figment on Sun, 22 Jun 1997 02:05:17 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Technocult/Religion (3/3) |
E. THIRD MIND FROM THE SUN While the transcendence of the Net is false, and could not exist without the corresponding framework of political fragmentation and the rapacious nomadism of global capitalism, I think that there is something very juicy and intriguing about the gnostic or mystical response to cyberspace. Again, however we analyze, critique, and resist our digital-historical condition as online subjects, we are also participating in it as agents, a participation that by its very nature erodes the familiar rules about consciousness, bodies, and the machinery of subjectivity. We are extending our minds into machinic fields of collective information, into incorporeal, engineered environments. For all the junk, the Internet remains an astounding zone of connections, histories, texts, images -- and most of all, of ever-bizarre and fascinating individuals. We are colonizing each other's brains, and we -- at least the limited "we" with access to these tools -- are doing it on a global scale at a time of overwhelming uncertainty and cultural crisis. Though I am mighty wary of techno-utopianism, Californian techno-myth, and Extropian glee, it seems to me that we must plunge forward with imagination into this historically-unprecedented situation -- which is hardly the same thing as capitulating to the money-mad agenda of Wired's editorial crew. Which bring us finally to the bizarre but nonetheless potent myth of the Gaian mind. According to the acidhead Rebublican John Perry Barlow, as more and more of get online, we are becoming the neurons of an enormous compex system that is engendering an emergent collective mind, which at a certain point will create an apotheosis of planetary consciousness. As an unholy blend of Arthur C. Clark, Teilhard de Chardin, _Neuromancer_, and eco-cybernetics, the Gain mind can be seen as intriguing if depressingly unironic chunk of mystical science fiction -- a resonant image with many forebears in the religious imagination, and metaphysical tradition of the West. Of couse, we can and should critique it like hell. Besides its basic goofiness and dull literalism, the Gaian mind naturalizes the current state of capitalist planetization, especially through its recourse to Kevin Kelleyish neo-Darwinian arguments and the "mystical positivism" that Barbrook criticizes. Of course, serious mystics would have trouble with the confusion that pattern-mad, cyber-materialists make between technology and the higher experiential stratospheres of consciousness and Being. At the same time, most proponents of this worldview would virulently deny the charge of mysticism as well, pointing to a wide variety of scientific and technological developments and research into nonlinear dynamics and the properties of complex systems that undergird their arguments. We all know that science is in many ways a social and ideological construction, and it certainly seems that the moment you start recognizing patterns and goals in nature, you begin this slide into mystical positivism, dodgy theories of history, and ripe excuses for the abject failure of the social imagination to grapple with the material breakdown of our new conditions. But to ignore the substance of the paradigmatic shifts in science by constantly invoking the invisible hand of ideology, as many nettimers do, misses a deeper point. Which is that the Great Divide between the productions of nature and the productions of culture, as they are mediated through human actors, is breaking down. We are part of the welter of cosmic phenomena, however much we also transcend it as rational observers who like to make disciplinary divisions between regions of the real. It is perhaps inevitable that at such a point the cosmological imagination returns, attempting to revivify and reenchant the patterns and logic of the material world. It seems that it's just as useful (though not necessarily any more useful) to seize that cosmological and speculative ground in the name of progressive, humanitarian, and ecological values as it is to endlessly and skeptically carp about its suspect qualities. While the new networks of "subject-objects" uncork all sorts of dangers -- social Darwinism, determinism, virulent social control -- I will remind you, as an example, that nowhere in Deleuze & Guattari do you find a Great Divide; instead you discover that bird songs are machinic, morals are geological, mathematics is a monster slang. Though I certainly have my problems with D&G, I remain deeply inspired by their distant sympathy with science, and the almost pagan (or at least Spinozan) exuberance they bring to the productive capacities of desire and material reality (if you doubt the pagan charge, reread "How to Build a Body Without Organs" and Deleuze's appendix on the phantasm in _The Logic of Sense_). Moreover, Manuel DeLanda's work, which is both deeply Deleuzian and intimately inspired by sober science, reminds us that these notions do not by any means intrinsically lend themselves to the bloated and irresponsible elitism of unrestrained information capitalism. Though I am glad old school leftists like Barbrook are still about, I am not convinced that we are doing anybody much good by simply retreating into Enlightenment categories of reason, at least in so far as these categories divide nature and science from the context of a subjective, interpersonal lifeworld that must remain always, in some sense, imaginal. But rather than bare my chest even more to the arrows of skeptical critique, and risk being branded a reactionary Californian and chased off the list, I want to look again at this striking image of the Gaian mind. What kind of mind is it, at least as it shows itself to us online? It's a mind full of idiocy, cant, greed, and rage; of agents seducing and selling junk to each other; of vast apparatuses of capture; moments of clarity, lust, and phantasm; of endless chattering debates; of secret investments in the technologies of power; of intimacies blooming across great distance; of boredom; of the fetishistic embrace for technique. In other words, it's a lot like our minds, our ordinary human minds, at least as they appear to us at this stage of the historical game. Which is to say that even if