Ewen Chardronnet on Sat, 9 Jun 2007 19:00:11 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Elements of the actuality of the vital combat |
One more text from the "Laboratory Planet" by the Observatory of Evolution. a+ Ewen -- Elements of the actuality of the vital combat : on nanotechnology and the world that goes with it by the Observatory of Evolution / Today the greatest ignominies exist not because we commit them but because we let them happen. They develop inside emptiness./ Robert Musil, The Man Without Qualities (about 1920) 1) A new genesis In 1989, at the same time that the ruling Socialists were celebrating the French Revolution with the greatest possible frenzy, engineers at IBM managed for their part to design a logo for the company made from the manipulation of 35 xenon atoms. Since then, and even if it only represents another step along the road towards the artificialisation of the world that we are employed to produce, the development of nanotechnologies has undergone a rapid expansion that would have seemed frightening if we had not been long used to strive to become what would soon need to be replaced. Nanotechnologies open the way to the reconstruction of the world using reworked elementary entities. In this new genesis all classifications of existing beings are abolished. Of course the subjective barrier between the inert and the living will no longer hold true; the same goes for the barrier between species even more. As for the well-known immunology barrier which theoretically prevents living organisms from being infested by foreign bodies, it becomes redundant; the nanoparticle penetrates into living cells as easily as sugar dissolves in water. The transgenesis on which molecular biologists are working will be achieved "naturally?. Animals and machines will merge in the Megamachine, consolidating the artificially living character of the social system and the machine character of naturally living organisms. Last, self-reproducing nano-entities could be used to create macro-organisms. The last point is a great subject of concern for the mutants who fear that social life is escaping them while the neo-mutants (the bolder mutants) overcome this fear and joyfully accept to become anything whatsoever inside the Megamachine. The latter, through the dense interconnection of everything inside it, will resemble a large soup tureen in which all the bodies that have shed their being will bathe, organised in a magma of extravagant positions. This is what is called convergence: nano, bio, info et cognito will form just one matter and one globalised subject. Given such a vision, it is perhaps vain to try and envisage the potential risks involved in this new advance in technical engineering; all of them are present in this extraordinary dilution. With the definitive disappearance of the order of natural reason, it will no longer be possible to speak of pollution, a term that used to indicate that a material element was to be found where, in theory, it had no reason to be; for example, that a radioactive caesium atom had no business being in a mushroom or in the encephalon of a child. ?There is loads of free space at the atomic level?; this remark by Richard Feynman, the illustrious and eccentric physicist (but not to the extent that it kept him out of the fabulous Manhattan project, in which the most brilliant Western physicists took part), is celebrated as an invitation to go and look into the intimacy of matter for what has become rare in our environment: more space, energy and new markets. Yet the amount of energy and hydraulic resources needed by the new industrialisation of matter will soon absorb practically everything that remains of our macroscopic natural resources (that is, what people today can touch with their fingers and put in their pockets). The social and geopolitical tension thus created will probably make a large increase in security arrangements indispensable. If the motor of development of nanotechnologies was the blind race for power that beings, at first sheltered and later enclosed in the social space, have never managed to hold back, then it is quite natural that the political, military and economic deciders rush headlong into this new game of evolution, since their social advancement does not leave them the option to hesitate. To humans who might worry about what is happening, the argument of their health will first be served up again: ?at last we will put a stop to the cancer epidemic?! And as soon as a particle of a body threatens to go wrong, a microrobot will enter into action to repair it. The senses could be considerably improved, corrected or quite simply adapted to what they are supposed to produce. No body, no digital data, no thought, will escape from the surveillance and the standardisation administered by world market rules. From certain points of view, so much the better: the traffickers in precious woods, threatened species and above all new-born children had better watch out. To sensitive souls who, faced with this worse-than-Orwellian situation, are seized by a new, deeper vertigo, the neo-mutant ideology will explain that, after all, this evolution is only continuing what mankind has always done and, in any case, no one can do anything about it, which although not definitively proven, is all the same quite likely and in any case would need to be disproved. This last task could well be quite tricky, which will not stop some people