David S. Bennahum on Thu, 9 Oct 1997 11:03:17 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Re: Remaking Social Practices |
What's remarkable about essays like this is the persistent use of made-up oppositions to set off a supposed "problem." In Mr. Guattari's essay, we are given a diagnosis of our present times, which, in a nutshell, is so familiar as to be banal: the times they are 'a changing so damn fast, that we have no context, no frame... and **it wasn't like that in the old days.** Or as Mr. Guattari puts it: >We cover our eyes; we forbid ourselves >to think about the turbulent passage of our times, which swiftly thrusts >far behind us our familiar past, which effaces ways of being and living >that are still fresh in our minds, and which slaps our future onto an >opaque horizon, heavy with thick clouds and miasmas. We depend all the >more on the reassurance that nothing is assured. This is such a tiresome trope, and so totally absurd when placed in the context of history. I am curious-- on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being the most disorienting, which was a worse time for intellectuals claiming a void of comprehension: --Those caught up in the events of 1789-1815 (aka French Revolution, Napoleonic Wars, etc.) --1914-1920 (The "Great War", Communism, Russian Revolution) --1945-55 (The creation of nuclear weapons capable of destroying the human race, the cold war) Are you seriously saying that the period from 1991-present (post-cold war) "swiftly thrusts far behind us our familiar past," "slaps our future onto an opaque horizon," and that "we depend all the more on the reassurance that nothing is assured"-- and th at this is a remarkable, new, unsettling, worrisome state of affairs? So compared to the peasants burning down the manors of the French aristocracy, or the Bolsheviks, with a tiny cadre, remaking an entire continent along ideological lines, or the mass-p roduction of nuclear bombs, this present-day period ranks a what-- a "10" for disorienting? So that would put other "disorienting" periods in history where-- at a 2?... maybe a 7 for the "Great War" and Revolutions of 1918-20? Pardon me for being faceitious here, but really, how can we go around, generation after generation always claiming that our time is the most confusing, most disorienting, most _unlike_ the past? Once you make this diagnosis, you go on to describe these "conditions" that are so completely metaphoric and allegorical, that I cannot really make sense of them. What does this, for instance, actually mean? >It is thus of primordial importance that, alongside >the capitalist market, there appear territorialized markets that rely on >the support of substantial formations, that affirm their modes of >valorization. Out of the capitalist chaos must come what I call >"attractors" of values: values that are diverse, heterogeneous, dissensual >[dissensuelle]. So for the "layman," you know, the person who is actually working, what lesson is to be gained from this diagnosis? What is a "territorialized market"? Do you mean a market based on geography, like the phrase, "the French market," or do you mean somethin g else? What is an "attractor" of values? And why do you say "capitalist chaos"? Do you mean that capitalist markets are chaotic, or do you mean that they are just so complex, that their "order" is incomprehensible to us? Isn't "chaos" consistent with the nouns you use: "diverse, heterogeneous, dissensual."? > An essential condition for succeeding in the promotion of a new >planetary consciousness would thus reside i n our collective capacity for >the recreation of value systems that would escape the moral, psychological >and social lamination of capitalist valorization, which is only centered >on economic profit. The joy of living, solidarity, and compassion with >regard to others, are sentiments that are about to disappear and that must >be protected, enlivened, and propelled in new directions. Is this really a new argument? I mean, didn't, for instance, the French clergy vehmently oppose the social consequences of industrialization in the 19th century, for similar reasons-- namely that capitalism's only value is "economic profit," and that this tends to destroy traditional social order? Why, after say 150 years of various permutations of capitalism, should we believe that its value of "economic profit" is any more corrosive than it was, say, in 1830? If anything, I would argue that, seven or more generations later, we've learned to adapt to the corrosive influences of capitalism. What then has changed since the 19th century to make us even weaker and succeptible to an existence where "the joy of living, solidarity, and compassion with regard to others, are sentiments that are about to disappear." Isn't this one of the oldest, persistent, lamentations that always seems to come along with "change"? >The suggestive power of the theory of information has contributed >to masking the importance of the enunciative dimensions of communication. >It leads us to forget that a message must be received, and not just >transmitted, in order to have meaning. Information cannot be reduced to >its objective manifestations; it is, essentially, the