad or malfunctioning, but because we need to understand how the shape of it turns to matter there. And these programmatic approaches didn't come into being all of a sudden, they built upon a dominant ontology themselves (as Philip E. Agre points out in The Practical Logic of Computer Work at http://polaris.gseis.ucla.edu/pagre/practical.html) and they are modelled after them. So we need to know how the transcoding process that Lev Manovich explains in his 'The Language of New Media', the way how our daily interaction with computer (networks) influences our strains of thoughts on every level, how that really works, how it affects us and more importantly, how we could affect it. I think IT matters, if you want a slogan. Or computers need sex, if you want a provocative one. And i think a lot of people should be doing this kind of research, not just some halfwit poet from kessel-lo without any resources, although of course i know a thing or two about how poetry works and how semantical processes at work there could be correlated to basic concepts in programming like recursive definition and garbage collection to name a few directions my own wreckage is floating in. I'm happy to notice some people are doing it here and with much more of the expertise required to do so. One would need to take another go at AI from the point before it went pragmatical, disassemble that and start rebuilding on, why not, a better phenomenology of analogic/discrete (referring to mr Sondheim's last post) although my guess is you do _not_ need to actually 'solve' any deep ontological and epistemological issues to get anywhere: if you allow the process of machine-building sufficient 'air-space' the 'text' will write itself, much like a poem goes ding-dong when it has finished being written and starts writing itself into reality. It is a process that dissolves time and space alltogether, in a way, anyone who's had the experience will testify to a sense of timelessness while writing/being ridden by and waking up afterwards without any memory of the actual writing. There's nothing mystical/romantic/visionary involved there, i think, it's just nature having its way. Very deterministic in the end, i'm afraid, inasmuch as that freedom is, epitemologically, a rather irrelevant question, only of (ab)use in rhetorical games of power after the fact, post-mortem if you want and mostly going on in equal bad taste as asking how it was after having intimate sex. Anyway,i've noticed programming doing the very same chemistry in my cranky brain... In a modest way i am steering my shaky Cathedral of erotic Misery, a net arty project at http://www.vilt.net/nkdee towards these goals. Just please don't ask me how i propose to realize such alternatives, i'm just in the middle of trying to formulate some notes that could lead towards a possibly workable hypothesis in the best of scientific tradition, eventually. Anyone is invited to join in the process of theory building, although at this stage for the actual authoring stuff, i hang on to a very male and as yet tyranical core authoring process, collaboration is nice but impossible when there's nothing to collaborate on... Very theoretically it could lead to results, following it's own recursively defined flow or growth. Notes towards a supreme fiction, if you want Wallace Stevens in the game, although his poetry unfolds far beyond his ontology. greetings, dv www.vilt.net -----Original Message----- From: nettime-l-request@bbs.thing.net [mailto:nettime-l-request@bbs.thing.net] On Behalf Of Alexander Galloway and Eugene Thacker Sent: maandag 16 mei 2005 18:56 To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net Subject: <nettime> The Ghost in the Network The Ghost in the Network In discussing the difference between the living and the nonliving, Aristotle points to the phenomena of self-organized animation and <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net