Brian Holmes on Thu, 16 Oct 2008 04:15:34 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Zittrain's Foundational Myth of the Open Internet |
Felix Stalder wrote: > I doubt it makes much sense to see Popper as crypto-cybernetic > nor does there seem to be any substantive connection between > Popper's notion of an "open society" and current notions of "open > technology/open media", except in one aspect which I will come back > to. Mmm, I could hardly disagree more, where cybernetics is concerned, and this time I am very happy to be on the side of Florian Cramer! The cybernetic project originated during the Second World War, under definite military imperatives. But this war was explicitly and consistently conceived by the Americans as a war for liberalism. The technological notion of "open systems" is directly related to the philosophies of liberalism, centered around the motifs of tansparency, rationality and the rule of law. The clearest case in point would be the liberal humanist Norber Weiner, who coined the word cybernetics. And the association only grows stronger with time. Check out a classic cybernetic book called "Nerves of Government" (1961) by the American political scientist Karl Deutsch, you will see what I mean. Having said this, the specific parallel that Felix draws between Popper's notion of falsifiability and the publication of bugs in free software projects is very elegant and precise. But the ethic of publicness permeates the early years of the Internet and has been a major American ideology even in the military. And so there is little surprise, in this era of degraded ideologies, to see "openness" being invoked by every predatory corporation on the block. If Web 2.0 products are advertised as "open" it is because they are trying to draw on the real historical prestige of open systems, and even more precisely, on the well established association between the open system of the Internet and liberal democracy. > For Popper the central question of political theory is a negative > one: How to get rid of a bad government. And this, and this reason > alone, is why he favours democracy because it has an inbuilt > mechanism to get rid of a bad government. You simply elect another > one. Now this is where the question of liberalism and its "open systems" becomes very knotty. Because sure, we can elect another government. In the US we're gonna, and I am going to vote for Mr. Obama and it looks like he is going to win. But who governs the US? Can we really vote them out? In recent weeks we have seen the amazing spectacle of financial interests (which, by the way, legitimate themselves by transparency and the rule of law) just taking over the government and dictating everything. Now, it would take pages and probably an entire book to justify all that would need to be said here, but look: if there is one sector in society which has flourished on the kind of communication made possible by cybernetic systems, it is certainly the financial sector. And if there is another one, it is certainly the military sector. And these are the two sectors that so far, we cannot "vote out." Clinton came into office, and as is well known, Rubin and Greenspan told him what he would have to do. Two weeks ago Paulson - the financial sector embodied within the government - managed to get his 700 billion bailout passed under intense scrutiny, and meanwhile the military managed to get their usual 680 billion passed without anybody batting an eye. Surely Popper is rolling over in his grave. But all of this is still done under the banners of the "open society" and of "open systems," for the two are inseparable in the democratic engineering culture of the USA. This is where the problem raised by Matze Schmidt in another post - the problem of systemic change - becomes at once so difficult and so urgent. How can you eject liberal governments which are legitimate by all the criteria established both historically and scientifically - and yet still are the source of clear injustice and oppression in the world? Adam Curtis has asked this question with great intensity about the legacy of Tony Blair, in his film "The Trap." But he is not alone. This is an old and in some circles, well-known dilemma. The connections between classical liberalism, Popperian science, and contemporary political economy - or I would prefer to say, contemporary technopolitical economy - are too deep and problematic to be brushed aside. Even though I realize that so far, I have said nothing so elegant and rational as the connection between falsifiability and the publication of bugs!!!! best, Brian # 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: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org