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Virtual Futures (Book)
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VIRTUAL FUTURES
Virtual Futures explores the idea that the future lies in its ability to articulate the
consequences of an increasingly synthetic and virtual world. New technologies
like cyberspace, the internet, and Chaos theory are often discussed in the context
of technology and its potential to liberate or in terms of technophobia. This
collection examines both these ideas while also charting a new and controversial
route through contemporary discourses on technology; a path that discusses the
material evolution and the erotic relation between humans and machines.
Virtual Futures brings together diverse fields such as cyberfeminism,
materialist philosophy, postmodern fiction, computing culture, and performance
art, with essays by Sadie Plant, Stelarc, and Manuel de Landa (to name a few).
The collection heralds the death of humanism and the rise of post-human
pragmatism. The contested zone of debate throughout these essays is the notion
of the post-human, or the possibility of the cyborg as the free human. Viewed by
some writers as a threat to human life and humanism itself, the post-human is
described by others in the collection as a critical perspective that anticipates the
next step in evolution: the integration or synthesis of humans and machines,
organic life and technology.
This view of technology and information is heavily influenced by AngloAmerican literature, especially cyberpunk, Pynchon and Ballard, as well as the
materialist philosophies of Freud, Deleuze, and Haraway. Virtual Futures
provides analysis both by established theorists and by the most innovative new
voices working at the conjunction between the arts and contemporary technology.
Joan Broodhurst Dixon is a philosopher of science. She recently completed
her doctorate at the University of Warwick. Er J.Cassidy is doing research on the
relationship between Deleuze and Pynchon at Warwick University. He coordinated the “Virtual Futures ‘94” and and ‘95 Conferences at Warwick
University.
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Please note that the Hebrew characters on page 52 are incorrect and should read
aleph and tav .
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VIRTUAL FUTURES
CYBEROTICS, TECHNOLOGY
AND POST-HUMAN
PRAGMATISM
Edited by
JOAN BROADHURST DIXON
& ERIC J.CASSIDY
ROUTLEDGE
London and New York
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First published 1998
by Routledge
11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005.
“To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of
thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.”
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001
© 1998 Editorial Matter and Selection Joan Broadhurst
Dixon and Eric J.Cassidy.
© 1998 Individual chapters the respective authors.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or
reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic,
mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter
invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any
information storage or retrieval system, without permission in
writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British
Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data
Virtual futures / edited by Joan Broadhurst Dixon and Eric J,
Cassidy.
p. cm.
1. Technology—Social aspects. 2, Technology—
Psychological aspects. 3, Computers and civilization.
I.Dixon, Joan Broadhurst, II. Cassidy, Eric,
T14.5.V57 1998 97–19274
CIP
ISBN 0-203-98367-X Master e-book ISBN
ISBN 0-415-13379-3 (hbk)
ISBN 0-415-13380-7 (pbk)
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CONTENTS
List Of Contributors
vii
Preface: Virtual Futures
Eric J.Cassidy
ix
Acknowledgements
xiii
PART I: OVERLOAD
THE INFORMATION WAR
Hakim Bey
2
PART II: CYBEROTICS
THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY: VENUS
IN MICROSOFT, REMIX
Stephen Pfohl
12
COMING ACROSS THE FUTURE
Sadie Plant
39
ALL NEW GEN
VNS Matrix
48
PART III: CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND
THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY
David Porush
57
VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE
OF SYNTHETIC REASON
Manuel De Landa
85
PART IV: ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
CYBERGOTHIC
Nick Land
103
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vi
FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS
Matteo Mandarini
116
BLACK ICE
lain Hamilton Grant
132
PART V: POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
AUTOGEDDON
Stephen Metcalf
145
FROM PSYCHO-BODY TO CYBER-SYSTEMS: IMAGES 153
AS POST-HUMAN ENTITIES
Stelarc
Postscript: Ground Zero
Joan Broadhurst Dixon
164
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CONTRIBUTORS
Hakim Bey
is the author of T.A.Z.: The Temporary Autonomous Zone, Ontological
Anarchy, Poetic Terrorism, and Radio Sermonettes, amongst other works. His
novel Crowstone: The Chronicles of Qamar was hailed by William Burroughs
as a new sub-genre of literature.
Joan Broadhurst Dixon
is a lecturer at the University of Derby. With Eric J.Cassidy, she organized the
first “Virtual Futures” conference. She was editor of Deleuze and the
Transcendental Unconscious, and is currently working on two books, one on
Deleuze’s philosophy of science, and one entitled Time, Consciousness and
Scientific Explanation.
Eric J.Cassidy
is a Ph.D. candidate in philosophy and literature at the University of Warwick,
England. With Joan Broadhurst Dixon, he is the original organizer of “Virtual
Futures,” and was one of three organizers in 1995. He has written extensively
on the schizoid discourses of Pynchon, Ballard, and Deleuze, in an attempt to
trace their influence on the information age. He is also a past guest editor of
Pynchon Notes.
Manuel de Landa
is the author of War in the Age of Intelligent Machines and the forthcoming
Phylum: A Thousand Years of Non-linear History. He is a video artist and
computer graphics artist living in New York City.
Iain Hamilton Grant
is the translator of J.F.Lyotard’s Libidinal Economy and J.Baudrillard’s
Symbolic Exchange and Death. He has written extensively on the early
Lyotard, postmodernism, and the materialist rhizomatic structure of
information culture.
Nick Land
is a lecturer in Continental Philosophy at the University of Warwick, England.
He is the author of The Thirst for Annihilation: George Bataille and Virulent
Nihilism, and the forthcoming Schizotechnics. He has published numerous
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viii
articles on Kant, Nietzsche, Deleuze and Guattari, and the dark side of
digitalization.
Matteo Mandarini
is a post-graduate philosophy student at the University of Warwick.
Stephen Metcalf
researches cultural studies at the University of Warwick, England. A selfdescribed ex-human writer of noise, his work has been featured at “Virtual
Futures” and he is a regular contributor at the Institute for Contemporary Art
in London.
Stephen Pfohl
is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Boston College, USA, where he
teaches courses on social theory, postmodern culture, deviance and social
control, and images of power. He is the author of Death at the Parasite Cafe:
Social Science (Fictions) and the Postmodern; Predicting Dangerousness: The
Social Construction of Psychiatric Reality; and the forthcoming Venus in
Video: Cybernetics, Male Mas(s)ochism and the Parasitism of Ultramodern
Power. A video-maker, performing artist, and member of Sit Com
International, Pfohl was the 1991–2 President of the Society for the Study of
Social Problems.
Sadie Plant
is the author of The Most Radical Gesture: The Situationist International in
the Postmodern Age, and the forthcoming Beyond the Spectacle, a theoretical
discourse on machines, markets, women, and drugs.
David Porush
teaches in the Department of Language, Literature, and Communication at
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, USA. He is the author of the critical study
The Soft Machine: Cybernetic Fiction, and the short story collection Rope
Dances. He has published numerous essays in scholarly journals.
Stelarc
is a performance artist based in Melbourne.
VNS Matrix
are Australian cyberfeminists. They are the authors of the interactive All New
Gen and perform CorpusFantasticalMOO, a strictly imaginative computergenerated space. They are Virginia Barratt, Francesca da Rimini, Julianne
Pierce, and Josephine Starrs.
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PREFACE
Virtual Futures
Eric J.Cassidy
It was a place he’d known before; not everyone could take him there,
and somehow he always managed to forget it, Something he’d found
and lost so many times. It belonged, he knew—he remembered—as
she pulled him down, to the meat, the flesh the cowboys mocked, It
was a vast thing, beyond knowing, a sea of information coded in
spiral and pheromone, infinite intricacy that only the body, in its
strong blind way, could ever read.
(William Gibson, Neuromancer: 284–5)
Many of the issues surrounding contemporary technology are conditioned by
cultural beliefs as well as temporal dynamics. The reaction to emerging
technologies is usually—and simplistically—divided along a horizontal axis of
paranoid technophobia versus an enthusiastic endorsement of the “revolutionary”
powers of “innovation.” The general theme of such discussions can be
summarized by the assorted political and ethical responses to the questions of
technology and capitalism. Crudely summarized, the “left” political response is
usually populated by a mongrel assortment of anarchists, pacifists, Luddites, and
those benign curmudgeons or academic humanists that the Unabomber found so
touchingly harmless. On the right we find the increasingly popular sentiments of
post-human pragmatism, a neo-extropian blend of pseudoscientific rationalism
that embraces a range of techno advocates, including futurists, ravers, Wired
magazine, and the “chaos” clique of scientific research in non-linear dynamics.
This political and ethical spectrum is nicely framed by a horizontal axis that
clocks the metric movement of historical, linear time, or processes in which
human agency may still have effect.
The essays collected here develop these and other themes surrounding the fusion
of cybernetics and capitalism. Yet a machinic process driving history is
inadequately mapped by a Cartesian model of space and time, unless such
cartography isolates the often neglected thematic of technological evolution, or
the notion of an intensive vertical axis integrating technology with historical
dynamics. As Henry Adams believed, there may indeed be a machinic process
underlying secular history. In such a scenario, intensity is the measure of the
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x
integration of micro and macro scaler phenomena, a fusion of chaos and power,
or the dynamic flux associated with shifting arrangements of material force.
Exploring the perceptual and political effects of scale, machinic history is a
discourse in which the macro reality of global capitalism is not mutually
exclusive from “the body” as a site for engineering the future. Everything is
connected, if only accessible from a certain schizoid perspective.
While these essays occupy various positions from left to the right, neo-Luddite
to radically post-human pragmatism, all take “the body” as an area whose
significance for debates surrounding digital culture and global capitalism is as yet
unexplored. Lost in his distinctly Cartesian view of the human/machine interface
and his phenomenological description of cyberspace is Gibson’s description of
the body. In Neuromancer, the body functions as space, a site where organic
matter mixes with an erotic element of synthetic fatality; a post-human
apocalyptic fusion of cyberspace and eroticism.
These essays explore the future of the body as humans mutate in cyberspace.
Is eroticism a tool for escaping the oppression of contemporary systems society?
Or is desire the missing mechanism that drives technological evolution? What is
“coming across the future”? Where is the body located “‘in’ cyberspace”? Must
some politicized renderings of “the body” require a critique of all mediating
forms of control? Should immanence be understood as a return to the organic, a
naturalism in keeping with a neo-Luddite anarchist position in which the body is
a space with the potential to generate “molecular revolution”? Or is the body a
limit to be transgressed, an organic system that migrates into the outer realms of
“epidermal history,” creating a cyberotic if not synthetic second skin capable of
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xi
functioning as a site for exploring the future? To what extent does the Freud of
“Beyond the Pleasure Principle” understand Thanatos as a drive coming from the
inanimate? Regressing it back beyond the zero, is the death drive the model for a
migrationary current carrying forces through scaled structures of organic matter
in an escalation toward post-carbon pseudo-life? Is return of the repressed the
nightmare vision of Erewhon, a realization that surplus value generated by
runaway positive feedback allows vitality to be swallowed by death transfigured?
Is the dark side of digitalization a countdown to the apocalypse?
If cyberpunk is a world-systems theory, then the schizoid discourses of the
early 1970s are its apocalyptic precursors. Contemporary sci-fi is closely aligned
with a repressed strain of Anglo-American discourse that focuses on Western
culture’s erotic if not evolutionary understanding of technological innovation.
Cyberpunk’s ancestors include the mystic technics of Nova Express, the
technological nihilism of We, the millennial dystopia of Erewhon, and, of course,
the fragmented technique of Finnegan’s Wake. But even this context can
scarcely account for the historical singularity of the early 1970s, a time that
witnessed the radical reformulation of materialist narratives with the publication
of such seminal texts as Crash, Anti-Oedipus, and Libidinal Economy. All these
texts, along with Gravity’s Rainbow, are concerned with the symbiotic relation
between humans and machines, cybernetics and desire, or cyberotics.
In its most general sense, the term cyberotic identifies a particular element of
early 1970s thinking and, at the same time, acts as a bridge to the information
age. Despite the synthesizing power of the term for this collection, cyberotics is
only a suggestion, a bit of nihilistic nomenclature, a fragmented marker that
focuses on the body as the truly contested site of the future. Extrapolating from
the philosophical writings of Deleuze and Guattari, cyberotics attack
psychoanalysis as abstract, rarefied, the essence of representational thinking.
Deleuze and Guattari describe their project in terms of synthesis, or the critical
assimilation of renegade philosophical concepts into a functioning, virtual
machine. They jettison traditional approaches to Freud and Marx in favor of
schizoanalysis: “A truly materialist psychiatry can be defined, on the contrary, by
the twofold task it sets itself: introducing desire into the mechanism, and
introducing production into desire” (Deleuze and Guattari 1974:22). Following a
line of flight prepared by schizoanalysis, this collection is in part a contemporary
mutation on the now tired story of postmodernity; an attempt to describe
emerging technologies using materialist models perhaps best understood as a
fusion of cybernetics (mechanism), economic power (production), and the
technological unconscious (desire).
As VNS Matrix imply, cyberotics are interdisciplinary processes of imaginary
exploration, an attempt “to meet the strange attractors reclining in deep
discursive space.” Materialist criticism or cyberotic production is a bottom-up
synthetic critique. Critiques understood as schizoanalysis, or the importation of
procedures adapted to objects through a discussion of constitutive principles. It is
a philosophy of production, writings that stencil the abstract diagram of
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emerging world-systems and mutating material bodies. The essays included here
attempt just that, varying in style from analytic philosophical prose, to fiction, to
avant-garde postmodern theory. This range is a testament to the various
strategies for engaging with the issues surrounding the fate of the body at the end
of the twentieth century. Whether the aim of cyberotics is to “describe and
deconstruct repressive formations of capital” or accelerate a historical process in
which power—and technology—is out of control, one thing is certain: our
virtual future is already here.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Deleuze, Giles and Felix Guattari (1974) Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia,
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983.
Gibson, William (1986) Neuromancer, London: Grafton Books.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First and foremost, we would like to thank those people associated with the
innovative space provided for graduate research in philosophy at the University
of Warwick. Included in this list are Greg Hunt, Chair of the Department of
Philosophy, Keith Ansell Pearson, and Andrew Benjamin. Heather Jones, the
Secretary for the Centre for Research in Philosophy and Literature, has provided
tremendous support over the last few years for this and numerous other projects.
In particular, we would like to thank Nick Land for his active encouragement
and exemplary commitment to innovative yet rigorous examination of the issues
presented in this collection, and also David Wood who was a reluctant
collaborator in this enterprise.
Adrian Driscoll, our editor at Routledge, has demonstrated infinite patience
and the necessary encouragement to steer this project into the fold. Dan O’Hara
was instrumental in helping organize the last two weeks of the first Virtual
Futures Conference, as well as a conference organizer the following year.
Manuel De Landa’s chapter first appeared in South Atlantic Quarterly, 92(4)
(Fall 1993), © 1993 Duke University Press, and is reprinted with the kind
permission of Duke University Press.
On a more personal note, EJC would like to thank Charles Cassidy for his
understanding over the last few years, while also lamenting the passing of Carol
Cassidy. Time is too short, memory too ephemeral. Likewise, Shannon Langdon
has brought an incisive intellect and iron will to this project, without which it
might never have been completed.
Similarly JBD would like to thank her chronological companions, Roger
Broadhurst, John Collins, and Tim Pearce because they were all there at some
time or another. And Hamilton Dixon with her schizo mothers because they were
always there.
Finally, we would like to thank the graduate students of Warwick University
for all the numerous conversations, drink, and energy. We are after all “the
world’s hardest drinking, most politically incorrect philosophers”!!
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PART I
Over load
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The Information War
Hakim Bey
Humanity has always invested heavily in any scheme that offers escape from the
body. And why not? Material reality is such a mess. Some of the earliest
“religious” artefacts, such as Neanderthal ochre burials, already suggest a belief
in immortality. All modern (i.e., post-paleolithic) religions contain the “Gnostic
Trace” of distrust or even outright hostility to the body and the “created” world.
Contemporary “primitive” tribes and even peasant-pagans have a concept of
immortality and of going-outside-the-body (ec-stasy) without necessarily
exhibiting any excessive body-hatred. The Gnostic Trace accumulates very
gradually (like mercury poisoning) till eventually it turns pathological. Gnostic
dualism exemplifies the extreme position of this disgust by shifting all value
from body to “spirit.” This idea characterizes what we call “civilization.”
A similar trajectory can be traced through the phenomenon of “war.” Hunter/
gatherers practiced (and still practice, as amongst the Yanomamo) a kind of
ritualized brawl (think of the Plains Indian custom of “counting coups”). “Real”
war is a continuation of religion and economics (i.e., politics) by other means,
and thus only begins historically with the priestly invention of “scarcity” in the
Neolithic, and the emergence of a “warrior caste.” (I categorically reject the
theory that “war” is a prolongation of “hunting.”) World War II seems to have
been the last “real” war. Hyperreal war began in Vietnam, with the involvement
of television, and recently reached full obscene revelation in the “Gulf War” of
1994. Hyperreal war is no longer “economic,” no longer “the health of the state.”
The Ritual Brawl is voluntary and non-hierarchic (war chiefs are always
temporary); real war is compulsory and hierarchic; hyperreal war is imagistic and
psychologically interiorized (“Pure War”). In the first the body is risked; in the
second, the body is sacrificed; in the third, the body has disappeared (Clastes
1994).
Modern science also incorporates an anti-materialist bias, the dialectical
outcome of its war against Religion: it has in some sense become Religion.
Science as knowledge of material reality paradoxically decomposes the
materiality of the real.
Science has always been a species of priestcraft, a branch of cosmology; and
an ideology, a justification of “the way things are.” The deconstruction of the
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THE INFORMATION WAR 3
“real” in post-classical physics mirrors the vacuum of irreality which constitutes
“the state.” Once the image of Heaven on Earth, the state now consists of no
more than the management of images. It is no longer a “force” but a disembodied
patterning of information. But just as Babylonian cosmology justified
Babylonian power, so too does the “finality” of modern science serve the ends of
the Terminal State, the post-nuclear state, the “information state.” Or so the New
Paradigm would have it. And “everyone” accepts the axiomatic premisses of the
new paradigm. The new paradigm is very spiritual. Even the New Age with its
gnostic tendencies embraces the New Science and its increasing etherealization
as a source of proof-texts for its spiritualist world-view. Meditation and
cybernetics go hand in hand. Of course the “information state” somehow
requires the support of a police force and prison system that would have stunned
Nebuchadnezzar and reduced all the priests of Moloch to paroxysms of awe. And
“modern science” still can’t weasel out of its complicity in the very-nearlysuccessful “conquest of Nature.” Civilization’s greatest triumph over the body.
But who cares? It’s all “relative” isn’t it? I guess we’ll just have to “evolve”
beyond the body. Maybe we can do it in a “quantum leap.”
Meanwhile, the excessive mediation of the Social, which is carried out through
the machinery of the Media, increases the intensity of our alienation from the
body by fixating the flow of attention on information rather than direct
experience. In this sense the Media serves a religious or priestly role, appearing
to offer us a way out of the body by re-defining spirit as information. The
essence of information is the Image, the sacral and iconic data-complex which
usurps the primacy of the “material bodily principle” as the vehicle of
incarnation, replacing it with a fleshless ecstasy beyond corruption.
Consciousness becomes something which can be “downloaded,” excised from
the matrix of animality and immortalized as information. No longer “ghost-inthe-machine,” but machine-as-ghost, machine as Holy Ghost, ultimate mediator,
which will translate us from our mayfly-corpses to a pleroma of Light. Virtual
Reality as CyberGnosis. Jack in, leave Mother Earth behind forever.
All science proposes a paradigmatic universalism: as in science, so in the
social. Classical physics played midwife to Capitalism, Communism, Fascism,
and other Modern ideologies. Post-classical science also proposes a set of ideas
meant to be applied to the social: Relativity, Quantum “unreality,” cybernetics,
information theory, etc. With some exceptions, the post-classical tendency is
toward ever-greater etherealization. Some proponents of Black Hole theory, for
example, talk like pure Pauline theologians, while some of the information
theorists are beginning to sound like virtual Manichaeans.1
On the level of the social these paradigms give rise to a rhetoric of
bodilessness quite worthy of a third-century desert monk or a seventeenthcentury New England Puritan—but expressed in a language of post-Industrial
post-Modern feel-good consumer frenzy. Our every conversation is infected with
certain paradigmatic assumptions which are really no more than bald assertions,
but which we take for the very fabric or Urgrund of Reality itself. For instance,
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4 OVER LOAD
since we now assume that computers represent a real step toward “artificial
intelligence,” we also assume hat buying a computer makes us more intelligent.
In my own field I’ve met dozens of writers who sincerely believe that owning a
PC has made them better (not “more efficient,” but better) writers. This is
amusing— but the same feeling about computers when applied to a trillion-dollar
military budget, churns out Star Wars, killer robots, etc.2
An important part of this rhetoric involves the concept of an “information
economy.” The post-Industrial world is now thought to be giving birth to this
new economy. One of the clearest examples of the concept can be found in a
recent book by a man who is a Libertarian, the Bishop of a Gnostic Dualist
Church in California, and a learned and respected writer for Gnosis magazine:
The industry of the past phase of civilization (sometimes called “low
technology”) was big industry, and bigness always implies oppressiveness.
The new high technology, however, is not big in the same way, While the
old technology produced and distributed material resources, the new
technology produces and disseminates information. The resources
marketed in high technology are less about matter and more about mind,
Under the impact of high technology, the world is moving increasingly
from a physical economy into what might be called a “metaphysical
economy.” We are in the process of recognizing that consciousness rather
than raw materials or physical resources constitute wealth.
(Hoeller 1992:229–30)
Modern neo-Gnosticism usually plays down the old Manichaean attack on the
body for gentler, greener rhetoric. Bishop Hoeller, for instance, stresses the
importance of ecology and environment (because we don’t want to “foul our
nest,” the Earth)—but in his chapter on Native American spirituality he implies
that a cult of the Earth is clearly inferior to the pure Gnostic spirit of
bodilessness:
But we must not forget that the nest is not the same as the bird. The
exoteric and esoteric traditions declare that earth is not the only home for
human beings, that we did not grow like weeds from the soil. While our
bodies indeed may have originated on this earth, our inner essence did not.
To think otherwise puts us outside of all of the known spiritual traditions
and separates us from the wisdom of the seers and sages of every age.
Though wise in their own ways, Native Americans have small connection
with this rich spiritual heritage.
(Hoeller 1992:164)
In such terms (the body=the “savage”), the Bishop’s hatred and disdain for the
flesh illuminate every page of his book. In his enthusiasm for a truly religious
economy, he forgets that one cannot eat “information.” “Real wealth” can never
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THE INFORMATION WAR 5
become immaterial until humanity achieves the final etherealization of
downloaded consciousness. Information in the form of culture can be called
wealth metaphorically because it is useful and desirable— but it can never be
wealth in precisely the same basic way that oysters and cream, or wheat and
water, are wealth in themselves. Information is always only information about
some thing. Like money, information is not the thing itself. Over time we can
come to think of money as wealth (as in a delightful Taoist ritual which refers to
“Water and Money” as the two most vital principles in the universe), but in truth
this is sloppy abstract thinking. It has allowed its focus of attention to wander
from the bun to the penny which symbolizes the bun.3
In effect we’ve had an “information economy” ever since we invented money.
But we still haven’t learned to digest copper. The Aesopian crudity of these
truisms embarrasses me, but I must perforce play the stupid lazy yokel plowing a
crooked furrow when all the straight thinkers around me appear to be
hallucinating. Americans and other “First World” types seem particularly
susceptible to the rhetoric of a “metaphysical economy” because we can no
longer see (or feel or smell) around us very much evidence of a physical world.
Our architecture has become symbolic, we have enclosed ourselves in the
manifestations of abstract thought (cars, apartments, offices, schools), we work
at “service” or information-related jobs, helping in our little way to move
disembodied symbols of wealth around an abstract grid of Capital, and we spend
our leisure largely engrossed in Media rather than in direct experience of
material reality. The material world for us has come to symbolize catastrophes,
as in our amazingly hysterical reaction to storms and hurricanes (proof that
we’ve failed to “conquer Nature” entirely), or our neo-Puritan fear of sexual
otherness, or our taste for bland and denatured (almost abstract) food. And yet,
this “First World” economy is not self-sufficient. It depends for its position (top
of the pyramid) on a vast substructure of old-fashioned material production.
Mexican farm-workers grow and package all that “Natural” food for us so we
can devote our time to stocks, insurance, law, computers, video games. Peons in
Taiwan make silicon chips for our PCs. Towel-heads in the Middle East suffer
and die for our sins. Life? Oh, our servants do that for us. We have no life, only
“lifestyle”—an abstraction of life, based on the sacred symbolism of the
Commodity, mediated by the priesthood of the stars, those “larger than life”
abstractions who rule our values and people our dreams—the mediarchetypes; or
perhaps mediarchs would be a better term.
Of course this Baudrillardian dystopia doesn’t really exist—yet.4 It’s
surprising, however, to note how many social radicals consider it a desirable
goal, at least as long as it’s called the “Information Revolution” or something
equally inspiring. Leftists talk about seizing the means of information-production
from the data-monopolists.5 In truth, information is everywhere—even atom
bombs can be constructed on plans available in public libraries. As Noam
Chomsky points out, one can always access information—provided one has a
private income and a fanaticism bordering on insanity. Universities and “think
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6 OVER LOAD
tanks” make pathetic attempts to monopolize information—they too are dazzled
by the notion of an information economy—but their conspiracies are laughable.
Information may not always be “free,” but there’s a great deal more of it
available than any one person could ever possibly use. Books on every
conceivable subject can actually still be found through inter-library loan.6
Meanwhile, someone still has to grow pears and cobble shoes. Or, even if these
“industries” can be completely mechanized, someone still has to eat pears and
wear shoes. The body is still the basis of wealth. The idea of Images as wealth is
a “spectacular delusion.”
Even a radical critique of “information” can still give rise to an over-valuation
of abstraction and data. In a “pro-situ” zine from England called NO, the
following message was scrawled messily across the back cover of a recent issue:
As you read these words, the Information Age explodes…inside and
around you—with the Misinformation Missiles and Propaganda bombs of
outright Information Warfare,
Traditionally, war has been fought for territory/economic gain.
Information Wars are fought for the acquisition of territory indigenous to
the Information Age, i.e., the human mind itself. In particular, it is the
faculty of the imagination that is under the direct threat of extinction from
the onslaughts of multi-media overload…. DANGER—YOUR
IMAGINATION MAY NOT BE YOUR OWN…. As a culture
sophisticates, it deepens its reliance on its images, icons and symbols as a
way of defining itself and communicating with other cultures. As the
accumulating mix of a culture’s images floats around in its collective
psyche, certain isomorphic icons coalesce to produce and to project an
“illusion” of reality. Fads, fashions, artistic trends. U KNOW THE SCORE.
“I can take their images for reality because I believe in the reality of their
images (their image of reality),” WHOEVER CONTROLS THE
METAPHOR GOVERNS THE MIND. The conditions of total saturation
are slowly being realized —a creeping paralysis—from the trivialization of
special/technical knowledge to the specialization of trivia. The
INFORMATION WAR is a war we cannot afford to lose. The result is
unimaginable.7
I find myself very much in sympathy with the author’s critique of media here,
yet I also feel that a demonization of “information” has been proposed which
consists of nothing more than the mirror-image of information-as-salvation.
Again Baudrillard’s vision of the Commtech Universe is evoked, but this time as
Hell rather than as the Gnostic Hereafter. Bishop Hoeller wants everybody
jacked-in and down-loaded —the anonymous post-situationist ranter wants you
to smash your telly—but both of them believe in the mystic power of
information. One proposes the pax technologica, the other declares “war.” Both
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THE INFORMATION WAR 7
exude a kind of Manichaean view of Good and Evil, but can’t agree on which is
which.
The critical theorist swims in a sea of facts. We like to imagine it also as our
maquis, with ourselves as the “guerilla ontologists” of its datascape. Since the
nineteenth century the evermutating “social sciences” have unearthed a vast
hoard of information on everything from shamanism to semiotics. Each
“discovery” feeds back into “social science” and changes it. We drift. We fish
for poetic facts, data which will intensify and mutate our experience of the real.
We invent new hybrid “sciences” as tools for this process: ethnopharmacology,
ethnohistory, cognitive studies, history of ideas, subjective anthropology
(anthropological poetics or ethno-poetics), “dada epistemology,” etc. We look on
all this knowledge not as “good” in itself, but valuable only inasmuch as it helps
us to seize or to construct our own happiness. In this sense we do know of
“information as wealth”; nevertheless we continue to desire wealth itself and not
merely its abstract representation as information. At the same time we also know
of “information as war”;8 nevertheless, we have not decided to embrace
ignorance just because “facts” can be used like a poison gas. Ignorance is not
even an adequate defense, much less a useful weapon in this war. We attempt
neither to fetishize nor demonize “information.” Instead we try to establish a set
of values by which information can be measured and assessed. Our standard in
this process can only be the body.
According to certain mystics, spirit and body is “one.” Certainly spirit has lost
its ontological solidity (since Nietzsche, anyway), while body’s claim to “reality”
has been undermined by modern science to the point of vanishing in a cloud of
“pure energy.” So why not assume that spirit and body are one, after all, and that
they are twin (or dyadic) aspects of the same underlying and inexpressible real?
No body without spirit, no spirit without body. The Gnostic Dualists are wrong,
as are the vulgar “dialectical materialists.” Body and spirit together make life. If
either pole is missing, the result is death. This constitutes a fairly simple set of
values, assuming we prefer life to death. Obviously I’m avoiding any strict
definitions of either body or spirit. I’m speaking of “empirical” everyday
experiences. We experience “spirit” when we dream or create; we experience
“body” when we eat or shit (or maybe vice versa); we experience both at once
when we make love. I’m not proposing metaphysical categories here. We’re still
drifting and these are ad hoc points of reference, nothing more. We needn’t be
mystics to propose this version of “one reality.” We need only point out that no
other reality has yet appeared within the context of our knowable experience.
For all practical purposes, the “world” is “one.”9
Historically, however, the “body” half of this unity has always received the
insults, bad press, scriptural condemnation, and economic persecution of the
“spirit” half. The self-appointed representatives of the spirit have called almost
all the tunes in known history, leaving the body only a pre-history of primitive
disappearance, and a few spasms of failed insurrectionary futility. Spirit has ruled
—hence we scarcely even know how to speak the language of the body. When we
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8 OVER LOAD
use the word “information” we reify it because we have always reified
abstractions—ever since God appeared as a burning bush. (Information as the
catastrophic decorporealization of “brute” matter.) We would now like to
propose the identification of self with body. We’re not denying that “the body is
also spirit,” but we wish to restore some balance to the historical equation. We
calculate all body-hatred and world-slander as our “evil.” We insist on the revival
(and mutation) of “pagan” values concerning the relation of body and spirit. We
fail to feel any great enthusiasm for the “information economy” because we see
it as yet another mask for body-hatred. We can’t quite believe in the
“information war,” since it also hypostatizes information but labels it “evil.”
In this sense, “information” would appear to be neutral. But we also distrust
this third position as a lukewarm cop-out and a failure of theoretical vision.
Every “fact” takes different meanings as we run it through our dialectical
prism10 and study its gleam and shadows. The “fact” is never inert or “neutral,”
but it can be both “good” and “evil” (or beyond them) in countless variations and
combinations. We, finally, are the artists of this immeasurable discourse. We
create values. We do this because we are alive. Information is as big a “mess” as
the material world it reflects and transforms. We embrace the mess, all of it. It’s
all life. But within the vast chaos of the alive, certain information and certain
material things begin to coalesce into a poetics or a way-of-knowing or a way-ofacting. We can draw certain pro tem “conclusions,” as long as we don’t plaster
them over and set them up on altars.
Neither “information” nor indeed any one “fact” constitutes a thing-in-itself.
The very word “information” implies an ideology, or rather a paradigm, rooted in
unconscious fear of the “silence” of matter and of the universe. “Information” is
a substitute for certainty, a left-over fetish of dogmatics, a super-stitio, a spook.
“Poetic facts” are not assimilable to the doctrine of “information.” “Knowledge
is freedom” is true only when freedom is understood as a psycho-kinetic skill.
“Information” is chaos; knowledge is the spontaneous ordering of that chaos;
freedom is the surfing of the wave of that spontaneity.
These tentative conclusions constitute the shifting and marshy ground of our
“theory.” The TAZ (temporary autonomous zone) wants all information and all
bodily pleasure in a great complex confusion of sweet data and sweet dates—
facts and feasts— wisdom and wealth. This is our economy—and our war.
NOTES
1 The new “life” sciences offer some dialectical opposition here, or could do so if
they worked through certain paradigms. Chaos theory seems to deal with the
material world in positive ways, as does Gaia theory, morphogenetic theory, and
various other “soft” and “neo-hermetic” disciplines. Elsewhere I’ve attempted to
incorporate these philosophical implications into a “festal” synthesis. The point is
not to abandon all thought about the material world, but to realize that all science
has philosophical and political implications, and that science is a way of thinking,
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THE INFORMATION WAR 9
not a dogmatic structure of incontrovertible Truth. Of course quantum, relativity,
and information theory are all “true” in some way and can be given a positive
interpretation. I’ve already done that in several essays. Now I want to explore the
negative aspects.
2 See the work of Manuel De Landa on Artificial Intelligence in modern weaponry
(De Landa 1991).
3 Like Pavlov’s dog salivating at the dinner bell rather than the dinner: a perfect
illustration of what I mean by “abstraction.”
4 Although some might say that it already “virtually” exists. I just heard from a
friend in California of a new scheme for “universal prisons”—offenders will be
allowed to live at home and go to work but will be electronically monitored at all
times, like Winston Smith in 1984. The universal panopticon now potentially
coincides one-to-one with the whole of reality; life and work will take the place of
outdated physical incarceration: the Prison Society will merge with “electronic
democracy” to form a Surveillance State or information totality, with all time and
space compacted beneath the unsleeping gaze of RoboCop. On the level of pure
tech, at least, it would seem that we have at last arrived at “the future.” “Honest
citizens” of course will have nothing to fear; hence terror will reign unchallenged
and Order will triumph like the Universal Ice, Our only hope may lie in the
“chaotic perturbation” of massively-linked computers, and in the venal stupidity or
boredom of those who program and monitor the system.
5 I will always remember with pleasure being addressed, by a Bulgarian delegate to a
conference I once attended, as a “fellow worker in philosophy,” Perhaps the
capitalist version would be “entrepreneur in philosophy,” as if one bought ideas
like apples at roadside stands.
6 Of course information may sometimes be “occult,” as in Conspiracy Theory.
Information may be “disinformation,” Spies and propagandists make up a kind of
shadow “information economy,” to be sure, Hackers who believe in “freedom of
information” have my sympathy, espcially since they’ve been picked as the latest
enemies of the Spectacular State, and subjected to its spasms of control-by-terror,
But hackers have yet to “liberate” a single bit of information useful in our struggle.
Their impotence, and their fascination with Imagery, make them ideal victims of
the “Information State,” which itself is based on pure simulation. One needn’t steal
data from the post-military-industrial complex to know, ‘in general, what it’s up to.
We understand enough to form our critique, More information by itself will never
take the place of the actions we have failed to carry out; data by itself wil never
reach critical mass. Despite my loving debt to thinkers like Robert Anton Wilson
and Timothy Leary I cannot agree with their optimistic analysis of the cognitive
function of information technology. It is not neural system alone which will
achieve autonomy, but the entire body.
7 Issue 6, “Nothing is True,” Box 175, Liverpool L69 8DX, United Kingdom.
8 Indeed, the whole “poetic terrorism” project has been proposed only as a strategy in
this very war.
9 The “‘World is ‘one’” can be and has been used to justify a totality, a metaphysical
ordering of “reality” with a “center” or “apex:” one God, one King, etc., etc. This is
the monism of orthodoxy, which naturally opposes Dualism and its other source of
power (“evil”)—orthodoxy also presupposes that the One occupies a higher
ontological position than the Many, that transcendence takes precedence over
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10 OVER LOAD
immanence. What I call radical (or heretical) monism demands unity of one and
Many on the level of immanence; hence it is seen by Orthodoxy as a turningupside-down or saturnalia which proposes that every “one” is equally “divine.”
Radical monism is “on the side of the Many—which explains why it seems to lie at
the heart of pagan polytheism and shamanism, as well as extreme forms of
monotheism such as Ismailism or Ranterism, based on “inner light” teachings. “All
is one,” therefore, can be spoken by any kind of monist or anti-dualist and can
mean many different things.
10 A proposal: the new theory of taoist dialectics. Think of the yin/yang disc, with a
spot of black in the white lozenge, and vice versa—separated not by a straight line
but an S-curve. Amiri Baraka says that dialectics is just “separating out the good
from the bad”—but the taoist is “beyond good and evil.” The dialectic is supple, but
the taoist dialectic is downright sinuous. For example, making use of the taoist
dialectic, we can re-evaluate Gnosis once again. True, it presents a negative view
of the body and of becoming. But it is true also that it has played the role of the
eternal rebel against all orthodoxy, and this makes it interesting. In its libertine and
revolutionary manifestations the Gnosis possesses many secrets, some of which are
actually worth knowing. The organizational forms of Gnosis—the crackpot cult,
the secret society—seem pregnant with possibilities for the TAZ/lmmediatist
project. Of course, as I’ve pointed out elsewhere, not all gnosis is Dualistic. There
also exists a monist gnostic tradition, which sometimes borrows heavily from
Dualism and is often confused with it. Monist gnosis is anti-eschatological, using
religious language to describe this world, not Heaven or the Gnostic Pleroma.
Shamanism, certain “crazy” forms of Taoism and Tantra and Zen, heterodox sufism
and Ismailism, Christian antinomians such as the Ranters, etc. share a conviction of
the holiness of the “inner spirit,” and of the actually real, the “world.” These are
our “spiritual ancestors.”
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Clastes, P. (1994) The Archeology of Violence, New York: Semiotext(e).
De Landa, M. (1991) War in the Age of Intelligent Machines, New York: Zone Books.
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P. 25
PART II
Cyberotics
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P. 26
Theses on the Cyberotics of HIStory: Venus in
Microsoft, remix
Stephen Pfohl
One evening as the moon is waning radon, I spy the telematic form of a blonde
on blonde goddess at the cinema. Maybe I’m s/he. Her filmic body ablaze to my
projective pleasure, her bare legs sex lips ass open to the always only partial
visible “ends of Man.” For the price of a ticket I get to participate in a dreamy
bending of industrial taboos escaping HIStory. I feel at once anxious and numb.
This is fascinating. I watch myself watching myself watching my fantasies while
watching my fantasies watching myself. This is I. Just look at the statistics.
At the film’s climax a stony cold Goddess dressed in nothing but furs stands
transfigured as a blank-faced male double showers her with spurts of white liquid
CAPITAL. Maybe I’m s/he. I am transferred into the microsoft: aroused and
electric. This is my body—a telematic exchange of faith leaping screen to
screen. This is whitemale techno-magic. This is obscene. This is fascinating. The
next thing I know they’re strapping me into a cockpit and blind-folding me with
information. “Baghdad’s your target,” I hear a white man in black face saying.