production of >subjectivity, the becoming- consistent [prise de consistence] of >incorporeal universes. Again-- loads of metaphor, but where's the point? What are the "objective manifestations" of information? And how is this related to the "production of subjectivity"? What are you talking about here? Again, let's try some real examples. When I send an e-mail message, are you saying that the people getting it "forget that a message must be received"? I guess this is supposed to mean that people hear each other, but don't actually listen to what's said. They get so into the seduction of fiddling with the tools of transmission and reception that the content becomes irrelevant. Okay? But isn't that stunningly condescending? I mean, perhaps then this nettime list is just an orgy of de-massified virtual tweaking, hundreds of people clacking at nifty computers and jabbing on their send buttons? Stop reading this now, and immediately go change your desktop pattern. > Humanity must undertake a marriage of reason and sentiment with >the multiple off-shoots of machinism, or else it risks sinking into chaos. <sigh> Now, I remember something about a nasty tiff with Italian Futurists at the begining of this century, and a great big debate about the dehumanization of machines, and the chaos they bring (the Futurists claiming machinism brought us order). What ex actly is so horrible about "machines"? Why do you claim that "reason and sentiment" are not _already_ married to machinsim? Let's take on "machine" of sorts-- computer networks. The origins of the Internet are rooted in explicit Utopian ambitions to pro duce a more "reasonable," progressive world. You may download the essays from http://www.memex.org/licklider.html or by directly linking to http://www.memex.org/licklider.pdf Written in 1968, by JCR Licklider and Robert Taylor, these two people were resp onsible for funding the creation of Internet, and setting its ideological agenda. Their goal was to use the technology of computers as a communications device (at a time when almost no one had thought of this), to break down barriers of misunderstanding between people, and increase access to education and knowledge. The point is: people have been trying to "undertake a marriage of reason and sentiment with the multiple off-shoots of machinism" for a long, long time. We are st ill doing it now-- it is amazing to ignore how many scientists and engineers are actually *aware* of the impact of their work, and seeking to resolve the ethical issues. Why do you presume that we need this marriage, when it's happened already, and well before our time? > In this way, the judiciary and the legislature >will be brought to forge new ties with the world of technology and of >research (this is already the case with commissions on ethics >investigating problems in biology and contemporary medicine; but we must >also rapidly create commissions for the ethics of the media, of urbanism, >of education). Commissions? What, like groups adults being paid to sit around conference tables and tell us how to solve the world's problems? Gosh, I imagine that at the UN alone there must be dozens of such committees in full session right now. Is this really a genui ne "solution" or just a tossed-off line in parentheses? >Without the promotion of such a subjectivity of difference, of the >atypical, of utopia, our epoch could topple into atrocious conflicts of >identity, like those the people of the former Yugoslavia are suffering. It >would be vain to appeal to morality and respect for rights. Oh man, talk about packing an argument down so tight that it vanishes. Are you saying the conflict in Yugoslavia is based on a lack of "subjectivity of difference, of the atypical, of utopia"-- that the whole thing is a conflict of "identity"? Again, what does this exactly mean? I thought the war in Yugoslavia was about what wars are usually about: getting it because you think you can-- "it" being power, territory, economic hegemony. Are you saying the war in Yugoslavia is a kind of violent "idenity" crisis? It seems that when you get down to the end of this essay, the bottom line is this: >a shaft of meaning must be >discovered, that cuts through my impatience for the other to adopt my >point of view, and through the lack of good will in the attempt to bend >the other to my desired. It's a fine ambition, but hard to take seriously when the whole premise of this essay is so flawed-- that our time is desperately poised on the edge of chaos, about to tip over at any moment. What's funny about this hubris is how much more wacky things a re about to get: genetic engineering is moving out of theory into reality, space exploration by humans is returning, nanotechnology has received a major boost from the latest inventions in semi-conductor minaturization, and medicine is about to experience a series of major shocks from new techniques using automated drug-delivery systems (implanted under the skin) and portable diagnositc machines... But that's for another time. Meanwhile, our current high-speed media frenzy is hailed as super-unsettling. We'll see, I guess. db http://memex.org/ --- # 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