finding it pleasant. /Without our animals ? which will be taken away to be burnt because they don't have microchips ? we'll be nothing./ A sheep-farmer, overheard one evening early in 2006 at the autonomous Domaine de Matens 2) Reason abused The critique of progress is achieved ? and has been for several millennia ?, that of the economy of production and of liberalism more recently, but no critique, not even the best recent social analyses, has been able to alter the direction of social development ? which confirms in passing that until now what has driven this development is certainly not desired or driven by human reason. The time has passed when we could ask ourselves if technological revolutions were good or bad, if science could be useful to mankind; each technical development is catastrophic. To plead the cause of progress, we can no longer say that it has maintained the demographic situation of human beings in an extraordinary way since this success has been transformed into a nightmare and the mutants are now calling for a cull of human beings (cf. http://mutation.ifrance.com/hominisation.htm). It is still possible ? despite the multiplication of natural catastrophes ? to celebrate the fact that modern mankind no longer has to fear bad weather, predators, and many physical constraints like long distance travel or the weakness of his own body. That these improvements have confined human beings within social arrangements that each day are more controlled and supervised, that an exchange, which is the basis of life, no longer takes place between humans and the natural environment, but between herded humans and social monitors, none of this should disturb overmuch the mutants that we are. To prolong the progressist plea it might also be recognised that technology has brought about a whole series of emancipations of which the most obvious is the distance travelled by mankind from the old domination of nature and the superstitions that were a part of the ancestral state of our harmony with the world. If these emancipations embody the greatness of Western culture, then we need to point out that they merely accompany the alienation of the biological order from the social order and the enclosure of the living in a system of control of everything that exists. So, for example, in the second half of the twentieth century, the emancipation of women from male domination coincided with (and not by chance) an increase in alienating technical systems. What from our point of view undermines the apologetic discourse of progress is, first, that the process of evolution was imposed independently of human wishes. Even if, of course, some human beings are delighted with social progress, it is clear that no one ever asked the question democratically to see if it is wanted. It was a condition for social evolution, and people could only try to feel happy about its positive effects. It is still heard, although more and more rarely, that deciders decide, after all, and that humans invested with political responsibility have approved what has happened. This argument appears today almost grotesque: the deciders in power have only reached their positions because they have accepted the extravagant demands of technical development beforehand, that is, they have never decided anything other than to let the forces of domination have their way. But what should finally ruin the idea of progress in the eyes of human beings is that it has made them obsolete. It has been said that humanity is a plastic being who can be adapted to every transformation, the agent of an evolution that destroys him while constructing him. An instrument, therefore, but also a victim of evolution. A victim who is now being successfully challenged in the production and the use of innovative systems. That is why the conception and the use of what is manufactured is being daily transferred more and more to self-programming machines. And the perspective of a world rid of this cumbersome parasite is now being envisaged. The extraordinary historical context in which we find ourselves is therefore that of social division, the fracture sociale; not the division once evoked by the President of a Republic on its way to being privatised, to indicate what separates the zealous servants of evolution from those who, unable or unwilling to keep pace, find themselves at the back of the pack in the banlieues; here the division is between machines and social institutions ? which now form the most influential part of society and control its development according to their own interests ? and, on the other hand, the humans who find themselves enclosed in this increasingly controlled system. All of us are thus called upon to play an active role, as effectively as possible, in the eradication of the living, or risk seeing ourselves ever more rapidly excluded from the life of society. This subjection of the individual in the elaboration of a destructive and dominating social system is carried out by virtue of a mechanism that is at work everywhere. This mechanism (called the bonus of the negative) can be explained summarily by the fact that it is statistically improbable for humans to decide everywhere as one to cease collaborating in the pillage, even if this pillage is ruining the world they inhabit (and those who do not take part get left behind). The introduction of the policy doubtlessly aiming to protect human societies from this phenomenon has historically