Eric Kluitenberg on Wed, 4 Nov 2015 16:59:09 +0100 (CET) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: <nettime> choose-your-own adventure: a brief history of nettime |
Dear nettimers, It feels a bit awkward to respond in this thread as the co-editor of the anthology this text is going to be part of, where I think the text is going to be a great contribution, a fascinating account of twenty years of <nettime> from a first-hand perspective. However, I am deeply intrigued by the remarks Brian made about a `third-order cybernetics' and his call to start figuring this new order out (a 'third age of net-critique' as he calls it). This is what I want to respond to here. The anthology we are putting together is part of a larger project, on-going under a mundane working title 'tactical media connections', with the aim of connecting different generations of activists, artists, theorists, discourses and practices between the classic era of tactical media and current practices and conditions, with the hope of developing a more informed perspective to move into the future. The project has been introduced on the list so will not dwell on this further. One of the things which is on my mind with this project is to raise the question: "What kind of interventions are required right now?", assuming that we are in the post-#occupy and post-prism era. For a variety of reasons we have seen that the various `occupy' quasi-movements (formations) have failed, unable to transform themselves into somehow coherent and potent political forces (in part because of their over-reliance on the play on affective registers), with the possible exception of Spain as also indicated in the thread started by Alex Foti ("What if we were all right but all wrong?"), which runs interestingly parallel to this one. And the post-prism condition need not really be explained - the confirmation of our worst nightmares about the extent of the electronic surveillance apparatus that dwarfs all sci-fi phantasies that may have preceded the Snowden Files disclosures. So, what does `intervention' mean in this context? Does it still make sense to think and talk about this at all? How could intervention be conceived of as somehow meaningful, viable, efficacious (able to produce desired results)? What strikes me, but comes as no real surprise, is the clear presence of the recent work that science and political philosopher Bruno Latour has been doing on what he calls "Facing Gaia", and what Brian refers to as `Earth-system' (see: [1]http://www.bruno-latour.fr/node/487 ). This comes as no surprise because Brian and I discussed this in private conversations, and also because his recent work with the Compass group in the Mid-West region (around Chicago) takes up the challenge of thinking through the meaning of this notion of `general ecology' - see: [2]http://midwestcompass.org/. The crucial point here, in my view, is the boundedness of these global transformations Brian is referencing by our existence on Earth, the planet as a system of interdependent parts, and the finiteness of resources available to and within this system. As Latour also observes in one of his recent lectures, the prospect of the human species (or a future Ark of Noah carrying the biological diversity of the planet) embarking on an exodus into space to new `Earth-like' worlds has been emphatically referred to the realm of fiction by calculations of the amount of energy and resources required to ship even a tiny segment of the Earth's current population to the nearest inhabitable worlds, which makes the entire exercise an entirely laughable fiction. It equally reduces the chance of us ever being visited by some remote superior extraterrestrial civilisation (that can solve our problems) to zero. In short: We are Earth-bound. Philosopher and aesthetician Jean-Francois Lyotard once observed that the avant-garde arts share with the techno-sciences and advanced capitalism an `affinity with infinity': the infinite ability to see, the infinite ability to know, and the infinite ability to realise / make / produce. This dictum no longer holds true. We are coming up to final limits, material and ecological. They are drawing ever closer and given the rapid material developments in the so-called emerging economies with exponential speed. The horizon is no longer that of the infinity of the avant-gardes, techno-sciences, and advanced capitalism, but instead the finiteness of the Earth's material and ecological resources. This imposes clear limits on the scope and extension of third-order cybernetics and the new modes of global governance (or non-governance) that accompany this new order. Latour develops his thinking along a simple line: he considers these systems as being designed by someone, some groups, some agencies, and that to attune them with boundedness imposed by the Earth-system we need to re-design these systems. The discipline of `design' (in a broad sense) then takes center stage in the process of what he has described ever since his 2004 book 'Politics of Nature' as `the progressive composition of the good common world'. This book is interesting here because it was written in response to the stagnation of green politics in Europe and elsewhere, so with the book he also put the question on the table; what kind of intervention is required now? - in his case in response to a perceived crisis of green politics. `Design' for Latour is crucial because it introduces among other things, an attention to detail. When dealing with largest possible systems, and especially when facing the largest of them all, the Earth-system (Facing Gaia), attention has to