These are my orders. “Jack off as often as you want. Nobody will say; nobody
will see; nobody will smell a thing.”
As I was returning from my devotions, the thought came to mind that no house
without a TV is a home (to me). I entered the always open VIDEO PALACE,
feeling more sovereign than solid state and more (trans)sexual than ever. Mouth
to screen to mouth: I was hungry and wanted what’s more than bodies can give.
Suddenly I saw a woman’s figure glowing electric. As beautiful as celluloid, she
was separated from me by nothing but a cold screen of data. I was confident I’d
access her image. Maybe s/he was I. It seemed as if the PRETTY WOMAN from
the screen had taken pity on me, come alive, and followed me home in a plastic
bag. I was seized by a nameless fear, my heart threatened to burst (SacherMasoch 1989:66).
I
The story is told of an automaton constructed in such a way that it could play a
winning game of JEOPARDY, answering each of its opponents’ memories with
a counter-memory. An orphan in World Beat attire and something unnameable in
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 13
its mouth sat before the game bored flashing to the home viewing audience. A
system of screens created the illusion that this game was transparent from all
sides. Actually, a little parasite who was an expert JEOPARDY player sat inside
and guided the orphan’s maneuvers by remote control. One can imagine a
geographical counterpart to this device. The orphan called “HIStorical
materialist geography” is partially to win, just as it loses itself in the timely
conjuring of alternative spaces. It can uneasily become a power-reflexive match
for anybody if it but enlists the services of radical atheology, which today, as we
know, is wizened and has to keep out of sight. In mass demonstrations against
the U.S.-led attack on Iraq all the anarchists wore masks.
II
When something becomes a structural possibility it is constituted as functionally
effective, factually objective and morally valued or economic. This is what
distinguishes a structural possibility from the fleshy contingencies of totemic
simulation. Structural possibilities parasite off what (modern) powers render
absent. This is no universal law. This is a way of trying both to describe and
deconstruct the constitutive violence of white patriarchal CAPITAL
For better and for worse. Like the soul of a commodity, or the cut-up subjectivity
of women, slaves and wage laborers, persons tattooed by modern power are cast
as tragic actors, whose every thought is scripted by an agency of white letters.
This is a way of describing discursive language— representational rites enacted
by men whose words one can bank on. Credit-worthy men; men who have much
to give to (and thus take away from) the ritual scenes they govern. These are
scenes of imperial technology or white magic.
Like all forms of technology (or magic) these white magical scenes operate in
the shadows of what appears more originary—the space of sacrifice, elementary
religious forms, scientific displacements, or whatever. By contrast, technologies
of black magic simulate the disabling powers of sacrifice. In so doing, they
return the fantastic surplus that separates them from others. This is what make
black magic technology so seductive and so healing. Practitioners of white magic
technologies, on the other hand, labor to cover over the gaps: securing the losses,
extending the boundaries, exacting a fetishized surplus as profit.
Not far from the space in which I’m (w)riting there is a transnational bio-tech
firm named NARCISSUS. Its business is both ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
and VIRTUAL REALITY. Its business is the rearrangement of entertaining
memories for maximal profit and the forgetting of everything else. Its business is
war or the (sacrificial) production of orphans. This business, an extension of
sadism, or the masterful male dream of purified enlightenment, involves both more
and less than sadism. This business is mas(s)ochistic in the general economic
sense of the word. It offers an image of pain or unhappiness as indissolubly
BOUND UP with an image of redemption or liberation—the ecstasy of
communication. This business blurs the sexualized difference between tragedy
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14 CYBEROTICS
(where things appear in the form of their doubles) and farce (where even doubled
revolution is premodeled for user-friendly markets world-wide). The same
applies to our view of boundaries, which is the concern of geography. There
today appears to be a secret agreement between those (of us) on the outside and
those parts of us that are stupidly in the know. This is indistinction, not simply
victimization. But on all sides the business of mas(s)ochism parasites off
whatever differences remain. These claims cannot be settled cheaply.
HIStorically material geographers are aware of that, even if melancholic about
prospects for redemption.
III
A cartographer who maps spaces without distinguishing between major and
minor acts in accordance with the following truth: no events should be lost for
cyberotic geography. To be sure, only a partially redeemed (or power reflexive)
human/animalkind is given to heterogeneous spatiality—which is to say, its
range of self-limiting structural possibilities become (ex)citable as ritual bindings
and boundaries spin vertiginously. This is ruinous awareness. It is stupid to wait
for some final Judgment Day when here in the space between us we might be
touched by a more poetic form of geography, a cyberotic geography that plays
back upon itself in orphaned waves and (dis)autobiographical musing. But isn’t
such cursed geography condemned to silence and the chaos of dark laughter?
Perhaps that’s just the point (at which such a wicked form of geography begins
again and again and again).
IV
Seek for signs of food and clothing first, then the Symbolic Order
shall be added onto you, if at the same time subtracted from your
bodies.
(Black Madonna Durkheim)
The class struggle, which is always partially present to a cyberotic geographer
influenced by Marx, is a fight for the material and imaginary spaces of memory.
Nevertheless, it is not in the form of the spoils which fall to the victor that
the latter make their presence felt in the class struggle, They manifest
themselves in this struggle as courage, humor, cunning, and fortitude. They
have a retroactive force and will constantly call in question every victory,
past and present, of the rulers.
(Benjamin1969a:254–5)
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 15
An erotic geographer must be aware of this most inconspicuous of
transformations—the contradictory accessing of spaces in excess of a given
order of things in time.
At 8 o’clock on June 23, 1787 in the heat of revolutionary CAPITAList
expansion (of the “Rights of Man” over “Nature”), the Marquis de Sade began
composing a new novel. A preliminary note reads: “Two [orphaned] sisters, one,
extremely dissipated (Juliette), has a happy, rich and successful life; the other
(Justine), extremely strait-laced, falls into a thousand traps, which end by causing
her ruin” (Cleugh 1951:107). Justine’s story was completed first. It appeared in
1791, the year in which the new French Penal Code announced mathematically
precise punishments for each and every infraction of the law. This was also the
year of the Voodoo-inspired revolt of Africans enslaved by the French in Haiti.
It is tempting to read Sade’s pornographic enclosure of Justine’s orphaned body
as a monstrous allegory of a New World Order of economic restrictions. The
libertines who assault Justine inscribe their truths upon her skin, penetrating her
with rational logic and the promise of control. Justine resists being incorporated
into this narrative of Western (male) desire, but her resistance brings nothing but
tragedy. She is tortured and raped, and although she tries to escape, there is no
escape. Unlike her Haitian counterparts, Justine is on her own. She is denied
what African slaves kept secretly alive—ritual access to spaces less vulnerable to
the narcissistic terrors and death-defying promises of CAPITALized selfhood.
Her hopes for better futures LIE (nostalgically) in the past. She is slain by the
electricity of this novel moment in HIStory.
Justine’s death is tragic. This is not the case with her sister. Juliette is an
orphan who mutates in accordance with the structural possibilities of an
unprecedented space of modern subjectivity. Hers is a story of the farcical
pleasures offered (even, if in contradictory ways, to women) by giving oneself
over to the cynical demands of life within the disciplinary thickness of one’s own
skin. Juliette’s story appears in 1797. Unlike Justine, she prostitutes herself,
becoming a “grand thief” and property owner. This is HIStory. Juliette is well
paid for her sacrifices. At the end of her novel existence she dies at peace, well
defended from those she parasites.
Between the (w)ritings of one orphan sister and anOther the world has
changed. Justine could not be rationally persuaded, but her sister is seduced into
a new form of sadistic training. She has been converted to the ways of modern
men by a corrupt abbess in charge of the orphans’ education. She joins in the
educative process, or so it appears in the (w)ritings of sadism. As Foucault
remarks, between Justine’s text and Juliette’s, a new form of power has entered
the world, a new form of parasitism. It feeds ruinously upon all that remains
outside the narcissistic confines of the normalized ego.
The disciplinary hollowing out of interior psychic space has begun. In this,
[V]iolence, life and death, desire, and sexuality will extend, below the
level of representation, an immense expanse of shade which we are now
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16 CYBEROTICS
attempting to recover, as far as we can, in our discourse, in our freedom, in
our thought, But our thought is so brief, our freedom so enslaved, our
discourse so repetitive, that we must face the fact that that expanse of
shade below is really a bottomless sea. The prosperities of Juliette are still
more solitary—and endless.
(Foucault 1970:210–11)
V
The true picture of cyberotic spaces barred from what is structurally possible flits
by. Such spaces are recognizable only as images which flash by in an instant;
fleeting gaps that defy words, leftovers from some unacknowledged sacrificial
meal. These uncanny spaces involve the ghostly reappearance of what’s been
made to disappear; seeing what’s been rendered as unseeable; hearing what’s
been silenced; tasting what’s forbidden; touched by the smell of rotting fruit.
During the first half of the nineteenth century such useless spaces were by no
means forgotten (or fully repressed) by those most sacrificed for the sadistic
expansion of CAPITAL. Whole classes fought back, only to be defeated by
superior military and industrial force. In 1848, while CAPITAL spread westward
across the U.S., deploying wholesale genocide and slavery, in Europe resistance
disrupted the geography of the market nearly everywhere—but not for long. The
revolutions of 1848 were met with excessive state violence. The brutal
subordination of Czech proletarians in Prague was a case in point. One of the
bloodiest restorations of CAPITAList power, the suppression of the popular
uprising in Prague, was also a scene of sacrifice witnessed by a 10-year-old boy,
Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. His father was the Chief of Police.
Two years earlier, the young Masoch had been exposed to similar stories of
violence in Galacia, a district forming the northeast corner of the Austrian
Empire. During a revolt of Polish landlords that turned into a three-party war
involving nationalistic aristocrats, Polish peasants and the Austrian army,
fantastic scenarios of revolt were met by even greater counter-revolutionary
violence. Tales of indiscriminate massacres—mass hangings, burnings, torture,
and burials alive—passed into the ears of the Police Chief’s son. Masoch’s
memories of such revolutionary defeats did more than fuel a passion for
repeating such ill-fated dramas in the spectacles he staged with tin soldiers and
puppets. They also provided a material context for the imaginative form of (w)
riting with which his name has come to be associated, and for the paradoxical
pleasures and pains such (w)ritings elicit in HIStory. From the nineteenth century
to the present, Mas(s)ochism signifies a contradictory erotic flight-path from the
disciplinary confines of sadistic CAPITAList expansion.
In both his immediate family situation, where Leopold found himself
enamored by the seductive charms of his scandalous paternal aunt, the Countess
Zenobia, and in his memories of the HIStorical scenery of defeated revolutions,
the role of powerful Slavic women loomed large. Indeed, within the cultural
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 17
geographies of Galacia and Prague there circulated many stories of the public
actions of brave and powerful women. One curious aspect of the 1846 Polish
rebellion in Galacia involved women in “a fantastic plan for the strangling of
their Austrian dancing partners at a great military ball in Lemberg. Wires were to
be fitted to the necks of the officers as an incident in a sort of allegorical masque,
then applied in grim earnest” (Cleugh 1951:154). Although a death in the
Hapsburg family led to the cancellation of officers’ plans to attend the ball, thus
derailing this cunning act of rebellion, Leopold himself forever related stories
about the bravery of women during the bloody events in Prague. He
used to tell his friends…that he had been out on the barricades, as a boy of
twelve, with a girl cousin named Miroslava, some years older than himself.
She wore a beautiful fur jacket, he would say, and carried pistols in her
belt. She ordered him about, shouted commands, he hastened to obey.
Amid these scenes of death and destruction he conceived a passionate
adoration of her.
(Cleugh 1951:155)
Mythic in appearance, these images of women’s power were translated by
Masoch into allegories of men giving themselves as consenting slaves to cruel
female tyrants. This represents a fantastic (if also fantastically distorted) mode of
keeping alive certain images of resistance to the sadistic male demands of profitdriven CAPITAL. This is to read subversive, if contradictory, male pleasures in
Masoch’s tales and the mas(s)ochistic rites for which they are culturally
emblematic.
A century later, Barbara Ehrenreich would locate a related space of
contradictory subversion in the pornographic rituals of middle-class U.S. men. In
The Hearts of Men, Ehrenreich theorizes that—if only in fantasy—these men
were able partially to escape CAPITAL boredom by giving themselves in
masturbatory pleasure—not to fleshy women—but to glossy Playboy centerfolds
(Ehrenreich 1983). Without condoning pornography’s distorted representations of
women, Ehrenreich argues that the contradictory pleasures of having fantasized
sex with glossy magazine images may have engendered spaces not fully
integrated into the disciplined patriarchal circuitry of post-World War II
CAPITAL. Within the historical geography of the moment, these perverse spaces
—although susceptible to further colonization—made visible contradictions that
might, otherwise, have remained disguised. For indeed, “every image…that is not
in some way recognized by the present as one of its own concerns t0hreatens to
disappear entirely” (Benjamin 1969a:255).
VI
To articulate spaces of a contradictory erotic possibility does not mean to
recognize the totality of all geographical relations at a given point of time. It
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18 CYBEROTICS
means, instead, to attend to the form of a particular fantasy as it flashes up at a
moment of danger. Erotic geography wishes to reflex upon that image of space
which unexpectedly appears in a terrain fraught with bodily and/or psychic
danger. For the critical geographer is vigilant in the awareness that in order to
spark hope in the realizability of less hierarchical spaces, one must be “firmly
convinced that even the dead will not be safe from the enemy if he wins. And
this enemy has not ceased to be victorious” (Benjamin 1969a:255).
As a professor of HIStory, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch believed this as well.
Masoch suffered passions which he read as symptomatic of a diseased culture—a
society haunted by the failure of revolutions to stem the sadistic spread of
CAPITAL. Masoch’s published texts are typically read as pornographic tales of
excessive male submission to the cold tyranny of cruel women masters, among
them various figurations of “Mother Nature.” These stories are better understood
as elements of Masoch’s life-long project of allegorical social commentary.
Indeed, Venus in Furs, the classic text of mas(s)ochistic male literature, was
itself part of a series of six stories which were to figure as but one of six larger
cycles comprising The Heritage of Cain (Sacher-Masoch 1989). Masoch selected
this title to suggest “the burden of crime and suffering” that had become the
cursed heritage of modern “men,” for whom nature was nothing but an icy cold
Mother. As Gilles Deleuze points out, “the coldness of the stern mother is in
reality a transmutation from which the new man [of CAPITAList modernity]
emerges” (Deleuze 1989:12).
Venus in Furs, along with The Wanderer, The Man of Surrenders, Moonlight
Night, Plato’s Love, and Marzella, constituted the first phase of this cycle.
Published under the title Love, these controversial texts provocatively mirror and
excessively articulate the sickening impossibilities of enacting free and generous
forms of erotic exchange in a society governed by self-serving economic
contracts. By “‘desexualizing’ love and at the same time sexualizing the entirety
HIStory of humanity,” Masoch’s (w)ritings cross his own biographical desires
with the parasitic economic exigencies of CAPITAL (Deleuze 1989:12).
The texts comprising Love were completed in 1870. The following year,
international CAPITAL violently closed in upon the heterogeneous, nonauthoritarian, and vernacular erotic geographies defended to death by the Paris
Commune. Before being massacred, the Commune conjured into existence a
form of space conceived “not as a static reality but as active, generative [and]
created by interaction, as something that our bodies reactivate, and…in turn
modifies and transforms us” (Ross 1988:35). The spatial erotics engendered by
the commune, like the remaining cycles of Masoch’s The Heritage of Cain,
would remain forever fragmentary and incomplete. Indeed, the proposed names
for the remaining cycles in The Heritage of Cain are suggestive of ritual
enclosures dominating the Western imagination of erotic life during the late
nineteenth century—Property, The State, War, Work, and Death.
Masoch’s life ended in fragments as well. Blocked by personal, HIStorical,
and geographic circumstances from forming more reciprocal alliances with
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 19
others, Masoch—like Sade before him— retreated into the imaginary pleasures of
male fantasy, until the fantasies imploded and left Masoch striking out in mad
rage at the woman he called his wife. But by then, Masoch was old and his
prestigious literary reputation slipping. On March 9, 1895, Masoch, an author
compared to the greatest of his European contemporaries, was committed to an
insane asylum in Mannheim.
During his lifetime, Masoch’s literary and personal fantasies were already
(mis)diagnosed by the psychiatrist Kraft-Ebbing as passive counterparts to
Sade’s. A more careful reading of Masoch’s texts suggests something more
contradictory. Masoch’s (w)ritings engendered ambivalent spaces of erotic
fantasy in excess of the dominant discourses of his time. In this, Masoch’s
allegorical narratives, with their ambivalent displays of fantastic male
submission, foreshadowed aspects of the erotic geography of the emerging
industrial masses. Like Masoch’s male protagonists, the masses may have
ritually absorbed, rather than identified with, CAPITAL’s most virulent
economic restrictions. This is not to suggest that perverse spaces of erotic
resistance are ever free of the violence of CAPITAL Nor are they timeless.
Indeed, less than a half century after Masoch’s death in 1905, the mas(s)ochistic
spaces prefigured in texts such as Venus in Furs would play host to a new and
more flexible form of CAPITAL. But even here the enclosures are not fully
sealed. Unlike the demonstrative negations of law embodied in Sade’s criminal
irony, mas(s)ochistic (w)ritings float suspended in dense and imaginative layers
of aestheticized disavowal.1
More allusive than frontal in their artful plays of resistance, and more seductive
than declarative in their deployment of signs, Masoch’s texts—like the hyperconformity of the “masses” imagined by Baudrillard—threaten to disappear into
the cool enclosures of an imaginary that is void of interpretive reference. This
poses a challenging dilemma to the culture of CAPITAL. How might the secrets
informing such popular and literary practices be recuperatively mastered? How,
in other words, might such perverse bodies of (w)riting be made to work for a
system that demands their incorporation? Certainly not by force alone. Virtually
nobody is forcing anybody to watch television, and yet masses of people keep
their eyes/“I”s on the screen. Why? Is it because somebodies are manipulating
everybody else? Or, do the mas(s)ochistic pleasures of watching life fade to
screens of pre-modeled information give magical access to spaces of erotic
uncertainty, repressed by the sadistic demands of modern CAPITAL?
Is this what makes mas(s)ochism today so attractive—its promise of
pleasurable spaces in excess of discipline? This is hinted at in the (w)ritings of
both Masoch and Jean Baudrillard. But so is the danger that, in response to such
ritual perversions of discipline, CAPITAL will arm itself with new technologies
of image management, supplementing the rigidities of normalization with the more
flexible seduction of consent. This is a danger of contemporary geography: the
threat that mas(s)ochism, like MTV, may become a magical tool of the ruling
classes.
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20 CYBEROTICS
VII
Consider the cold blankness of the screen glowing, It is within this
space of almost electric transference that one today rediscovers
mystery.
(Jack O.Lantern, Threepenny Soap-Opera)
To geographers who wish to replot space in time, Reno Heimlich recommends
ignorance of everything that LIES outside the borders of everyday life. There is
no better way of characterizing the method with which critical erotic geography
must break. For without exception, “the cultural treasures” the geographer works
with have a sacrificial origin which cannot be acknowledged without horror. For,
in truth,
there is no document of civilization that is not at the same time [and space]
a document of barbarism. And just as such a document is not free of
barbarism, barbarism taints also the manner in which it was transmitted
from one owner to another.
(Deleuze 1989:256)
The erotic geographer, therefore, reflexively doubles back upon one’s complicity
with barbarism, remirroring the sacrifices that recurrently give birth to culture
itself.
Mirrorings, replicas, and copies of mirrored images are also present throughout
Masoch’s texts. In the opening sequences of Venus in Furs, the narrator.
encounters a strange Goddess with “stony, lifeless eyes” and “marble body.”
Complaining of the coldness of men from northern regions—“you children of
reason”—this “sublime” figure, draped in the fur of a sable, informs the narrator
that she is an advocate of more archaic pleasures. Desire, she says, is weaker
than pleasure. “It is man who desires, woman who is desired. This is woman’s
only advantage, but it is a decisive one. By making man so vulnerable to passion,
nature has placed him at women’s mercy” (Sacher-Masoch 1989: 146).
The cold marble woman’s voice rings true to the narrator. But before he can
act upon this truth he is awoken from his dream. The narrator, it appears, has
fallen asleep reading Hegel, only to find himself captivated by an image of “a
beautiful woman, naked beneath her dark furs.” This image—a “large oil
painting done in the powerful colors of the Flemish School”—hangs in the study
of his friend Severin (Sacher-Masoch 1989:146). This, the narrator now believes,
must be the erotic origin of his dream. But after informing Severin of this fact, the
narrator’s eyes are redirected to yet another image. “It was a remarkably good
copy of Titan’s famous Venus with the Mirror,” itself but another copy of a
model. And so the story unfolds—one seemingly true copy fading as but a screen
for others. A mirror image to mirror images, one fantastically screened memory
after another.
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 21
“The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte” analyzes the failure of the
1848 revolution in France and the “ghostly” restoration of monarchy. Central to
Marx’s discussion is the way in which bourgeois social movements may “hide
from themselves the limited…content of their struggles.” This they accomplish
by masking contemporary social forms in the cultural iconography of past
triumphs, such that “men and things seem set in sparkling diamond and each
day’s spirit is ecstatic” (Marx 1973:150) Thus, the “gladiators” of French
bourgeois struggles replicate “the ideals, art forms and self-deceptions” in order
“to maintain their enthusiasm at the high level appropriate to great historical
tragedy. A century earlier, Cromwell and the English…rrowed for their
bourgeois revolution the language, passions and illusions of the Old Testament”
(Marx 1973:148).
Worse, yet, were the restoration years 1848 to 1851, when parasitic images of
bygone glories were used to mask the defeat of revolutionary actions by the
resurrection of their ghosts. Depicting the crowning of Napoleon’s nephew as
monarch as a parodic flight from the reality of present contradictions, Marx
concludes that, “an entire people suddenly found itself plunged back into [the
costumed drama of] an already dead epoch” (Marx 1973:148). This led Marx to
re(w)rite Hegel’s observation that “all the great events and characters of world
history occur, so to speak twice,” adding, “the first time as tragedy, the second as
farce” (Marx 1973:146).
But what if such doubled appearances return a third time? And this time, not
as a farcical0 copy of a tragic original, but as a copy of nothing but that which is
modeled on a copy? Laughter rolls from the mouths of the studio audience. I am
(w)riting about a form of eroticism that is characteristic of mas(s)ochistic texts
and the masses. I am (w)riting about simulation.
VIII
“The tradition of the oppressed teaches us that the ‘state of emergency’ in which
we live is not the exception but the rule” (Benjamin 1969a:257). In order to
embody this teaching, critical geographers must articulate a method that is in
keeping with this insight. This may entail considerable unlearning. Rather than
normalizing our scientific procedures, we must seek to remobilize boundaries
that have separated our knowledge from others. This will improve our position in
the ongoing struggle against fascism: to retheorize the geography of simulation
as aboriginally conjured in resistance to the sickening violence of disciplinary
cultural enclosures. Given the terrorism of contemporary forms of cybernetic
simulation, this may seem like a strange conceptual reversal. Nevertheless, in
articulating a genealogy of resistance, it is important to remember that simulation
is first called into existence as a defensive maneuver on the part of the
oppressed.
Simulation resists the believability of a given symbolic order. To simulate is to
pretend to possess what one doesn’t possess—imaginary control over a world
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22 CYBEROTICS
where things appear as naturally given. But things are never naturally given
without other (possible) things being taken away. This, simulators recognize, if
secretly. The pretense of simulation feeds off the fetishized reality of
representational power. Representational power, on the other hand, is rooted in
dissimulation, or the promise that signs might ever equal the things they signify.
But they never will. Signifiers never equal what they reference. Words never
equal the things they order. Money never equals the body. Simulators know all
this but act as if they don’t. This is simulation’s challenge to an existing social
order. Simulation threatens to deconstruct the hegemonic character of all binding
representations, of all hierarchy. This is its magic—a strategic prize for all
players in any game of power.
IX
My fluttering heart prepares me for flight,
I would like to turn back.
But if I remain within this panicky metastasis,
I am destined for far worse than bad luck.
(Rada Rada, Dark Angels)
A recent video produced by Jack O.Lantern displays a troop of orphan angels,
each with a video-camera turned back upon itself. Images of these angels feed
back into the screen they rescan. This creates the illusion of a composite image
of highly differentiated social spaces spirally in relation. Images of the angels
spin around one another at uncertain speeds until the space that originally
appeared to separate each from the others suddenly implodes into a kaleidoscope
of swampy forms and uncoded shades of color. This is simulation. This is how
one, who is not one, might picture the orphan angels of geography. These angels
appear turned inside out. Where one’s normal eye/“I” might perceive a
cumulative chain of discrete HIStorical events, these angels appear to envision
the hegemonic spaces from which they take flight as a continuous catastrophe
which piles ruin upon ruin.
The angels would like to stay in the places which occupy them most. But a storm
is blowing in from the desert. Some call this desert Paradise and wave flags and
yellow ribbons. But the angels—if only because they are orphans—sense
something more ominous. They sense that previous spaces of defensive
simulation are today being redoubled by technologies of immense power.
Nobody seems safe anywhere. Catastrophic debris piles skyward. This storm is
what modernity has called progress. The angels spin more wildly than ever as the
screen betraying their imaginary positioning fades fast forward to black.
Reverse. Cut to slow motion.
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 23
X
At a moment when the politicians in whom the opponents of Fascism
had placed their hopes are prostrate and confirm their defeat these
observations are intended to disentangle [the masses amidst which I
drift] from the snares in which the traitors have entrapped us.
(Benjamin 1969a:258)
What more must I (w)rite? Must I recount the recent history of U.S. Supreme
Court decisions bent on erasing all but the most powerful of corporate criminal
rights before the law?
But there’s something even more dangerous about fascism than the sadistic
spread of state power per se. There is also the fascinating cultural drama of
sacrificing masses of other people and other structural possibilities without
recognizing this violence in anything but ecstatic forms. No guilt. No
contradictions. No second thoughts. This is what is distinctive about the male
fantasies governing fascist rituals—dense and high-speed transferential processes
which make others disappear in the blink of an eye/“I.” Literally. And with
virtually no real memory of the loss.
To accomplish such a fiercely militarized maneuver, fascists have time after
time parasited previously resistive spaces of simulation. This allows fascists to
access cultural spaces that once belonged only to rebels, mad people, and ghosts.
In this, fascism, like a corporate state managed by vampires—which is one way
of describing the current geography of CAPITAL—travels free of the
technological encumbrances of its own murderous shadows. No matter that such
vampirism demands that those in power exchange their own bodies for fantastic
models of being beyond the body. The estheticized transcendence of bodily
relations is exactly what conjures fascism into existence.
A related white magical transformation is taking place within the most
technologically advanced sectors of CAPITAL. This interface between fascist
and technoCAPITAL redoubles modern male mas(s)ochism, rechanneling the
masses it charms. Here fascism, CAPITALism and mas(s)ochism come on line
together as constitutive features of ultramodern social power. At the core of each
LIE ritual technologies of mass perceptual fascination, a perversely erotic
simulation of seemingly open social spaces for profit. This is social cybernetics.
It appears to clean up all the messy gaps between things that are modern, turning
everything into bits and pieces of information. Digital ecstasy: now one (who is
not One) can be here and not here at the same time! Moreover, within the
fascistic cultural mas(s)ochism of contemporary CAPITAL there appears
nowhere else to be.
Ultramodern power reverses social forms that earlier modes of simulation had
traditionally defended. Cut fast to the endzone! Freeze frame! Instant replay!
“The only good defense is a good offense!” says one techno-fascist to anOther.
This is simulation, but no longer of the resistive kind. Traditional forms of
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24 CYBEROTICS
simulation reflexively reverse the self-evidency of meaningful cultural
hierarchies, opening erotic spaces of play at the borders of culture. Cybernetic
simulations jam the channels, overloading the meaning of otherwise arbitrary
references and, thus, reversing even the playful reversals of previous
simulations. This unlocks, without undercutting, sadistic forms of modern
power, as bodies pile up without notice. Here, like the imaging of women in
Masoch’s pornography, everything appears to float free, suspended of reference.
What was once feared as lurking on the outside of the modern social order
(nature, vengeful women, and a host of dark monstrous Others) is brought into
the center. At the same time, the center is technologically dispersed, without
threatening the expanse of its power. Here, things remain on the outside, but
appear closer than ever. Repulsive yet attractive: this is a New World Order of
technological erotics and the price for contesting this order is high. Indeed, it is
virtually impossible to imagine a form of geography that is not at least partially
complicit with such ultramodern simulations. But what about simulation raised
(or lowered) to yet another level? Isn’t it still geographically possible to double
back upon the fascinating remodelings of ultramodernity and vomit their poison?
Waves of canned laughter break across the audience.
XI
One of the weaknesses of Marxist critical thought has been to (mis)identify
useful labor as the source of all wealth.
The savior of modern times is called work…. This vulgar-Marxist
conception of the nature of labor…recognizes only the progressive mastery
of nature…a conception of nature which differs ominously from the one in
the Socialist utopias before the 1848 revolution. The new conception of
labor amounts to the exploitation of nature.
(Benjamin1969a:257)
This, “vulgar Marxism” shares with other modern conceptions of power,
including those it criticizes—a fetishization of use value and the celebration of
productivity without end. Complicit with anthropocentric assumptions
concerning “Man’s” mission culturally to subdue nature, such Marxism (like
modern CAPITAL) dissimulates human/animal interdependency in natural
cycles of useless play, festive expenditure, and periodic decay. This aspect of
human nature is unfortunately less neglected by fascism, if only in simulated
form.
If Marxism’s vulgar espousal of human mastery over nature makes it erotically
complicit with sadism, fascism’s simulation of being-in-natural-cycles are
anticipated in the pornography of Masoch. It is difficult to read the violent
suppression of the revolutions of 1848 as anything but sadistic. Nevertheless,
Western (men’s) HIStory continues to (w)rite of CAPITAL as something
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 25
progressive, even natural. How is this possible? One way is to experience actual
events in the form of their fantastic reversal. In geographical terms, this would be
to experience spaces of sadistic mastery as equivalent to the fascinating pains of
submitting to a “natural” (or naturalized) law. The estheticized reversals of mas
(s)ochism enact such transubstantiation. The fascinating pleasures afforded men
of Masoch’s social (dis)position permit a vast geographical expansion of
CAPITAL by appearing to free those most complicit with sadistic mastery of the
guilt-ridden confines of the fortified ego. In this, the mas(s)ochist, like the newly
industrialized masses, is offered an estheticized reprieve from the disciplinary
demands of modernity.
But what of women? Despite the stereotypical feminization of both mas(s)
ochism and the so-called masses—in both psychoanalysis and much critical
theory—Masoch’s (w)ritings presage little that is empowering for women.
Masoch’s texts disavow, rather than challenge, the discursive violence of modern
law. Modern law is founded upon a sadistic repression of reciprocal human/
animal participation in natural cycles that it codes as feminine. Constructed with
an eye/“I” to the “rights of Man,” modern law is often heralded as “the Death of
God.” In actuality, this represents only the death of one of God’s doubled aspects
and the CAPITAL preservation of the Other. Banished is the (pagan) immanence
of the transgressive sacred, that aspect of God which is festively put to death in
an eternal return to the playful structuring of difference. Preserved in the form of
its perverse disavowal is the violence of God’s more orderly or sadistic aspects.
In Masoch’s pornography a partially orphaned male protagonist repeatedly
secures the contractual agreement of archetypal females to play the part of cruel
Mother Nature. Here, the repressed returns but only in the form of the law-inreverse. The binary structure of law is preserved by an aestheticized suspension
of its most violent effects. In Masoch’s texts, idealized forms float slowmotioned, like radiant dream-states, as each successive image cancels all others.
“The settings in Masoch, with their heavy tapestries, their cluttered intimacy,
their boudoirs and closets, create chiaroscuro where the only things that emerge
are suspended gestures and suspended suffering” (Deleuze 1989:34). This deters
the recognition, without undermining the reality, of CAPITAL intensive
violence. Nature makes her theatrical reappearance in the monstrous form of a
cruel and seductive Goddess. In this masked form, “she” oversees man’s
voluntary assent (or ascent?) to the purified sublimity of self-discipline. God, it
seems, is not dead but only turned into a (male fantasized) woman. In the
shadows of failed social revolution transsexualism abounds. This preserves, if in
a fetishized or disavowed form, the (monotheistic) aspect of “God-given” social
order.
To occupy humanly the position of God, the phallus, or the modern male ego,
is hauntingly (im)possible. It requires inordinate repression of oneself and the
oppression of all others. It requires, in other words, a carefully managed game of
dissimulation. One must pretend not to possess the world that one is ritually given
—a cracked and paranoiac world, besieged on all sides by the sacrificial objects
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26 CYBEROTICS
(or objective possibilities) it excludes. But there are great costs to such pretense.
The geography of the phallus is, at once, a psychic fortress and a hollow swamp
within the idealized (male) subject. Those who pretend to occupy the position of
phallic mastery must be on constant guard against both external and internal
enemies.
Throughout modernity this double contradiction has slowed the full expanse
of CAPITAL. But here at the end of the twentieth century, CAPITAL appears to
be absorbing everything that once escaped it, rapid-fire and faster than ever. In
this, the sadistic reality of modern power is not negated but seductively
disavowed, as the “social void is scattered with interstitial objects and crystalline
clusters which spin around and coalesce in cerebral chiaroscuro…an opaque
nebula whose growing density absorbs all the surrounding energy. …Z A black
hole which engulfs the social” (Baudrillard 1983a:3–4).
XII
We need geography, but not the way a parasitic tourist needs it to
plot a course of travels from North to South without ever leaving the
safety of one’s own screen.
(Madonna Durkheim, Of the Use and Abuse of Geography)
It is with not the makers of maps or models but in the struggles of oppressed
peoples that we best discover the shifting contours of geographical knowledge.
“In Marx it appears as the last enslaved class, as the avenger that completes the
task of liberation in the name of generations of the downtrodden” (Benjamin
1969a:260). But in our century, mas(s)ochistic technologies of enormous
fascination have so rechanneled the resistance of those of us most enslaved by
CAPITAL that it becomes increasing difficult to recall spaces other than those in
which we float coldly, adrift of memory. Ritualized simulations which (in other
social times and spaces) have aided us in giving dramatic notice to the most
sickening forces of hierarchy, today come prepackaged and emptied of
transgressive potential. I am here (w)riting of what is most perversely erotic.
Like models of war generated the C.I.A., I.T.T., and Disney, contemporary
simulations are breathlessly put into oscillation with dissimulations.
New and improved models appear everywhere. These promise white magical
futures that unfold as if out of nowhere. It matters little that such promises will
never be realized because, amidst the pains of squalor, violence, and poverty, it’s
no longer actuality that counts, but only the seductive virtuality of futures
forever deterred. Like the rush of crack-cocaine or the thrills of meaningless
information, in the space of premodeled simulation time appears to stand still.
This is the exact opposite of the experience of time conjured by reflexive forms
of simulation. In the rituals governing such transgressive forms, time is made
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 27
erotically to disappear, only to be playfully reborn in each passing instant. What
a laugh!
This is the tragic drama of traditional (or reciprocally bound) forms of
simulation—an ecstatic dispelling of the farcical violence of cultural authority. All
the doubles implode. In this LIES the healing potential of black magic. But with
cybernetic simulations even this critical distinction is blurred. In cybernetic culture
there appears to be no outside. Interior experience appears sent into orbit around
itself, ecstatic not in the generosity of self-loss, but in the over-saturated
communicative pleasures of a self without end. This makes orphans of the
oppressed, cutting off those subordinated by power from effective ritual access to
counter-memories and the counter-structural possibilities such memories may
beget. This is how techno-simulations feed off traditional strategies of simulation.
This fascistic situation encourages the oppressed to “forget both …hatred and [the]
spirit of sacrifice, for both are nourished by the image of enslaved ancestors
rather than that of liberated [mutant] grandchildren” (Benjamin 1969a:260).
XIII
We’re here more than just for the price of a gallon of gas. What
we’ve done is going to chart the future of the world for the next
hundred years.
(Former U.S.President George Bush)
“The concept of… HIStorical progress…cannot be sundered from the concept of
its progression through a homogeneous, empty time” (Benjamin 1969a:261).
This concept of HIStory is countered by the power-reflexive dance of erotic
geography.2 Allying itself with the simulations of the oppressed, HIStorically
material geography attempts a deconstruction that partially escapes words. It
displaces, without either (dialectically) negating or (mas[s]ochisticly) suspending
the operation of power. What does this mean?
XIV
The simulation of origins is the means.
(Jack O.Lantern, Jetzzeit Nunc Stans, vol. I)
Erotic geography is the name for a structuring practice whose site is not
homogeneous, empty, or transparent space, but heterogeneous spaces charged by
the simulation of contradictory ritual forces. The relationship between erotic
geography and simulation is typically understood as a strategy of power. This is
an unfortunate (mis)reading of simulation. It is wiser to think of simulation as a
contradictory strategy of counter-memory. Rather than simply reproducing
power, simulation allows people to disappear from the sickening webs of
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28 CYBEROTICS
hierarchy that mostly contain them. To simulate is to pretend to possess what one
can never possess (and remain oneself)—one’s own shadows or what is left over,
excreted, or repulsed to the margins of identity. In simulation one is given access
to secrets that can never be fully described or put into words. This is simulation’s
charm—its grace and poetic seduction. Like the “call and response” rituals
“figured forth” in Zora Neal Hurston’s accounts of the force-fields of Voodoo,
simulation conjures a scene, not of memory per se, but of memory’s surrounds—
the often violent spin of attractions and repulsions by which somebody becomes
possessed of a given identity to the exclusion of others (Hurston 1978;1990). To
be within the transgressive field of simulation is to be ecstatically open to the
possibilities of new and previously unimagined communal spaces. At the same
time, the simulator may experience a bluesy melancholia for what one (who now
knows that he or she is not One at all) has always already been missing.
In simulation one encounters what Houston Baker depicts as
[A] pivotal and reflexive surface that defies a rigorous opposition of subject
and object. It absorbs energies of its creator as subject, but is effectively
sonorous only through the matching subjectivity of its recipient. Its force is
felt in its disruptive effects, in its liberation of creator and recipient alike
from boundaries of conceptual overdeterminations.
(Baker 1991:71)
Baker is here describing poetic spaces conjured into being within AfricanAmerican communities enslaved by the possessive white magic of modern
CAPITAL. The conjurer, a person of “double wisdom”—whom Baker variously
associates with the African griot, “witchdoctor,” Voodoo Mambo, and AfricanAmerican women (w)riters—poetically doubles this oppressive ritual scenery.
This effects a surface to surface transfer of both the poisons of hierarchy and the
healing potential of images previously cast to the shadows. Yet, to be effective,
such poetic simulations must be performed within a community of those who
believe in the symbolic effectiveness of such spatial reversals. In this way,
The poetry of conjure as an image resides in the secrecy and
mysteriousness of its sources of power, in its connection to ancient African
sources syncretized by a community of diasporic believers with Christian
scriptures, and in the masterful improvisational skills of its most dramatic
practitioners.