only projected it with more force outside the boundaries of the social space, to the point where it now exists practically everywhere. And whilst, for instance, a generation takes part in property speculation to have somewhere to live, it will become virtually impossible for the next generation to have living space; and whilst a generation intends to prepare for retirement by turning its savings into capital in pension funds, it is busy undermining the conditions of survival on the surface of the planet. Struggling in this trap without hope of being delivered only imprisons us a little more. This is probably what certain radicals mean when they criticize the left, the global citizens movement, the antiglobalisation movement and most groups or individuals who try with varying degrees of insight to resist what is happening. Perhaps it is also what many people intuitively believe who have decided to do nothing, not even to think. In fact, the present period is still one in which we must question everything, or risk falling into helplessness or thoughtlessness. If the present situation gives rise to a resentment that in some ways resembles that felt by a defeated people when they have to give up their own culture and embrace that of their new masters, the particularity of the present situation is that the last human victors in history? let us call them the Westernised techno-merchants ? now have the feeling that their own end is at hand, and that the new masters, if we try to see something familiar in them, have the features of robots and machine systems. Now what has until now characterised the mutants (those who try zealously to obey what they believe is the path of evolution) is that they could accommodate the demands of modernity by adopting an emancipatory ideology that still seemed humanly reasonable. Today this is no longer the case; all ideologies - the supernatural, the divine, the economy, humanism, rationalism, socialism - have been discredited. What we must agree to in order to prosper today defies human reason, including the spirit of the scientific method, and it is clear that if we had to continue along this path we would have to shed our human appearance. Nothing that can be reasonable functions any more, apart from the idea of changing oneself into anything, so long as it works. That is why the new ideology, the neo-mutant ideology, is conceived precisely to explain why we should find it better to go beyond the human stage. / Since we are already dead, let's make the most of it!/ (Zapatista proverb) 3) The vital combat, in Grenoble and elsewhere! For there to be a chance of turning things around, it would not only be necessary for the majority of humans to see that it is better to leave the system and live differently by devoting their energies to reconstruction projects, but also that they should realise it everywhere at the same time. And above all that those invited to join the techno-market system should refuse to do so. The many existing resistance strategies come up against this difficulty. For example, the concept of 'uneconomic growth' which is based on a quite realistic view of our ecologic situation, seems to ignore that growth is not a chosen or organised choice of evolution by mankind but an obligation imposed by the requirements of domination of the most influential societies in the rational colonisation of the living world. How can the supporters of this concept imagine that the society in which they find themselves will accept a huge decrease of its power at the very moment when a billion individuals are living through an incredible period of growth and could soon, as a result, take control (both themselves and those who will work with them) of the countries of uneconomic growth even more easily than the West colonised the world. So we will not find the forces able to stop the mechanisation of living beings within populations that have accepted, whether they wanted to or not, to create this world. It is essentially within what still exists outside the techno-market sphere or in what has not yet grown there, that we should look for a potential driving force for this movement. It is thus on the populations of the south (providing that we do not have too many illusions about their capacity to remain deaf to market propaganda) and perhaps on the young generations of the north (those who have not yet left the school system to take up their posts) that we should count. In our countries, it is not unthinkable that the place from which massive and significant resistance to what is happening could be organised is the secondary school. To maintain a human community in which children are not admitted to the canteen without the agreement of a biometric system giving access to atomised meal trays, can only result from a strong desire and a reflection on the part of secondary school students. It is for a generation in the making that falls the hope of preparing a life of dignity rather than applying for a job as a social agent. Their elders, participating individually in this combat, will only be able to lend a hand and if necessary give some helpful warnings. Observatory of Evolution (cf. ?Why the future doesn't need us" by Bill Joy) Title taken from a work by Gérard Nissim Amzallag (CNRS Editions), in which the author analyses the nature and the operational modalities of the industry science and techniques. # 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