shift according to Latour to the smallest possible details, and intervention has to emerge at the microscopic level of re-design and subsequently scale up to the macro-level in a process of collective experimentation. Such a process can only begin with a clear and critical analysis of the `design' of 'third-order cybernetics, and all this clearly exceeds the frame of the tactical media book as such. It does however suggest a clear call for at least one particular intervention in response to this question that has been haunting me since at the very least the beginning of this tactical media connections trajectory (but actually much longer), what kind of interventions are required now? Whatever you call it, a `third age of net-critique', a critical examination of the design of third-order cybernetics, figuring out the post-anarcho-llbertarian condition, this is certainly an important and challenging suggestion to take up. The next steps then already clearly indicate themselves: How can one imagine such processes of re-design, at what levels, through which practices? What are the roles that activists, artists, theorists can assume there? And how can these things be put into practice? (politics) Amidst the gloom we can see hopeful beginnings, the theories and practices of the commons that rely on scalable and self-sustaining community based systems of exchange, co-operation and governance. The transference of principles of free software to open content and free culture production, the experiments with distributed currency and transaction systems - but none of them and also not combined are enough to produce a viable counter-veilling force to what Brian has so nicely described as third-order cybernetics. One possibility is of course simply not to act, at least not initially, and wait for these systems to collapse under the weight of their own internal contradictions (the crash-scenario). I very much oppose this view, the damage and the amount of suffering this would produce are unimaginable and the whole point of critique and (attempts at) re-design is to avoid exactly this scenario. It is the failure of `global governance', in as far as such a thing exists at all, that it is unable to address the ravages of this impending new order and so we cannot resign ourselves to either only re-design on the microlevel, nor to the design of self-sustaining communities, let alone to inertia while waiting for the crash. The critical analysis / deconstruction of this impending order can be a step one towards developing (`designing') new and efficacious forms of intervention - that I see as a clear and potentially productive suggestion. ------ Then a final practical note: we are participating in some debates and with a workshop with the tactical media connections project in the upcoming edition of Transmediale (Feb. 3 - 7, 2016). We will also use this opportunity of the festival as a gathering place to hold an informal meeting during the festival, exact date and time still need to be determined as soon as the overall festival schedule is fixed. Much in the tradition of the nettime meet ups that are referenced in Ted's and Felix's text. It would be great to see people there and debate about these and other ideas. We'll post details also here and on our blogs when we know place, date, time, but as stated in the text such physical meet ups are extremely important so we hope we can have a more direct exchange there. bests, eric On 04 Nov 2015, at 04:53, Brian Holmes <bhcontinentaldrift@gmail.com> wrote: As noted last April Fools', there will be good reasons for fresh conceptual collaborations in the future. The neoliberal order with its bewildering anarcho-libertarian ideology is on the way out. We are headed toward a new state-form based on third-order cybernetics, or general ecology, in which finely grained data on global populations will be used to repress those populations, but also to facilitate and channel behaviors more adaptive to the overall earth system. As resource use continues to grow, survival issues will increasingly make earth-system dynamics into an ultimate reference point, directly present and determinant for all experience, yet not susceptible of direct control. This leads to fundamental epistemological shifts, with many cascading effects on human-machine combinations (we cyborgs, I mean). (...) However, I think that key aspects of the coming round of global development will be orchestrated by the new inter-state/inter-imperialist order, in order to coordinate production/consumption and provide earth-system level services for all included populations. Who will do this? A consortium of countries including China. Whether the US or the EU will be part of it, I don't know. In short, the 21st century is not likely to be your grandpa's political economy! I don't expect any recognizable pattern to become visible for a decade or more; but it is likely that that the decisive breakthroughs of the future are actually being invented right now, without us knowing it. First-order cybernetics was analyzed, critiqued and subverted in the Sixties and Seventies, and second-order forms were at the heart of our concerns in the Nineties and the Noughties. Don't you think a Third Age of net-critique is dawning? Who wants to have a go at that one? curiously, Brian *** Cybernetics essays ("Dark Crystals" section): https://brianholmes.wordpress.com/2009/01/19/book-materials Two forks of Technopolitics: http://www.thenextlayer.org/technopolitics_group http://threecrises.org <...> # 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://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org