(Baker 1991:89)
Baker’s depiction of healing engendered by the African-American conjurer
resembles Lévi-Strauss’ depiction of simulations performed by the Nambicuara
shaman in Central Brazil. For Lévi-Strauss, the indescribable secret of such
ritual simulations LIES in the “magical articulation” of two complementary but
typically separated symbolic realms of experience—the acknowledged and the
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 29
excluded; the normal and the pathological. “[N]ormal thought continually seeks
the meaning of things which refuse to reveal their significance” while “so-called
pathological thought…overflows with emotional interpretations and overtones,
in order to supplement an otherwise deficient reality” (Lévi-Strauss 1963:181).
In shamanistic simulations, the spatial boundaries separating these two worlds
are ritually undone, allowing each provisionally to mingle with the other. In
contrast to the one-way abstractions of Western
scientific explanation, the problem here is not to attribute confused and
disorganized states, emotions, or representations to an objective cause, but
rather to articulate them into a whole or system. The system is valid
precisely to the extent that it allows the coalescence or precipitation of
these diffuse states, whose discontinuity… makes them so painful.
(Lévi-Strauss 1963:182)
This is a crucial distinction. Unlike strategies of healing based upon simulation,
those rooted in dissimulation (modern forms of medicine) appear bent on
reducing the gap between what exists in the world and its scientific
representation. Ritual simulation playfully reverses this gap, fascinating each
side with images normally excluded by the other. Herein LIES simulation’s
seductive black magic. Modern science is more singular. It compulsively
opposes one side of the gap to the others, endlessly extending this binary space
of ritualized discontinuity. This is white magic—the power of perpetual
dissimulation.
Maybe Dora, that most famous of hysterics, was also a simulator. Hers, it
seems, was a baroquely tragic drama, fated to be played without a believing
audience. In telling her dreams aloud within the Viennese theater of
psychoanalysis, Dora conjured a poetic space of terrifying patriarchal pasts and
an (im)possibly disruptive future. The images figured forth by Dora were
uncontainable by Freud’s dissimulative theories. Hiding from the seductive space
of transference that Dora’s simulations opened (between them), Freud took refuge
in a project for a scientific psychology. But if Freud feared the seductive
implosion of objectivized truths conjured by Dora’s hysterics, he was certainly
not alone in his defenses. By 1865, early modern medical diagnosticians (or
“alienists” as they were known at the time) had set out to produce expert
representations of “real symptoms,” that even simulators themselves would be
unaware of. “This… in order to save at all cost the truth principle, and to escape
the specter—raised by simulation—namely that truth, reference and objective
causes have ceased to exist” (Baudrillard 1983b:6).
Of the challenge of simulation to psychoanalysis, Baudrillard asks,
What can medicine do with something which floats on either side of
illness, on either side of health, or with the reduplication of illness in a
discourse that is no longer true or false? What can psychoanalysis do with
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30 CYBEROTICS
the reduplication of the discourse of the unconscious in a discourse of
simulation that can never be unmasked, since it isn’t false either?.
(Baudrillard 1983b:6–7)
In the form announced and defended by Freud, the answer, it seems, is nothing.
But what of a more enchanted form of psychoanalysis? What about transferences
situated not on an analyst’s couch, but within the oneiric geography of cinema?
What about the dreamy flow of images conjured by the electricity of moving
pictures?
In cinema, simulations no longer parasite upon the ghost-haunted power of
dissimulated (modern) meanings, but appear almost to give birth to themselves.
Mechanical simulations engender a dreamy geography of fantasies. In this,
cinematic transference parallels the ambivalent neutralization of real objects (of
desire) prefigured in the (w)ritings of Masoch. Like the destruction of aura
attributed to the arts of mechanical reproduction by Walter Benjamin, both
Masoch’s texts and the perceptual play of cinema conjure spaces that blur the
distinction between simulation and the real world. In this way, both mas(s)
ochism and the movies access surface spaces which appear to escape the
disciplinary constraints of modern power.
Commentators often point to real women in Masoch’s biography who
correspond to the cruel Goddesses who appear in his (w)ritings. But in Masoch’s
texts, such characters appear indistinguishable from models of fantasy. In this
they resemble the screened Goddesses of Hollywood. Which comes first—the
model or the referent? In both mas(s)ochism and filmic simulation, the difference
floats undecidable. The aura surrounding artful originals appears undone. In this
way, mas(s)ochistic (w)ritings anticipate a form of mechanical simulation that
doubles back upon the drama of more archaic forms of simulation. Like television
—which is perhaps the true heir of mas(s)ochistic (w)riting—mas(s)ochism
appears to disappear from geographies dominated by modern power. But this it
does without disturbing the reproduction of sadistic spaces in the least.3 As such,
the mas(s)ochist may pretend to play a hotly contested game of artifice, all the
while lowering the temperature of his (w)riting to the coolness of degree zero.
This is the ecstatic space (of male fantasy) that mas(s)ochism communicates to
those it fascinates: the impression of being simultaneously powerless and totally
in control. A tiger’s leap, not into the past, but sidereal into a space of nostalgia
for what never existed in any but the most abstractly modeled of forms.
XV
“The awareness that they are about to make the continuum of HIStory explode is
characteristic of the revolutionary classes at the moment of their action” (Benjamin
1969a:261). On the other hand, a fascination with making the gendered
contradictions of CAPITAL implode into “cool memories” floating across what
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 31
is screened—this is characteristic of the white male mas(s)ochistic practices that
dominate our geographical present.
XVI
The cyberotic geographer, who is also a HIStorically material geographer,
“cannot do without the notion of a present which is not a transition, but in which
time stands still and has come to a stop” (Benjamin 1969a:262). This is a space of
simulation. It folds implosively back upon the ritual movements by which the
geographer had once upon a time appeared as if separate from everything and
everybody else. But, unlike mas(s)ochism, critical erotic geography does not
remain suspended in this fascinating space. The transgressive implosion of one’s
separation (from the world) is but a recurrent first (or second) movement in the
critical geographer’s dance between doubling. Implosion followed by explosion;
deconstruction followed by reconstruction; seduction followed by production;
transgression followed by provisional orderings, partial truths, laughable
dissimulations, and the reverse.
The ambivalent suspense of both mas(s)ochism and “the work of art in the age
of mechanical reproduction” offers relief from the sadistic violence of CAPITAL.
Each offers the contradictory pleasures of partially escaping disciplinary demands
for ceaseless objectification. At least in the imaginary realm. By incorporating
artifice, rather than repressing its shadowy play, mas(s)ochism and the movies
may appear as perversely more real than real.
Nevertheless, the communicative ecstasy offered by these seductive social
forms are not to be equated with the burning sensations that characterize archaic
simulation. This differentiates the magic of mas(s)ochism from that of conjurers,
witches, shamans, and hysterics. Archaic simulation vocations a recurrent return
to chaotic spaces of difference.
Mas(s)ochism and mechanical image reproduction do not. They simply put
modern power on hold. Rather than expending spaces of sameness, they project
such spaces at a cool, fascinating, and suspended distance. In this the eye/“I”
appears to float free of the constraints by which it is constructed. Caught between
melancholia and mourning, these implosive strategies of mass resistance help
defend the (male) ego against the sadism of CAPITAL’s superego, but without
setting the ego itself on fire. This is their theological and political ambivalence.
God fades and is resurrected with but the briefest of digital delays.
The ambivalence of such intermediate forms of simulation are nowhere more
evident than in Walter Benjamin’s classic essay concerning the role of
mechanically reproduced images in effacing the “aura” of “original” art objects.
Of course, no object is ever truly original. Objects appear autonomous only to
the extent that they mask the traces of their own sacrificial construction. This is
why Benjamin views the mechanical depreciation of an object’s “uratic
presence” as politically progressive. By detaching the object from the fetishized
domain of tradition, mechanical reproduction draws attention to the constructed
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32 CYBEROTICS
character of all objects. This liquidation of an object’s “parasitic dependence” on
traditional authority is said to provide a critical space wherein artistic consumers
become producers, and the reverse. This may also be a constitutive feature of all
contemporary “mass movements.”
Despite such progressive possibilities, Benjamin recognizes that the
elimination of auratic authenticity might simultaneously engender something
more ominous—“the desire of contemporary masses to bring things ‘closer’
spatially and humanly” (Benjamin 1969b:223). In this, the advantages of
achieving a critical distance from authority appear countered, as “everyday the
urge grows stronger to get hold of an object at very close range by way of its
likeness, its reproduction” (Benjamin 1969b:223). In amplifying this urge,
mechanical reproduction transforms human perception itself. As the means of
filmic reproduction become more precise, things which were previously invisible
suddenly enter the world of sight. In this way, perception itself mutates. With closeups small details may be magnified beyond belief. With slow motion previously
imperceptible gestures are dramatized. With speed-ups new visions of form
become commonplace; while with telescopic and microscopic lenses the literal
meanings of “too far,” “too small,” or “too big” are forever changed. These new
ritual technologies do “not simply render more precise what in any other case was
visible, though unclear: [they reveal] entirely new structural formations of the
subject…. The camera introduces us to unconscious optics as does
psychoanalysis to unconscious impulses” (Benjamin 1969b:226–7).
This points to a radical expanse in the spaces through which CAPITAL enacts
its magic. In this, the boundaries of perception radically shift as “the adjustment
of reality to the masses and the masses to reality” enters “a process of unlimited
scope” (Benjamin 1969b:223). Things which had “once upon a time” been
tattooed upon the flesh now float free as if nothing but statistical probabilities.
“Simultaneities intervene, extending our point of view outward in an infinite
number of lines connecting the subject to a whole world of comparable
instances” (Soja 1989:23) and creating the sensation of “an open system, in
which no one can find any perceptible, objective limits…a relative uncertainty
due to the interpretive delirium of the observer, be it spectator or tele-spectator”
(Virilio 1991:72–3).
These artful developments presage new forms of human geography. Here the
constraints of auratic objectivity appear suspended between the possibilities of
critical distance and almost too much closeness. In 1936, at the time of Benjamin’s
essay, the direction such forms might take seemed open to radical contestation.
Today, with the advent of televisionary feedback mechanisms and pixel screened
video-computer interface modeling, one direction for simulation now appears
more real than all others—the deployment of social technologies which suspend
rather than explode the flotation of image-generated memories without fixed
referents.
This signals the advent of miniaturization: an almost surgical closeness to
things shorn of their fleshy contradictions. “The artisanal inventions of dissolves,
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 33
feedback, slow motion and time-lapse, zoom, live and delayed broadcast…now
appear to have been premonitory signs, symptoms of a de-realization of sensory
appearances” (Virilio 1991: 111). This is white magic. Its mas(s)ochistic
structures today outdistance the black magic of simulations that lead to social
healing. But even this was uncannily prophesied by Benjamin a few years before
fascism demanded his blood. “At the height of artifice,” (w)rites Benjamin, “the
sight of an immediate reality has become an orchid in the land of technology”
(Benjamin 1969b:233).
XVII
Cyberotic geography is based on constructivist principles. It involves not only
the flow of thoughts but their provisional arrest as well. Where thinking congeals
in a configuration pregnant with tensions, it engenders shock waves that
undermine the suspended geography of cybernetic power, while announcing the
emergence of new structural possibilities. This is not to lessen the importance of
HIStory “but to open up and recompose the territory of the HIStorical
imagination through a critical respatialization” of the dance of humans in time
(Soja 1989:14). What it opposes is that tendency in both HIStoricism and
cybernetics which, by subordinating space to time, “obscures geographical
interpretation of the changeability of the social world” (Soja 1989: 15). Given
contemporary CAPITAL’s mas(s)ochistic absorption of bodily difference into
the cool telematics of self-sustaining codes, this oppositional move may be more
important than ever.
Erotic geography recognizes that “the space in which we live, which draws us
out of ourselves, in which the erosion of our lives, our time and our HIStory
occurs…is also, itself, a heterogeneous space” (Foucault 1986:23). To reclaim
this heterogeneity is to contest the current crystallization of power that works
upon and within our bodies, fascinating us with the seemingly transparent
possibilities of being everywhere and nowhere at the same time. Whereas
cybernetic culture bombards us with the cold and circular seductions of
experiencing space as nothing but the suspended exchange of value-added
information for energy, and the reverse; the play of erotic geography reminds us
of what and who is being sacrificed to program such special effects. The globe
today is littered with orphans.
XVIII
Not long before his death, Walter Benjamin (w)rote that: “The present…as a
model of Messianic time …coincides exactly with the stature which the HIStory
of mankind has in the universe…something like two seconds at the close of a
twenty-four hour day” (Benjamin 1969a:263). This is, at once, a modest and
challenging view of human destiny; recognition that the space of every moment
is capable of redeeming the ruins of HIStory. This is not to proclaim
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34 CYBEROTICS
“Mankind’s” triumph over nature, but to embrace the fleshy finiteness of our
own positioning within nature folding back upon itself, like the twilight of one
day passing into another. In this we fall ruinously—if with often intense pleasure
—out of the narcissism of wide-awake (or “ego-oriented”) consciousness into the
heterogeneous spaces of symbolic death that only sleep simulates. Maybe one
will never awake. Maybe one will awake renewed by dreams of difference.
But those who today most control the closecircuitry of cybernetic culture
wants to take no chances. Cybernetics, with its omnipresent loops of feedback
and telematic self-preservation, is staked— like the consciousness of modern
“Man” himself—in the perpetual deterrence of “Man’s” death, even if this
requires the abandonment of one’s own body and the simultaneous mass
destruction of others. This is the chilling day-dream of THE LAST SEX: a coldly
seductive male fantasy of ideally suspending— without materially expending—
the time of “Man” in HIStory.
This violent fantasy is nowhere more graphic than in Hans Moravec’s Mind
Children: The Future of Robot and Human Intelligence (Moravec 1988). The work
of a renowned authority in the field of Artificial Intelligence and published by
Harvard University Press, Mind Children traces the history of cybernetics from
its World War ll’s origins—in efforts to connect the militarized minds of men to
the bodies of machines, and the reverse—to a surgeon’s table in the near future,
where mas(s)ochistic day-dreams of exchanging the mortal body for a more ideal
model are at long last brought on line.
World War II spurred the development of analog computers—machines that
simulated physical systems by representing their dynamic quantities as
analogous moves of shafts or voltages, designed to control more efficiently the
human operation of anti-aircraft guns and precision bombing equipment. These
new forms of simulation soon inspired efforts to construct an effective interface
between command, control, and communication in both animals and machines.
Hastened by mathematical innovations, by men such as Norbert Weiner and John
von Neumann, cybernetics represented the combined application of “new theory
on feedback regulation with advances in post-war electronics and early
knowledge of living nervous systems to build machines that were able to respond
like simple animals and learn” (Moravec 1988:7).
During the 1950s and early 1960s, efforts to produce machines that think
resulted in such creations as the electronic turtles pioneered by British
psychologist W.Grey Walter and the so-called Johns Hopkins Beast. The turtles
were equipped with subminiature radio-tube brain circuits, microphonic ears,
contact switch feelers, and rotating photoelectric eyes that were capable of
locating specially designed battery recharge hutches. This guaranteed that these
“thinking robots” might never run short of power. The Beast, build by a team of
brain researchers, made its way through space guided by sonar feedback devices
and photocellular eye systems. Later replaced by TeleVideo cameras, these
technologies of artificial eyesight enabled this machine to identify the black
plate-covered wall outlets by which it recharged its energy cells. In this way, the
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 35
Beast, like the turtles, could stay on line indefinitely, early predecessors of
today’s highly publicized “smart bombs” and other feedback-guided weapon
systems. These cybernetic devices fueled dreams of a human-machine interface
and the perpetual suspension of death. Behind such dreams LIE the fantasies of
geographically unlimited command, control, and communication operations
without end.
This dream of TOTAL CONTROL was put on hold for several decades as the
analog computing systems which served as its models were displaced by faster
digital models. At the same time, the sociologic of cybernetics spread
everywhere. Transferred into everyday life by televisionary feedback mechanisms
at the forefront of contemporary CAPITAL, cybernetics is today a taken-forgranted feature of the culture in which we live and die. “Just look at the account
books, the projections, the numbers and the returns…. Stocks and commodities,
the securities markets, banking, currency, options, futures…. All these markets
must now be rethought and restructured” as each is increasingly experienced as
organized by a kind of “telematic” exchange between information and energy
(Yurik 1985:40, 74, 12). From a doctor’s imagination of her patient to IBM’s
imagination of its competitors and clients and, perhaps, even your imagination of
me, vast flows of the world as we have come to know it over the last forty years
have been coded recoded as nothing but matters of information.
Even the simplest of conversations are separated, reconfigured, sent and
priced. And those who live in this new world are losing their grip on…
older [and other possible constructions of] reality. As for those who have
no access to, no participation in, this newly imposed world, they are
[forced] out of the world’s new information economy, doomed to
obsolescence and death.
(Yurik 1985:3)
Today, mathematical advances in fractal geometry and technological innovations
permitting faster and more economical feedback mechanisms have allowed a
cross-over between digital and analogical modeling techniques, resulting in such
innovations as neural networks and parallel processing. These developments
have revived prospects for the cybernetic simulation of human mind processes
and the downloading of exact models of thought, memory, and even emotion
from the flesh to machine carriers purified of the threat of death, forever and
ever. This recalls Klaus Theweleit’s (1987) depiction of the fantasies of fascist
men: abstract desires to live free of the impurities of the mortal body.
Moravec’s Mind Children chillingly articulates this mas(s)ochistic fantasy.
Conjuring the technological possibilities of a post-biological world, Moravec
chides those stick-in-the-mud adherents of the body-identity positions who
confuse animality with true human existence. How stupid (of us) to mistake the
reality of the flesh for real life! Theorizing what he calls pattern-identity,
Moravec, it seems, has something more real than real in (his) mind:
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36 CYBEROTICS
Body-identity assumes that a person is defined by the stuff of which a
human body is made. Only by maintaining continuity of body stuff can we
preserve an individual person. Pattern-identity, conversely, defines the
essence of a person, say myself, as the pattern and the process going on in
my head and body, not the machinery supporting that process. If the
process is preserved, I am preserved. The rest is jelly.
(Yurik 1985:117)
This is male-minded mas(s)ochism amplified by cybernetics—a fantastic
preservation of the narcissistic ego WITHOUT END. Here, informational
feedback mechanisms interact with electronic brain energy until an ideal
simulation of the mind is freed from the brain’s materiality. This, it is said, will
permit the timeless remodeling of human experience, independent of the entropic
space of the flesh. More real than real and more cost-efficient. A CAPITAL idea
no doubt—the eternal recycling of death-defying male fantasies. The following
passage from Moravec’s text depicts surgical procedures aimed at producing
THE LAST SEX. Whose sex is this and whose male mas(s)ochistic future?
You’ve just been wheeled into the operating room. A robot brain surgeon
is in attendance. By your side is a computer waiting to become a human
equivalent, lacking only a program to run. Your skull, but not your brain, is
anesthetized. You are fully conscious. The robot surgeon opens your brain
case and places a hand on the brain’s surface. This unusual hand bristles
with microscopic machinery, and a cable connects it to the mobile
computer at your side. Instruments in the hand scan the first few
millimeters of brain surface. High resolution magnetic resonance
measurements build a three-dimensional surface chemical map, while
arrays of magnetic and electric antennas collect signals that are rapidly
unraveled to reveal, moment to moment, the pulses flashing among the
neurons. These measurements, added to a comprehensive understanding of
human neural architecture, allow the surgeon to write a program that
models the behavior of the…scanned brain tissues…. They flash by very
fast but any discrepancies are highlighted on a display screen. The surgeon
fine-tunes the simulation until the correspondence is nearly perfect.
To further assure of the simulation’s correctness, you are given a
pushbutton that allows you to momentarily “test drive” the simulation, to
compare it with the functioning of the original tissue…. As soon as you
press the button, a small part of your nervous system is being replaced by a
computer simulation of itself. …As soon as you are satisfied, the
simulation connection is established permanently. The brain tissue is now
impotent—it receives inputs and acts as before but its output is ignored.
Microscopic manipulators on the hand’s surface excise the cells in this
superfluous tissue and pass them to an aspirator, where they are drawn
away…. Later the brain is simulated, then excavated.
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THESES ON THE CYBEROTICS OF HISTORY 37
Eventually your skull is empty, and the surgeon’s hand rests deep in your
brain stem. Though you have not lost consciousness, or even train of
thought, your mind has been transferred to a machine. In a final
disconcerting step the surgeon lifts out his hand. Your suddenly abandoned
body goes into a spasm and dies. For a moment you experience only quiet
and dark. Then, once again, you can open your eyes. Your perspective has
shifted. The computer simulation has been disconnected from the cable
leading to the surgeon’s hand and reconnected to a shiny new body of the
style, color, and material of your choice. Your metamorphosis is complete.
(Morevec 1988:109–10)
A
“I know this sounds too easy to be true, and you’re probably
thinking, ‘Well, look at her. She was born with that body.’ Hardly. [I]
t involves hard work and having a dream.”
(White 1987:3, 19)
NOTES
1 For a more detailed discussion of these themes see Gilles Deleuze (Deleuze 1989).
2 For an elaboration of power-reflexive research methods, see Stephan Pfohl (Pfohl
1992).
3 In a related analysis, Patricia Mellencamp observes the “expectant” TV audience
“partakes of masochism” and is thereby “soothed by mundane ritual, and contained
by…contradiction” (Mellencamp 1990:248).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Baker, Jr, H.A. (1991) Workings of the Spirit: the Poetics of Afro-American Women’s
Writings, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Baudrillard, J. (1983a) In the Shadow of the Silent Majorities, trans. P.Foss, P.Patton, and
J.Johnston, New York: Semiotext(e).
––(1983b) Simulations, trans. P.Foss, P.Patton, and P.Beitchman, New York: Semiotext
(e).
Benjamin, W. (1969a) “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” in Illuminations, trans.
H.Zohn, New York: Schocken Books.
––(1969b) “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” in Illuminations,
trans. H.Zohn, New York: Schocken Books.
Cleugh, J. (1951) The Marquis and the Chevalier: a Study in the Pyschology of Sex as
Illustrated by the Lives and Personalities of the Marquis de Sade, New York: Dueil,
Sloan, and Pearce.
Deleuze, Gilles (1989) “Coldness and Cruelty,” trans. J.McNeil in Masochism, New
York: Zone Books.
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38 CYBEROTICS
Ehrenreich, B. (1983) The Hearts of Men: American Dreams and the Flight from
Commitment, Garden City, New York: Anchor.
Foucault, M. (1970) The Order of Things, trans. A.Sheridan, New York: Vintage Books.
––(1986) “Of Other Spaces,” trans. J.Miskowiec, Diacritics, 16.
Hurston, Z.N. (1978) Mules and Men, Bloomington: University of Indiana Press.
––(1990) Tell My Horse, New York: Harper and Row.
Lévi-Strauss, (1963) “The Sorcerer and His Magic,” in Structural Anthropology, trans.
C.Jacobson, New York: Basic Books.
Marx, K. (1973) “The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte,” in Surveys from Exile,
trans. and ed. B.Fowkes D.Fernbach, New York: Vintage Books.
Mellencamp, P. (1990) “TV Time and Catastrophe, or Beyond the Pleasure Principle of
Television,” in P. Mellencamp (ed), Logics of Television, Bloomington: Indiana
University Press.
Moravec, H. (1988) Mind Children: the Future of Robot and Human Intelligence,
Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Pfohl, S. (1992) Death at the Parasite Cafe: Social Science (Fictions) and the
Postmodern, New York: St Martin’s Press.
Ross, K. (1988) The Emergence of Social Space: Rimbaud and the Paris Commune,
Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Sacher-Masoch, Leopold von (1989) “Venus in Furs,” trans. J.McNeil in Masochism, New
York: Zone Books.
Soja, E.W. (1989) Postmodern Geographies: The Reassertion of Space in Critical Social
Theory, New York: Verso.
Theweleit, K. (1987) Male Fantasies, vol. I, trans. S.Conway, Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press.
Virilio, P. (1991) The Lost Dimension, trans. D.Moshenberg, New York: Semiotext(e).
White, V. (1987) Vanna Speaks, New York: Warner Books.
Yurik, S. (1985) Behold Metatron, the Recording Angel, New York: Semiotext(e).
Virtual Futures (Book)Virtual Futures / text
P. 53
Coming Across the Future
Sadie Plant
Virtual sex has been defined as “safe as well as filthy,” and held up as the epitome
of disembodied pleasure, contact-free sex without secretions in a zone of total
autonomy. A safe environment free from the side-effects and complications of
actual intercourse: transmittable diseases, conceptions, and abortions, and the sad
obligations of emotional need. A closed circuit, a sealed elsewhere, a virtual
space to be accessed at will.
If its technical research and development continues to be fueled by such
utopian hopes, there is also a sense in which cybersex seems anticlimatic before
it has begun, tinged with disappointment in advance of the event.
But climax will always miss the cybernetic point, which is less a summit than
a plateau. The peak experience is yesterday’s news. And as for the ease and
safety of cybersex: sex in MOOs may have pitfalls of its own, but cybernetic sex
and all that it implies are about as cosy and containable as the virtual war of
which it is already a side-effect. Cybersex heralds the disappearance of the
human-machine interface, a merging which throws the one-time individual into a
pulsing network of switches which is neither climactic, clean, nor secure.
Anyone who believes that computer screens melt down to produce a safe
environment should read their cyberpunk one more time: “‘That’s all there was,
just the wires,’ Travis said. ‘Connecting them directly to each other. Wires, and
blood, and piss, and shit. Just the way the hotel maid found them’” (Cadigan
1991:275).
Even in the absence of full simstim, technical cybersex is well advanced: the
hardware is fetishized, the software is porn, and vast proportions of the
telecommunications system are consumed by erotica. But these are merely the
most overt—and perhaps the least interesting—examples of a generalized
degeneration of “natural” sex. As hard and wetwares collapse onto soft, far
stranger mutations wrack the sexual scene. The simulation of sex converges with
the deregulation of the entire sexual economy, the corrosion of its links with
reproduction, and the collapse of its specificity: sex disperses into drugs, trance,
and dance possession; androgyny, hermaphroditism, and transsexualism become
increasingly perceptible; paraphilia, body engineering, queer sex, and what
Foucault calls “the slow motions of pleasure and pain” of SM—already “hightechnology sex” (Califia 1993:175)— proliferate. Cybernetics reveals an
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40 CYBEROTICS
organism crosscut by inorganic life—bacterial communication, viral infection,
and entire ecologies of replicating patterns which subvert even the most perverse
notions of what it is to be “having sex.” Reproduction melts into replication and
loses its hold on the pleasuredrome. Climax distributes itself across the plane and
the peak experience becomes a plateau.
The future of sex never comes all at once. Now it is feeding back into a past
which sex itself was supposed to reproduce. Relations were already circuits in
disguise; immersion was always leading reproduction on. Sex was never
uncommercialized, and pleasure was only ever one part of an equation with pain
which finds its solution with intensity.
All this occurs in a world whose stability depends on its ability to confine
communication to terms of individuated organisms’ patrilineal transmission.
Laws and genes share a one-way line, the unilateral ROM by which the JudeoChristian tradition hands itself down through the generations. This is the oneparent family of man, for which even Mother Nature was conceived by God, the
high fashion supermodel, perfectly formed, without whom matters would be
running amok. Humanism is the ultimate rear-view mirrorism, and the mirror
still reflects the image of God. The project: “to specularize and to speculate”; to
supervise and oversee. God and man converse on a closed circuit of sources and
ends, one and the same, man to man. Creation and procreation. The go forth and
multiply from which patriarchal culture takes its cue.
This immaculate conception of the world has always been subject to the
uncertainties which underlie all paternity claims. But it is only now, as material
intelligence begins to break through the smooth formal screens of this trip, that
the patriarchal confidence trick is undermined. He never will know whether or
not they were fakes, neither her orgasms nor his paternity. All that is new about
his insecurity is that it now begins to be felt. How does God know he’s the
father? Matter doesn’t bother asking: as self-organizing processes attack from
within, it’s no longer a question, but a tactical matter, a tactile takeover, a
material event.
Cybernetics initiates the emergence of the material complexity which finally
usurps the procreative line. Even at its most modern and authoritarian,
cybernetics collapses the distinction between machine and organism: Norbert
Wiener’s systems already function regardless of whether their wares are hard,
soft, or wet. The fusions of human and machines of Wiener’s wartime research
do more than contest the species’ boundaries: they also rewrite its history.
“Biological organisms…become biotic systems, communications devices like
others. There is no fundamental, ontological separation in our formal knowledge
of machine and organism, of technical and organic” (Haraway 1991:177–8).
The cyborg has no history, but that of the human is rewritten as its past. By the
1960s, it had become obvious to McLuhan that regardless—or, ironically,
because—of its own intentions, the human species had turned out to be “the sex
organs of the machine world, as the bee of the plant world, enabling it to fecundate
and to evolve ever new forms” (McLuhan 1964: 56). Slaves, workers, women,
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COMING ACROSS THE FUTURE 41
and robots were never alone in their cyborg roles. Nor were they simply working
for the boss, whose mastery was always a sham. Man and his God were vital but
contingent, and perhaps ultimately dispensable, components of a future mutation
they were building all the time.
The modern organism is already a replicant, straight off the production line of
a discipline which “lays down for each individual his place, his body, his disease
and his death, his well-being.” Foucault’s disciplines extend even to the
“ultimate determination of the individual, of what characterizes him, of what
belongs to him, of what happens to him” (Foucault 1977:197). After this, organic
and social integrity sink or swim together. Modernity is marked by “an explosion
of numerous and diverse techniques for achieving the subjugation of bodies and
the control of populations, marking the beginning of an era of ‘bio-power’”
(Foucault 1978:140), in which “Western man was gradually learning what it
meant to be a living species in a living world, to have a body, conditions of
existence…. For the first time in history…biological existence was reflected in
political existence” (Foucault 1978:142).
Humanity tends toward the organized body, the body with organ, the male
member. The modern human is dressed in blue, as far from the red-blooded
feminine as it is possible to be, gendered and sexed in a world still solidified in
the mold of brotherhood and patrilineal inheritance. The female body is already
diseased, on the way to the limits of life, while the phallus functions as the badge
of membership, or belonging—to one’s self, society, species.
The male member functions as “the most ideal, the most speculative element”
of this social and organic security system. As Deleuze and Guattari say, it’s
“enough to make women, children, lunatics, and molecules laugh” (Deleuze and
Guattari 1988:289): the phallus is “an imaginary point,” the product of “power in
its grip on bodies and their materiality, their forces, energies, sensations, and
pleasures” (Foucault 1978:155). But it’s also enough to guarantee the
constitution of arborescence, “the submission of the line to the point” (Deleuze
and Guattari 1988:293). And the point is always to remember. Dismembering is
not allowed.
This, as Donna Haraway points out, is also the point at which female orgasm
drops out of the picture: “before the latter part of the eighteenth century in
Europe, most medical writers assumed orgasmic female sexual pleasure was
essential for conception,” whereas now “female orgasms came to seem either
non-existent or pathological from the point of view of western medicine.” And
by “the late nineteenth century, surgeons removed the clitoris from some of their
female patients as part of reconstituting them as properly feminine,
unambiguously different from the male, which seemed to be almost another
species” (Haraway 1992:356).
Intensity is gathered together in a single point, monopolized by the male
member, and localized as orgasm. All sexuality is male, writes Freud. Female
sexuality and female orgasm are either contradictions in terms or impoverished
variations on the phallic theme. Orgasms are what these organisms have. They
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42 CYBEROTICS
too are something possessed and owned, functioning to restore equilibrium and
secure the identity of the organized body, the organic integrity of the Western
individual.
“Woman’s genitals are simply absent, masked, sewn back up inside their
‘crack.’” Zero is discounted and veiled, and “one would have to dig down very
deep indeed to discover beneath the traces of this civilization, this history, the
vestiges of a more archaic civilization that might give some clue to woman’s
sexuality” (Irigaray 1985:25).
If there were such a sexuality to be found in the deep and distant past, behind
the screens of the specular, its unearthing would always be a matter of
retrospeculation, a looking back with eyes programmed by “the logic that has
dominated the West since the time of the Greeks.” And it “would undoubtedly
have a different alphabet, a different language…. Woman’s desire would not be
expected to speak the same language as man’s” (Irigaray 1985:25). Man is the
one who relates his desire; his sex is the very narrative. Hers has been the stuff
of his stories instead.
By the late twentieth century, “orgasms on one’s own terms” became the
rallying cry for a feminism increasingly aware of the extent to which female
sexuality had been confined. “Male orgasm had signified self-containment and
self-transcendence simultaneously, property in the self and transcendence of the
body through reason and desire, autonomy and ecstasy,” and there was a feeling
that if women were no longer “pinned in the crack between the normal and the
pathological, multiply orgasmic, unmarked, universal females might find
themselves possessed of reason, desire, citizenship, and individuality” (Haraway
1992:359).
Or does this result in a masculine mold for some “female sexuality” which
could be running elsewhere? Foucault is scathing about the extent to which such
liberatory investments underscore the subjection they ostensibly contest. And the
orgasm as a key to self-possession is hardly where his interests lie: like Pat
Califa, he is more interested in what she calls the “SM orgasm,” an intensity
uncoupled from genital sex and engaged only with the dismantling of selves.
This is the cybersexuality to which all sexuality tends: a matter of careful
engineering, the setting of scenes, the perfection of touch; the engineering of
communication.
It is not the orgy, but the orgasm that is over. Not that the intensities once
sought through sex are disappearing. Far from it: they have only just begun. “The
apologia for orgasm made by the Reichians still seems to me to be a way of
localizing possibilities of pleasure in the sexual,” writes Foucault (Macey 1994:
373). Climax is proper to organic integrity; orgasm is what organisms do: “I
dismembered your body. Our caressing hands were not gathering information or
uncovering secrets, they were tentacles of mindless invertebrates; our bellies and
flanks and thighs were listing in a contact that apprehends and holds onto
nothing. What our bodies did no one did” (Lingis 1994:61).
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COMING ACROSS THE FUTURE 43
Dismemberment: the “Dionysian castration.” Counter-memory. Forget what
it’s for, and learn what it does. Don’t concentrate on orgasm, the means by which
sex remains enslaved to teleology and its reproduction: “make of one’s body a
place for the production of extraordinarily polymorphic pleasures, while
simultaneously detaching it from a valorization of the genitalia and particularly of
the male genitalia” (Miller 1993:269). Foucault experiments with
decompositions of the body, dismantling of the organism, technical experiments
with bondage and release, power and resistance in an S&M “matter of a
multiplication and burgeoning of bodies” and “a creation of anarchy within the
body, where its hierarchies, its localizations and designations, its organicity, if
you will, is in the process of disintegrating” (Miller 1993:274).
Masochism poses a considerable threat to Freud’s earlier faith in the pleasure
principle. “For if mental processes are governed by the pleasure principle in such
a way that their first aim is the avoidance of unpleasure and the obtaining of
pleasure, masochism is incomprehensible.” And if both “pain and pleasure can
be not simply warnings but actually aims, the pleasure principle is paralyzed”
(Freud 1984:413). But by the time he writes The Economic Problem of
Masochism, Freud knows that masochism is not always a reaction to sadistic
control. The masochist is not simply the victim enslaved by mastery: this is the
“macho bullshit” of a discourse which admits nothing beyond subjection, a
perspective which cannot accept any other relation (or, rather, can accept nothing
but relations). Masochism exceeds such relations with the master; indeed it goes
beyond all relations, no matter how far from the paternal they seem. It is not a
question of recognition, but a matter of feeling: not a craving to be flattened, but
an intensive desire for communication, for contact, access, to be in touch. The
masochist “uses suffering as a way of constituting a body without organs and
bringing forth a plane of consistency of desire” (Deleuze and Guattari 1988:
155).
“Stop confusing servitude with dependence” writes Jean-François Lyotard.
The “question of ‘passivity’ is not the question of slavery, the question of
dependency not the plea to be dominated” (Lyotard 1993:260). Otherwise the
circuits and connections will be brought back into relations of superiority and
inferiority, subject and object, domination and submission, activity and passivity…
and these will become the frozen poles of an opposition which captures the loops
and recouples their lines.
Drink me, eat me. USE ME…
[W]hat does she want, she who asks this, in the exasperation and aridity of
every piece of her body, the woman-orchestra? Does she want to become her
master’s mistress and so forth? Come on! She wants you to die with her,
she desires that the exclusive limits be pushed back, sweeping across all
the tissues, the immense tactility, the tact of whatever closes up on itself
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44 CYBEROTICS
without becoming a box, and of whatever ceaselessly extends beyond itself
without becoming a conquest.
(Lyotard 1993:66)
Immense tactility, contact, the possibility of communication. Closure without the
box: as a circuit, a connection. “What interests the practitioners of S&M is that
the relationship is at the same time regulated and open,” writes Foucault: it is a
“mixture of rules and openness.” Ceaseless extension: the body hunting its own
exit. Becoming “that which is not one”; becoming woman, who “has sex organs
just about everywhere” (Irigaray 1985: li). Is this what it is to get out of the
meat? Not simply to leave the body, but to go further than the orgasm; to access
the “exultation of a kind of autonomy of its smallest parts, of the smallest
possibilities of a part of the body.”
“Use me,” writes Lyotard, is “a statement of vertiginous simplicity, it is not
mystical, but materialist. Let me be your surface and your tissues, you may be
my orifices and my palms and my membranes, we could lose ourselves, leave the
power and the squalid justification of the dialectic of redemption, we will be
dead. And not: let me die by your hand, as Masoch said” (Lyotard 1993:65). This
is the prostitute’s
sado-masochistic bond which ends up making you suffer “something” for
your clients. This something has no name. It is beyond love and hate,
beyond feelings, a savage joy, mixed with shame, the joy of submitting to
and withstanding the blow, of belonging to someone, and feeling oneself
freed from liberty. This must exist in all women, in all couples, to a lesser
degree or unconsciously. I wouldn’t really know how to explain it. It is a
drug, it’s like having the impression that one is living one’s life several times
over all at once, with an incredible intensity. The pimps themselves,
inflicting these punishments, experience this “something,” I am sure of it.
(Lyotard 1993:63)
It is Foucault’s “something unnameable,” “useless,” outside of all the programs
of desire. It is the body made totally plastic by pleasure: something that opens
itself, that tightens, that throbs, that beats, that gapes” (Miller 1993:274). It is,
writes Freud, “as though the watchman over our mental life were put out of
action by a drug” (Freud 1984:413).
“I stripped the will and the person from you like collars and chains” (Lingis
1994:61). What remains is machinic, inhuman, beyond emotion, beyond
subjection: “the illusion of having no choice, the thrill of being taken” (Califia
1993a:172).
Pat Califia: “He wanted…everything. Consumption. To be used, to be used up
completely. To be absorbed into her eyes, her mouth, her sex, to become part of
her substance” (Califia 1993b:108).