we are hardwiring a great collective Mind, it is pretty foolish to believe that this medium is going to get us out of the problems that our individual minds already encounter and create as they navigate and constellate social and interpersonal reality: those perennial emotional traps, anxious ego-projects, power games, and immense conflicting drives, none of which can be honestly written off as the alienated effects of an admittedly overwhemlingly degraded social condition. As long as we don't change, become wiser and more compassionate and more imaginative, the change certainly isn't going to come through some extension of instrumental rationality. In fact, it will just amplify the ills that already beset and delude us. So I'd like to counter the Gain mind with another image of networked unity, one that comes to us from the remarkable imaginary of Hua-Yen Buddhism, perhaps the most philosophically sophisticated Chinese sect, and one that, like much Chinese and Japanese Buddhism, is permeated with the immanent flux of the Tao. With its extraordinary emphasis on the immanent and profoundly productive networks of multiplicity, along with more perrenial Buddhist notions of emptiness and fundamental unity, the Hua-Yen school in many ways strikes me as the most Deleuzian of Buddhisms. Sects of Chinese Buddhism tended to cluster around one particular Buddhist sutra, and the Hua-Yen scripture, known as the Flower Garden Sutra, is an immense work of visionary ferocity that easily stands as one of the most psychedelic religious documents of all time, a kind of Eastern _Finnegan's Wake_. Unlike all the other sutras, which are said to have been written for beings already mired in samsara, the Flower Garland Sutra preports to issue directly from the world as directly perceived by the dropout Gautama in his moment of enlightenment, when he sat beneath the bodhi tree with a diamond mind and an utterly broken heart. The text blows the mind. The central organizing image of Hua-Yen philosophy is the Net of Indra, the ancient sky-god of the Vedas. Indra's Net is an infinite lattice of connections, a great web. And at each node in this vast web of multiplicity, at each juncture point, there is a jewel, and each reflects all of the other jewels, all the other nodes in the network. In a sense it is like Leibniz's monadology, an important precursor to cyberspace, except that here the monads are *nothing but* windows. Indra's Net captures the infinite extent and endlessly combinatory set of relationships found in multiplicity, and at the same time suggests a kind of unity through reflection, and all-in-oneness that does not dissipate the all. Like ourselves, the jewels are empty of any abiding substance, and yet they are still constructed in relationship. Their lucid emptiness allows them to reflect the totality of this network of relations without collapsing that network into a monarchical monad of the Western religious imagination, an overly synthetic unity, the great transcendent Hegelian Overmind that now promises to digitally coalesce into some kind of paternalistic all-being. It's not that kind of unity at all. Whenever Mark Dery bumps up against folks who profer the spiritual conviction that we are all connected, he likes to quote P.J. O'Rourke's snide line about the hippie notion that there is "a throbbing web of psychic mucus and we [are] all part of it somehow." Deployed as an argument, as a working concept of philosophy or politics, the notion that "we are all one" is generally worthy of mockery and contempt. But unless the countless mystics scattered through the wisdom traditions of the world for millennia are fibbing, than the Net of Indra is not just a concept, but a perception, a state-specific realization about the nature of reality that inevitably sounds lame when translated into our chattering daily discourses. Moreover, such a transpersonal realization, at least in the Mahayana tradition and in today's new school of "engaged Buddhism", compels a radical commitment to the world. It encourages a commitment to healing the suffering of others, a broadening of identification, and a stark recognition the fragile, non-commodified networks that still bind us to other humans, to the nonhuman world, and to the world -- forgive me -- beyond representation. In this sense, one is reminded of the etymological roots of "religion," which have to do with binding and connecting -- not as in some authoritarian machine, but as in the anthropological matrix that Latour discusses, an endless animated web of hybrids. And so the next time you log onto the Indranet, you might consider: what am I connected to? What is my computer connected to? It's connected to phone lines, to electrical grids, to the Internet, to the World Wide Web. It's connected to all these different minds in a historically unprecedented fashion. What else is it connected to? As historical materialists and Buddhists both recognize, it is connected to its own conditions of production, political, social, ecological. This is its "karma." How far can I follow this hyperlink? Do I stop with my online discoveries, or with the Malaysian factory that helped build my machine, or with the stock market fluctuations that brought the factory there, or with the working conditions of the women who soldered the circuit boards, or with the poisoned ground that my CPU leaves in its wake? Sober and concerned people often bring these questions up in a banal, hand-wringing way, but they are very real. That's what's "online". That's the web. That's the Net of Indra. It is the conditions of causal production in our world that make us "one", and those conditions are mighty dire these days, whatever goodies the techno-utopians have up their sleeves. So even if I accept this goofy, gooey, very Californian idea that we are all connected and that the Internet has something to do with it, that doesn't really let me off the hook. If I really reflect on our condition in the mindful, compassionate, and witheringly self-critical way that the sharpest spiritual teachers encourage, I come to the conclusion that the only thing of real validity is to work on the networks that compose the here and now, the networks that most hopelessly embed and bind bodies and minds and spirits. Thank you. END --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de