Brian Holmes on Thu, 16 Oct 2008 23:52:36 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Cybernetics and the Internet |
Hello everyone, Way back whenever, Nettime gave itself the goal of developing an immanent critique of the Internet - the quintessential "open system." In the eyes of perhaps a majority the time for such a critique is now over, the net has stabilized and you might as well do a critique of your doorbell or your toaster. Some nettimers go on valiantly hacking into Web 2.0. I was always less interested in the toaster itself and more in the ringing at the door, so I've tried to move from the immanence of the electronic environment to the genealogy of the militarized American society that produced it. And I've tried to show how the development of the cybernetic discourse has accompanied the USA's metamorphosis into liberal empire. The immanence of networked communications is exactly what we just experienced in a month of excruciating financial crisis. The crisis is not over and it's clear that the critique of the communications networks has not been completed. One of the ways for a cultural critic to move across this strange, crisis-ridden "ground" that we now share - that is, the virtual ground of real-time global communications - is to sink historical probes through the contemporary media field, in order to connect with past metaphors of technological change, seized within their social and material conditions of emergence. What this allows you to do is to follow the evolution, not just of mutating artifacts, epistemologies and organizational forms, but also of the enigmatic images that people have used both to grasp those changes and to ward them away. History itself then becomes immanent in the present, and you end up with a lot more handles on current situations - and with a lot more impatience towards the reigning consensus, which according to the old law of the commodity is usually based on a total denegation of the social and political stakes of whatever you might have to deal with. Inspired by conversations on this list, I've been trying out this approach for a year or two, taking my departure points from Adam Curtis's fascination for game theory and the Nash equilibrium, or from Norbert Wiener's speculations on "God & Golem, Inc." I've just finished a critical review of Lutz Dammbeck's film, Das Netz - which imho is the best existing documentary about cybernetics and the Internet. Lutz's film focuses purely on the symbolic: that is, those points of condensation where societal laws and norms reveal themselves, not just with, but *as* their own contradictions. What I do is retrace some of the theoretical and historical backgrounds from which each of those symbolic elements springs, and in that way give some discursive depth to the extraordinary insights and scandalous affects of the film. I've also developed some unexpected consequences of Warren McCulloch's notion of "experimental epistemology." Since so many people are passionately interested in this stuff I guess there may be some objections! What's more, I have hidden a bizarre sub-agenda in this piece, and given the current context, I want to lay it bare for your examination. After reflecting for years on that "thing" called political economy since 1945, I have become convinced that it, like cybernetics, has developed according to two key organizational paradigms, neither of which ever managed to cancel each other out and both of which continue to inform the present that has forgotten them. The first corresponds to the military desire for command and control: it uses feedback information to coordinate vast logistical supply lines of industrial production and distribution, it organizes people into a functional hierarchy, and it always seeks to home in on a predetermined target (production, sales, efficiency, etc). These were the major issues of the Fordist economies of scale in the 1930s-60s, which gradually caught up to the global scale of simultaneous multi-theater operations attained by the military in WWII. Clearly, the kinds of logistical control at a distance provided by first-generation cybernetic systems were key to this expansion of industry and trade. The second paradigm is a self-reflexive one, which was there from the very inception of cybernetics but which, in economic terms, corresponds closely to the need for a new type of semiotic production and consumption arising after the saturation of the developed world with consumer durables. This same self-reflexivity (of the kind that Soros, for example, never ceases discussing) is part of the early-1970s shift to a financialized economy, which, as Keynes pointed out long ago, is not about who wins the beauty contest, but who people think will win it: bets on bets on bets on bets, market reflexivity.... The movement toward semiotic production was also a way to mediate a much more complicated and fractious society, where discipline was no longer the name of the game and methods had to be found to integrate each person's individual motivations into some kind of flexible give-and-take with the functional requirements of larger organizations. So you get very sophisticated strategies which include room for the construction of different purposes, multiple-stakeholder scenarios and the like. In this second phase of postwar political economy, during the 1980s and 90s, "second-order" cybernetics and complexity theory were put into managerial practice everywhere, creating fractal organizational forms and technologies that can interface with a far wider range of cultures, desires and individuals. The "open systems" of networked communications are the technological face of what (neo)liberal thinkers, in the wake of Popper, call the "open society." The 'second-order economics" which we have known for the last thirty years, and which reached its peak in the new economy, is only dealt with very briefly at the end of the paper on Das Netz. I will include a lot more on it in a following article on Guattari and cybernetics, which I've been writing in parallel to this one. What seems to happen in our own time, since 2000, is that we are confronted with the atavistic return of a Cold War mentality, dominated by the command-and-control model of target-seeking, even while the ecstatic neoliberal reflexivity of global finance has gone on building its semiotic castles in the air. Two technopolitical paradigms, whose problematic origins most people have just forgotten, have spun out of control at the same time. I think that Lutz Dammbeck, perhaps more fully than any other single artist, has crystallized the inherent paradoxes of these two paradigms, along with the presence of their recalcitrant Others - those human universes that the cybernetic society effectively excludes. As you probably know, Dammbeck's film is not only about cybernetics but also about terrorism, of a home-grown American variety. The documentary can be obtained on DVD, by ordering it over the Internet (and there's a torrent out there for the German version). As for my article, it is immanent to our medium: http://brianholmes.wordpress.com/2008/10/13/filming-the-world-laboratory 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