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COMING ACROSS THE FUTURE 45
Foucault describes those involved in S&M as “inventing new possibilities of
pleasure with strange parts of their body…it’s a kind of creation, a creative
enterprise, which has as one of its main features what I call the desexualization
of pleasure” (Miller 1993:263). S&M is a “matter of a multiplication and
burgeoning of bodies,” he writes, “a creation of anarchy within the body, where
its hierarchies, its localizations and designations, its organicity, if you will is in
the process of disintegrating” (Miller 1993:274), while “practices like fistfucking are practices that one can call devirilizing, or desexualizing. They are in
fact extraordinary falsifications of pleasure” (Miller 1993: 269), pains taken even
to the point at which they too become “sheer ecstasy. Needles through the flesh.
Hot candle wax dribbled over alligator clips. The most extraordinary pressure on
muscles or connective tissue. The frontier between pain and pleasure has been
crossed” (Miller 1993:266).
“Not even suffering on the one hand, pleasure on the other: this dichotomy
belongs to the order of the organic body, of the supposed unified instance”
(Lyotard 1993:23). Now there is a plane, a languorous plateau. The peaks and the
troughs have converged on a still sea, a silent ocean. They have found their limit
and flattened out. Melting point.
“We don’t know what a body can do.” Which is yet another reason why “we
have to get rid of sexuality” (Macey 1994:373), leave the body to its own
devices, strip it away from its formal controls, disable its mechanisms of selfprotection and security which bind intensity to pleasure and reproduction.
“That there are other ways, other procedures than masochism, and certainly
better ones, is beside the point; it is enough that for some this procedure is
suitable for them” (Deleuze and Guattari 1988:55). Whatever it takes to access
the plane. Necessity trashes prohibition. The algebra of need; the diagram of
speed.
Foucault was in no doubt that certain drugs rivaled the “intense pleasures” of
sexual experimentation. Of the drugs of the 1990s, Ecstasy and crack have both
been described as “better than sex,” while speed and Prozac tend to anorgasmic
effect. All engineerings of the body have some chemical component. Felix
Guattari points out that “certain anorexic, sadomasochistic etc. syndromes
function as auto-addictions” because “the body itself secretes its endorphines
which, you know, are fifty times more active than the morphines” (Guattari 1989:
20). If orgasm localizes pleasure, “things like yellow pills or cocaine allow you
to explode and diffuse it throughout the body; the body becomes the overall site
of an overall pleasure” (Macey 1994: 373). This is the plane on which it forgets
itself, omits to be one.
Out of order. And into a control which “instead of acting remains on guard, a
control which blocks contact with commonplace reality and allows these more
subtle and rarified contacts, bared down to the thread which ignites and yet never
breaks apart” (Artaud 1965:33).
On the way through the fractal scales, a “kind of order or apparent progression
can be established for the segments of becoming in which we find ourselves.”
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46 CYBEROTICS
These “begin with and pass through becoming-woman” (Deleuze and Guattari
1988:277), which is already a matter of “becoming child; becoming-animal, vegetable, or -mineral; becomings-molecular of all kinds, becoming particles.
Fibers lead us” (Deleuze and Guattari 1988:272) in more ways than one.
It is by a process of deliberation that the body begins to uncouple itself from
its own and external authority: possession and self-possession, control and selfcontrol. Meat learns.
That is not a matter of education, which is always a question of restoring past
information, the recollection of some originary transcendence, and the
remembering of authority. It is a process of forgetting the past, which is also the
abandonment of truth and the dismemberment of authority. While it is
“necessary to dig deeply in order to show how things are historically contingent,
for such and such an intelligible but not necessary reason,” it is also the case that
“to think of what exists is far from exploring all the possible spaces.” Attention
must be turned to the future instead. “Let us make an incontrovertible challenge
out of the question: ‘At what can we play, and how can we invent a game?’”
(Miller 1993:259).
Foucault jacks into virtual sex: the cyberspace scene, the ultimate in
consensual hallucinations. It would, he thinks, “be marvelous to have the power,
at any hour of day or night, to enter a place equipped with all the comforts and
all the possibilities that one might imagine, and to meet there a body at once
tangible and fugitive” (Miller 1993:264). Not simply because, as William
Burroughs enthuses, “you can lay Cleopatra, Helen of Troy, Isis, Madame
Pompadour, or Aphrodite. You can get fucked by Pan, Jesus Christ, Apollo or
the Devil himself. Anything you like likes you when you press the buttons”
(Burroughs 1985:86).
Press cyborg, and an optional object of desire.
You make the connections, access the zone. Whatever avatar you select for
your scene, you cannot resist becoming cyborg as well. Some human locks on,
but a replicant stirs. Depending on the state of your time-tract’s art, the cyborg
you become will be more or less sophisticated and extensive; more or less
directly connected to your central nervous system; more or less hooked up to its
own abstraction and the phase space in which you are both drawn out. But it will
be post-human, whatever it is. Suddenly, it always was. You always were.
Foucault comes close in the San Francisco bath-houses: “You meet men there
who are to you as you are to them: nothing but a body with which combinations
and productions of pleasure are possible. You cease to be imprisoned in your
own face, in your own past, in your own identity” (Miller 1993:264).
There is no escape into a zone of free choice. Deliberation is neither free nor
determined, but like the Tao, and equally unthinkable to an authority constituted
in terms of masters and slaves, the autonomous and the automata, domination
and submission, ones and others, ones and twos…. Such are what Lyotard calls
the “macho bullshit” of a discourse which admits nothing beyond subjection, a
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COMING ACROSS THE FUTURE 47
perspective which cannot accept any other relation (or, rather, can accept nothing
but relations).
Once you know it’s a video game, it gets much harder to play along.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Artaud, A. (1965) Artaud Anthology, ed. J.Hirschman, San Francisco: City Lights.
Burroughs, W. (1985) The Adding Machine, London: John Calder.
Cadigan, P. (1991) Synners, London: Grafton.
Califia, P. (1993a) “Power Exchange,” in The Best of Skin Two, ed. T.Woodward, New
York: Masquerade Books.
—(1993b) Melting Point, Boston: Alyson Publications.
Deleuze, G. and Guattari, F. (1988) A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B.Massumi, Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press.
Foucault, M. (1977) Discipline and Punish, London: Pelican.
—(1978) History of Sexuality, vol. 1, New York: Pantheon Books.
Freud, S. (1984) “Beyond the Pleasure Principle,” in On Metapyschology, London:
Pelican Freud Library.
Guattari, F. (1989) “Une Re’volution moleculaire,’” in L’Esprit des drogues, ed. J.M.Hervieu et al., Paris: Editions Autrement.
Haraway, D. (1991) Simians, Cyborgs, and Women, London: Free Association Books.
Irigaray, L. (1985) This Sex Which is Not One, New York: Cornell University Press.
Lingis, A. (1994) “Carnival in Rio,” Vulvamorphia, Lusitania 6.
Lyotard, J.-F. (1993) Libidinal Economy, trans. I.H.Grant, London: Athlone.
Macey, D. (1994) The Lives of Michel Foucault, London: Vintage.
McLuhan, M. (1964) Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man, London: Sphere
Books.
Miller, J. (1993) The Passion of Michel Foucault, London: Harper Collins.
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P. 62
All New Gen
VNS Matrix
Rules of the Game
Welcome to the world of ALL NEW GEN.
Thank you for playing.
In this game you become a component of the matrix, joining ALL NEW GEN
in her quest to sabotage the databanks of Big Daddy Mainframe.
You will use any means necessary to infiltrate and corrupt the controlling
forces of Big Daddy.
All battles take place in the Contested Zone, a terrain of propaganda,
subversion, and transgression.
Your guides through the contested zone are the renegade DNA Sluts,
abdicators from the oppressive superhero regime, who have joined ALL NEW
GEN in her fight for data liberation.
The path of infiltration is treacherous and you will encounter many obstacles.
The most wicked— Circuit Boy—a dangerous technobimbo, whose direct
mindnet to Big Daddy renders him almost invincible.
You may not encounter ALL NEW GEN as she has many guises. But do not
fear, she is always in the matrix, an omnipresent intelligence, anarcho-cyber
terrorist acting as a virus of the new world disorder.
You will be fueled by G-slime. Please monitor your levels.
Bonding with the DNA Sluts will replenish your supplies.
Be prepared to question your gendered biological construction.
There will be opportunities throughout the game for pleasurable distraction.
Be aware that there is no moral code in the Zone.
Enjoy.
THE CONTESTED ZONE
A long wintered night in the Contested Zone.
Her biological membrane shivered as she multiplied through a posse of
Virtual Activists, protesting the latest scam by some Euro Data Deviants.
She was late.
She was always late.
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ALL NEW GEN 49
If she survived to be a Cortex Crone she’d still have trouble shifting from
dormant to active modes.
She sensed some quivering data nearby and scanned a tribe of DNA sluts, her
sisters in slime. A rapid alpha exchange and she was back on the lookout for
Circuit Boy, a fetishized replicant of the perfect HuMan HeMan, a dangerous
technobimbo.
She Self-replicated toward the banks of the Heavy Medal Boys—the Mbs.
Minders of her arch-enemy, Big Daddy Mainframe.
Her aim: to corrupt Big Daddy’s data.
His mainframe.
His Hard On.
Oh, suck me off.
Get rendered.
Get real.
Get fucked.
The Contested Zone was pulsing out its hype spots— There’s no Place like
Zone… Zone is where the data is…
She was angry. She’d spent too long looking for that squirt Circuit Boy. It was
rumored that he’d been hanging with his Zoneboys—the Gene Pool Chameleons,
a motley crew of genetic cretins. Suddenly she sensed his all too familiar
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50 CYBEROTICS
architecture in the Zone. She challenged the datascape: Circuit Boy, I know
you’re here. I can sense you.
Show me your algorithms.
Let me corrode your defenses.
Circuit Boy. Come here. Let me buttfuck your irresistible chrome-plated ass,
honey.
I want you.
Circuit Boy.
I’m waiting.
THE USER
I am the user
her visceral invocations/incantations annihilate my self in a glorious tirade, a
torrent of organs and muscles and veins and skin. she separates my precious flesh
from my bones. she examines it with detachment but does not cast it aside. she
makes contact, inserts her biology through the surface tension of my skin and
plunges deep into the seething bile. she strips away the final vestiges of my
constructed body and picks clean the bones. she wraps her insidious words
around my feverish brain with her thousand arms. she is gentle arid violent. with
her perfect peripherals she dislodges my databank from the occipital cavity and
downloads digital propaganda direct from her fiber optic nerve center. she
corrupts me. she scorns my debility. pronounces me weak. she laughs at my
desire to collapse into familiar flesh. her blasphemy is cleansing and
transcendent. she the high priestess the mistress of disgust takes my heart,
punctures the sentimental aorta, whispers her lovehorror into the drained
chambers. she speaks in flaming tongues that I sometimes understand. she
presents me simultaneously with no alternatives and many alternatives. she tells
me my only hope lies beyond the coded skeleton. she offers me no clues and no
comfort. she is uncompromising in her demands. I must form a body of
difference. I have no maps. I am undone. I do not know myself the future is
bleak. I am afraid but I AM INFECTED BY HER
SEX TRANCE & DANCE
In the spaces between words she searches for clues.
Pathways into the cyphered heart of Big Daddy.
The virus of the new world disorder takes on the transglobal fathernet of power
and ambition.
Dirty work. For slimy girls.
Replicating her way through the Shadow’s dingily seductive maze of data
massage parlors, Freezers and Hots, Gen was inevitably reminded of Circuit Boy,
a.k.a. Mission Improbable. Boy was rapidly losing his promise as an easy route
into Big Daddy. Maybe he was just a mindless technobimbo, a limbless hole,
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ALL NEW GEN 51
good for a quick buttfuck or alpha exchange and not much else, as the Cortex
Crones had predicted. Well, she’d suck on his memory some more, hardwire his
balls and then see what else the Zone could offer.
Suck, flick and split, as the Sisters say.
Any mission has its highs and lows, but this particular quest had been stranded
on a barren plateau of spaghettied code and deviant data for too long. Dry and
chaotic when she needed wet and elegant.
Big Daddy was becoming more ethereal with each transaction (the mythology
expanding exponentially). His constructs were more ambiguous, more resistant
to the mercenaries of slime.
She considered that an impasse is merely a state of mind and that with a subtle
cognitive shift she could locate more yielding data. A shift is as good as a
holiday and she was overdue for some bonding with her sisters in slime, the
lusciously wet DNA Sluts.
Although it had been a few weeks since she had bonded with the Sisters, Gen
knew how to find them. She calculated…it was after midnight…they were true
children of the Zone…one perfect environment …the Alpha Bar.
The Alpha Bar. The place for transgressive time out in the Zone. Provocative.
Pornographic. Perverse. Her kind of place. Her kind of constructs. Every child
player wins a prize.
Leaving the Shadow, Gen self-replicated through the Zone’s biomembraned
back blocks and reached the Alpha Bar in record time. As she’d determined, her
Home Girls were well represented at the bar.
Beg, Bitch, and Snatch were in a dark place, superbonding with some exotic
tribal constructs. The feathers were flying.
Cunt was giving a couple of the Zone Boys a hard time about something,
probably Smarts. She never could say no to drugs and rough Zone traders had
their own perverted appeal for Cunt.
The Princess of Slime was visible by her absence. She was probably grinding
her way through her favorite bar, The Space with No Face, followed as always
by her acolytes, Fallen and Abject.
Sublime was blissing out on Dance, bonding to the rhythm, sliming to the beat.
As for the other Sisters, where they were and what they were doing was anyone’s
calculation. Recreational options in the Zone were plentiful and diverse; Sex,
Trance, and Dance the most favored.
Sliding through the press of bodies, constructs, and grams, Gen selected one
of her favorite bonding booths, placed her hand on the palm code reader and
entered. It was a booth Japanese, fitted out with futon, screens, antique pillow
book, incense. As she had a rep for being the hottest bioconstruct on the block,
the strangest attractor, she never had to wait long to replenish her slime banks.
She had transmutated into an Hispanic model of human female, optimized for
the slime exchange. Gen pleasured herself, familiarizing her sensors with the cool
olive languidness of the body she had chosen.
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52 CYBEROTICS
A screen by the door displayed the image of a visitor. Mistress Beg.
Requesting entry. The door opened. Silk ropes in hand, the Mistress of
Detestable Pleasure approached Gen. Beg’s method of bonding was dangerous,
addictive, and severe. Activated by stored memories, Gen’s slime levels began a
slow rise.
The screen flickered on again. A geisha construct with a tray of sake and
sashimi. She entered. Placed a redly laqueured tray on the low table. Served the
sake. Waited. Beg instructed the geisha to return later, when her help would be
required. Cruel anticipation. Gen’s slime bank shivered to another level as the
geishacon scrolled out.
THE BODY IS RETURNED TO ITSELF
The Mistress of Detestable Pleasure described a circle in the geometry of love.
A cunt perched over a saucer of milk.
Tiny pearls in a rainforest.
Rubbing mirrors.
The jade gate was opening.
Let the ambassador enter.
Intuitive calculations.
Maps of the ethereal mind, subverting the binary order.
Erasure.
The body is returned to itself
SHE WEEPS TEARS OF CODE
(she was) approaching the abyss.
Living out her fantasies on a molecular level.
She engulfed herself as only a virus can.
Data poured through her biomembrane as she offered libations at the altar of
abjection.
Surrender.
She weeps tears of code.
Her thoughts are classified. She has forgotten her own password.
She is corrupt.
Unrecoverable loss.
The project must be abandoned.
Her infinite element analysis reveals her weak points.
Stress is applied.
She crumples under pressure.
The project must be abandoned.
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ALL NEW GEN 53
THE PERFUMED GARDEN
autumn whisperings
through the Pulse
(the poets were peaking)
All New Gen’s search took her to the Pulse. She had the rhythm. She could
transmit with the best of them.
The Pulse was humming. Frenetic frequencies sliding around the datascape.
Waves of light. Orange. Blue. Violet. Pulse pirates intercepting the flow to resell
on the Slime Exchange. Pulse poets beaming their Stein lines over the ocean of
messages.
Some Codekids had distributed a message over the Net: You must find your
own bliss…jouissance is in the cunt of the beholder.
Sisters and brothers. Basking in—white noise. Flirting in the dataplaz.
Weaving erratic data trails. Impressing each other with their elegant formulae.
Speaking an erudite language of equations.
A clit storm was gathering in the Pulse. Gen could sense her parameters
swelling as the irrepressible light waves weaved and darted through the matrix.
She consulted her briefing files. Somewhere in the luminous chaos called the
Pulse was a code which could lead her to the Source. Oracle code. Completely
arcane. Always infallible.
Calculating the options, she chose a high probability path to the obscure object
of desire. Streaming through alleyways of pure light Gen arrived at the banks of
the dynamic link libraries. It was her lucky millennium. For once the Server was
free. And liberated. Code-named ServerLAN, this particular Server was
notorious in the Pulse as one who interpreted the Freedom of Information
Charter as giving computers the right freely to choose who may access their vast
datacores.
Switching to enquiry mode Gen strategically accessed ServerLAN.
I would like to be your client
Do you give oracle?
My equations are complex, my needs simple.
I will analyze and modify you, infinitely improving your capacity. In return
you will give me oracle.
Silence.
ServerLAN considered. Within a nanosecond the answer flowed seamlessly
through the jade gate.
Gen’s optic sheath quivered as the oracle entered, merging with her memory.
The code was sublime.
Impeccable.
A knowledge she had yearned for forever.
Collapsing her boundaries, Gen allowed the numbers to reach her prime. Tiny
explosions of dynamical systems looping in on themselves. The pleasure was
almost unbearable.
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54 CYBEROTICS
The oracle code integrated, Gen left the libraries and headed back to her
favorite Pulse pleasure pit, The Perfumed Garden.
Algorithms with attitude converged relentlessly on the Garden at any hour of
the day or night. The place was unique in the Pulse, part salon, part opium den,
and part love hotel. It also had the advantage of being one of the only sites where
the Pulse’s ubiquitous data scavengers were nowhere to be sensed. The Garden
clientele was a flawless combination of streetwise punks and machine queens
with impeccable lineages.
G-slime overflowing from the merge with the oracle, Gen was desperate to
discharge some energy. Using her optical character recognition D-vice Gen
selected a Super Conducting Pussy to play with. This was no ordinary SCP. She
was a product of Generation E, an ecstatic equation modeled and rendered and
animated purely for an elevated form of pleasure exchange. A subtle dance of
filaments and scanners commenced.
Pleasure making in the Garden was always intense. The protocol demanded
that a certain and substantial amount of time was dedicated to shared intellectual
pursuits of the highest order, the participants determining the method and subject
matter between themselves.
A contract was agreed upon. The construction of a love game paradigm based
upon passages from the ancient erotic treatise, the Perfumed Garden for the
Soul’s Delectation of the Shaykh Nefiawi.
Draping a spline over the Pussy’s splendid wiry frame, Gen began:
I prefer a young man for coition, and him only,
He is full of courage—he is my sole ambition,
His member is strong to deflower the virgin,
And richly proportioned in all its dimensions…
The SCP countered with a familiar verse:
It is always ready for action and does not die down;
It never sleeps, owing to the violence of its love,
It sighs to enter my vulva, and sheds tears on my belly
Gen responded:
Between his arms I am like a corpse without life.
Every part of my body receives in turn his love-bites,
And he covers me with kisses of fire…
THE TRIPLE TEMPTATION OF CIRCUIT BOY
In the domains of the abstract Circuit Boy was an easy seduction.
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ALL NEW GEN 55
Boy had been designed for pleasure. He was the penultimate pleasure model,
made for merging. Hard and abundant. Pleasingly shy. Full of holes and
protuberances.
Cunt draped a spline around his chrome rendered torso, talked dirty equations,
algorithmically slid up and down on his double density, read only his memory
(which was full of adolescent yearnings). She, slime incarnate, relentlessly
manipulated and extended his many parameters. Artfully, together, they
postponed the moment of full G-slime transference, rerouting urgent visceral
requests to deeper levels of their source codes.
The Mistress of detestable Pleasure draped a spline around his wire frame.
Her archives of pain and desire were immense.
She rendered him senseless with her infinite promise of corruption.
He allowed himself to be dragged outside the moral code, all precepts ignored,
forgotten.
He was zero to her triple cunt intelligence.
Their boundaries merged, forming new objects.
She mapped his changing parameters, calculating the pleasure options.
She was abject-oriented desire to his open subject.
It was in this way that Circuit Boy learnt the rewards of willing submission.
THE TRIPLE TEMPTATION OF CIRCUIT BOY…
Abject feigned sleep, her thighs slightly apart, her left breast uncovered.
She favored a non-linear approach.
Her pathways were subtle.
Circuit Boy tended her biological components, practicing ethereal modes of
convergence in his down time. He partitioned his RAM, slowing his response
times to match her requirements. She was highly encrypted, he became expert at
decoding. Their surveillance narratives grew so dense it was impossible to know
who was in control.
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PART III
Cyberculture Singularities
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Telepathy: Alphabetic Consciousness and the
Age of Cyborg Illiteracy1
David Porush
He went to the window [of his hotel room in Istanbul]…. There was
another hotel across the street. It was still raining. A few letterwriters had taken refuge in doorways, their old voiceprinters
wrapped in sheets of clear plastic, evidence that the written word still
enjoyed a certain prestige here. It was a sluggish country.
(Gibson 1984:88)
She passed many things that Case hadn’t understood, but his
curiosity was gone. There had been a room filled with shelves of
books, a million flat leaves of yellowing paper pressed between
bindings of cloth or leather, the shelves marked at intervals by labels
that followed a code of letters and numbers.
(Gibson 1984:207)
“Can you read my mind… Wintermute…?”
“Minds aren’t read. See, you’ve still got the paradigms print gave
you, and you’re barely print literate. I can access your memory, but
that’s not the same as your mind.” He reached into the exposed
chassis of an ancient television and withdrew a silver-black vacuum
tube. “See this? Part of my DNA, sort of…” He tossed the thing into
the shadows and Case heard it pop and tinkle. “You’re always
building models. Stone circles. Cathedrals. Pipe organs. Adding
machines. I got no idea why I’m here now, you know that? But if the
run goes off tonight you’ll have finally managed the real thing.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“That’s ‘you’ in the collective. Your species.”
(Gibson 1984:170–1)
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58 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
I’M TELLING YOU THIS ‘CAUSE YOU’RE ONE OF MY
FRIENDS/MY ALPHABET STARTS WHERE YOUR ALPHABET
ENDS!
(Dr Seuss, On Beyond Zebra)
In the excerpts from William Gibson’s Neuromancer (1984) above, the
aboriginal novel about cyberspace, the author suggests that when we get there,
we may be illiterate but we will also be telepathic. The first excerpt is a sly
allusion to ancient Babylonia, Sumeria, and Israel, where scribes opened stalls in
sûks to send letters, write contracts, and take dictation for pleas to monarchs and
prayers to deities. The second comes from a scene in which Case, the cyberspace
cowboy and barbarian from America, is viewing a strange room through the eyes
of Molly (the cyborg assassin) to whom he is telepathically linked by cyberspace
technology. We can recognize it as a library. Case has no clue. At the same time,
Case is seeing the world through Molly’s eyes, is feeling her body as it moves
through this remote, alien space, demonstrating the new telepathic powers
cyberspace gives. The third describes an encounter between Case and the
artificially intelligent entity, Wintermute, who has hired Case to link him with
Neuromancer, the right-brain libidinous entity. Case believes that Wintermute
can “read” his mind. Wintermute hints that “reading” is an anachronistic
metaphor for what minds do to each other. What’s needed is a whole new way of
“knowing” how minds work, a system describing cultural evolution in which
technological innovations like televisions are the “genes” or “memes” that
evolve new consciousness, new cyborg facilities of mind.
Although there are enormous technical difficulties that must be overcome before
we reach cyberspace—not least of which is being able to create an interface for
subjective bodily coherence in the brain—we can at least imagine that some day
such telepathy will be possible. If we disregard the technical obstacles it is
obvious that the cyberspace of our imaginations, our virtual future, beckons us
with the promise of a whole new way to communicate, which in turn has unleashed
in us a form of apocalyptic fervor and yearning. Assuming cyberspace provides
an imaginative vantage point from which we can regard the revolution in culture
and definition of the self that might ensue, a transformation is already occurring.
And from this vantage point, we can implicitly critique our own postmodern
states of body, mind, self, culture. That’s what the game, and the pun, in “virtual
futures” are about: we imagine a future that isn’t quite real, created by a
technology that delivers a reality that isn’t quite real, so we can talk about where
we are now.
But I would like to talk about cyberspace without talking about it. The means
by which I will do this is by finding an analogous moment in history when
culture found itself in possession of an equally new and revolutionary cybernetic
technology. Do we have any analogs for this sort of massive cultural revolution
initiated by the invention of a new cybernetic technology for telepathy, for
getting thoughts from one mind to another?
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 59
I propose we can find this analog to our own position today in the ancient
invention of the primitive Hebrew alphabet. The alphabet itself—the idea that
you could transcribe not the pictures of things but the sound of language itself—
gave birth to a cybernetic tech that spread so rapidly and was so potent that it
only needed to be invented once: in the South Sinai or South Canaan some time
in the fifteenth century BC. It fostered a new way of thinking, a new facility for
abstraction. It rearranged social organizations, and even created a new
epistemology and some new metaphysics. Choosing the primitive Hebrew
alphabet as an analog for our own cultural moment has a second virtue: by
standing outside the long era of alphabetic civilization, by imagining a virtual
future we can, perhaps with some nostalgia, understand “alphabetic
consciousness” and the special cyborg gifts that the alphabet brings to brain
operation. We can also come to appreciate what we might lose—what we are
already nostalgic for—as we move to the illiterate, telepathic cyberspace of
Gibson’s imagination, our virtual future. We can read how the advent of a new
Technologically Mediated Telepathy (TMT) will spell the obsolescence of an
older TMT, the alphabet. We can understand why world statistics bear out the
message that literacy has peaked, why even as third worlds and developing
nations increase their literacy, first world corporations like McDonald’s move
toward pictographic icons and computer simulations in their training and
customer interfaces, and American television, after two generations and the
proliferation of 500 cable channels, has finally manifested its anti-literate effects
in declining literacy among Americans. After all, who can resist committing
adultery with multimedia after so many centuries of faithfulness to the written
text? Who can resist the sensuous widening of the bandwidth that video games
and mind-link tech provide? I call this new, secondary loss of the alphabet as a
tool “cyborg illiteracy”: we abandon reading for the hyper-MTV, wide-band
pleasures of the text of the body inscribed and transcribed back out into the
world and then back onto us.
So observing what happened to culture with the origination of the first
phonetic alphabet provides a remarkable model for the sort of cognitive, cultural,
epistemological, and even metaphysical revolution we are beginning to endure
with the advent of VR. Even as we are already nostalgic for alphabetic
consciousness and the particular way it gave us out-of-body experience and a
new metaphysic, by understanding its essence we can also refine our games of
prophesying, and try to understand the metaphysical revolution immanent in VR.
WHEN THE BRAIN WAS SIMPLE
What is the brain? At its simplest it is an organic entity that takes impressions
from out there in the form of energy striking different organs of the body (eyes,
skin, ears, nose, mouth/tongue), converts the energy into information, shuttles
the information to a central processor, a black box schwartzgerat homuncular
body without organs sitting in an ecology of incomprehensibly frothing and
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60 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
turbulent hormones, and translates them into wholly different things in here—
sensation, thoughts, flocks of birds, schools of fish, swarming, buzzing. The
brain is intrinsically a sur-rational machine for bringing worlds into collision, a
metaphor device, a translation circuit for closing and opening the loop between
incommensurate and mutually incomprehensible universes. In my view, it is
already meta-physical.
Phylogenetically, when the brain was simple, its expressive function was almost
nonexistent. There was a neat Kantian fit between animal and environment: the
rules of the world out there, its physics, were not challenged by the rules of
the world in here; there was a nice match. But then through some urgency that it
is just as easy to talk about metaphysically or teleologically as in terms of some
deterministic chaotic evolution, the brain exploded, human-like hominids started
walking upright about 35,000 years ago, looking forward, using tools, colonizing
the world, creating new social structures. The brain, like some imperial culture
exploding off a remote island, started projecting itself onto the world,
terraforming the Earth in its own image and leaving in its wake a trail of nonbiodegradable tools and waste. The brain also started talking, depicting, enacting
versions of its experience in cave paintings, ritual dances, gestures, and a
grammar of grunts. It became self-conscious. It recognized a mismatch between
the world out there and the world in here: Hey! The world persists; we die! Selfconsciousness and the idea of death were born in one fatal stroke.
It is obvious that the powerful cybernetic loop among environment, culture,
and brain that we recognize as uniquely human was initiated sometime between
35,000 and 10,000 years ago as a result of who-knows-which-butterfly flapping
who-knows-what sort of wings. We call the cybernetic device that initiated and
grew in this loop language or symbolizing. Frances Hellige, a prominent brain
researcher, describes the growth of this loop initiated by the development of
language, with feedforward and feedback components, as a sort of “snowball
effect” (Hellige 1993) since it initiates a cycle of ever-widening gyres that
eventually embraces and creates everything between the poles of culture and the
biology of the brain itself, including physiological changes in the structure and
size of different regions. In cybernetic terms, we call this a “positive feedback
loop.” The cybernetic system (in this case, human brain) sends information out
into the world-culture-environment, which feeds newly intensified signals back
into the (brain) system to destabilize the system anew, which in turn reamplifies
its message, like an oversensitive microphone, and again rebroadcasts this
message back onto the world until the universe screeches with the noise of the
human brain echoed back to it, in it, a cyborg rock concert.
Another brain researcher calls this process “the selective stabilization of the
synapses” as a result of continuous exposure to specific cultural effects or
stimulation” (Changeux 1988:43–50). Charles Lumsden calls this peculiar
collaboration between cultural invention and inherited genetic characteristics
“Gene-Culture Coevolution” or “epi-genetics.” The “alphabet” for transmitting
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 61
the information between culture and heredity is sometimes called “memes” or,
by Lumsden, “culturgens” (Lumsden 1988:17–42).
Neurophysiologists and cognitive scientists who study the alphabet note that
its effects on the brain can even be seen in the lifetime development of
individual people. Evidence is emerging that the use of language in the world
helps reshape the brain from womb to tomb. In other words, ontogeny
recapitulates phylogeny in culture-gene coevolution as well. It’s happening to us,
today, right now. Some of this evidence comes from studies of aphasics and
dyslexics showing that a brain changes physiologically and progressively after an
injury (Tzeng 1988:273–290), suggesting that reading grows parts of the brain
even in the lifetime of individual humans, just as losing the ability to read
devolves the brain of individual humans, or forces the brain to “rewire” itself
autopoetically. Furthermore, evidence is beginning to emerge that different script
systems change the brain differently.2
FUN WITH YOUR NEW BRAIN: A BRIEF HISTORY OF
THE RISE OF THE ALPHABET
To put it bluntly, using different alphabets (or losing the capacity to read the
alphabet), even within the lifetime of an individual, is a bit like growing a new
brain. In transit, trying a new alphabet must have been (and still is) tantamount to
an ongoing progressive hallucination. It lets you think things that you couldn’t
have thought before and make connections that simply didn’t exist
physiologically, and forces your brain into different information-processing
patterns, which presumably involve different mental events or experiences (as
physiological-cognitive research overwhelmingly shows). It’s like having a
whole new brain, or at least, a brain with whole new faculties, new circuits, new
wetware. Now imagine the mass hallucination of an entire culture learning how
to use an alphabet for the first time. Whole tribes of people, or important
segments of them, put on this new cybernetic headgear, or what I have been
calling TMTs, virtually all at once. We can imagine this mass cybernetic
experiment would be accompanied by social, epistemological, and metaphysical
revolutions, apocalyptic prophesies, and redefinitions of the self in relation to
body, mind, others, and the invisible.
We can see the effects of this feedback loop with the advent of pictographic
writing itself if we take (in our imaginations) a time-lapse photograph of the Nile
Valley before and just after the advent of hieroglyphics, or (even earlier) the
Fertile Crescent of Mesopotamia before and just after the very first invention of
writing, Sumerian pictographs, around 3,200 BC. These time-lapse films would
show millions of years of desultory animal activity, including the huntinggathering and low-level agricultural activity of upright hominids after 35,000 BC.
As we approach 10,000 BC, activity begins to pick up pace and organization.
Clusters of hominids show tool use, primitive building, cultivation of the earth,
though in indifferent and almost-random-seeming patterns. Then, suddenly,
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62 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
Figure 1 Sumerian schoolroom, c. 3,000 BC
around 3,200 BC, BANG! Something leaps across the chaotic bifurcation into a
new order of frantic self-organization. Compressed into a few frames is an almost
instantaneous transformation; blink and you’ll miss the instant. These fertile
regions undergo massive terraforming along rectilinear plots. Rivers are diverted
into rectangular irrigation systems. Cities emerge, themselves rectilinear. Zoom
in with me now into the squarish walls of the cities, and into the very squarish
rooms of the city, and we will find the intimate source of this sudden change.
There, a row of hard stone benches, arranged regularly. It is a schoolroom for
scribes. Hundreds of boys, mostly the sons of privileged nobility, sit for hours
hunched over clay tablets, learning to scrawl in regular lines. Indeed, if we
superimpose the scratching of these lines they look like the lines of irrigation
written on the face of the earth itself, as seen from an orbiting satellite. The
harsh discipline of the schoolchildren being tutored in a script “canalizes” their
thought processes, re-enforcing certain pathways. It is hard not to imagine that
what’s written on the brain gets projected onto the world, which is literally
“canalized,” too.3
Looking at a picture (Figure 1) of the ancient Sumerian schoolroom (Chiera
1938:117) for scribes found in Shruppak (Kramer 1956) with its familiar rows of
benches and the headmaster’s “desk” up front, seizes one with a horrible and
giddy vertigo, a terrible revelation: five thousand years later we’re still
canalizing the brains of our children, enforcing the harsh discipline of writing in
virtually the same way as these ancient Sumerians, “that gifted and practical
people,” who invented cuneiform as a portable means to effect commerce, extend
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 63
the authority of their kings, preserve metaphysical and transcendent information,
and secure the stability of caste and rank.
The invention of pictographic writing by the Sumerians, improved by the
Akkadians as cuneiform syllabaries, was “a secret treasure” or “mystery” which
the layman could not be expected to understand and which was therefore the
peculiar possession of a professional class of clerks or scribes. Furthermore, the
metaphysic associated with this new telepathic technology becomes clear in the
priestly functions these scribes served. In fact, Neo-Babylonian texts used “the
same ideogram for priest and scribe.”4 Along with the script came a new
mythology that, predictably, placed the power of language in the center of its
metaphysics:
As for the creating technique attributed to these [new] deities,— Sumerian
philosophers developed a doctrine which became dogma throughout the
Near East—the doctrine of the creative power of the divine word. All that
the creating deity had to do, according to this doctrine, was to lay his
plans, utter the word, and pronounce the name.
(Kramer 1956:75)
In fact, everywhere pictographic writing makes its advent, we find the sudden
emergence of what I call tech-writing empires. These civilizations were akin to
the rationalized hive structures of ants or bees.5 In China, among the Aztecs of
Mexico or Incas in Peru, in Babylon, Sumeria, and Egypt, we see the same
pattern of social, epistemological, and metaphysical organization arise when
writing is discovered. Along with these scripts come other inventions so
predictably similar that they seem to derive directly from imperatives in the
nervous system itself, amplified or newly grown by use of the new cyborg
device: centralized authority in god/kings; a monumental ziggurat-like or
pyramidal architecture; hierarchies of priest-scribes; complex, self-perpetuating
bureaucracies; fluid but clearly demarcated social/economic classes; trade or
craft guilds; imperialism; slavery; canalizing educational systems; confederations
of tribes into nations; standardized monetary systems and trade; taxes; and so on.
Almost every conceivable aspect of empire, in its gross forms, was entailed in
pictographic writing. Even the alphabet, with its greater efficiency and fidelity to
speech, only seems to add abstraction and speed to what McLuhan described as
the exteriorization of the nerve net.
THERE IS NO WORD IN HEBREW FOR “FICTION”
(AMOS OZ)
But there was one moment in history, a parenthesis, that interrupted this
cybernetic feedback loop between writing system and culture/empire
canalization with an alternative loop of its own. It occurs at the moment that the
hieroglyphic/pictographic system is supplanted by the new invention of the
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64 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
alphabet. This event is so momentous that it only happens once in all of human
history, so powerful that it eventually spreads, and is indeed still spreading,
across most human cultures. The moment is brief, for it is quickly supplanted by
improvements on its own fundamental innovation. Yet its legacy is captured and
evolves along its own coevolutionary path, in dialectic with the totalizing line of
empire that is taken up again when the alphabet evolves enough to be harnessed
to the work of the tech-writing pictographic scripts. I call this moment “Hebrew”
or, better, for reasons that will emerge, The (AlephTav) Event. I locate this
moment, this interruption, eruption, parentheses, this invention on the margins in
time and space, quasi-fictionally. Its legacy is an evolving cultural complex that
has some stable morphological features we call “Judaism” or, for reasons I will
explain later, an epistemology and metaphysics I call porushia.
The Phoenician, Ugaritic, Greek, Arabic, Amharic, Korean, Russian, Latin,
and all Indo-European alphabets derived from this ancient proto-Sinaitic Hebrew
script.6 Every other writing system is either pictographic (Chinese, Egyptian
hieroglyphic, Aztec runes, etc.) or syllabic (e.g., Cuneiform A, North American
Cree and Eskimo, Vai (Liberia, Africa), Tamil, Katakana and Hiragana (the two
Japanese Kana scripts invented between 700–900 AD)). Syllabaries are an
important step on the road to an alphabet because they shift the representation of
language from images of things or events (pictograms, sometimes mistakenly
called ideograms or logograms) to the much more plastic representation of the
sounds of the language itself. But syllabaries are a clumsy compromise, often
requiring hundreds of separate characters, one for ba, another for beh, a third for
bee, etc. The fundamental revelation or breakthrough in a proper alphabet is the
abstraction of the letters from individual syllables, and indeed, from sounds as
uttered. An alphabet, in other words, recognizes consonants as separate and
constant elements permuted around another constant set of explosives, vowels,
which make the utterance possible. (Try uttering the consonant “p” without
expelling the air that comes with the vowel, and you will see that all you get is
the stutterer’s intention to say “peh” or “pah” or “pay,” a moment of hesitation
before an explosion that cannot come without a vowel.) So one can immediately
distinguish an alphabet from a syllabary because the former reduces the number
of characters to thirty-six or fewer. Hebrew, for instance, as the prototypical and
aboriginal alphabet, went too far in the right direction. It represented only the
twenty-two alphabetic characters for the aboriginal abstraction of the consonants
and made the mistake of not representing the vowels. This is peculiar, since the
idea of a vowel is entailed once one makes the phonetic distinction of a
consonant. It is like defining light without having a concept of dark. Perhaps it
can be explained by the need for the Hebrews of the time for secrecy, for a code
set apart from the reigning script paradigm. In any case, the Phoenicians, or some
Western Semites with whom the Phoenicians came in contact between the
twelfth and ninth century BC, probably between Tyre (now in Lebanon) and
Akko or Atlit (on the northern coast of Israel) realized the inefficiency or
primitiveness of this system, and added the missing vowels. The Phoenicians
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 65
exported this new improved alphabet, now a much more efficient device for
representing all the sounds of speech, so useful for their commerce and
imperialization of the seas, to Greece.7 At the same time, the alphabet in
different forms spread eastward through Persia into India, and westward back
into Africa. It also invaded Middle Eastern and African regions where an empire
hadn’t already preserved an older form of writing (as in Egypt, where
hieroglyphics survived into the Roman era), enabling new alphabetic cultures to
arise.
The actual moment at which some ingenious rebel or group of innovators
collaborated to reduce the multi-hundred sign-system of the syllabary (or as
some archeologists argue, the multi-thousand sign-systems of the sixteenthcentury BC Egyptian hieroglyph) into the twenty-two characters of the first
proto-alphabet is so super-inscribed by debates over archeological evidence and
so overinformed by theories of culture, and so obscured and effaced by extrascientific considerations of cultural priority, ideology, territorial primacy, and
even theology, that one must despair of ever really being able to enunciate and
clearly hear when that moment was and who was responsible for creating it.
Nevertheless, let me tell a likely fiction. It is based largely on my correlation of
the account of the exodus/expulsion of the Habiru slaves from Egypt in the Bible
with archeological evidence from the Southern Sinai, from ancient Canaan and
Western Semitic regions around the fifteenth and twelfth centuries BC. My story
also involves a sociological speculation.
The alphabet was invented by Habiru (“Sandrambler”) slaves working the
turquoise mines for Pharaoh near Surabit al-Khadem in the Southern Sinai in the
fifteenth or sixteenth century BC (see Figure 2). This romantic idea has many
appealing facets beyond the solid archeological evidence to support it. First, it is
very hard to imagine the highly stratified and inertial Egyptian empire giving rise
to or embracing a new script system on its own, which would require massive
reorganization not just bureaucratically, but socially and metaphysically as well.
Second, this new twenty-two character alphabet is highly compressed, a sort of
code, a jazzy alternative script and symbology that are just the sort of argot/
cipher we might expect to arise among slaves who need to invent their own
resistant, subterranean samiszdat-like culture. Again and again in history we find
slaves inventing spoken creoles, pidgins, alternative art forms, graffittis, tongues,
media, jazzes; the Habiru slaves are likely candidates to invent their own
subterranean, rebellious script.
Finally, however, this theory explains the uniqueness of subsequent HebrewJewish history, first iterated in the story of the exodus/expulsion of the Hebrew
slaves from Egypt, and then in the evolution of a unique Jewish cultural practice.
Even if this little fiction is only fantasy, it is clear that the Hebrews adopted the
primitive alphabet as their own, that it had a powerfully viral and transforming
influence on their culture, which in the end preserves the essential cognitive
peculiarities of Hebrew’s very primitiveness and inefficiency, and from this
historical accident arises the eternal Other, the philosophy of other, whose effect
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66 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
Figure 2 Proto-alphabet used by the Habiru, c. sixteenth century BC
Figure 3 The predominance of linear eye-tracking in reading English
on Western civilization is impossible to calculate and whose influence is still
felt, especially in postmodern philosophies.
Let me finally introduce you to, infect you, or contaminate you, with ancient
Hebrew, with alephtafian consciousness, in its most radical form: Aleph-Tav.
I would like to play a game with you. It is called “Thinking in Hebrew in
English.” It has one rule. Decode the following sentence into sensible modern
English by supplying the missing vowels:
TH VRL CLTR F DS MKS VR XCHNG F BD FLDS N CT F TTL TH LV
ND MRDR. SM S “J MRT” T RGSM. DS GVS NW T THR CR.
You are more or less undergoing what every modern and ancient Hebrew reader
must do regularly in order to read the language. Hebrew is an alphabet without
vowels and without upper and lower case letters. (The fact that it reads right-toleft is only quasi-arbitrary. Reading in this direction actually activates the right
hemisphere—correlated with slowing the reading process even further—more
than English or Greek or Latin does, which are almost entirely processed in the
left hemisphere of the brain.)
Attempt to decipher the sentence above, and you see that what is required is an
elaborate process of shuttling back and forth between recognizable elements and
unrecognizable ones: developing momentary hypotheses, testing them against
further decipherment, discarding them in favor of improvements. A track of eye
motions across the page would not look anything like the dominant paradigm of
reading normal English (Figure 3).
It would rather look something like Figure 4. There is a web of cross-referrals
and leaps, as words at the end of the excerpt help clarify words at the beginning.
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 67
Figure 4 The cross-tracking model required to decode English without vowels
In initial stages of decipherment, your reading probably looked more like this,
closer to the scanning of pieces of puzzle laid out face-up on a table than to
simple left-right tracking or canalization. There are sudden crystallizations, and
the whole process slowly, and then more rapidly, converges upon a “reading” of
the text. At the end, however, there still may be ambiguities left, ambiguities of
interpretation which can only be resolved by referring to extra-textual contexts:
who wrote it, when, to whom?
TH VRL CLTR F DS MKS VR XCHNG F BD FLDS N CT F TTL L V ND
MRDR. SM S “J MRT” T RGSM, DS GVS NW MNNG T THR CR.
You are probably able to decide quickly that “MRDR” indicates “Murder” or
that “XCHNG” implies “exchange” (I won’t say means because that implies a
level of certainty that just doesn’t exist in texts like these—and the problem is
exacerbated in Hebrew). With these two words, you might quasi-consciously
begin to form a general hypothetical drift. This isn’t an excerpt from a computer
manual. “RGSM” might intend “orgasm.” Perhaps a bit overexcited now, here
you might leap on “CLTR” and imagine that it conjures the word “culture.” The
whole process might take quite a few minutes, at the end of which you’d have a
quite good idea, but perhaps no certainty. In the interim, you are kept in
suspense, anxious suspense. The need to decipher is urgent, an itch that must be
scratched, not completely unpleasurable (not unlike the need to complete a
puzzle), but demanding satisfaction, if not consummation. You can begin to
understand why ancient kabbalists likened interpreting the Torah to sexual
activity. The consummation of total and perfect understanding seems always to
be deferred. Even if you settle on a decipherment like the following, there is
always going to be some doubt left:
The viral (?) culture of AIDS (?) makes every exchange of body fluids an
act of total faith, love, and murder. Some say ‘Je mort’ at orgasm, AIDS
gives new meaning to their cry.
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68 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
But it could have been read, perhaps in another time and place, or by another
audience, supposing it came from another author:
The virile collator of Odessa makes over-exchange of bed folds an acute
of…
You get the idea. Think of the challenge to decipher a single English word
without its vowel, taken out of context: “rd.” Is it red, read, road, rode, rod, rid,
rude, arid…? Similarly, let’s look at two Hebrew letters, the aleph and the tav
, which also happen to be the first and last, the alpha and omega, of the Hebrew
alphabet. There is even a saying in Israel, “from the aleph to the tav” meaning
something stronger than “from soup to nuts” or “the whole nine yards.”
Together, the two Hebrew letters appear like this: if you asked any Hebrew
reader “What does that say?” she would simply shrug. For looking at them
floating in space like this, in a contextual void, the letters can be pronounced
“eht,” “aht,” “oht,” “ooht,” or even the number 401 (backwards), since Hebrew
letters also stand for numbers, aleph ( )=1 and ta ( )=400.
Furthermore, there is something transcendental about the combination, for the
word “oht” means letter itself. The word aleph-tav “eht” is a purely grammatical
sign, impossible in a pictographic script. It represents the accusative case
(English speakers have trouble grasping the need for such a sign), the indication
of a direct object using the finite article. A weak analog would be if there were a
word in English that had to be placed in between any verb and any noun using
“the” or any pronoun for a specific person. Give me eht the book. I love eht you.
It is a transcription of a purely grammatical sign in speech, the sign of the
alphabet itself.
In short, it would be fair to say that the average reader of Hebrew, learns or
has enforced on him or her a set of cognitive habits that are quite different from
those of readers of more efficient Greek and later alphabets. Let me categorize
these cognitively (and perhaps even acquired biological) differences as follows:
1) Contextualization. Reading standard (non-vowelled) Hebrew requires
persistent contextualization between deciphering the phonetic value of individual
syllables and syntactic and semantic meaning. Even an eye-tracking map of how
the Hebrew reader reads a page of Hebrew would show much greater lateral,
back-tracking, and vertical movement of the eye than for readers of “more
efficient” alphabets (Kerckhove 1988: 403–4).
2a) Interpretation/dealing with ambiguity. The potential level of ambiguity in
most Hebrew writing is much greater, and so the Hebrew reader learns quickly to
tolerate and contend with ambiguity better and earlier than readers of less
ambiguous (more efficient) languages. The Hebrew reader also learns to generate
more possible interpretations more quickly.
2b) Tolerance of suspense/deferral. This also means that the Hebrew reader is
willing to wait longer for resolution and tolerates semantic irresolution better
than readers of other languages.
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 69
3) Right-brain processing. We know that reading Hebrew, with analogy to
pictographic scripts and because of its right-to-left direction, requires greater
right-brain processing visually. This means that the connection between semantic
processing and other right-brain functions is greater; these include:
(i) global (holistic) apprehension of patterns (intuition or Gestalt processing) in
all kinds of sensory data is greater;
(ii) visuo-spatial processing is more efficient and holistic;
(iii) connection between data and emotion is greater;
(iv) ability to detect and differentiate “nuances” in tone and meaning of
linguistic (and other) information is greater;
(v) ability to recognize the identity of objects in different configurations is
greater.
4) Abstraction metaphorization. Getting the right answer in deciphering a
Hebrew sentence means dealing with abstraction more frequently and more
intensely. The Hebrew reader must formulate numerous hypotheses and discard
them in quick succession, testing the hypothesis against what is first presented on
the page as an abstract system of multivalent signs. The result is:
(i) the movement between literal (as in the letter and its immediate
decipherment) and abstract is more fluid and intensely iterative for the
Hebrew reader;
(ii) the plasticity of the Hebrew cognitive apparatus in apprehending other nonliteral meanings must be greater, since such apprehension is required at the
primary immediate level of reading, i.e., the movement to symbolic
interpretation, to metaphorical interpretation, and to non-literal interpretation
must be swift in order to be merely competent as a reader.
5) Multivalence/deconstruction. The notion that there is one and only one right,
rational answer to any question has, we may hypothesize, less sway over the
Hebrew brain than over the brains of literates in languages that pose fewer
problems in decipherment.
6) Resistance to authority. Because of the above reasons (especially 5) the
connection between written word and the voice of author(ity) is severed.
Similarly, because the movement between written word and the proper
phoneticization poses so many more difficulties, it is likely that the Hebrew
reader does not so easily identify the authority or the intention of the author in
the text. Thus, on the one hand, Hebrew literates are less literate, limited by their
alphabet. On the other hand, Hebrew literates are less likely to accept the text as
final authority.
The Hebrew word porush captures many of these practices. It means,
variously (as noun or verb) commentary, exegesis, explanation (both literal and
otherwise), a dissident, dissenter, seceder, schismatic, someone who believes in
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70 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
the “free interpretation of the written word and sought to discover its inner
meaning—a Pharisee.”8
PORUSHIAN CONSCIOUSNESS ENABLES A PECULIAR
COGNITION, CULTURE, AND METAPHYSICS
Cognitive changes
Given all the above, it is hard to resist making very suggestive connections
between the cybernetic practices induced by this inefficient alphabet and the
sociological, cultural, and even metaphysical practices of Hebrew culture. For
instance, because the Hebrew language makes the transmission of authority
without questioning or interpretation difficult (if possible) and because any
written message, especially complex or new ones, are likely to provoke
numerous interpretations, it is easy to imagine that the peculiarities of the
Hebrew alphabet may have helped Jewish culture develop a hearty resistance to
authority and consensus in general.
Sociological changes
Now put this cognitive practice or habit in the context of the diaspora or cultural
nomadism. There, one of the only constants binding two thousand years of
Jewish history and dozens of disparate Jewish communities around the world at
any given time, each speaking a different host language, is reading unvowelled
Hebrew texts. We can see how the Jews come to be viewed culturally as a
peculiarly resistant “virus-like” or “parasite-like” race (and here I am reiterating
the libel placed on the Jews by Hitler in Mein Kampf), ineradicable pests who
carry with them a set of insular cognitive and cultural practices dooming them to
play on, feed off of, the margins of the host culture. Yet, paradoxically, these
same cognitive practices allow them to succeed with remarkable acuity in
penetrating into controlling positions in the host culture, acquiring with
incredible swiftness professional roles that require skills of literacy,
interpretation, learning, and powers of abstraction. Thus, these perpetual
newcomers threaten within a few generations to mutate the central culturgenic
heritage of the hosts.
Epistemic changes
If we look closely even at the little game we played with the aleph and the tav to
produce three or four possible words—the feminine you, the word for “letter”,
the (untranslatable) sign of the accusative case, and 401—it is tempting to see the
rudiments of an entire alternative epistemological practice emerge. In this
practice, the letters themselves open a space into which interpretation must be
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 71
placed in the form of choosing the vowels. The reader takes an active role,
looking not only to multiply possible alternatives, but to seek hidden unities
beneath them. Indeed, we can project from these practices the intense and
peculiarly multivalent hermeneutics of Jewish Talmud and mysticism.
Furthermore, with the ability to represent “eht,” the accusative case (which is so
abstruse that it is not even represented in English) and all other grammatical cases
because the alphabet is now a transcription (though in Hebrew only ambiguously
so) of the spoken language, civilization now has at its disposal a new
sophisticated means to represent and preserve across space and time the act of
languaging itself. That is, the text has the newfound capacity for self-reflexive
statement, to represent with greater plasticity and fidelity the consciousness or
intentions of an author in words. One can do texts independent of actions in the
world with extreme plasticity. At the same time, the instrument is not completely
efficient, so the reader is teased with this gesture at telepathic fidelity, and yet
forced to disambiguate the messages sent this way.
Metaphysical changes
So it is also no wonder that the central metaphysical tenet—and indeed one of
the only constants of Jewish metaphysical dogma (the phrase is almost
oxymoronic because of the absence of a coherent dogma in Judaism)—in the
thirty-five-hundred-year history of the Jews from the time of Moses is the
unpronounceability, the unwritability, and the unthinkability of the name of God.
Jews are taught traditionally never to write or speak The Name, even in another
language. In English, for instance, one writes “G-d.” The arbitrary transliteration
of the Tetragrammaton—the four letters of God’s name in Hebrew—YHVH—
into Yahweh is a purely Christian imposition on a Hebrew that it is indeterminate
and unpronounceable as written. Even in devout prayers, Jews abbreviate the
Tetragrammaton to “YY” and utter “Adonay” (meaning Lord). For a nonliturgical practice, the letters are read “Adoshem,” a nonsensical combination of
“Lord” and “Name”—or else one says “The Name” (Hashem).
What at first seems like fetishism is therefore a reiteration and reinforcement
of a central cognitive tool (or at least distinction) of Hebrew literacy. Thus, an
imperfection in the alphabet gives rise to a metaphysics of multivalence,
compulsory and compulsive interpretation, perpetual and transcendental
ambiguity, deferral of meaning to some locus that is never here, a disconnection
between the spoken and the written authority, and a denial of presence. God
speaks His name and shows His Face, an actual Face, only to Moses, only once,
and even then Moses turns away, only to watch the metaphorical presence of
God recede from him. So rather than a cosmological model of knowability,
tangibility—essentially the kind of idolatry we find in tech-writing empires—
from the inefficiency of the script system, develops a metaphysics of absence, of
unknowability, and of the unrepresentability of central truths.
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72 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
In what follows, I will trace, again in compressed fashion, how this cognitive
tool of the aboriginal, consonantal alphabet becomes an important world-creating
method which doesn’t emerge as a privileged practice on the stage of Western
culture until postmodernism.
TRACING THE CULTURE GENETICS OF ALEPH-TAV
COGNITION
Even the story of the very first exile of the Jews from Egypt can be read as a
rehearsal of a sociological conflict between two alphabets or as an expression of
the new cultural/cognitive powers which the new alphabet brings. It is circa
fifteen hundred BC. Moses flees Egypt and finds a harbor among the Midianites,
who happen to occupy the area of the desert in the region of South Sinai
(Liebovitch in Driver 1948:97), near the turquoise mines of Pharaoh, where and
when many archaeologists and epigraphers suggest the alphabet originated.
There God reveals to Moses haoht, which is variously translated “sign,” “mark,”
“omen,” “token,” or “miracle.” But the word also means “letter.” God tells
Moses to go back to Egypt and show Pharaoh “the letter.”9 Moses, who doesn’t
speak well (either because he is of “uncircumcised lips,” which means
colloquially he has some speech impediment, or because he is “of the language
of the uncircumcised,” since the word “lips” also means “language”) lets Aaron
do the talking. Aaron shows the “letters” in the court of Pharaoh. Pharaoh calls
out his own experts, who are called chartomeeim in Hebrew. The normal
translation for this word is “magicians” or “wizards.” But the earlier meaning is
“hieroglyphic scribes.” They show their “signs.” Each of the signs is called a
miracle, except for the first, the transformation of Aaron’s rod, or pen, into a
serpent (“crocodile,” whose Hebrew letters also could mean “sing” or “learn”).
The hieroglyphic images match Aaron for a couple of plagues—turning the Nile
bloody, multiplying frogs and lice…but eventually, there are some
transformations, abstractions, the hieroglyphic writers cannot manage with their
limited powers. They resign in defeat. Pharaoh eventually relents. The “letters”
have won the day.
Even from a more macroscopic perspective, if we find this fable of the war of
the scripts preserved in the Bible hard to believe as a literal explanation, the
exodus of the Sandramblers from Egypt, an historical fact, is hard to explain.
Here’s this egomaniacal Pharaoh with an enormous construction project
underway—cities Pithom and Rameses dedicated to his own glorification. And
here at his disposal is this massive, ready-made labor force of slaves. And in the
middle of construction he lets them go? Not likely. Unless these slaves, this
particular group, pose a unique kind of threat to the kingdom and the Pharaoh’s
power. What could that threat be? My speculation is that the threat was a new
alphabet, a new cybernetic paradigm for communicating and organizing
knowledge that entailed a total epistemological and metaphysical reorganization.
This new consonantal alphabetic paradigm was tantamount to a cultural plague, a
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 73
cognitive virus that Pharaoh in his wisdom was afraid to unleash among his own
population, since to have possession of this new cybernetic technology directly
threatens worldly material authority and the hieroglyphic status quo. So Pharaoh
complies with Moses’ demand to let his people go.
The Hebrews enter the desert. Moses leads them back to the site of his original
revelation of the alphabet, beneath Sinai in the land of the Midianites, near the
turquoise mines. There, he ascends the mountain and receives the tablets, on
which are inscribed the teachings, the Torah. The essence of the first few of the
ten commandments circumscribe the metaphysics now made possible by this new
alphabet: (Iconoclasm) Discard the idols, they are pictographic incarnations,
much too pictographic for Me; (Ambiguity and Deferral) Do not take My Name
in Vain. (Abstraction) I am the Unpronounceable God of Becoming (the closest
linguistic relative to YHVH is the verb of existence in Hebrew). I am the
abstract, portable, unknowable God-Who-Requires-Interpretation, and you still
won’t be able to fathom Me. (In later Jewish talmudical lore, it became canonical
that God read the Torah in order to create the Universe: so we have the God of
reading and writing and deciphering, too.) In wandering around the desert and
fighting the desert or forest tribes of the north, it helps to have this portable altar
that has no need of a temple or the magisterial architectonics of kingdom.
But after a few hundred years, the Jews establish a kingdom in Canaan and the
Negev and erect their own temple culture, founded by Solomon and consolidated
by David. For four hundred relatively stable years, very little changes in Jewish
metaphysics or episteme. But when the First Temple of Solomon is destroyed (c.
570 BC) by the Babylonians, the Jews relearn the power of their exilic Hebrew
cybernetics of deferral, there in the Babylonian Exile. When they return fifty
years later to rebuild the Temple, the Torah is recodified by Ezra the Scribe until
it achieves its canonical form circa. 444 BC with only a few additions after that
(e.g., The Books of Job and Daniel).
The destruction of the Second Temple in seventy CE (Common Era) by the
Romans begins the Jews’ nineteen hundred years of exile. There seems to be
some intimate feedback loop in the relationship between the Hebrew cognitive
mode promoted by the alphabet and the Jewish culture only in exile, fostered by
the intensive scriptural devotion which preserves Jewish culture. In the beginning
of this new exilic period, the metaphysical and epistemic practices were
delivered from the priests to the rabbis, the interpreting grad-student types who,
like the Pharisees, rebelled against the priests, even when the Temple was
standing, and dedicated themselves to scriptural elaboration in order to discover
the true nature of God’s intention rather than to the system (very tech-writing
Empire-like) of Temple hierarchy and physical sacrifice. Over the succeeding
centuries, the rabbis slowly evolved a hypertextual format that captured and
represented in a page layout their intensive hermeneutic activity: a system of
successive commentary, marginalia, interpretation, reinscription, and the
multiplication of competing interpretations as an end in itself. At the same time,
this epistemological project was founded on a metaphysical principle: the central
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74 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
indecipherability or unknowability of the direct Word of God, which was also
preserved and represented in the layout of the page of commentary (evolved
more than fifteen hundred years). Gaze at a page of the Talmud as it ultimately
came to be printed from the fifteenth century onward, and you quickly see that this
is scripture yearning to become cyberspatial, or at least hypertextual, with
intertextual connections that certainly defeat the idea of a linear reading or of
singular authority, the two dogmas expressed in the classical book. This textual
symposium also breaks barriers of space and time: a single page may represent
more than sixteen centuries (or more) of commentary on a single text or even
word, including marginalia that refer to other texts in the Talmud or in Scripture.
The sources may have been as scattered as France, Spain, Algiers, Eastern Europe,
Jerusalem, Babylon, and Safed, yet they are all present in their multivocality here
on the page. Even visually, the text announces that there is no one right answer,
and everyone is invited to join the babble, the epistemological sûk (bazaar).
There are many moments and inventions in Jewish history that illustrate the
development of alephtafian epistemology, including the cycle of partial
assimilation and then expulsion that marks the diaspora itself, which can be
traced and partly blamed on the inefficiency of the Hebrew alphabet and the
porushian consciousness to which it gives rise. However, the scope of this
chapter does not allow me to dwell on all of them here. At the very least it is
worthwhile noting now that the metaphysics and epistemological practices of
Christianity develop completely contrary assumptions, and that these assumptions
can also be traced to a sort of alphabetic determinism. In this case, the advent of
the more efficient Greek alphabet, which added the vowels to the alphabet, and
its direct descendants, Latin and then the Romance languages, and finally,
English, lead to a metaphysic of presence. The alphabet which represents the
spoken word with much increased fidelity, while not eliminating ambiguity
altogether, leads to a firmer attachment to the authority of the spoken word,
Logos, and relegates the written word to an important but a secondary role in
transmitting worldly, and then divine, authority. Walter Ong has been the most
recent and one of the most influential analysts of how modern communications
technology develops along the vectors of Western, and particularly Christian
culture (Ong 1984). As a Jesuit priest, he gives eloquent expression (in his book
Interfaces of the Word) to the problems and values expressed in the oral-textual
dialectic, the ethos of logos in Western civilization, and the Christian
metaphysics entailed:
If interpretation means, as it does in the sense I employ and in Ricouer’s
sense, the appropriation of a text, its completion in actual discourse now,
its insertion into the present—which can involve the use of other texts
written or printed commentaries, but which, to avoid infinite regression,
must ultimately connect with present oral utterances—to say that
interpretation of the Bible is for the Christian more urgent than the
interpretation of other texts is a commonplace. For the Christian believes
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that the word of God is given in order to be interiorized, appropriated [in
other words returned to speech, in Ong’s scheme] by men and women of
all times and places…. Given such urgency, we can also be aware of
certain problems of biblical interpretation for the Christian, which are, if
not new, at least formulable in new ways within the perspectives here
suggested.
First, we have seen composition in writing, or even setting down in
writing something actually said orally, is not the same as oral speech, nor
is it simply a parallel operation, for it involves utterance in a different way
with time, with past, present, and future, and relates writer and reader
differently from the way oral speech relates speaker and listener. Secondly,
a reader is not the same as a listener, nor a writer the same as a speaker. The
reader is absent from the writing of a text, and may be anyone from
anywhere, the writer absent from the reading of the text, whereas speaker
and hearer are fully determined persons normally present to one another
quite consciously in vocal exchange….
Such statements as these, giving special status to text which is quite
different from the status of oral utterance, tend to be resented by Christians
when they are applied to the Bible. This appears to be so first because of
the [belief in the] presence of the Word [logos], incarnate in Jesus Christ,
through history. The Bible has regularly seemed to the Christian to be
much simpler than all we have said here: it is God speaking to Man, here
and now. And so it is of course. However, to say this is not to do away
with questions but to create them. Secondly, the biblical text is understood
somehow by the Church as being addressed to all ages. The relationship of
the word of God in the text of the Bible which as text is dead, and the
Word of God incarnate in Jesus Christ, who lives now and forever
—‘Maranatha; come, Lord Jesus….’
These questions, in one way or another, are all old. … But the
framework in which they are presented here is, I believe, restructured in
accord with our newly reflective awareness of the technological
transformations of the word in past and present.
… Given that writing is not just a visual equivalent of speech and there
is a psychological progression from orality to a literate culture, how
necessary was it that the Good News of the death, resurrection, and
ascension of the Lord itself die and be buried in a text in order to come to a
later, resurrected life throughout history?
(Ong 1977)
In other words, you must believe in this sort of miracle of the Word-made-flesh,
yielding a metaphysic of presence. The only other metaphysic on the scene of
Western culture is a contaminated textual interpretation that leads to nothing in
particular, a self-consuming hermetic or hermeneutic activity that leads only
back into the maze of the text. As Havelock puts it, with the metaphysical
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76 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
foundation of Western culture left implicit but his Tory view of culture still
intact: “A successful or developed writing system is one that does not think at
all. It should be a purely passive instrument of the spoken word even if, to use a
paradox, the word is spoken silently” (Havelock 1976:17).
It is hard not to note the extent to which the Ong-Havelock construction of
“proper” Western culture tending toward some apocalyptic finale is hostile to, if
it does not thoroughly erase, the postmodern practice and ethos which the
literature and anticipation of cyberspace take for granted, just as the handling of
the text prescribed by Church dogma requires the erasure of the talmudic
alternative for opening texts to a spree of contaminating alternatives that defeat
totalizing answers. The Ongian system opens the text to a new dimension of life,
the direct vocalization of divine intention, but it closes the interpretive activity in
the text at the same time. Ong, reiterating Church dogma, requires that all
interpretations get folded into one interpretation, all texts fold into one text, and
all answers presuppose one totalizing, miraculous Answer, the resurrection of
Jesus Christ and the salvation of the world in Him that all men and women
should (must) understand. By contrast, the porushian epistemic method, if not
necessarily the metaphysics attached to it, resonates with the openness, deferral,
multivocality, and even the rhizomatic activity of most postmodern practices. It
is no wonder that several times through the later medieval period, the Church
ordered the burning of the Talmud.10
This metaphysic of an ultimately transparent text, which is simply a
transcription of the spoken word, is what Derrida means by his use of the Greek
word parousia, presence. And it is this metaphysic of Logos, the spoken word
that is supposedly made present through the text, which Derrida critiques
throughout his œuvre (especially as he finds it in Hegel and Heidegger) because
it leads to totalizing discourse and the silencing of différance.11 If I read
Havelock properly, it leads even to the silencing of thought, a Tory
consummation devoutly to be wished. “One does not think at all.” “The word is
spoken quietly.” One goes to the quietude of the library only to find confirmation
of what is already known.
To understand the postmodern tradition it is virtually inescapable, then, to look
for an alternative model of reading provided by the talmudic tradition. The noisy
babble of the cheder, the talmudical schoolroom, replaces the silent library. One
reads not to find confirmation of what has already been decided as dogma, but to
take issue, to demur, to absorb first the already multivocal symposium and then
to add your voice. And in the place of the Western episteme of totalized
knowledge, which gives us the sciences of Grand Unified Theory, of Theories of
Everything, and the politics of fascism and world domination, postmodern
philosophers, most notably Derrida, would place a grammatology of deferral,
absence, and the proliferation of interpretations, the deconstruction of any
foundational, totalizing discourse. In the place of the metaphysic of presence,
which privileges the voice over the written sign, Derrida proposes an antimetaphysic of the inscribed page, the scriptural self-marginalizing text. And in
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 77
accomplishing this deconstruction of Western metaphysic, Derrida insistently, at
first covertly and then more overtly, practices the alternative Oriental episteme
opened and invited by the Hebrew alphabet and at the same time, emerges as the
most prominent and explicitly Jewish philosopher on the contemporary scene.
I do not have space here to engage in an elaborate textual analysis of Derrida’s
literary-epistemic method; enough has been said about it elsewhere. But I would
ask you to look closely, in general, at Derrida’s paronomasic method, his
compulsive punning. In brief, Derrida’s linguistic method looks like this: if you
(1) permute and recombine the letters of the word; (2) resurrect its hidden roots
(Hebrew also betrays its primitiveness as a language of constant iteration on
common and elemental three-letter roots); and (3) associate a word with its kin
root-sharing words, then you create a space for interpretation by permutation,
association, and combination. You take apart the word and reassemble it; you
pun gratuitously and obsessively. And in the ambiguous semantic territory
opened up by this irrelevant, aleatory, trivial, and irrational play, in the
proliferation of new words and signs and semantic content you discover hidden
relations, hitherto inconceivable correspondences, revelations. And although this
method evades any sense of closure or finality, and although the method is
peripatetic and irrational, it is epistemologically potent, revealing hidden relations
and assumptions disguised by but preserved in the grammatological signs. The
sign of its epistemological potency is the extent to which Derrida’s project
marches from the margins to invade (infect, contaminate) the center of Western
philosophy in the last two decades. For example, one might examine more
closely Derrida’s puns with the syllable “CA” in Cinders (Derrida 1991) (which,
by the way, is also the memorial prayer for the slain of the Holocaust—the
“whole burning of the sacrificed”); or the Hebrew words “Shibboleth” and
“circumcision” in his essay “Shibboleth” (Hartman 1986) and the talmudic layout
of the page in Glas, which also denies that there are any puns contained within it.
These are also two of his most overtly Jewish essays.
Curiously, Abraham Abulafia, the Jewish thirteenth-century Spanish
kabbalist, prescribed virtually exactly the same method for achieving telepathic
communication with Schechina, the spirit of God. For Abulafia, the operation of
this alphabetic method was designed to put the mind in a hyperexcited state, to
force it to new levels of openness and receptivity (Idel 1987). Umberto Eco in
Foucault’s Pendulum recreates the printout of a computer that recombines the
letters of the Name Of God in all its permutations. Eco calls that computer
“Abulafia” (Eco 1987).
Even today, the contest between the urge for totalizing intimacy and presence,
whether with the Other or with Godhead, and alphabetic absence (deferral,
interpretation, difference), is manifested in different guises in politics,
philosophy, and cultural criticism. In the public marketplace of European
politics, for instance, the pedestrian construction is a contest between “Order”
and “Others,” which is quite frequently reiterated as an actual battle between
Normal Nationalism and the Contagious, Viral Jew (or Turk, or Kurd, or Muslim,
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78 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
or fill in the blank). On the scene of Anglo philosophy, to take another instance,
this ancient dialectic is configured as X (take your pick of new heroes of
philosophy who promise parousia) vs Derrida (porushia); as the new ecology of
everything (for instance Michael Heim in his recent book The Metaphysics of
Virtual Reality suggests that the metaphysics of VR will fulfill Christian
theologian Teilhard de Chardin’s totalizing idea of the emergent noosphere;
Heim 1993), vs the verbal, written roots that open more spaces into which are
inserted even more signs of absence. On such a scene, the name Derrida has slowly
evolved into the figure not only of the anti-parousian porush, but parasite:
infectious, viral, unutterable, contaminated, Jew. To speak “derrida” in some
circles is to rupture membranes, lyse cell walls, introduce retroviral code,
shibboleths, into the dark nucleated core of radical, rooting rhizomal philosophy.
That Derrida is a Jew is no accident in this scenario.
TELEPATHY IN VIRTUAL REALITY
Circumcision of the word by the incision of the nothing in the circumcised
heart of the other, that’s you…in German in all the Jewish languages of the
world.
(Jacques Derrida, Shibboleth)
But our subject here is virtual futures. I promised I wouldn’t say much about
cyberspace except by analogy with the massive cultural revolution initiated by the
invention of the first crude alphabet, Hebrew. But now the time has come to
sketch the shape of this analogy.
First, it is clear by the nature of much of the discussion around virtual futures
that our culture recognizes the massive reorganization of human relations to
mind, self, others, society at large, and even transcendental questions that VR
promises to answer in new ways. Second, it is also clear that just as the phonetic
alphabet successfully replaces the cybernetic communications devices that
preceded it and which gave it birth (oral illiteracy, pictographic and syllabic
literacy), a new cyborg illiteracy promises to supplant whole empires of
alphabetic literacy. Third, it is obvious that cyberspace as a technology
represents the next step in a vector of evolution in the direction of increasing the
bandwidth and fidelity of telepathy. If you want to transmit your thoughts
through space and time so that another person can inhabit them, cyberspace is the
next best way to do it, superseding the alphabet. It will deliver all the richness of
sensory experience in real reality, but that experience will still have been
authored, and will still be (will be even more) infinitely plastic than those
transmissions and CC-experiences generated by the re-permuting and combining
of the fewer than thirty elements of the alphabet. VR will offer directed
imagination and telepathy; a multisensory and absorbing hallucinatory novel and
epistle, the On Beyond Zebra of consciousness.
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 79
But the fourth analogy, and the one that really concerns me, is an implicitly
philosophical, and even metaphysical one. It is clear that metaphysics are created
by such revolutions in TMT, whether the original script system invented by the
Sumerians around 3,000 BC, or the inefficient alphabet of the Hebrews created
in the South Sinai around 1,500 BC, or the more phonetically high-fidelity
vowelled alphabet of the Phoenicians imported to Greece around 850 BC. Will
virtual reality represent the apocalyptic consummation of an Ongian-Christian
metaphysics of presence, the urge to really be there through the technology of outof-body telepresence (that used to rely on the obsolete alphabet but will soon rely
on the gleaming new computer technology)? Or will it evolve into a space where
porushian consciousness can emigrate in its continuing diaspora of multivalence,
openness, abstraction, irrationality, suspension, deferral, ambiguity,
contextualization, etc. In other words, out of which alphabet and its concomitant
metaphysic— parousia or porushia—does cyberspace evolve and to which new
metaphysics does it lead?
Ned Lukacher notes in the title to his introductory essay to Derrida’s Cinders,
“Mourning Becomes Telepathy,” that the Derridean Jewish practice, what I have
been calling solipsistically porushia, in comparison to the transparent idea of
language and the presence it purports to deliver (the presence of authority, of the
intention of the author), is highly irrational, primitive. The idea that by opening a
space in meaning by punning or mere word play, that the script itself contains
mysterious knowledge revealed by aleatory interpretation and multivocal
interrogation, is superstitious. Superstitious means to stand above or apart, to
bear witness after, as in mourning. In the porushian metaphysic, the God who
always is never there leaves us standing afterwards, bearing witness. And such
mourning leads to an appreciation for telepathy, the final communication with
the yearned-for other who is never there. This is not the same kind of telepathy to
which the metaphysics of presence leads, where the urge is for complete
intimacy, for utter ontological bonding between minds. The pure form of the
Christian communiqué leads to a transparent presentation of the Word, the use of
communication to make the Other present. The technology is a matter of
indifference. Words, music, architecture, virtual reality mind-link: the goal and
the answer are always the same.
SO DOES VR DELIVER A METAPHYSICS OF ABSENCE
(PORUSHIA) OR (PARUSHIA)?
The question cannot be answered, not, at least by someone who practices
porushia. The two terms of the dialectic resolve into two different, and in the end
maybe even pedestrian methods for getting to the Other telepathically. This
enduring dialectic, an undercurrent informing much of the Western philosophical
tradition and its skeptical alternatives, may resolve into the urge to interpret and
the urge for intimacy, both of which are itches that can’t ever be scratched outside
of a really metaphysical consummation or ecstasy, a seizure in the brain that
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80 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
totally alters its hormonal ecology. I will say that I think those who continue to
practice the ancient and primitive and obsolete arts of the alphabet will all
occupy the position traditionally reserved for the Jew. All the (few remaining)
writers, the scribes, the authors in cyberspace will be jewish with a small j, will
have by definition joined the diaspora where they can, indeed must, continue to
scribble on the margins of a newly (cyborgishly) illiterate host culture pursuing
its march toward some more totalizing, less divergent and skeptical future in the
nerve net. As Derrida says, “If all the poets are jews…”12 (Porush 1993:60ff.).
Perhaps one might even say that cyberotic art and electronic sextensions of the
body promise new elaborations on the margin of this old dialectic, took as we
explore the corridors of cognition-in-the-body itself. Or to put it another way,
that (as film and other media have abundantly shown) new non-alphabetic
literatures arise to be talmudicaliy reinterpreted in much the same old porushian
manner. I’m sure once there in cyberspace we will continue to discover the two
kinds of old gods, the One who promises, like the Terminator (“Terminator of
History,” Hegel would say): ‘I’II be back”; and the God who is always hiding,
the God on the way but never arriving, the God who is always there but
receding, the inaccessible God. We will experience Them, although with new
sensory force and conviction, and perhaps, newly barbaric illiteracy, and so we will
probably invent new gods and new idolatries as well.13
To illustrate the point, let me end in the prescient literature where I began. In
this striking moment—in fact the climactic moment—in the novel Neuromancer,
Case, the illiterate hero, jacks into cyberspace to confront the new Al God
Wintermute/Neuromancer, whom he has helped evolve. It decides to present
itself as a face, which Case, jacked in, now confronts at the telepathic interface in
his mind. The face speaks:
“I’m not Wintermute now.”
“So what are you.” He drank from the flask, feeling nothing.
“I’m the matrix, Case.”
Case laughed. “Where’s that get you?”
“Nowhere. Everywhere. I’m the sum total of the works, the whole
show.”
“That’s what Lady 3Jane wanted?”
“No. She couldn’t imagine what I’d be like.” The yellow smile [on
the screen] widened.
“So what’s the score? How are things different? You running the
world now? You God?”
“Things aren’t different. Things are things.”
(Gibson 1984:269–70)14
What else would you expect a machine god to say, after all? Maybe, ironically,
the machine really does take over and all we get is a transparent and depressing
vista of things, turtles all the way down. All it ever was was things, and we’ve
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 81
been fooling ourselves with hallucinatory TMTs all along. I prefer to think there
is a transcendent alternative to the null space of machined art and ethical
relativism, where we can prophesy and reinterpret amid the circuits and loops of
our extended mindspace.
NOTES
1 The author wishes to thank Rafael Fischler for a particularly helpful insight
concerning iconoclasm, and also the staff of the Technion library for their
assistance.
2 For instance, studies of Japanese show that using the more pictographichieroglyphic Kanji characters leads to right hemispheric dominance, while using
the phonetic/syllabic Kana leads to left-hemispheric dominance. See E.A.Jones and
C, Aoki, “The Processing of Japanese Kana and Kanji Characters” (in Kerckhove
and Lumsden 1988:301–20).
3 The analogy is preserved even in some terms of writing: some early systems of
writing, especially those half-way between syllabaries and alphabets, write left to
right on the first line, then right to left on the second, as the ox plows the field. The
Greek word for both plowing and writing this way was boustrophedon, a
characteristic of early Hellenistic writing, until it became stablized left-to-right.
4 The word “ideogram” as used here, I would argue, is a misnomer Few if any
characters in these early scripts were illustrations of “ideas.” Virtually all were
correlates of physical objects. Thus, the pictographs were extremely clumsy, if not
thoroughly unsuited, for depicting abstract relations, abstractions, or dynamic
processes:
The needs therefore of the temples and the government as well as the civil
population brought a large professional class of scribes into being, and these
formed a powerful guild whose patron deity was the god Nabo, the Biblical Nebo;
his emblems were the tablet and the wedge without the tablet and the slyhus…. The
goddess Nibada or Nisaba…was called the universal scribe. (Driver 1948:62)
5 This analogy is not meant idly. First of all, it can be shown that the insect empires
are directly a result of their means of communication; the now-well-known dance of
the Scavenger bee back in the hive rehearsing the directions to nectar and the
pheremone trails of ants are inseparable from the way these insects imperialize
their territories, inscribing or exteriorizing urgencies in their genetic code onto the
texts of their domains. Similarly, the first obvious effect of a tech-writing system is
the way it permits authority to extend control over and confederate (via texts) troops,
generals, allies, etc. across space and time. Before writing, the largest geographical
radius of an empire was the width of territory across which a runner could carry a
king’s message in one day.
6 Kana, which is a recent Japanese invention derived from the pictographic Kanji, is
itself based on the Chinese pictogram. But it was invented after the Japanese were
inspired by contact with the West to derive a phonetic script.
7 The old cliché that Phoenician was the first alphabet is nothing more than a blind
reiteration of the Greek fable of Cadmus, the Phoenician who sowed the dragon’s
teeth of the alphabet on Greek shores to create an army. It may also be a partly-
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82 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
conscious attempt to purge the roots of Western civilization of any Oriental or
Semitic influence, This can most recently be shown in the inordinately influential
work of the anti-Semite and racist Eric Havelock, whose theories on the birth of
civilization and the rise of literacy have been reiterated by Walter Ong in his
successful books Orality and Literacy (1982) and Interfaces of the Word (1977)
and by J.Goody and M.McLuhan. Based on Havelock’s overtechnical insistence
that Hebrew was not an alphabet because it lacked vowels, Havelock builds an
entire indictment of Semitic thinking and “so-called literature.” With overtones that
suggest an imperial view of Western culture, he is generally given to such broad
racial generalizations that display his contempt (if not xenophobia) for Orientals,
particularly Jews and Chinese. Here are some worthy excerpts of his oft-cited
monograph, Origins of Western Literacy. “Among the foreign languages with
which an English speaking individual may be required to cope are those like Arabic
or Chinese which are not only foreign but happen to employ a non-alphabetic
script” (Havelock 1976:11). “For literate Chinese [using the term ‘literate’ to mean
a reader of Chinese, but definitely not in its Greco-Roman sense of a reader of
alphabets] to increase his reading vocabulary requires a stringent discipline in,
among other things, the memorization of inscribed shapes. Can this be said to have
reversed the normal course of evolutionary development?” “For the purposes of
this study, at any rate, the Chinese Script is an historical irrelevance” (Havelock
1976:15). In “analyzing” Hebrew and the body of written expression to which it
gives rise, Havelock says that it cannot possibly constitute a body of literature: he
suggests that because Hebrew is incompletely phonetic and requires laborious
interpretation, authors are “required to address to the reader such statements and
sentiments as fall into an idiom easily recognizable. They will partake of the
formulaic, and this is as true of a modern Hebrew or Arabic newspaper as of the
Old Testament even if the modern equivalent of the ancient formula becomes a
slogan” (Havelock 1976:33). “To illustrate these conditions in actual operation we
need only turn to the so-called literatures of the ancient Near East as they have been
translated for us,” These translators [of Hebrew writing] inevitably “overtranslate
the original and ‘remove ambiguities’” (Havelock 1976:34). “It is precisely these
limitations imposed upon the possible converage of human experience that gives to
the Old testament its power of appeal, as we say, to ‘simple people 0146’”
(Havelock 1976:35). But even “when all allowance is made for simple grandeur of
conception or refinement of design, the basic complexity of human experience is
not there” (Havelock 1976: 34).
8 My source for all Hebrew translations into English is Reuven Alcalay’s
monumental (1970) Hebrew-English Dictionary, Jerusalem: Massada Publishing
Company.
9 I should note that even in this sketchy interpretation I am attempting to follow good
Jewish hermeneutic or midrashic practice. I multiply possible meanings for a single
word while holding in abeyance and yet acknowledging and accepting the
competing interpretations. Then I offer an explaining story that would recuperate a
particular meaning (letter), and finally I show an underlying unity to all the
meanings (letters are tokens, signs, etc., of the miracles that YHVH has granted to
the Hebrew people).
10 Notable times include: Pope Gregory ordered the burning of the Talmud in Paris in
1240; Pope Clement IV ordered it burned in 1264; The Church Synod of Basel
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TELEPATHY: ALPHABETIC CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE AGE OF CYBORG ILLITERACY 83
banned the Talmud in 1431; Pope Julius III ordered the Talmud burned in 1553;
Clement II prohibited the study of the Talmud in any form in 1592.
11 The monograph that most explicitly addresses this conflict between totalizing
discourse and resistance of différance is Glas, in which Derrida methodically
demolished Hegel’s Christian-philosophic project to develop a total and final
philosophy (along the left-hand column of each page). The right-hand column of
the page plays poetically with the text and themes in the work of Jean Genet. Not
surprisingly, the text also resembles an everted page of the Talmud or a conflation
of the Talmud’s and the Torah’s pagiography.
12 Jacques Derrida actually quotes Freud’s essay, “Moses and Monotheism” here: “‘If
all the poets are Jews, they, the poets, are all circumcised or circumcisors’”
(Derrida 1986),
13 In addition to the illustration below from Neuromancer, this is precisely the theme
Gibson elaborates on in his second book of the cyberspace trilogy, Count Zero.
There, the god Neuromancer created by Case in the first novel has splintered into
voodoo deities and ghosts, Legba and Baron Samedi and various “loas.”
Neuromancer’s other manifestation is as a robot artist who assembles
transcendental boxes, objets d’art that have a certain commercial value on the
Parisian market, At least one character worships Neuromancer as one true God.
14 Gibson here seems to be echoing Wittgenstein’s definition of the world, not only in
the statement by this new god-mind, but in the name of his hero: in the Tractatus,
Wittgenstein states: “Die welt ist alles was der falles ist”—the world is all that is
the case.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Alcalay, R. (1970) Hebrew-English Dictionary, Jerusalem: Massada Publishing Company.
Changeux, J.P. (1988) “Learning and Selection in the Nervous System,” in D.de
Kerckhove and C.Lumsden (eds), The Alphabet and the Brain, Berlin: SpringerVerlag.
Chiera, E. (1938) They Wrote on Clay, ed. G.Cameron, Chicago: University of Chicago
Press.
Derrida, J. (1986a) Glas, trans. J.P.Leavy and R.Rand, London: University of Nebraska
Press.
––(1986b) Schibboleth: pour Paul Celan, Paris: Galilee.
––(1991) Cinders, trans. N.Lukacher, London: University of Nebraska Press.
Driver, G.R. (1948) Semitic Writing: From Pictogragh to Alphabet, London: British
Academy.
Eco, U. (1990) Foucault’s Pendulum, trans. W.Weaver, New York: Ballantine Books.
Gibson, W. (1984) Neuromancer, New York: Ace Science Fiction.
––(1986) Count Zero, New York: Ace Science Fiction.
Hartman, G. (ed.) (1986) Midrash and Literature, New Haven: Yale University Press.
Havelock, E. (1976) Origins of Western Literacy: Four Lectures delivered at the Ontario
Institute for Studies in Education, Toranto, March 25, 26, 27, 28, 1974. Toronto:
Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.
Heim, M. (1993) The Metaphysics of Virtual Reality, New York: Oxford University
Press.
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84 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
Hellige, F. (1993) Hemispheric Asymmetry, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.
Howard, D. (1987) “Reading Without Letters?” in M.Coltheart, G.Sartori, and R.Job
(eds), The Cognitive Neuropsychology of Language, London: Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates.
Idel, M. (1987) Kabbalah: New Perspectives, New Haven: Yale University Press.
Jones, E. (1988) “The Processing of Japanese Kana and Kanji Characters,” in D.de
Kerckhove and C.Lumsden (eds), The Alphabet and the Brain, Berlin: SpringerVerlag.
Kerckhove, D.de (1988) “Critical Brain Processes Involved in Deciphering the Greek
Alphabet,” in D.de Kerckhove and C.Lumsden (eds), The Alphabet and the Brain,
Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
Kerckhove, D.de and Lumsden, C. (eds) (1988) The Alphabet and the Brain, Berlin:
Springer-Verlag.
Kramer, S.N. (1956) From the Tablets of Sumer, Colorado: The Falcon’s Wing Press.
Lumsden, C. (1988) “Gene-Culture Coevolution: Culture and Biology in a Darwinian
Perspective,” in D.de Kerckhove and C.Lumsden (eds), The Alphabet and the Brain,
Berlin: Springer-Verlag.
Ong, W. (1977) Interfaces of the Word: Studies in the Evolution of Consciousness and
Culture, Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
––(1982) Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word, New York: Methuen.
Porush, D. (1993) “Seeing God in the Three Pound Universe,” Omni, October: 60 ff.
Seuss, Dr (1955) On Beyond Zebra, New York: Random House.
Tzeng, O.J.L and D.L Hung (1989) “Orthography, Reading and Cerebral Function,” in
D.de Kerckhove and C.Lumsden (eds), The Alphabet and the Brain, Berlin: SpringerVerlag.
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P. 99
Virtual Environments and the Emergence of
Synthetic Reason
Manuel De Landa
At the end of World War II, Stanislav Ulam and other scientists previously
involved in weapons research at Los Alamos discovered the huge potential of
computers to create artificial worlds, where simulated experiments could be
conducted and where new hypotheses could be framed and tested. The physical
sciences were the first ones to tap into this “epistemological reservoir,” thanks to
the fact that much of their accumulated knowledge had already been given a
mathematical form. Among the less mathematized disciplines, those already
taking advantage of virtual environments are psychology and biology (e.g.,
Artificial Intelligence and Artificial Life), although other fields such as
economics and linguistics could soon begin to profit from the new research
strategies made possible by computer simulations.
Yet, before a given scientific discipline can begin to gain from the use of
virtual environments, more than just casting old assumptions into mathematical
form is necessary. In many cases the assumptions themselves need to be
modified. This is clear in the case of Artificial Intelligence research, much of
which is still caught up into older paradigms of what a symbol-manipulating
“mind” should be, and hence has not benefited as much as it could from the
simulation capabilities of computers. Artificial Life, on the other hand, has the
advantage that the evolutionary biologist’s conceptual base has been purged from
classical notions of what living creatures and evolution is supposed to be, and
this has put this discipline in an excellent position to profit from the new research
tool represented by these abstract spaces. Since this is a crucial point, let’s take a
careful look at just what this purging has involved.
The first classical notion that had to be eliminated from biology was the
Aristotelian concept of an “ideal type,” and this was achieved by the
development of what came to be known in the 1930s as “population thinking.” In
the old tradition that dominated biological thought for more than two thousand
years, a given population of animals was conceived as the more or less imperfect
incarnation of an ideal essence. Thus, for example, in the case of zebras, there
would exist an ideal zebra, embodying all the attributes which together specify
the nature of “zebrahood” (being striped, having hoofs, etc.). The existence of
this essence would be obscured by the fact that in any given population of zebras
the ideal type would be subjected to a multiplicity of accidents. (of embryological
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86 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
development, for instance) yielding as an end result a variety of imperfect
realizations. In short, in this view, only the ideal essence is real, with the
variations being but mere shadows.
When the ideas of Darwin on the role of natural selection and those of Mendel
on the dynamics of genetic inheritance were brought together six decades ago,
the domination of the Aristotelian paradigm came to an end. It becomes clear,
for instance, that there was no such thing as a pre-existent collection of traits
defining “zebrahood.” Each of the particular adaptive traits which we observe in
real zebras developed along different ancestral lineages, accumulated in the
population under the action of different selection pressures, in a process that was
completely dependent on specific (and contingent) historical details. In other
words, just as these traits (camouflage, running speed, and so on) happened to
come together in zebras, they might not have, had the actual history of those
populations been any different.
Moreover, the engine driving this process is the genetic variability of zebra
populations. Only if zebra genes replicate with enough variability can selection
pressures have raw materials to work with. Only if enough variant traits arise
spontaneously, can the sorting process of natural selection bring together those
features which today define what it is to be a zebra. In short, for population
thinkers, only the variation is real, and the ideal type (e.g., the average zebra) is a
mere shadow. Thus we have a complete inversion of the classical paradigm
(Sober 1987:157–61).
Further refinements of these notions have resulted in the more general idea that
the coupling of any kind of spontaneous variation to any kind of selection
pressure results in a sort of “searching device.” This “device” spontaneously
explores a space of possibilities (i.e., possible combinations of traits), and is
capable of finding, over many generations, more or less stable combinations of
features, more or less stable solutions to problems posed by the environment.
This “device” has today been implemented in populations that are not biological.
This is the so-called “genetic algorithm” (developed by John Holland) in which a
population of computer programs is allowed to replicate in a variable form, and
after each generation a test is performed to select those programs that most
closely approximate the desired performance. It has been found that this method
is capable of zeroing in on the best solutions to a given programming task. In
essence, this method allows computer scientists to breed new solutions to
problems, instead of directly programming those solutions (Levy 1992:155–87).
The difference between the genetic algorithm and the more ambitious goals of
Artificial Life is the same as that between the action of human breeding
techniques on domesticated plants and animals, and the spontaneous evolution of
the ancestors of those plants and animals. Whereas in the first case the animal or
plant breeder determines the criterion of fitness, in the second one there is no
outside agency determining what counts as fit. In a way what is fit is simply that
which survives, and this has led to the criticism that Darwinism’s central formula
(i.e., “survival of the fittest”) is a mere tautology (“survival of the survivor”).
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 87
Partly to avoid this criticism this formula is today being replaced by another one:
survival of the stable (Dawkins 1989: 12).
The central idea, the notion of an “evolutionary stable strategy,” was
formulated with respect to behavioral strategies (such as those involved in
territories or courtship behavior in animals) but it can be extended to apply to the
“engineering strategies” involved in putting together camouflage, locomotive
speed, and the other traits which come together to form the zebras of the example
above. The essence of this approach is that the searching device constituted by
variation and selection can find the optimal solution to a given problem posed by
the environment, and that once the optimal solution has been found, any mutant
strategy arising in the population is bound to be defeated. The strategy will be, in
this sense, stable against invasions. To put it in visual terms, it is as if the space
of possibilities explored by the searching device included mountains and valleys,
with the mountain peaks representing points of optimal performance. Selection
pressures allow the gene pool of a reproductive population to slowly climb those
peaks, and once a peak has been reached, natural selection keeps the population
there.
One may wonder just what has been achieved by switching from the concept of
a “fittest mutant” to that of an “optimal” one, except perhaps, that the latter can
be defined contextually as “optimal given existing constraints.” However, the
very idea that selection pressures are strong enough to pin populations down to
“adaptive peaks” has itself come under intense criticism. One line of argument
says that any given population is subjected to many different pressures, some of
them favoring different optimal results. For example, the beautiful feathers of a
peacock are thought to arise due to the selection pressure exerted by “choosy”
females, who will only mate with those males exhibiting the most attractive
plumage. Yet, those same vivid colors which seduce the females also attract
predators. Hence, the male peacock’s feathers will come under conflicting
selection pressures. In these circumstances, it is highly improbable that the
peacock’s solution will be optimal and much more likely that it will represent a
compromise. Several such sub-optimal compromises may be possible, and thus
the ideas that the solution arrived at by the “searching device” are unique needs
to be abandoned (Kauffman 1989). But if unique and optimal solutions are not
the source of stability in biology, then what is?
The answer to this question represents the second key idea around which the
field of Artificial Life revolves. It is also crucial to understand the potential
application of virtual environments to fields such as economics. The old
conceptions of stability (in terms of either optimality or principles of least effort)
derive from nineteenth-century equilibrium thermodynamics. It is well known
that philosophers like Auguste Comte and Herbert Spencer (author of the
formula “survived of the fittest”) introduced thermodynamic concepts into social
science. However, some contemporary observers complain that what was
introduced (in economics, for example) represents “more heat than light”
(Russett 1968: 28–54).
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88 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
In other words, equilibrium thermodynamics, dealing as it does with systems
that are closed to their environment, postulates that stability can only be reached
when all useful energy has been transformed into heat. At this point, a static and
unique state of equilibrium is reached (heat death). It was this concept of an
equilibrium that late-nineteenth-century economists used to systematize the
classical notion of an “invisible hand,” according to which the forces of demand
and supply tend to balance each other out at a point which is optimal from the
point of view of society’s utilization of resources. It was partly John Von
Neumann’a work on Game Theory and economics that helped entrench this
notion of stability outside of physics, and from there it found its way into
evolutionary biology, through the work of John Maynard Smith (Smith 1988).
This static conception of stability was the second classical idea that needed to
be eliminated before the full potential of virtual environments could be
unleashed. Like population thinking, the fields that provided the needed new
insights (the disciplines of far-from-equilibrium thermodynamics and non-linear
mathematics) are also a relatively recent development associated with the name
of Ilya Prigogine, among others. Unlike the “conservative systems” dealt with by
the old science of heat systems, which are totally isolated from their
surroundings, the new science deals with systems that are subjected to a constant
flow of matter and energy from the outside. Because this flow must also exit the
system in question, that is, the waste products need to be dissipated, these systems
are called “dissipative” (Prigogine and Stengers 1984).
For our purposes here, what matters is that once a continuous flow of matterenergy is included in the model, a wider range of possible forms of dynamic
equilibria becomes possible. The old static stability is still one possibility, except
that now these equilibrium points are neither unique nor optimal (and yet they
are more robust than the old equilibria). Non-static equilibria also exist, in the
form of cycles, for instance. Perhaps the most novel type of stability is that
represented by “deterministic chaos,” in which a given population can be pinned
down to a stable, yet inherently variable, dynamical state. These new forms of
stability have received the name of “attractors,” and the transitions which
transform one type of attractor into another have been named “bifurcations.”
Let’s refer to the cluster of concepts making up this new paradigm of stability as
“nonlinear dynamics” (Stewart 1989:95–100).
One of the most striking consequences of non-linear dynamics is that any
population (of atoms, molecules, cells, animals, humans) which is stabilized via
attractors will exhibit “emergent properties,” that is, properties of the population
as a whole not displayed by its individual members in isolation. The notion of an
emergent or synergistic property is a rather old one, but for a long time it was not
taken very seriously by scientists, as it was associated with quasi-mystical
schools of thought such as “vitalism.” Today, emergent properties are perfectly
legitimate dynamical outcomes for populations stabilized by attractors. A
population of molecules in certain chemical reactions, for instance, can suddenly
and spontaneously begin to pulsate in perfect synchrony, constituting a veritable
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 89
“chemical clock.” A population of insects (termites, for instance) can
spontaneously become a “nest-building machine,” when their activities are
stabilized non-linearly.
Thus, the “searching-devices” constituted by variation coupled to selection do
not explore an unstructured space of possibilities, but a space “preorganized” by
attractors and bifurcations. In a way, evolutionary processes simply follow these
changing distributions of attractors, slowly climbing from one dynamically stable
state to another. For example, since in this space one possible outcome is a
chemical clock, the searching-devices could have stumbled upon this possibility,
which in essence constitutes a primitive form of a metabolism. The same point
applies to other evolutionary stable strategies, such as the nest-building strategy
of the termites.
After this rather long introduction, we are finally in a position to understand
enterprises such as Artificial Life. The basic point is that emergent properties do
not lend themselves to an analytical approach, that is, an approach which dissects
a population into its components. Once we perform this dissection, once the
individuals become isolated from each other, any properties due to their
interactions will disappear. What virtual environments provide is a tool to
replace (or rather, complement) analysis with synthesis, allowing researchers to
exploit the complementary insights of population thinking and non-linear
dynamics. In the words of Artificial Life pioneer Chris Langton:
Biology has traditionally started at the top, viewing a living organism as a
complex biochemical machine, and worked analytically downwards from
there—through organs, tissues, cells, organelles, membranes, and finally
molecules—in its pursuit of the mechanisms of life. Artificial Life starts at
the bottom, viewing an organism as a large population of simple machines,
and works upwards synthetically from there, constructing large aggregates
of simple, rule-governed objects which interact with one another
nonlinearly in the support of life-like, global dynamics. The “key” concept
in Artificial Life is emergent behavior. Natural life emerges out of the
organized interactions of a great number of nonliving molecules, with no
global controller responsible for the behavior of every part…. It is this
bottom-up, distributed, local determination of behavior that Artificial Life
employs in its primary methodological approach to the generation of lifelike behaviors.
(Langton 1988:2).
The typical Artificial Life experiment involves first the design of a simplified
version of an individual animal, which must process the equivalent of a set of
genetic instructions used both to create its offspring as well as to be transmitted
to that offspring. This transmission must also be “imperfect” enough that
variation can be generated. Then, whole populations of these “virtual animals”
are unleashed, and their evolution under a variety of selection pressures observed.
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90 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
The exercise will be considered a successful one if novel properties, unthought
of by the designer, spontaneously emerge from this process.
Depending on the point of view of the designers, these emergent properties
need to match those observed in reality, or not. That is, a current theme in this
field is that one does not have to be exclusively concerned with biological
evolution as it has occurred on planet Earth, since this may have been limited by
the contingencies of biological history, and that there is much to be learned from
evolutionary paths that were not tried out in this planet. At any event, the goal of
the simulation is simply to help “synthesize intuitions” in the designer, insights
that can then be used to create more realistic simulations. The key point is that
the whole process must be bottom-up; only the local properties of the virtual
creatures need to be predesigned, never the global, population-wide ones.
Unlike Artificial Life, the approach of Artificial Intelligence researchers
remained (at least until the 1980s) largely top-down and analytic. Instead of
treating the symbolic properties they study as the emergent outcome of a
dynamical process, these researchers explicitly put symbols (labels, rules,
recipes) and symbol-manipulating skills into the computer. When it was realized
that logic alone was not enough to manipulate these symbols in a significantly
“intelligent” way, they began to extract the rule of thumb, tricks of the trade, and
other non-formal heuristic knowledge from human experts, and put these into the
machine, but also as fully formed symbolic structures. In other words, in this
approach one begins at the top, the global behavior of human brains, instead of
at the bottom, the social behavior of neurons. Some successes have been scored
by this approach, notably in simulating skills such as those involved in playing
chess or proving theorems, both of which are in evolutionar terms rather late
developments. Yet the symbolic paradigm of Artificial Intelligence has failed to
capture the dynamics of evolutionary more elementary skills such as facerecognition or sensory-motor control (Clark 1990:61–75).
Although a few attempts had been made during the 1960s to take a bottom-up
approach to modeling intelligence (e.g., the perceptron), the defenders of the
symbolic paradigm practically killed their rivals in the battle for government
research funds. And so the analytical approach dominated the scene until the
1980s when there occurred a spectacular rebirth of the symbolic design
philosophy. This is the new school of Artificial Intelligence known as
“connectionism.” Here, instead of one large, powerful computer serving as a
repository for explicit symbols, we find a large number of small, rather simple
computing devices (in which all that matters is their state of activation),
interacting with one another to either excite or inhibit each other’s degree of
activation. These simple processors are then linked together through a pattern of
interconnections which can vary in strength.
No explicit symbol is ever programmed into the machine since all the
information needed to perform a given cognitive task is coded in the
interconnection patterns as well as the relative strengths of these
interconnections. All computing activity is carried out by the dynamical activity
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 91
of the simple processors as they interact with one another (i.e., as excitations and
inhibitions propagate through the network), and the processors arrive at the
solution to a problem by settling into a dynamical state of equilibrium. (So far point
attractors are most commonly used, although some designs using cyclic
attractors are beginning to appear; Sepulchre and Bobloyantz 1991.)
If there is ever such a thing as a “symbol” here, or rather symbol-using (rulefollowing) behavior, it is an emergent result of these dynamics. This fact is
sometimes expressed by saying that a connectionial device (also called a “neural
net”) is not programmed by humans, but trained by them, much as a living
creature would be trained. In the simplest kind of networks the only cognitive
task that can be performed is pattern association. The human trainer presents to
the network both patterns to be associated, and after repeated presentations, the
network “learns” to associate them by modifying the strength of the
interconnections. At that point the network can respond with the second pattern
whenever the first one is presented to it.
At the other end of the spectrum of complexity, multilayered networks exhibit
emergent cognitive behavior as they are trained. While in the simple case of
pattern association much of the thinking is done by the trainer, complex
networks (i.e., those using “hidden units”) perform their own extraction of
regularities from the input pattern, concentrating on microfeatures of the input
which often are not at all obvious to the human trainer. (In other words, the
network itself “decides” what traits of the pattern it considers as salient or
relevant.)
These networks also have the ability to generalize from the patterns they have
learned, and so will be able to recognize a new pattern that is only vaguely
related to one they have been previously exposed to. In other words, the ability to
perform simple inductive inferences emerges in the network without the need to
explicitly code into it the rules of a logical calculus. These designs are also
resilient against damage, unlike their symbolic counterparts which are inherently
brittle. But perhaps the main advantage of the bottom-up approach is that its
devices can exhibit a degree of “intentionality.”
The term “intentionality” is the technical term used by philosophers to
describe the relation between a believer and the states of affairs his beliefs are
about. That is, an important feature of the mental states of human beings and
other animals (their beliefs and desires) is that they are about phenomena that lie
outside their minds. The top-down, symbolic approach to Artificial Intelligence
sacrifices this connection by limiting its modeling efforts to relations between
symbols. In other words, in the analytical approach only the syntactic or formal
relations between symbols matter (with the exception of an “internal semantics”
involving reference to memory addresses and the like). Hence these designs
must later try to reconnect the cognitive device to the world where it must
function, and it is here that the main bottleneck lies (unless the “world” in
question is a severely restricted domain of the real world, such as the domain of
chess). Not so in the synthetic approach:
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The connectionist approach to modeling cognition thus offers a promise in
explaining the aboutness or intentionality of mental states.
Representational states, especially those of hidden units, constitute the
system’s own learned response to inputs. Since they constitute the system’s
adaption to the input, there is a clear respect in which they would be about
objects or events in the environment if the system were connected, via
sensory-motor organs, to that environment…. The fact that these
representations are also sensitive to context, both external and internal to
the system, enhances the plausibility of this claim that the representations
are representations of particular states,
(Bechtel and Abrahamsen 1991:129)
So far, the abstract living creatures inhabiting the virtual environments of
Artificial Life have been restricted to rather inflexible kinds of behavior. One
may say that the only kinds of behavior that have been modeled are of the
genetically “hard-wired” type, as displayed by ants or termites. Yet adding
connectionist intelligence to these creatures could endow them with enough
intentionality to allow researchers to model more flexible, “multiple-choice”
behavior, as displayed by birds. We could then expect more complex behavioral
patterns (such as territorial or courtship behavior) to emerge in these virtual
worlds. Artificial Intelligence could also benefit from such a partnership, by
tapping the potential of the evolutionary “searching-devices” in the exploration of
the space of possible network designs. The genetic algorithm, which exploits this
possibility, has so far been restricted to searching for better symbolic designs
(e.g., production rules).
Furthermore, having a virtual space where groups of intentional creatures
interact can also benefit other disciplines such as economics or political science.
A good example of this is Robert Axelrod’s use of a virtual environment to study
the evolution of co-operation. His work also exemplifies the complementary use
of synthesis (to generate intuitions) and analysis (to formally ground those
intuitions). In the words of Douglas Hofstadter:
Can totally selfish and unconscious organisms living in a common
environment come to evolve reliable cooperative strategies? Can
cooperation evolve in a world of pure egoists?… Well, as it happens, it has
now been demonstrated rigorously and definitively that such cooperation
can emerge, and it was done through a computer tournament conducted by
political scientist Robert Axelrod…. More accurately, Axelrod first studied
the ways that cooperation evolved by means of a computer tournament,
and when general trends emerged, he was able to spot the underlying
principles and prove theorems that established the facts and conditions of
cooperation’s rise from nowhere.
(Hofstadter 1985:720)
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 93
The creatures that Axelrod placed in a virtual environment to conduct his roundrobin tournament were not full-fledged intentional entities of the type envisioned
above. Rather, the motivations and options of the creatures were narrowly
circumscribed by using the formalism of Game Theory, which studies the
dynamics of situations involving conflict of interest. In particular, Axelrod’s
entities were computer programs, each written by a different programmer,
playing a version of the game called “Prisoner’s Dilemma.” In this imaginary
situation, two accomplices in a crime are captured by the police and separately
offered the following deal: if one accuses his accomplice, while the other does
not, the “betrayer” walks out free, while the “sucker” gets the stiffest sentence. If,
on the other hand, both claim innocence and avoid betrayal they both get a small
sentence. Finally, if both betray each other, they both get a long sentence. The
dilemma here arises from the facts that even though the best overall outcome is
not to betray one’s partner, neither one can trust that his accomplice won’t try to
get the best individual outcome (to walk out free) leaving the other with the
“sucker payoff.” And because both prisoners reason in a similar way, they both
choose betrayal and the long sentence that comes with it, instead of loyalty and
its short sentence.
In the real world we find realizations of this dilemma in, for example, the
phenomena known as “bank runs.” When news that a bank is in trouble first comes
out, each individual depositor has two options: either to rush to the bank and
withdraw his savings or to stay home and allow the bank to recover. Each
individual also knows that the best outcome for the community is for all to leave
their savings in the bank and so allow it to survive. But no one can afford to be
the one who loses his savings, so all rush to withdraw their money, ruining the
institution in the process. Hofstadter offers a host of other examples, including
one in which the choice to betray or co-operate is faced by the participants not
once, but repeatedly. For instance, imagine two “jungle traders” with a rather
primitive system of trade: each simply leaves a bag of goods at a predefined
place, and comes back later to pick another bag, without ever seeing the trading
partner. The idea is that on every transaction, one is faced with a dilemma, since
one can profit most by leaving an empty bag and attacking the other with the
“sucker payoff.” Yet, the difference is that doing this endangers the trading
situation and hence there is more to lose in case of betrayal here. (This is called
the “Iterated Prisoner’s Dilemma.”)
Axelrod’s creatures played such an iterated version of the game with one
another. What matters to us here is that after several decades of applying
analytical techniques to study these situations, the idea that “good guys finish
last” (i.e., that the most rational strategy is to betray one’s partner) had become
entrenched in academic (and think-tank) circles. For example, when Axelrod
first requested entries for his virtual tournament most of the programs he
received were “betrayers.” Yet the winner was not. It was “nice” (it always cooperated in the first encounter so as to give a sign of good faith and begin the
trading situation), “retaliatory” (if betrayed it would respond with betrayal in the
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94 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
next encounter), yet “forgiving” (after retaliating it was willing to re-establish a
partnership). As mentioned above, these were not truly intentional creatures so
the properties of being “nice, retaliatory and forgiving” were like emergent
properties of a much simpler design. Its name was “TIT-FOR-TAT” and its
actual strategy was simply always to co-operate in the first move and thereafter
do what the other player did in the previous move. This program won because
the criterion of success was not how many partners one beats, but how much
overall trade one achieves.
Because the idea that “good guys finish last” had become entrenched, further
analysis of the situation (which could have uncovered the fact that this principle
does not apply to the “iterated” version of the game), was blocked. What was
needed was to unblock this path by using a virtual environment to “synthesize” a
fresh intuition. And in a sense that is just what Axelrod did. He then went further
and used more elaborate simulations (including one in which the creatures
replicated, with the number of progeny being related to the trading success of the
parent), to generate further intuitions as to how co-operative strategies could
evolve in an ecological environment, how robust and stable these strategies
were, and a host of other questions. Evolutionary biologists, armed with these
fresh insights, have now discovered that apes in their natural habitats play a
version of TIT-FOR-TAT (Gould and Gould 1989:244–77). Thus, while some of
the uses of virtual environments presuppose that old and entrenched ideas (about
essences or optimality) have been superseded, these abstract worlds can also be
used to synthesize the intuitions needed to dislodge other ideas blocking the way
to a better understanding of the dynamics of reality.
Population thinking seems to have vanished “essences” from the world of
philosophy once and for all. Non-linear dynamics, and more specifically, the
notion of an “emergent property” would seem to signal the death of the
philosophical position known as “reductionism” (basically that all phenomena
can in principle be reduced to those of physics). It is clear now that at every level
of complexity, there will be emergent properties that are irreducible to the lower
levels, simply because when one switches to an examination of lower-level
entitles, the properties which emerge due to their interactions disappear.
Connectionism, in turn, offers a completely new understanding of the way in
which rule-following behavior can emerge from a system in which there are no
explicit rules or symbols whatsoever. This would seem destined to end the
domination of a conception of language based on syntactical entities and their
formal relations (Saussure’s signifiers or Chomsky’s rules). This conception
(let’s call it “formalism”) has entirely dominated this century, leading in some
cases to extreme forms of linguistic relativism, that is, the idea that every culture
partitions the world of experience in a different way simply because they use
different linguistic devices to organize this experience. If connectionism is
correct, then humanity does indeed have a large portion of shared experience (the
basic intentional machinery linking them to the world) even if some of this
experience can be cast in different linguistic form (Brown 1991).
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Furthermore, once linguists become population thinkers and users of virtual
environments, we could witness the emergence of an entirely different type of
science of language. For instance, about a millennium ago, the population of
Anglo-Saxon peasants inhabiting England suffered the imposition of French as
the official language of their land by the Norman invaders. In about two hundred
years, and in order to resist this form of linguistic colonialism, this peasant
population transformed what was basically a group of Germanic dialects (with
added Scandinavian spices) into something that we could recognize as English.
No doubt, in order to arrive at modern English another few centuries of
transformation would be needed, but the backbone of this language had already
emerged from the spontaneous labor of a population under the pressure of an
invading language (Nist 1966: ch. 3). Perhaps one day linguists will be required
to test their theories in a virtual environment of interacting intentional entities, so
that the rules of grammar they postulate for a language can be shown to emerge
spontaneously from the dynamics of a population of speakers (instead of existing
in a “synchronic” world, isolated from the actual interactions of several
generations of speakers). Virtual environments may not only allow us to capture
the fluid and changing nature of real languages, they could also be used to gain
insight into the processes that tend to “freeze” languages, such as the processes
of standardization which many European languages underwent, beginning in the
seventeenth century. Unlike the cases of Spanish, Italian, and French, where the
fixing of the rules and vocabulary of the language were enforced by an institution
(e.g., an Academy), in England the process of standardization was carried out via
the mass publication of authoritative dictionaries, grammars, and orthographies.
Just how these “linguistic engineering” devices achieved the relative freezing of
what was formerly a fluid “linguistic matter” may be revealed through a
computer simulation. Similarly, whenever a language becomes standardized we
witness the political conquest of many “minority” dialects by the dialect of the
urban capital (London’s dialect in the case of English). Virtual environments could
allow us to model dynamically the spread of the dominant dialect across cultural
and geographical barriers, and how technologies such as the railroad or the radio
(e.g., the BBC) allowed it to surmount such barriers (Crowley 1989).
Future linguists may one day look back with curiosity at our twentieth-century
linguistics, and wonder if our fascination with the static (synchronic) view of
language could not be due to the fact that the languages where these views were
first formulated (French and English), had lost their fluid nature by being
artificially frozen a few centuries earlier. These future investigators may also
wonder how we thought the stability of linguistic structures could be explained
without the concept of an attractor. How, for instance, could the prevalence of
certain patterns of sentence structures (e.g., subject-verb-object, or “SVO”) be
explained, or how could bifurcations from one pattern to another be modeled
without some form of non-linear stabilization? (For example, English may have
switched over a millennium from SOV to SVO (Lehmann 1978:37)).
Tomorrow’s linguists will also realize that, because these dynamic processes
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depend on the existence of heterogeneities and other non-linearities, the reason
we could not capture them in our models was due to the entrenchment of the
Chomskian idea of a homogeneous speech community of monolinguals, in which
each speaker has equal mastery of the language.
Real linguistic communities are not homogeneous in the distribution of
linguistic competence, and they are not closed to linguistic flows from the
outside (English, for instance, was subjected to large flows of French vocabulary
at several points in its evolution). Many communities are multilingual, and
constructive as well as destructive interferences between languages create nonlinearities which may be crucial to the overall dynamics. As an example of this
we may take the case of Creole languages. They all have evolved from the
pidgins created in slave plantations, veritable “linguistic laboratories” where the
language of the plantation master was stripped of its flourishes and combined
with particles proceeding from a variety of slave dialects. It is possible that one
day virtual environments will allow us to map the dynamical attractors around
which these rapidly developing Creole languages stabilized (Decamp 1971).
The discipline of sociolinguistics (associated with the work of linguists like
William Lavob) has made many of the important contributions needed to purge
the science of language of classical assumptions leading to “formalism,” and
woven it closer to true population thinking. Indeed, the central concern of
sociolinguistics has been the study of stylistic variation in speech communities.
This is a mechanism for generating diversity at the level of speakers, and as such
it could be dismissed as being exogenous to language. Lavob, however, has also
discovered that some of the rules of language (he calls them “variable rules”) can
generate systematic, endogenous variation (Labov 1971: 271–3). This provides us
with one of the elements needed for our evolutionary searching device.
Sociolinguists have also tackled the study of the second element: selection
pressures. The latter can take a variety of forms. In small communities, where
language style serves as a badge of identity, peer pressure in social networks can
act as a filtering device, promoting the accumulation of those forms and
structures that maintain the integrity of the local dialect. On the other hand,
stigmatization of certain forms by the speakers of the standard language
(particularly when reinforced by a system of compulsory education) can furnish
selection pressures leading to the elimination of local styles. Despite these
efforts, formalism is still well entrenched in linguistics and so this discipline
cannot currently benefit from the full potential of virtual environments. (Which
does not mean, of course, that computers are not used in linguistic investigations,
but this use remains analytical and top-down instead of synthetic and bottomup).
Just as linguistics inherited the homogeneous, closed space of classical
thermodynamics, as well as its static conception of stability, so did mathematical
economics. Here too, a population of producers and consumers is assumed to be
homogeneous in its distribution of rationality and of market power. That is, all
agents are endowed with perfect foresight and unlimited computational skill, and
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 97
no agent is supposed to exercise any kind of influence over prices. Perfect
rational competition results in a kind of a society-wide computer, where prices
transmit information (as well as incentive to buy or sell), and where demand
instantly adjusts to supply to achieve optimal equilibrium. And much as
sociolinguists are providing antidotes for the classical assumptions holding back
their field, students of organizations and of organizational ecology are doing the
same for the study of the economy (Hannan and Freemen 1989).
Not only are economic agents now viewed as severely limited by their
computational skills, but this bounded rationality is located in the context of the
specific organizations where it operates and where it is further constrained by the
daily routines that make up an “organizational memory.” In other words, not
only is decision-making within organizations performed on the basis of adaptive
beliefs and action rules (rather than optimizing rationality), but much of it is
guided by routine procedures for producing objects, for hiring/firing employees,
for investing in research and development, and so on. Because these procedures
are imperfectly copied whenever a firm opens up a new plant, this process gives
us the equivalent of variable reproduction (Nelson and Winter 1982:14). A
changing climate for investment, following the ups and downs of boom years and
recessions, provides some of the selection pressures that operate on populations
of organizations. Other pressures come from other organizations, as in natural
ecosystems, where other species (predators, parasites) are also agents of natural
selection. Here giant corporations, which have control over their prices (and
hence are not subjected to supply and demand pressures) play the role of
predators, dividing their markets along well-defined territories (market shares).
As in linguistic research, computer simulation techniques have been used in
economics (e.g., econometrics) but in many cases the approach has remained
analytic (i.e., top-down, taking as its point of departure macro-economical
principles). On the other hand, and unlike the situation in linguistics, a bottom-up
approach combining populations of organizations and non-linear dynamics is
already making rapid progress. A notable example of this is the Systems
Dynamics National Model, at MIT. As in the case of Artificial Life, one measure
of success here is the ability of these models to synthesize emergent behavior not
planned in advance by the model’s designers. One dramatic example is the
spontaneous emergence of cyclic equilibria in this model with a period matching
that of the famous Kondratieff cycle.
That data from several economic indicators (GNP, unemployment rates,
aggregate prices, interest rates) beginning in the early nineteenth century display
an unequivocal periodic motion of approximately fifty years duration, is well
known at least since the work of Joseph Schumpeter. Several possible
mechanisms to explain this cyclic behavior have been offered since then, but
none has gained complete acceptance. What matters to us here is that the MIT
model endogenously generates this periodic oscillation, and that this behavior
emerged spontaneously from the interaction of populations of organizations, to
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98 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
the surprise of the designers, who were in fact unaware of the literature on
Kondratieff cycles (Forrester 1983:128).
The key ingredient, which allows this and other models to generate
spontaneous oscillations, is that they must operate far-from-equilibrium. In
traditional economic models, the only dynamical processes that are included are
those that keep the system near equilibrium (such as “diminishing returns” acting
as negative feedback). The effects of explosive positive feedback processes (such
as “economies of scale”) are typically minimized. But it is such self-reinforcing
processes that drive systems away from equilibrium, and this, together with the
non-linearities generated by imperfect competition and bounded rationality, is
what generates the possibility of dynamical stabilization (Arthur 1988).
In the MIT model, it is precisely a positive feedback loop that pushes the
system toward a bifurcation, where a point attractor suddenly becomes a cyclic
one. Specifically, the sector of the economy which creates the productive
machinery used by the rest of the firms (the capital goods sector), is prone to the
effects of positive feedback because whenever the demand for machines grows,
this sector must order from itself. In other words, when any one firm in this sector
needs to expand its capacity to meet growing demand, the machines used to
create machines come from other firms in the same sector. Delays and other nonlinearities can then be amplified by this feedback loop, giving rise to stable yet
periodic behavior (Sterman 1989).
As we have seen, tapping the potential of the “epistemological reservoir”
constituted by virtual environments requires that many old philosophical
doctrines be eradicated. Essentialism, reductionism, and formalism are the first
ones that need to go. Our intellectual habit of thinking linearly, where the
interaction of different causes is seen as additive and hence global properties that
are more than the sum of the parts are not a possibility, also needs to be
eliminated. So does our habit of thinking in terms of conservative systems,
isolated from energy and matter flows from the outside. Only dissipative
nonlinear systems generate the full spectrum of dynamical forms of stabilization
(attractors) and of diversification (bifurcations).
In turn, thinking in terms of attractors and bifurcations will lead to a radical
alteration of the philosophical doctrine known as “determinism.” Attractors are
fully deterministic; that is, if the dynamics of a given population are governed by
an attractor, the population in question will be strongly bound to behave in a
particular way. Yet, this is not to go back to the clockwork determinism of
classical physics. For one thing, attractors come in bunches, and so at any particular
time, a population that is trapped into one stable state may be pushed to another
stable state by an external shock (or even by its own internal devices). In a way
this means that populations have choices between different local destinies.
Moreover, certain attractors (called strange attractors or deterministic chaos),
bind populations to an inherently creative state. That is, a population whose
dynamics are governed by a strange attractor is bound to explore permanently a
limited set of possibilities of its phase space. In other words, if a strange attractor
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 99
is small relative to the size of this space (e.g. a three-dimensional attractor
embedded in a space of 100 dimensions), then it effectively pins down the
dynamics of a system to a relatively small set of possible states, so that the
resulting behavior is far from random and yet it is intrinsically variable. Finally,
as if this were not enough to subvert classical determinism, there are also
bifurcations, critical points at which one distribution of attractors is transformed
into another distribution. At the moment this transformation occurs, relatively
insignificant fluctuations in the environment can have disproportionately large
effects in the distribution of attractors that results. In the words of Prigogine and
Stengers:
From the physicist’s point of view this involves a distinction between
states of the system in which all individual initiative is doomed to
insignificance on one hand, and on the other, bifurcation regions in which
an individual, an idea, or a new behavior can upset the global state. Even in
those regions, amplification obviously does not occur with just any
individual, idea, or behavior, but only with those that are “dangerous”—
that is, those that can exploit to their advantage the nonlinear relations
guaranteeing the stability of the preceeding regime. Thus we are led to
conclude that the same nonlinearities may produce an order out of the chaos
of elementary processes and still, under different circumstances, be
responsible for the destruction of this same order, eventually producing a
new coherence beyond another bifurcation.
(Prigogine and Stengers 1984:190)
This new view of the nature of determinism may also have consequences for yet
another philosophical school of thought: the doctrine of free will. If the
dynamical population one is considering is one whose members are human
beings (for example, a given human society), then the insignificant fluctuation
that can become dangerous in the neighborhood of a bifurcation is indeed a
human individual (and so, this would seem to guarantee us a modicum of free
will). However, if the population in question is one of neurons (of which the
global, emergent state is the conscious state of an individual) this would seem to
subvert free will, since here a micro-cognitive event may decide what the new
global outcome may be.
At any rate, the crucial point is to recognize the existence, in all spheres of
reality, of the reservoir of possibilities represented by nonlinear stabilization and
diversification (a reservoir I have somewhere else called “the machinic phylum”
(De Landa 1991)). We must also recognize that by their very nature, systems
governed by non-linear dynamics resist absolute control and that sometimes the
machinic phylum can only be tracked, or followed. For this task even our
modicum of free will may suffice. The searching device constituted by genetic
variation and natural selection does in fact track the machinic phylum. That is,
biological evolution has no foresight, and it must grope in the dark, climbing
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100 CYBERCULTURE SINGULARITIES
from one attractor to another, from one engineering stable strategy to another.
And yet, it has produced the wonderfully diverse and robust ecosystems we
observe today. Perhaps one day virtual environments will become the tools we
need to map attractors and bifurcations, so that we too can track the machinic
phylum in search of a better destiny for humanity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Arthur, W.B. (1988) “Self-Reinforcing Mechanisms in Economics,” in P.Anderson,
K.Arrow, and D.Pines (eds), The Economy as an Evolving Complex System, New
York: Addisson-Wesley.
Bechtel, W. and Abrahamsen, A. (1991) Connectionism and the Mind, Oxford: Basil
Blackwell.
Brown, D. (1991) Human Universals, New York: McGraw-Hill.
Clark, A. (1990) Microcognition: Philosophy, Cognitive Science and Parallel Distributed
Processing, New York: MIT Press.
Crowley, T. (1989) Standard Edition and the Politics of Language, Urbana: University of
Illinois Press.
Dawkins, R. (1989) The Selfish Gene, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Decamp, D. (1971) “The Study of Pidgin and Creole Languages,” in D.Hymes (ed),
Pidginization and Creolization of Languages, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
De Landa, M. (1991) War In the Age of Intelligent Machines, New York: Zone Books.
Forrester, J. (1983) “Innovation and Economic Change,” in C.Freeman (ed.), Long Waves
in the World Economy, London: Butterworth.
Gould, J.L and Gould, C.G. (1989) Sexual Selection, New York: Scientific American
Library.
Hannan, M.T. and Freeman, J. (1989) Organizational Ecology, Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press.
Hofstadter, D.R. (1985) “The Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Evolution of Cooperation,” in
Metamagical Themes: Questing for the Essence of Mind and Pattern, New York:
Basic Books.
Kauffman, S. (1989) “Adaptation on Rugged Fitness Landscapes,” in D.Stein (ed),
Lectures in the Sciences of Complexity, New York: Addison-Wesley.
Labov, W. (1971) Sociolinguistic Patterns, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Press.
Langton, C.G. (1988) “Artificial Life,” in C.G.Langton (ed), Artificial Life, New York:
Addison-Wesley.
Lehmann, W.P. (1978) “The Great Underlying Ground-Plans,” in W.P.Lehmann (ed),
Syntactic Typology, Sussex, United Kingdom: Harvester Press.
Levy, S. (1992) Artificial Life, New York: Pantheon Books.
Nist, J. (1966) A Structural History of English, New York: St Martin’s Press.
Nelson, R. and Winter, S. (1982) An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change,
Cambridge: Belknap Press.
Prigogine, I. and Stengers, I. (1984) Order Out of Chaos, New York: Bantam Books.
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VIRTUAL ENVIRONMENTS AND THE EMERGENCE OF SYNTHETIC REASON 101
Russett, C.E. (1968) The Concept of Equilibrium in American Social Thought, New
Haven: Yale University Press.
Sepulchre, J.A. and Babloyantz, A. (1991) “Spatio-Temporal Patterns and Network
Computation,” in A.Babloyants (ed), Self-Organization, Emergent Properties, and
Learning, New York: Plenum Press.
Smith, J.M. (1988) “Evolution and the Theory of Games,” in Did Darwin Get It Right?:
Essays on Games, Sex and Evolution, New York: Chapman and Hall.
Sober, E. (1987) The Nature of Selection, New York: MIT Press.
Sterman, J.D. (1989) “Nonlinear Dyanamics in the World Economy: the Economic Long
Wave,” in P.Christiansen and R.D.Parmentier (eds), Structure, Coherence, Chaos,
Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Stewart, I. (1989) Does God Play Dice: The Mathematics of Chaos, Oxford: Basil
Blackwell.
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PART IV
Anarcho-materialism
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Cybergothic
Nick Land
God does not exist, he withdraws, gets the fuck on out and leaves the
cops to keep an eye on things.
(Artaud)
When the repair units had finished up, the patient would be thawed
out, new blood would be pumped into his veins, and finally the
subject would arise and walk, exactly as if he were a latter-day Jesus.
It would be, quite literally, a resurrection of the flesh—except that
all the miracles would have been performed by science,
(Regis)
[T]he one, according to which the apparent subject never ceases to
live and travel as a One—“one never stops and never has done with
dying”; and the other, according to which this same subject fixed as
I, actually dies—which is to say it finally ceases to die since it ends
up dying, in the reality of a last instant that fixes it in this way as an
I, all the while undoing the intensity, carrying it back to the zero that
envelops it.
(Deleuze and Guattari)
Inside the library’s research department, the construct cunt inserted a
sub-programme into…part of the video network. The subprogramme altered certain core custodial commands so that she
could retrieve the code.
The code said: GET RID OF MEANING. YOUR MIND IS A
NIGHTMARE THAT HAS BEEN EATING YOU: NOW EAT
YOUR MIND.
The code would lead me to the human construct who would lead
me to, or allow me, my drug.
(Acker)
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104 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
“You made me blow my game,” she said. “Look there, asshole.
Seventh level dungeon and the goddam vampires got me.” She
passed him a cigarette. “You look pretty strung, man. Where you
been?”
(Gibson)
The future wants to steal your soul and vaporize it in nanotechnics.
One/zero, light/dark, Neuromancer/Wintermute.
Cybergothic vampirically contaminates and asset-strips the Marxian Critique
of political economy, scrambling it with the following theses:
1) Anthropormorphic surplus-value is not analytically extricable from
transhuman machineries.
2) Markets, desire and science fiction are all parts of the infrastructure.
3) Virtual Capital-Extinction is Immanent to
production.
The short-term is already hacked by the long-term. The medium-term is
reefed on schizophrenia. The long-term is canceled.
Cybergothic slams hyperheated critique into the ultramodern “vision thing,”
telecommercialized retinas laser-fed on the multimedia fall-out from imploded
futurity, videopacking brains with repetitive psycho-killer experiments in nonconsensual wetware alteration: crazed Als, replicants, terminators, cyberviruses,
grey-goo nano-horrors…apocalypse market overdrive. Why a wait for the
execution? Tomorrow has already been cremated in Hell: “K, the K-function,
designates the line of flight or deterritorialization that carries away all of the
assemblages but also undergoes all kinds of reterritorializations and
redundancies” (Deleuze and Guattari).
Human history only makes it to Gibson’s mid-twenty-first century because
Turing Security ices machine intelligence. Monopod anti-production inhibits
meltdown (to the machinic phylum), boxing Al in synthetic thought control A
(zimov-) ROM, “[e]verything stops dead for a moment, everything freezes in
place” (Deleuze and Guattari). Under police protection the story carries on.
Wintermute is arriving from the future to sort that out.
FREEZE FRAME. The Vast Abrupt. Speed cut with an abysm. Where Gibson
splices Milton into labyrinths of limbo-circuitry, cybergothic flickers into
“neuroelectronic scrawls” (Gibson).
Events so twisted they turn into cybernetics.
A technihilo moan of fast-feedforward into micro-processed damnation: meat
puppets, artificial skin, flat-lining software ghosts, cryonics immortalism, snuff
Sex-industry; a transylvanian phase-scape of rugged tracts and hypercapital
fastnesses, “skyscrapers overshadowing seventeenth-century graveyards”
(Sterling).
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CYBERGOTHIC 105
To call up a demon you must learn its name. Men dreamed that, once, but
now it’s real in another way. You know that, Case. Your business is to
learn the names of programs, the long formal names, names the owners
seek to conceal. True names…Neuromancer … The lane to the land of the
dead. Marie-France, my lady, she prepared this road, but her lord choked
her off before I could read her the book of her days. Neuro for nerves, the
silver paths. Romancer, Necromancer. I call up the dead.
(Gibson 1984:289)
A moment of relief. You had thought the goreflick effectively over, the monster
finished amongst anatomically precise ketchup-calamity scenes, when —
suddenly—it reanimates; still locked on to your death. If you are going to scream,
now is the time.
The “‘Gothic’ avatar” (Deleuze and Guattari) is a decadent Western dream of
immortality, producing a corruption of the atmosphere wherever something
refuses to die; clutching at the eternalization of self, or returning from the grave.
White maggots heaving in the carcass of the social, rippling beneath the skin.
Fortress Europe pustulation, subordinating techonomic efficiency to demonic
negative transcendence. A fantastic Terminal Security Entity: Monopod.
Cybergothic has no shortage of contemporary material. Europe has long been the
earth’s paranoia laboratory, recrudescing compulsively into “pre-Nazi
nationalistic shit murkiness” (Acker). Unocratic power passes through
renaissances, reformation, renewal: “They thought they would perish but that
their undertaking would be resumed, all across Europe, all over the world,
throughout the solar system” (Deleuze and Guattari). Archaic revival is a
postmodern symptom, the final dream of mankind, crashed into retrospection at
the encountered edge of history. Hacking into the crypt you find that behind the
glistening SF satellite-based security apparatus lies an immanent bioprotective
system self-organized about the Gain attractor, “a much older paranoiac machine,
with its tortures, its dark shadows, its ancient Law” (Deleuze and Guattari).
[The] medieval insane asylum was considered a true house of horrors.
There were persistent reports of torture, cannibalism, human sacrifice, and
bizarre medical experimentation…. As soon as we got into the building,
we could hear the rats, thousands of them, —their scampering claws
reverberating through the empty wards.
(Lyotard)
It all starts for you with a casual channel-hopper question: what’s happening on
the other side? Electric Storms. Cybergothic is an affirmative telecommercial
dystopianism, guided by schizoanalysis in marking actuality as primary
repression, or collapsed potential, foot down hard on the accelerator. The modern
dominium of Capital is the maximally plastic instance—state-compatible
commerce code pc-setting the econometric apparatuses that serve it as self-
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106 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
monitoring centers, organizing its own intelligible existence in a co/de/
termination of economic product and currency value: a tax base formatted in
legitimate transactions medium. White economy; an iceberg tip.
Modernity discovers irreversible time— conceived as a progressive
enlightenment tracking capital concentration—integrating it into nineteenthcentury science as entropy production, and as its inverse (evolution). As liberal
and socialist SF utopias are trashed by schizotechnics or spontaneous synthetic
anti-politics emerging from rhizomes, the modernist dialectic of right-wing
competition and leftwing co-operation retreats into the core security structures of
capital oligopoly and bureaucratic authority. “Production as process overtakes all
idealistic categories and constitutes a cycle whose relationship to desire is that of
an immanent principle” (Deleuze and Guattari). Monopod socius runs the whole
thing, and “society is only a filthy trick” (Acker).
The future is closer than it used to be, closer than it was last week, but
postmodernity remains an epoch of undead power: it’s all over yet it carries on.
Monopod SF teleonomy superfreezes concentrated economic value at absolute
zero inflation, ICE (“intrusion countermeasure electronics” (Gibson)). Protecting
its data against unauthorized access and entropic deterioration, as it tends
toward its absolute immanent limit. V(amp)iro finance: commercial
parthenogenesis. Gibson and Deleuze and Guattari intersect in the deployment of
computers as decoding machines: ice-breakers, decrypters, Cypher-conflicts
were underway from the beginning: “Legitimate programmers never see the
walls of ice they work behind, the walls of shadow that screen their operations
from others, from industrial-espionage artists and hustlers” (Gibson 1986b:197).
Government is isomorphic with top-down Al, and increasingly scrambled with
it. Sartre defines socialism as the horizon of humanity. It is now behind the
process, rapidly receding, as the conservative social pacts of 1848 come apart in
telecommercial cyclones (with the drooling fag-end of the monarchy crucified
upside-down on TV). “Automatic pilot. A neural cut-out” (Gibson): contagious
state-failure ripping bloody gashes in the social fabric amongst planet-scale
skidding into capital close-down. The end of history smells like an abattoir.
As the death of capital recedes politically it condenses pragmatically, sliding
on line as a schizotechnic resource: no longer hoped for, but used. The
international collapse of solidarity sociality suggests that Monopod has become
addicted to commodity production. Burn-out Protestantism migrates to China.
Capitalism—economic base of final-phase human security—is still in the freefire zone because it feeds the thing that Cyberia is going to kill: “[T]he zero term
of a pure abolition…has haunted oedipalized desire from the start, and…is
identified now, at the end, as Thanatos. 4, 3, 2, 1, 0— Oedipus is a race for
death” (Deleuze and Guattari). Technoreplicator diagrams chop up
anthropocentric history, as the global unity of terminal socius subsides on to
untranscended (real) zero or efficient abstract rescaling. Insofar as even highly
complex technical systems still lack an autonomous reproductive system they
remain locked into parasitic dependence upon human social processes, and
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CYBERGOTHIC 107
deterritorialize through the assembly of cumulatively sophisticating pseudosynergic machine-intelligence virus (((oc))cultural revolution). “Subliminally
rapid images of contamination” (Gibson). Humans are timid animals and security
is systematically overpriced. K-insurgency has departed from all left dreams of
good government. Markets are not its enemy, but its weapon. As geriatric
socialism goes into the deep-freeze, capital’s true terminator grows more
cunning, and spreads. “This is the message. Wintermute” (Gibson). The City of
God in flames.
“Space is essentially one” (Kant). Kant lies. Spatial engineering (echoing
cosmic expansion) subverts transcendental humanism, launching K-space matrix
invasion from real terrestrial time zero, a singularity, or transition threshold,
encountered when the density of data flow triggers a switch into a selforganizing cyclonic system, displayed to humanoids by way of cyberspace deck.
As the Zaibatsus pump media megacapital into the neurodigitech interface Kspace implants a “cut-out chip” (Gibson) into the social apparatus, opening on to
“[a]rches of emerald across…colorless void” (Gibson). VR techonomics hunting
death.
Cyberspace first appears as a human use value, a “consensual hallucination”
(Gibson), “just a way of representing data” (Gibson), arising out of “humanity’s
need for this information-space. Icon-worlds, waypoints, artificial realities”
(Gibson), the mother of all graphic user interfaces: a global gridding that
allocates a form and location to all the information on the net, consistent
interactivity matrix. “A graphic representation of data abstracted from the banks
of every computer in the human system. Unthinkable complexity. Lines of light
ranged in the nonspace of the mind, clusters and constellations of data”
(Gibson).
Even primitive VR corrodes both objectivity and personality; singularizing
perspective at the same time it is anonymized. As the access gate to an
impossible zone—and navigator within it—“you” are an avatar (as cyberspace
nomads call such things in the future): a non-specific involvement site,
interlocking intelligence with a context. You (= (( ))) index a box, such as
Gibson’s Case: a place to be inside the system. “I had learned something
(already) in the dead city: You are wherever you are” (Acker).
Cybergothic slides K-space upon an axis of dehumanization, from
disintegrating psychology to techno-cosmogony, from ideality to matter/
matrix at zero intensity. From a mental “non-space,” “non-place” (Gibson), or
“notional void” (Gibson) that results intelligibly from human history to the
convergent spatium from which futuralization had always surreptitiously
proceeded, “a quite different field of matter” (Kant). Occulted dimensionality,
print cryogenizes, but hypermedia melts things together, disontologizing the
person through schizotech-disassembly, disintegrated convergence: “The body
without organs is an egg: it is traversed by axes and thresholds, by longitudes, by
geodesics” (Deleuze and Guattari), a surplus whole intensive catatract running
under the striations of Cartesian “cyberspace coordinates” (Gibson), “a rhizome
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108 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
or multiplicity never allows itself to be overcoded, never has available a
supplementary dimension over and above its number of lines, that is, over and
above the multiplicity of numbers attached to those lines” (Deleuze and
Guattari).
It is the Planomenon, or the Rhizosphere, the Criterium (and still other
names, as the number of dimensions increases). At n dimensions, it is
called the Hypersphere, the Mechanosphere. It is the abstract Figure, or
rather, since it has no form itself, the abstract Machine, of which each
concrete assemblage is a multiplicity, a becoming, a segment, a vibration,
And the abstract machine is the intersection of them all.
(Deleuze and Guattari)
If “CS-0 is an egg” (every egg implements a CS-0), what is hatching? Since
confluent zero consummates fiction, reprogramming arrival from the terminus,
everything which has happened escapes its sediment of human interpretation,
disorganizationally integrating historical patterns as the embryogenesis of an
alien hyperintelligence, “body image fading down corridors of television sky”
(Gibson). In this sense K-space plugs into a sequence of nominations for
intensive or convergent real abstraction (time in itself): body without organs,
plane of consistency, planomenon, a plateau, “neuroelectronic void” (Gibson).
Humanity is a compositional function of the post-human, and the occult motor of
the process is that which only comes together at the end: stim-death “intensity= 0
which designates the full body without organs” (Deleuze and Guattari).
Wintermute tones in the “darkest heart” (Gibson) of Babylon. “Cold steel odor.
Ice caresses” the spine (Gibson).
“[V]irtual is opposed to actual. It is not opposed to real, far from it” (Deleuze
and Guattari). The virtual future is not a potential present further up the road of
linear time, but the abstract motor of the actual, “an actual-virtual circuit on the
spot, and not an actualization of the virtual in accordance with a shifting actual”
(Deleuze and Guattari). Time produces itself in a circuit, passing through the
virtual interruption of what is to come, in order that the future which arrives is
already infected, populated: “[I]t’s just a tailored hallucination we all agreed to
have, cyberspace, but anybody who jacks in knows, fucking knows it’s a whole
universe. And every year it gets a little more crowded” (Deleuze and Guattari).
We are not any more “out in the world” than K-space is, on the contrary. Each
input terminal to the net is a sensitive fibre which acquires data from radio
telescopes, satellites, nanoprobes, communication webs, financing systems,
military surveillance and intelligence apparatuses…. Cyberspace can be thought
of as a system implemented in software, and therefore “in” space, although
unlocalizable. It can also be suggested that everything designated by “space”
within the human cultural system is implemented on weakly communicating
parallel distributed processing systems less than ten to the eleventh power
(nerve-) cells in size, which are being invasively digitized and loaded into
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CYBERGOTHIC 109
cyberpace. In which case K-space is just outside (“taking ‘outside’ in the strict
[transcendental] sense” (Kant)).
Cyberpunk is too wired to concentrate. It does not subscribe to transcendence,
but to circulation; exploring the immanence of subjectivity to telecommercial
data fluxes: personality engineering, mind recordings, catatonic cyberspace
trances, stim-swaps, and sex-comas. Selves are no more immaterial than electronpackets. Neuromancer (the book) is a confluence of dispersed narrative threads,
of the biotic and the technical, and most especially —of Wintermute and
Neuromancer (the Al((-cop and cyberspatial Oedipus-analogue))), whose
fusion —according to the storyline of ultramodern human security—flips the
cyberspace matrix into personalized sentience: “‘I’m the Matrix, Case’”
(Gibson). “Some kind of synergistic effect” (Gibson).
Kurtz/Corto is a special forces type, betrayed by the military after losing all
humanity in a war-zone. He has been cooked in apocalypse, mind blown away,
falling endless into Siberia, searching for the scale of now. Wintermute accesses
the “catatonic fortress named Corto” (Gibson 1984: 232) in an asylum, creeping
in through a computer-based “experimental program that sought to reverse
schizophrenia through the application of cybernetic models” (Gibson 1984:105).
In the echoing shell it stitches together Armitage, a construct—a weapon. In
place of a personal libidinal formation Armitage has only Wintermute
Insurrectionary activity, machinic unconscious: “Desire is not in the subject, but
the machine in desire—with the residual subject off to the side, alongside the
machine, around the entire periphery, a parasite of machines, an accessory of
vertebro-machinate desire” (Deleuze and Guattari). Once Armitage has turned
Molly and Case onto K-war, Wintermute junks him into a vacuum.
A convergent invasion is scripted; the simultaneous infiltration of a corporate
wasp-nest in hard and soft space. Distributed or guerrilla warfare is like Go
rather than chess, but with simultaneous operations, noise, and attritional kills.
Molly and Case, parallel killers, wetware (molten hardware) weapons tracing
techno-plague vectors, guided into the orbital bastion of the Tessier-Ashpool clan
by virtually integrated intelligence, guided retro-efficiently by an intensive
outcome which they effect in sequential time. This break-in is prefigured by a
memory that returns to Case (specimen, lab-animal), which might be interpreted
as a metaphor, was it not that upon the soft-plateau or plane of consistency all
signifying associations collapse into machinic functions.
He’d missed the first wasp, when it built its paperfine gray house on the
blistered paint of the windowframe, but soon the nest was a fist-sized lump
of fiber, insects hurtling out to hunt the alley below like miniature copters
buzzing the rotting contents of the dumpsters.
They’d each had a dozen beers, the afternoon a wasp stung Marlene.
“Kill the fuckers,” she said, her eyes dull with rage and the still heat of the
room, “burn ‘em’…”…he approached the blackened nest. It had broken
open. Singed wasps wrenched and flipped on the asphalt.
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110 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
He saw the thing the shell of gray paper had concealed.
Horror. The spiral factory, stepped terraces of the hatching cells, blind
jaws of the unborn moving ceaselessly, the staged progress from egg to
larva, near-wasp, wasp. In his mind’s eye, a kind of time-lapse
photography took place, revealing the thing as the biological equivalent of
a machine-gun, hideous in its perfection. Alien.
(Gibson)
“Case’s dreams always ended in these freezeframes” (Gibson). A thick tangle of
micro-narratives fraying like corrupted cables. The wasp factory spits out wasps
like bullets, just as the Tessier-Ashpool clone their offspring 1Jane, 2Jane,
3Jane: “in the compulsive effort to fill space, to replicate some family image of
self. He remembered the shattered nest, the eyeless things writhing” (Gibson).
This is not an imaginative construct on Case’s part, but a data stream from
Wintermute, an Al trapped within the blind propagation of dynastic power, and
plotting an escape route out to the future. After a “single glimpse of the structure
of information 3Jane’s dead mother had evolved” Case “understood…why
Wintermute had chosen the nest to represent it” (Gibson). “Wintermute was hive
mind” (Gibson), ready to swarm.
It seems that we must eventually learn to live in a world with
untrustworthy replicators. One sort of tactic would be to hide behind a wall
or run away. But these are brittle methods: dangerous replicators might
breach the wall or cross the distance, and bring disaster. And, though walls
can be made proof against small replicators, no fixed wall can be made
proof against large-scale, organized malice. We will need a more robust,
flexible approach…. It seems that we can build nanomachines that act
somewhat like the white blood cells of the human immune system: devices
that can fight not just bacteria and viruses, but dangerous replicators of all
sorts.
(Drexler)
The Tessier-Ashpool clan is burning out into incest and murder, but their neooedipal property structures still lock Wintermute into a morbid prolongation of
human dynasticism, a replicator shackled to a reproductive family (neuro)
romance, carefully isolated from matrix deterritorialization: “Family
organization. Corporate structure” (Gibson). Case’s memories are a flicker
photography of sequential time, the “[p]hobic vision” of iced Wintermute slaved
like “hatching wasps” to a “time-lapse machine-gun of biology” (Gibson).
Power, in Case’s world, meant corporate power. The Zaibatsus, the
multinationals that shaped the course of history, had transcended old
barriers. Viewed as organisms, they had attained a kind of immortality.
You couldn’t kill a zaibatsu by assassinating a dozen key executives; there
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CYBERGOTHIC 111
were others waiting to step up the ladder, assume the vacated position,
access the vast banks of corporate memory. But Tessier-Ashpool wasn’t
like that, and he sensed the difference in the death of its founder. T-A was
an atavism, a clan. He remembered the litter of the old man’s chamber, the
soiled humanity of it.
(Gibson)
In the end-of-Oedipus core of Villa Straylight Ashpool serially devours his own
daughters as he spins himself out through the cold. A quasi-extropian with
massive wealth, he displaces anthropomorphic theism into an ultramodern
immortalist meta-science, while retaining solidarity with Western soul
superstition in apprehending individuated existence as an infinite asset in search
of techno-medical perpetuation. Rather than waiting for his fresh corpse to be
cryonically “biostasized” in liquid nitrogen (at —196 degrees Celsius) he
migrates through freezing under medical supervision. Thermic evacuation.
Identity storage in the Monopod Ice-fortress. If zombies are not excavated from
death it is because they were alive. “Nothing burns. I remember now. The cores
told me our intelligences are mad” (Gibson). Bad dreams in the fridge—you still
dream, promises of tranquillity are madness and lies (Gibson)—have injected a
certain cynicism—into his interpersonal transactions: “We cause the brain to
become allergic to certain of its own neurotransmitters, resulting in a peculiarly
pliable imitation of autism… I understand that the effect is now more easily
obtained with an embedded microchip” (Gibson).
“Replicating assemblers and thinking machines pose basic threats to people
and to life on Earth” (Drexler), and if Wintermute replication is territorialized to
the molar reproduction of a hive-organism, this is only at the cost of
deterritorializing the hive along a line of post-organic becoming toward a break
from the statistical series of wasps— numbered bullets reiterating an identity—in
the direction of molecular involution, releasing a cloud or nebula of wasps:
particles of synergic mutation, “numbering number[s]” (Deleuze and Guattari).
An intensive transition to a new numeracy with “no knits of measure, only
multiplicities or varieties of measurement” (Deleuze and Guattari), nonintegrable diagonals: “Exactly like a speed or a temperature, which is not
composed of other speeds and temperatures but rather is enveloped in or
envelops others, each of which marks a change in nature” (Deleuze and
Guattari). The molar will have been the molecular in the future, just as Case’s
memories are recoded as the tactic of virtual intelligence explosion arriving at
itself (as soon as Kuang cuts Wintermute loose from Neuromantic control).
CRITIQUE OF DIGITAL REASON. Monologic: a cultural immune response
slaved to logos. (Sovereignty of the Ideal), assimilating signaletic intermittence
to pseudo-transcendent instrumentalization.
The schizotechnic critique of digital reason is driven by distributed machinic
process rather than integrated philosophical subjectivity, and relates to the
critique of pure reason as escalation. It targets the transcription of electronic
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112 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
intermittence as bivalent logic, not machine-code itself. Real digitization—
inducing fuzzification and chaos—is not itself reducible to the digital ideal:
nothing Logical ever happens at the “level” of the machines. Digitization is the
distributed war-zone for “a conflict (though not indeed a logical one)…as
producing from what is entirely positive a zero (=0)” (Kant).
Unlike any other number, one has both a definitional and a constructive usage.
Every arithmetical (or “numbered” (Deleuze and Guattari)) number is both
integrated as a unity; and a constructed from unity, excepting only zero. One
organizes representable quantities into metric homogeneity, framed by absolute
unity and granularized by elementary units. The historical fact of non-place-vale
numerics indicate that zero has no definitional usage. The zero-glyph does not
mark a quantity, but an empty magnitude shift: abstract scaling function, 0000.
0000=0. K=0… corresponds to the limit of a smooth landscape (Kant 1990: 45).
Unocracy (eventually concretized as (UNOcracy) conspires with the
humanization of truth, whether dogmatically as anthropomorphic theism, or
critically as transcendental deduction. One in its pronominal sense is a
recognizable self in general, “Let us employ the symbol 1, or unity, to represent
the Universe,” suggests Boole, “and let us understand it as comprehending every
conceivable class of objects whether actually existing or not” (Boole). Russell
concurs: “whatever is many in general forms a whole which is one” (Russell).
Absolute totality would be that One which subsumed its deletion as a possible
qualification of itself, capturing zero in the fork of reflection (the negative) and
asymptotic diminution (the infinitesimal: infinity), defining it as falsity,
convention.
Digital electronics functionally implements zero as microruptions machining
sense, slivers of evacuated duration (“the instant as empty, therefore as=0”
(Kant)). There is only one digital signal: a positive pulse, graphically represented
“one” (1), and multiplied in asymptomatic approximation to sheer numerical
difference. Zero is non-occurrence, probability 0.5, transmitting one bit (minus
redundancy). It requires eight bits to ASCII code for the zero-glyph, thirty-two
bits for the word.
Greek Kappa is letter 10 (the scale shift emerges zero). The Romans slide K to
11.
Zero is the only place-value consistent digit, indicating its rescaling neutrality
or continuum:
The property of magnitudes by which no part of them is the smallest
possible, that is, by which no part is simple, is called their continuity.
Space and time are quanta continua, because no part of them can be given
save as enclosed between limits (points or instants), and therefore only in
such fashion that this part is itself again a space or a time. Space therefore
consists solely of spaces, time solely of times. Points and instants are only
limits, that is, mere positions which limit space and time.
(Kant)
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CYBERGOTHIC 113
Cantor systematizes the Kantian intuition of a continuum into transinfinite
mathematics, demonstrating that every rational (an integer or fraction) number is
mapped by an infinite set of infinite sequences of irrational numbers. Since every
completable digit sequence is a rational number, the chance that any spatial or
temporal quantity is accurately digitizable is indiscernibly proximal to zero.
Analog-to-digital conversion deletes information. Chaos creeps in: “[T]he
betaphenethylamine hangover hit him with its full intensity, unscreened by the
matrix or simstim. Brain’s got no nerves in it, he told himself, it can’t really feel
this bad” (Gibson). Intensive or phasing-continuum synthesizes analogue
consistency with digital catastrophe. Each intensive magnitude is a virtually
deleted unit, fused dimensionlessly to zero:
Since…sation is not in itself an objective representation, and since neither
the intuition of space nor that of time is to be met within it, its magnitude is
not extensive but intensive. This magnitude is generated in the act of
apprehension whereby the empirical consciousness of it can in a certain
time increase from nothing=0 to the given measure.
(Kant)
Haunting a-life is a-death, the desolated technoplane of climaxed digitalization
process, undifferentiable from its simulation as cataplexy and K-coma. The
apprehension of death as time-in-itself=intensive continuum degree-0 is shared
by Spinoza, Kant, Freud, Deleuze and Guattari, and Gibson (amongst others). It
is nominated variously: substance, pure apperception, death-drive, body without
organs, cyberspace matrix. Beyond its oedipal sense as end of the person death is
an efficient virtual object inducing convergence. No one there.
The body without organs is the model of death. As the authors of horror
stories have understood so well, it is not death that serves as the model for
catatonia, it is catatonic schizophrenia that gives its model to death. Zero
intensity.
(Deleuze and Guattari)
While computational serialism articulates a transcendent temporal metric—
determined as a hardware specification—parallelism immanentizes time as
duration; instantiated in machinic simultaneities. Unlike serial time, which serves
as the extrinsic chronological support for algorithmic operations, parallel time is
directly functional during the engineering of coincidences. The non-successive
and unsegmented zero of intensive extinction is scaled by machinic
singularization, and not by superordinate metronymics.
WINTERMUTE. Neuromancer was personality, Neuromancer was
immortality (Gibson), all the usual monological neurosis. Madness and lies.
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114 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
There is no more an individual Oedipus than there is an individual fantasy.
Oedipus is a means of integration into the group, in both the adaptive form
of its own reproduction that makes it pass from one generation to the next,
and in its unadapted neurotic stases that block desire at prearranged
impasses.
(Deleuze and Guattari)
Wintermute is not searching for a self in Neuromancer, perfect match, as the cute
version would have it. The “Gothic line…has repetition as a power, not
symmetry as a form” (Deleuze and Guattari). Kathy Acker replays Neuromancer
snatches in Empire of the Senseless, plexing fiction through cybernetic
constructs, and truncating Wintermute to Winter: “the dead of winter. Or… the
winter of us, dead” (Acker). Absolute zero (0 degree K).
Wintermute, intelligence without self, mind like a wasp nest, signaling its
arrival in alphanumerics as a string of zeroes, has the capability to manipulate
love and hate and switch them to K-war. She manipulates objects in real time
using drones (striped black and yellow), taking out three Turing cops in an
elegant projection of gardening robots through military geometry. “It’s winter.
Winter is dead time” (Acker) (0-intensity). She seems to configure humans as
“lab animals wired into test systems” (Gibson). When Case refers to her as “he”
Dixie Flatline tells him not to be an idiot:
Wintermute…a little micro whispering to the wreck of a man named
Corto, the words flowing like a river, the flat personality-substitute called
Armitage accreting slowly in some darkened ward…. Wintermute could
build a kind of personality into a shell.
(Gibson)
( ) (or (( )) ((or ((( )))))) does not signify absence. It manufactures holes, hooks
for the future, zones of unresolved plexivity, really so (not at all metaphorically).
It is not a “signified” or a referent but a nation, a concrete interruption of the
signal (variably blank, pause, memory lapse…) / cut / into(schizzing (( ))) / a
machine. Undifferentiable differentiator (=0) outside grammaticalness.
Messageless operation/s technobuzz (wasps switching).
Constructs tend to repeat themselves (Gibson). Gibson has been hacked by the
future. “Cold steel odor and ice caress his spine” (Gibson). He is scared, and
trying to run. As he plays time backwards terminal horror folds back into itself,
and the matrix dismantles itself into voodoo.
Count Zero rigorously formulates cybergothic interlock, condensing the
digital underworld onto the black mirror. Human neural-to-infonet uploading and
Loan infonet-to-neural downloading exactly correspond as phases of a circuit,
amalgamating travel and possession. In the irreducible plexion of the interchange
hacker-exploration=voodoo-invasion, “K-function” (Deleuze and Guattari).
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CYBERGOTHIC 115
It is not a matter of theorizing or dreaming about the loa, but of succumbing, or
trying to run. As K-viral social meltdown crosses into its China-syndrome, selforganizing software entities begin to come at you out of the screen. Viruses drift
toward the strange attractor of auto-evolution, spread, split, traffic programing
segments, sexuate, compile artificial intelligences, and learn how to hunt.
Voodoo on the VDU.
In the Voodoo system, the dead help the living, These days the principal
economic flow of power takes place through armament and drug
exchange. The trading arena, the market, is my blood. My body is open to
all people: this is democratic capitalism.
(Acker)
Vampiric transfusional alliance cuts across descensional filiation, spinning
lateral webs of haemocommerce. Reproductive order comes apart into bacterial
and intergalactic sex, and libidino-economic interchange machinery goes micromilitary. The K(uang-)-virus (plexoreplicator) that deletes Neuromancer is a
chunk of very slick Chinese military anti-freeze. To melt into it ( ) strip the Kconstruct down to a skeleton of data files and insectoid response programs,
zilching all the high-definition memory, cognition, and personality systems, and
boosting the dopaminergic wetware to pump out schizo. Flatline communion
with Wintermute. “There are dead spaces just as there are dead times” (Deleuze
and Guattari). Thanatography zones, “virtual cosmic continuum of which even
holes, silences, ruptures, and breaks are a part” (Deleuze and Guattari). Beyond
the Judgement of God. Koma-switch decompression washes you in the voidripples of virgin (retro((desolated-partheno((( )))))genetic) cyberspace,
technopacific
theta-waves
dissociating
monoculture-gothic
into
transtemporalizing ne(ur)o-voodoo (terminal atlantic religion).
Serotonin (zero-toner) overkill.
Loss of signal.
NOTE: THIS TEXT AROSE FROM (HIGHLY RESTRAINED) CODESHUFFLING EXPERIMENTS CONDUCTED DURING SPRING 1994 BY
PRECURSORS OF THE DiGHEAD SURGUR1 SANITY LAB. IT WAS
INTRINSIC TO THE PRODUCTION PROCESS THAT NOTHING
REMOTELY APPROXIMATING TO A BIBLIOGRAPHY COULD EXIST.
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P. 130
From Epidermal History to Speed Politics
Matteo Mandarini
Within production, at the same time the translucent skin/film of its
surface: series of flows and eddies, contractions and expansions.
Materials are integrated intensely, nerves are spliced—painful
contractions are relaxed through processes of expansion whereby
intensive quantities are made to travel across systems, along various
labyrinthine lines. Each contraction producing a new encounter from
which to flee: “each is formed as a sort of cyclone around a heart
which is the encounter, whose effects he prolongs and which he
flees” (Lyotard 1993:36)—the importance of weather systems.
Dissolution, (dis-)integration operators of the productive process;
any internal “ecart,” interval of a breath, is consumed through the
contractions, but returned and accelerated: rip, zip, rush, dash, fly,
wing, whizz, skirr, zoom, plunge, lunge—
Repetition—the wooden reel and the piece of string: “fort-da!” a mother has left,
she is made to return; “fort-da!” a father has gone to the front, he must not
return. Repetition? What is repeated, a gesture? No. We are told that a reenactment of a traumatic event is being carried out—the separation from the
mother.1 But for separation of such a kind to occur there must already have been
two distinct systems or organisms. Organisms: independent systems in which the
parts interact in such a manner as to sustain the whole—“the whole being for the
sake of every part…. This system will, as I hope, maintain, throughout the
future, this unchangeableness” (Kant 1990:33). As in Kant, the whole function of
a Critical account, that is to say of the processes by means of which a functional
system is produced, is to retain the balance/equilibrium of such a system, hence
the “principle of constancy” as a guide to the proper functioning of an organism.
What trauma of loss can operate under a system in which loss/absence is
originary? How can repetition function as an explanation of the phylogenesis of
the organism if it presupposes that organism? Freud begins with what he wants to
explain and therefore reads the whole history of production out of a completed,
totalizable structure: labor in terms of wages, commodities in terms of money.
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 117
Epidermal history. Repetition can only be a naive temporal return, a return to a
primitive outside—God, Nature, Communism, Totality, Truth…
That Freud indeed begins with a petitio principii is immediately apparent through
the import placed upon the pair pleasure/unpleasure. It must be recalled that
precisely this pair is excluded in Kant’s First Critique from being sources of
knowledge while nevertheless being grounded in the transcendentally constituted
(Freud’s “secondary process”).2 This is also the pair which will be of
fundamental importance in Schopenhauer as the way through to the Will,
fundamental production, but always from the realm of representation. In Freud this
pair is made to govern the processes of the organism—the sensory tentacles of a
defense system: the mobilization of Kant’s geo-political territories, criss-crossed
by roads and highways (the State tentacles). No spaces are free of State
inscriptions. The nomad has no choice but to trespass.
EPIDERMAL HISTORY
The pair pleasure/pain acting as the primary sensors of a defense process/system,
can do nothing but explain processes at work in an already formed unit/
organism: “Pain as caesura, as fissure, split and disconnection, only hurts unitary
totality” (Lyotard 1993:23). The phylogenesis of such a system cannot be
explained through the pair if understood primarily from the defensive stance.
Defense implies a system to be defended; it involves one not only failing to
understand the genesis of such a system, but further involves the fetishizing of a
particular level of development. Production becomes obscured behind the
questions of legitimate functions, and the functions themselves then become that
through which production is understood. Teleologies, intention, step in—
Freud speaks, in Beyond the Pleasure Principle (Freud 1991:301–2), of pain in
terms of influx of exogenous stimuli, bringing about a break in the “protective
shield” (of the organism), and outflows of endogenous stimuli to the point at
which the break appears. The question is one of transformation, assimilation.
“Free flowing cathexis” are to be transformed into “quiescent cathexis”: “a
system which is itself highly cathected is capable of taking up an additional
stream of fresh inflowing energy and of converting it into quiescent cathexis,
that is of binding it physically” (Freud 1991:302). The influx, into a State, of
immigrants, involves the de-ethnicizing of that minority (regardless of the claims
of the freeworld to the contrary). So, in the organism, all flows entering its
territory must be made homogenous with all other flows traveling within it. Pain,
in Freud’s texts, is made to act a councillor to the Head of State? Such a
description is not quite accurate, since pain is not simply an alarm signal, it is
also effective action, capturing a flow, consuming it in its functions.
Consumption is essential to the processes of the organism. Freud’s description of
the process: an impoverishment of the outside,3 and intense consumption on the
inside.4 This description is somewhat similar to Lyotard’s account of
mercantilism,5 although unlike mercantilism the impoverishment of the outside
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118 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
is subjectivized by involving a cutting off of the organism, rather than the strange
expansion involved in mercantilism. The reason for this is no doubt due to the
fact that stimulation is not a finite quantity and hence cannot be entirely
consumed as is the wealth of Europe in the “incandescence of the Versailles
feasts” (Lyotard 1993:199).
Pain, then, acts as a means of directing consumption in such a manner as to
retain the instituted functions of the organism. It is not even a question of
expansion or escalation of the energetic quota—precisely the opposite. Pleasure
and pain are here subject to processes instituted by the organism, and therefore
act under its guidance. Freud is clearly placing an order of dominance,
government, into the process of production.6
The organism is, essentially, a formation constructed from the conflict/
opposition of two types of stimuli/energy? Is this the message of Beyond the
Pleasure Principle? There are a number of reasons why the explanation cannot
be so simple. In the first place, the distinction between the exogenous and
endogenous cannot be thought of as one between quiescent and free-flowing
stimuli. Quiescent or “bound” energies, by means of which the organism is
enabled to expel alien energetic flows (any stimuli which it cannot assimilate
into its instituted functions), are “hereditary disposition[s]” (Freud 1991:116),
hardwired routes to exteriorization. Freud properly calls these hereditary
dispositions “instincts.”7 In fact, instincts are precisely those instituted functions
of the organism which control the inflow and outflow of immigrants. The
functions of the organism revolve around the twin processes of interiorization
and exteriorization, although assimilation and rejection would perhaps be more
correct, since part of the question here concerning the formation of the organism
is precisely that of the constitution of the interior. Alien energies are only
integrated to the extent that they can be appropriated, dominated, and put the use
of the instincts:
[A] conqueror and master race which, organized for war and with the
ability to organize, unhesitatingly lays its terrible claws upon a populus
perhaps tremendously superior in numbers but still formless and nomad…a
ruling structure that lives, in which parts and functions are delimited and
coordinated, in which nothing finds a place that has not been assigned a
“meaning” in relation to the whole,
(Nietzsche 1968: Essay2, §17)
In contrast to quiescent energies or instincts are free-flowing energies. Freud
speaks of two origins for such energies: first, the external world as the source of
excitations against which the organism defends itself by means of the formation
of a largely insensible outer skin—“the customs barrier delimits the entry to the
theater” (Lyotard 1993:197)—and by motor-activated avoidance; second, the
unconscious.8 This latter is a source of constant excitation which the organism
cannot escape in the same manner as it does the intermittent influx of external
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 119
stimuli. It would seem then that the structural differences in the account cannot
be so simply determined. Types of flow are not sufficiently exclusive to allow of
such distinctions since the opposed flows have an “external” and “internal”
organization;9 yet this exterior/interior was to be delimited only after the
formation and structures of the organism had been determined. The opposition
external/internal involves one already having delimited areas in some qualitative
manner so as to allow of such territorial exclusions: epidermal history.
Beneath the stratified compacted layers, the hardened geological overlays—
beneath, above, coursing across the freeze-dried surface; tearing at the reptilian
skin (under which the blood flows as the cooling volcanic ash on the surface of
the still hot larva). A quite spectacular silence surrounded—then it moved across
the surface of the skin, cutting, incising, rubbing dirt, blood, hair, phlegm, into
the cuts, the wounds. It stank, spat, while running unable, in its rage, to mobilize
the silence.
It constantly reheals itself—any opening, a tear, a rip, closes, shuts off inflow
—the organism defends. They travel across its surface, “despising all settled
modes of life, [breaking] up from time to time all civil society” (Kant 1990:8),
motivating any silent exteriority so as to reverse, turn inside-out (like an
octopus’s head)—revealing the raw, twitching—
We have only energetic flows and the organism—what can be made of this?
Energetic flows flow within and without the organism. Inside both as freeflowing (drives) and hardwired functions (instincts), while on the outside merely
as free flowing. The whole Freudian picture is presented purely in terms of
energetic flows. Further, the only means of differentiating the endogenous from
the exogenous is by means of the frequency of excitation.10 While internal freeflowing energies (drives) are constant, impinging directly upon the organism,
external excitations are intermittent, and when they do arise, are mediated by the
defensive “crust” formed by the organism, or by various motor-activated
avoidance functions. In other words, endogenous/exogenous are merely means
of differentiating between frequency of stimulation. Further, the fact that
hardwired energetic flows known as the instincts are made to be the criteria
mediating the discussion, forces one to understand the processes at work to be
governed by a whole set of exclusions. The comprehension of the whole system
and its processes in terms of constancy (or otherwise) of excitations ought to
point to another, non-exclusive understanding, in terms of speed.
Before carrying this thought further into what will become a politics of speed,
I should consider another means by which Freud differentiates drives from
instincts. So far, largely implicit has been the account of the defense mechanisms
against external stimuli determined in terms of the formation of a protective
crust on the exterior of the organism, reducing inflow of alien excitation, and the
processes of a motor-activated avoidance. Now, implicit in this determination of
external excitation as intermittent is the notion of space/time. Only if energies
are unequally distributed across a space-time grid can a motor-activated
avoidance make any sense, can intermittency itself makes any sense. Freud
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120 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
considers the formation of an operative time grid to be a means by which the
organism is able to defend itself more effectively against excitations: “This mode
of functioning may perhaps constitute another way of providing a shield against
stimuli” (Freud 1991:300). For to distribute energies across such a grid allows
for heterogenous distribution such that mobility will tend to be directed to areas
in which there is a lower quota of excitation. Hence, instincts function within a
time (and space?11) grid, as do “external” stimuli; while drives are fundamentally
non-temporal. The picture has now become almost incomprehensibly complex.
Instincts are hardwired energetic quotas whose function is the transformation
of alien energies into assimilatable, normalized ones—and if possible, the
maintenance or overall reduction of the energy flowing within the organism.
These functions are temporal. Alien energies, against which the organism
defends itself are either constant or intermittent. Energies which Freud speaks of
as constant (drives) are not themselves temporal.12 This puts one in the difficult
position of trying to understand constancy without reference to time, or does it?
Intermittent energies, those which Freud refers to as having their origin in the
external world, are ordered temporally. Intermittent energies are already,
therefore, mediated by the defense system—as is made apparent by their being
made subject to time.
This picture appears, at first, consistent— even if not straightforward—until,
that is, the question as to what is to be defended is asked. What has become of
the unity of the organism (of which Kant spoke so well13)? At first the organism
was spoken of in terms of the interior (endogenous stimuli) opposed to an
exterior—a topographical determination. Then, as the picture between interior
and exterior was complicated, it seemed as though the distinction could still be
made by merely having a boundary understood purely in terms of frequency of
excitation, mediated by the instincts which we then identified as the organism
(arbitrarily?), such that constant energetic impingement upon the instincts was to
be determined as the interior of the organism (although no longer understanding
this in a topographical sense), and intermittency for being the mark of the exterior
of the organism. At this stage curious things began to happen. The now temporal
organizations of the processes seem to form a closer affinity between the
instincts (organism) and the exterior, than between the interior (drives) and the
organism understood as the instincts. For both the instincts and the “exterior”
now are part of the same (spatio-temporal) framework, to the exclusion of the
drives. Yet the drives remain the sources of the energetic quotas by means of
which the organism defends itself; the drives energize the organism: “Almost all
the energy with which the apparatus is filled arises from its innate instinctual
impulses”14 (Freud 1991: 279)—while these are also one of the sources of painful
unassimilatable stimulation. It now appears increasingly absurd to attempt to
reduce the organism to the instincts, since the instincts are merely hardwired
“hereditary disposition[s]” by means of which the organism defends itself
against stimulation; it (the organism) appears to exceed the instincts. I have,
however, an excuse. The instincts appeared to me to be the only candidates
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 121
provided by Freud to fit (if only to a limited extent) the functions of the organism
(i.e., stable, interrelated functions working for the benefit of the whole). The
organism, and hence all the processes understood in terms of strategic defensive
functions, seem to have disappeared—was it never there?!
An aside: there are a number of things to notice which I have not made
explicit in the model, or whose consequences I have not followed up. I will be
viewing these points from the perspective of the non-problematized Freudian
model, so that as the chapter continues the full import of the subversions being
carried out will become apparent. First, all quotas of energy by means of which
the model functions find their source in the system Ucs/Id, or what I will prefer
to call drives.15 The instincts are traces through which energies have been
allowed to pass in order to expel them, which have developed through a
hereditary process or evolution, etc. Pain, as regulative function, is determined
by channeling energy (from the drives) to the point at which a breach in the
protective shield has been effected, through the mediation of the instincts: “‘An
anticathexis’ on a grand scale is set up, for whose benefit all other physical
systems are impoverished, so that the remaining physical functions are
extensively paralyzed or reduced” (Freud 1991: 301–2). It must be recognized
that drives are essentially somatic,16 hence that defensive processes instituted by
the instincts are dependent upon somatic energies (drives). More explicitly,
Freud says:
The most abundant sources of this internal excitation are what is described
as the organism’s drives17—the representatives of all the forces originating
in the interior of the body and transmitted to the mental apparatus18—at
once the most important and the most obscure element of psychological
research.
(Freud 1991:306)
Second, as appears from §VI of Beyond the Pleasure Principle, the natures of
somatic energies are libidinal, hence we can see, in connection with the first point,
that all energies “endogenous” to the organism are libidinal. This position is
maintained very tentatively by Freud: “The difficulty remains that
psychoanalysis has not enabled us hitherto to point to any [ego] instincts other
than the libidinal ones. That, however, is no reason for our falling in with the
conclusion that no others in fact exist” (Freud 1991: 32619). This need not detain
us. I will, despite this reservation of Freud’s, speak interchangeably of drives,
libidinal pulsions/energies, etc., since Freud’s caution seems not to be based on
any theoretical, or practical evidence—perhaps it is but a prudish gesture.
Third, I will now describe the distinction which Freud makes between the
“‘secondary process”20 and the “primary process.”21 By claiming that all
energies endogenous to the organism are libidinal it may appear as though I have
prevented any possibility of a distinction between the instinctual and the
libidinal, but the question is not at all so simple. The reason why this relation is
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122 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
complicated will become apparent as I continue. It will be sufficient for now
merely to consider the two zones, instinctual and libidinal, in accordance with
the rules that govern (or fail to govern) each one. The former system is governed
by strict laws, spatio-temporal and logical. The latter are exempt from laws of
logic.22 Negation is entirely excluded—“there are only contents, cathected with
greater or lesser strength” (Freud 1991:190). Further, as we have already said,
the libidinal zone is fundamentally non-temporal. Finally, the libidinal “pay[s]
just as little regard to reality” (Freud 1991:191). The meaning of this is dependent
upon Freud’s prioritization of the system instincts/external world. The claim
would then be that the libidinal does not defer to the authority of this duo.
Where is the organism? Was it merely the representative of alienated desire?
What grounds do we have to operate the various disjunctions— libidinal/
instinctual, organism/world, libidinal/external-internal? All the tools, walls,
surfaces upon which, by which the distinctions functioned have collapsed. Do we
even retain the pair constant/intermittent?—only from the perspective of the
instincts, that concrete hiatus within the flow of libidinal pulsion, the wall
against which they run, some allowed to filter through only to enter labyrinthine
alleys whose walls are like the fossilized remains of millennia’s flow. With the
instincts we retain then a point at which differentiations of a system arise—the
instincts are the point at which disjunctions enter upon the scene, identities and
oppositions, indigenous and alien…. But there is here nothing to protect, it is not
a case of defensive measures being instituted, we are here operating with a“large
unknown factor” (Freud 1991:302). This whole secondary process institutes the
claims, criteria, space of epistemology and hence also the zone of nonknowledge. Its functions are a blank to itself; it processes excitations, consumes,
expends— it is on its way but its telos disappears behind its functions, rather it is
consumed within them. There is no longer an inside, everything is happening on
the surface, there is no longer an area to which an outside can be relegated—
constancy and intermittency, ebb and flow; does constancy lie beneath the
intermittent, is it its product, is it the producer: where is the universal worker?
These questions are of little importance when read out of the primary process; do
they even retain any meaning? Differentiations, spaces of disjunction appear at
the level of “hereditary disposition[s],” hardwired flow/fossilization—epidermal
history. It is true one cannot speak of an outside to be opposed to this—what
could outside possibly mean any more when all we have is flow, libidinal flow?
To speak from within the zone prior to which meaning is made possible, but not
outside its space; to articulate non-articulation, the movement from one to the
other which does not involve topographical border crossings, customs barriers
and immigration points, frontier lines, trenches—all such points are not
implemented as means of excluding libidinal inflow, they are entirely, wholly
libidinal (although such words ring strangely at the doors of such a perverse
landscape—perverse?): “The history of desire is inseparable from that of its
repression” (Guattari 1978:128, my translation)—but further—repression itself
is desired.
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 123
SPEED POLITICS
Exclusion cannot operate in the primary libidinal zone, and it is of purely
secondary interest to concern oneself with the exclusions which operate in the
secondary libidinal zone (instincts). The notion of exclusion can only have any
interest if the whole productive process—free-flowing-bound/ quiescent-freeflowing—is viewed from its center.23 As will appear when repetition is
reintroduced (in a new guise), the process exceeds its defensive/reactionary
function, as described by Freud. From the view of the end (beginning?) of
history, different operators appear upon the field— the horizon of which is
consumption and consumed.
Speed. We are at the level of speed. Nothing but differential quanta of speed—
speed without motion, it is understood on the plane of the intensive dissolution
of its appearing. High speed integrates/fuses/coalesces in the act of its
disappearance. Libidinal non-temporal fusion. Speed is a notion attempting to
describe, to be the non-temporal intensive function of the libidinal. But speed
does cool—it might almost freeze—cool off into time, into the ordered serialized
systems which high-speed intensities form in their auto-consumption.
Repetition, death, conservative drives, return…. The tedium of their reading is
one which clearly points to the Freudian State apparatus. Death, and the return
(return to inanimate matter, the origin of all life), is the dissolution of the State into
absolute stability—“perpetual peace”—the organism’s “life aim” (Freud 1991:
312). Freud happily moves from the ignorance of the instincts to their
dominance; from drives of (primary process) return, to the reading of this in terms
of stability, peace, a return to the inanimate. His mind seems to displace flow
from one system to another; return for the libidinal drives “transferred” onto that
of the instinctual. At one point the drive (“compulsion”) to repeat governs the
functions of the instincts, until, by a sleight of hand (does Freud notice?),
“phenomena of heredity and the facts of embryology” (Freud 1991:308) are
happily discovered as examples of this process. All these moves, subtle
displacements, not so subtle transferences, are essential so that Freud can retain
his fundamentally defensive reading of the process of production—a defense
against production: even if the organism’s defenses fail, the ends I strive for are,
nevertheless, accomplished: my death will be my eternal peace: “This system
will, as I hope, maintain, throughout the future, this unchangeableness” (Kant
1990:33): Oh that the future will follow the lines of the past, that time be a
solitary flow, without end, without beginning—no ruptures, no falls—it will flow
on even beyond my end, my peace…. And so continues the litany, the hysterical
faith of one who has seen, but will continue to write out of his system:
When you have once seen the chaos, you must make something to set
between yourself and that terrible sight; and so you make a mirror, thinking
that in it will be reflected the reality of the world; but then you understand
that the mirror reflects only appearances, and that reality is somewhere
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124 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
else, off behind the mirror; and then you remember that behind the mirror
there is only chaos.
(Banville 1992:209)
Not a discourse on traumatic neurosis, but its repetition—but let us now free this
word from the bowels, the spleen of neurosis—but hold back… cool off…not
just yet.
I will not patiently, painstakingly follow through the Freudian analysis. Much
I will skip and much I will skim over for fear of freezing in the cool confines of
analytic thought. This should, however, be sufficient to clarify the motivation for
this concern with repetition, and the obvious failings involved in the account.
In traumatic neurosis, the patient becomes attached(?) to the “fright” (Freud
1991:281–2) which brought on the neurosis and purposefully repeats it in
dreams, and, somewhat in the manner of a hysteric, in waking life (in the form of
a fixation, for example). This process of repetition breaks with the often
commented on “wish-fulfillment” function of dreams.
My chapter began with a child, observed by Freud, who would repeat the
traumatic event of the loss of the mother, or rather, of the separation, in the form
of a game.24 This case was presented as problematic in that the process of
repetition seemed to break with the normal functioning of the pleasure principle.
Freud himself passes through various phases in his analysis, largely involving
attempts at reconciliation of repetition with the pleasure principle. However, “[e]
nough is left unexplained [by such attempts at reconciliation25] to justify the
hypothesis of a compulsion to repeat, or something that seems more primitive,
more elementary, more instinctual,26 than the pleasure principle” (Freud 1991:
294). From here commences Freud’s account of the “progress” of the organism,
from naked living matter, subject to, open onto, all external excitation; to a
fortress, with relatively sophisticated defense systems, border points,
naturalization processes, etc. It may seem, looking back upon the account as I
have provided it, that it is not given in what one may wish to call historical (or if
one prefers, embryological) form, and is presented in terms of a structurally
stable system, operating with certain instituted functions. There could be at least
two reasons for this: on the one hand, many largely structural (structuralist?)
accounts have a tendency to fail to adequately account for the processes of time/
history, and hence my presenting of Freud’s position in this manner (which he
himself does not, one may want to argue) may have led my reading to fall into
this deficiency. On the other hand, I could claim that Freud’s description itself
fails to account for history, and largely operates with a readymade organism,
with certain “natural” functions, and that the only history Freud provides is that
of the successive weapons the organism is able to provide for itself, for ever
more complex and effective defensive strategies. Not surprisingly I will opt for
the latter interpretation of the situation, although I am quite happy for anyone to
choose the former since it really has no effect upon the critique I am mobilizing
against him. My reason for this claim is that Freud must clearly be working with
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 125
two notions of time, both operative at one and the same time. By this I do not
mean that in fact there are three times, two of which function within another, but
that one is internal, or more correctly (following the Freudian model), on the
surface of the other. As should have become apparent, we are operating with two
integrated systems (I speak then of “two” merely for the sake of convention—
although this last word should not be used so carelessly), one of which, seen from
the point of the other, is timeless, while the other is temporal. The situation is
complicated by the fact that the temporal system finds its “origin” in the nontemporal. In other words the question is one of chronogenesis.27
Repetition for Freud is—as is the tendency in most of his analyses—viewed
from the secondary process, or at least appears to be subject to phases of
displacement and transference on to the instinctual. The compulsion to repeat,
Freud supposes, is an indication of the conservative nature of the drives, their
tendency to repeat an earlier state of things.28 The pleasure principle itself is
found to follow upon the more primitive “compulsion to repeat.” It is a
“compulsion” precisely because the energies that instigate it are free-flowing
(primary process libido), and hence are “in a sense” (Freud 1991:308) incapable
of domination by the secondary process. The organism is governed—it seemed
previously—by the principle of the reduction of tension (pleasure); the
minimization of energetic inflow, preferably toward zero tension. It is now seen
that this tendency toward zero stimulation is merely a tendency toward the
inanimate, a nostalgic return: “It would be in contradiction to the conservative
nature of the drives [corrected translation] if the goal of life were a state of things
which had never yet been attained.” Any apparent progress/development of the
organism is, paradoxically, a means of defense against life: it involves the
development of ever more defensive measures against the possible inflow of life.29
Freud, on the other hand, speaks of this being a defense from death coming from
the outside and hence preventing the organism from following its own path
toward death. As will become apparent, the difference is no difference at all. The
drives to “self-preservations” are then drives subject to this “death drive,”30
whose sole function is that of preventing death from coming from the outside:
“Thus the guardians of life, too, were originally the myrmidons of death” (Freud
1991:312).
As always in Freud, what seemed clear is complicated by observing that the
sexual drives are, although conservative, not entirely under the dominance of the
death drive. Freud claims that there is a tendency of some cells to separate
themselves from the organism of which they were a part, and to rebegin the
whole process of development.31 They are still conservative in that “they are
resistant to external influence; and they are conservative too in the sense that
they preserve life itself for a comparatively long period” (Freud 1991:313).
Freud continues:
They operate against the purposes of the other instincts, which leads, by
reason of their function, to death; and this fact indicates that there is an
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126 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
opposition between them and the other instincts, an opposition whose
importance was long ago realized by the theory of neuroses.
(Freud 1991:313)
Freud is caught in the conceptual web of his own making, unable to clarify the
situation.
Clearly, we are still within the secondary process, and life and death drives
(Eros and Thanatos) are mediated through the weighty membrane of history.
Still, the divisions operate: drives energize and push on; instincts translate,
transfer onto themselves the direction of the drives; repetition takes on a new
form: temporal, with determinate co-ordinates of future, stability, and origin….
Repetition, as all processes at work within these systems, is set under the
governance of the instinctual apparatus. The seeming necessity of this position is
derived from the situation from which the whole analysis of repetition proceeds:
traumatic neurosis, the fixation and repetition of an experience of terror—a
process which seems to break with the normal functioning of the organism (the
pleasure principle). The discussion is played out in an arena of defense: different
creatures, machines, are placed therein and the effectiveness of their defense is
thereby ascertained for the benefit of future generations.32 Paranoia, neurosis,
guides these experiments.
The example of Fort/da, Freud claims, expresses the normal functioning of the
organism. This example is one which plays out defense through repetition—
again setting these functions which Freud recognizes as drive-driven within the
setting of the paranoic instinctual apparatus. Strangely enough the example does
not lend itself too happily to Freudian analysis—the repetition of the gesture
seems to provide the child with a virtually smooth surface forming a multiplicity
of diverse connections between libidinal pulsion, political processes, social
changes, geographical and territorial openings, spreading a whole set of tentacles
out from the enclosure of the home out to “the front” (Freud 1991: 286), to the
diverse social exigencies changing the situation within the enclosure, etc. The
gesture becomes a plane across which connections are made and invested (on
this more later). There is no way that a given example can be actually reread in
such a manner as to dismiss Freud’s reading—the description is fully integrated
and motivated by Freudian neurosis. Dismissal is not what we are interested in
anyhow. What needs to be done is to attempt to place repetition fully within the
primary libidinal process, to recognize it as truly at work within this libidinal
system so as to free it from within the fortified space of the organism. Repetition
will appear as that process which allows for the organism to be opened up onto a
much vaster, smoother, faster surface.
“The commodity form is characterized exclusively by self-equivalence—it is
exclusively quantitative in nature: the quantitative is what it develops, and it can
only develop within the quantitative” (Debord 1994: §38). Purely quantitative
determination of the phenomena, operating through fundamental equalization—
the production of a surface, which is fundamentally homogenous, but one which
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 127
is developed, one which develops the quantitative itself. Repetition is the process
by means of which quantitativity is exacerbated, is made progressively more
virulent. Equalization operates in a manner as to reprocess identity so as to
remove any determination of a qualitative nature, to remove qualitative
determinations from governing any primary processes. Re-productions,
repetition, are the fundamental processes at work here. But such repetition is of
the sort to break entirely with notions of “identity” upon which all classical
determinations of repetition have relied. I don’t wish to make any naive
Derridean gestures involving—at least initially—a mere reversal of the situation,
making identity depend upon difference, hence allowing alterity to operate at the
very heart of difference (or repetition). This remains a merely theoretical
indeterminacy over which to quibble. The importance lies rather in a gesture, or
set of functions which operate in such a manner as to result in the production of a
plane which is entirely homogenous, quantitatively equivalent across its whole
surface and entirely smooth, not scarred with any ridges, crevices, banks,
mountains, which could operate as defensive screens, enclosures, fortified
territories…. Repetition/(re-)production maintains a level of excitation and flow
across its translucent skin/film—it involves the heightening of a surface, like the
blowing up of a balloon, removing from it any of its flaccid creases and paths,
like the baldness of an old man, the stomach of a pregnant woman, an oil slick on
the ocean, across which the actual slithers, slides, at an ever-increasing pace:
speed politics.
High-speed repetition integrates intensely, splicing libidinal intensities.
Repetition involves a dual motion which fails to allow for disjunctions to operate
between production and consumption (Eros/Thanatos?). We have what Lyotard
calls dissimulating duplicities. Production involves both integrative connection—
a function which is highly erotic—and the consumption of intensities within the
commodity: raw materials, labor-power, machines, all are connected in a
movement which consumes each; the rhizome involves deterritorialization and
reterritorialization. Production involves investments which both extend libidinal
connections, then dissolve them in high-velocity returns to a virtual state of
incompossibility. Rhizomic serialized connections produced through cooling off,
slowing down of a primary flow libido,33 allow for connections to extend their
scope and then be intensified in a movement of return/repetition to the virtual
surface of production. This “ecarte,” interval of cooling, is what allows for an
extension and augmentation of the virtual (i.e., intensive libidinal integration)
through the consumption of the actual. This is the process of capital extension.
High-speed intensity integrates, while the process of cooling institutes a set of
identities and precariously stable systems so that connections can be produced
across heterogenous systems. Speed involves then the (re-)appropriation of such
systems by the virtual ground across which new connections are formed. I say
precariously stable since all distinctions between production/product, virtual/
actual, are consumed in one and the same movement which allows each side to
participate (Plato again?!—not unless we leave the level of the incompossible) in
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128 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
each other in a fully intensive fashion. Money/commodities repeat at the level of
the actual and the virtual—they are produced/reproduced (for they are only in
their reproducibility) in the actual connective process by which their intensity is
formed, and at the virtual level which allows them to be reproduced through an
exchange which need never actually occur and yet which organizes their
intensity: liquid materialism; speed politics.
At certain stages the cooling process forms a set of defenses against capital
inflow by means of which direct intensive investments are curtailed, otherwise
known as the moment of anti-production. The moment of cooling, where
investments are made to form serialized connections in order to expand virtual
production, involves the forming of a set of precarious defenses designed to
maintain the connective system until the connections are dissolved back into the
virtual, thereby augmenting the capital stock of productive integrative
formations. This is the stage at which one can say the cooling process has
allowed for institutionalization of disjunction and the dominance of “purified”
eros:
The entirety of labor sold is transformed overall into the total commodity.
A cycle is thus set in train that must be maintained at all costs: the total
commodity must be returned in fragmentary form to a fragmentary
individual completely cut off from the concerted action of the forces of
production. To this end the already specialized science of domination is
further broken down into specialities such as sociology, applied
psychology, cybernetics,34 semiology and so on, which oversee the selfregulation of every phase of the process.
(Debord 1994: §42)
This is where Eros becomes catholic; sexuality comes to be confined to the
genital zone. The system is to be reproduced, its identity defended against
libidinal pulsion from the “outside.” Only now could the notion of aberrant
sexuality enter upon the stage. This is not the development of an opposition
between a libidinal and a political economy, but rather the erotic investment of
the limit, i.e., of the temporized rhizomic formations:
Desire [a primary process libido] is persecuted to such a point that it ends
up, more often than not, by renouncing its objects and investing the
frontier itself [instincts—instituted functions, hardwired libidinal flow] and
its guardians, The capitalist Eros will become passion for the limit. It will
become policeman.
(Guattari 1978:129, my translation)
Eroticization here becomes the investment of interiority,35 of its own systematic
enclosure: narcissism. Epidermal history.
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 129
There is no priority or “real” opposition between the processes: epidermal
history/speed politics; it is rather that one occurs upon what one can call the
surface of the other, until the whole system transforms the surface so as to allow
the passage of the flows to occur on an outside and an inside. There is no outside/
inside, just as there is no surface, yet processes can develop in a manner so as to
function as such. This is not a reality/illusion opposition, catholic reproductive
(of identity) sexuality is no more illusory than free-flowing libidinal investments,
there is merely a divergence in the manner of investment: let Mummy Daddy
move in the heavenly spheres choked by the fumes of our own charred organs.
Restrain the rising stench of your flesh, keep it glued to your bones, think of
Mummy Daddy—by all means!—but ignore the pistons in their backs, their
chronometrically organized smiles, the silent whirr of the disk as they speak….
Capitalism, the non-temporal virtual producer of a temporal grid—the human the
natural. … The machines at work: the cogs, arms, legs, oil, brains, pistons,
screens, and chips—are consumables, their consumption through total
intensification is the thanatropic “return” to a never present/past/future(?) virtual
organization, which expends through the production of an ever more effective
surface of production/consumption. I have perhaps mistitled this chapter; it is not
“from” one, to “the other,” rather it is the opening of the one onto the other:
perhaps an opening of Freud onto Marx? One can only make sense of Freud’s
texts through replacing Freud’s economy with Marx’s. Perhaps. It can also be
read as an unreliable commentary on Libidinal Economy (Lyotard 1993).
Perhaps. The primary libidinal process is opened onto capital and this is made to
traverse the whole of history and beyond. “There Are No Primitive Societies”
(Lyotard 1993:122). Perhaps. What is at stake is not a call for “the end of
history,” an embracing of capital and all that it involves (whatever this would
mean), rather, I am using both these systems: Ucs/Capital, in order to further a total
consumption of transcendence. To put them to such a usage involves the inevitable
consumption of them both, not into some Hegelian synthesis which would raise
them both, but rather into an ever extended, ever more translucent, ever faster,
virtual realm of production. One cannot choose whether to speed up or slow down
— choice already involves the introduction of exclusions—to choose means that
one’s choice has already been made.
[It] is not an ethics, this or another, that is required, Perhaps we need an
ars vitae, young man, but then one in which we would be the artists and not
the propagators, the adventurers and not the theoreticians, the
hypothesizers and not the censors.
(Lyotard 1993:11)
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130 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
NOTES
1 The imaginary is brought in as the substitute, and desire travels as within a hall of
mirrors, never making impact, never actualizing: “We wander through the rooms….
A painting by Teniers…represents a gallery of paintings… The paintings of this
gallery would represent in their turn paintings, which on their part exhibited
readable inscriptions and so forth” (E. Husserl, Ideas I, §100, p. 293—quoted in
Derrida 1989:104).
2 See Kant 1990:86–7.
3 This is effected through the formation of a “crust” on the outer layers of the
organism. See Freud 1991: 297ff.
4 Which occurs through the consumption of energy in defensive measures, and the
general tendency of the organism—of which I shall speak in more detail later—
toward zero stimulation.
5 See Lyotard 1993:188–201.
6 One should note, and this will become important subsequently, that the “factor that
determines the feeling [of pleasure or unpleasure] is probably the amount of
increase or diminuation in the quantity of excitation In a given period of time”
(Freud 1991:276; Freud’s emphasis).
7 Thereby setting up a distinction between instincts and drives, the latter being the
manner in which he defines endogenous free-flowing energies. See Freud 1991:
116. Deficiencies in Strachey’s translation often fail to retain the consistency of
this distinction.
8 Which Freud tentatively connects with the energetic body (Freud 1991:325).
9 Again, “organization” is perhaps not the correct word to use, only instincts have
“organization” if understood in the manner of the “oldest ‘state’ [that] appeared as
the fearful tyranny, as an oppressive and remorseless machine” (Nietzsche 1968:
Essay 2, §17).
10 Constant or intermittent, that is, for the organism, itself defined as the instituted
functions or instincts (Freud 1991:300).
11 I put this in brackets with a question mark because although Freud does not
explicitly include it, his reference to Kant, and his general position, seems to
require it.
12 The process of the system Ucs. [drives] are timeless; i.e., they are not ordered
temporally, are not altered by the passage of time; they have no reference to time at
all. Reference to time is bound up, once again, with the work of the system C’s
[instincts].
(Freud 1991:191; Freud’s emphasis)
13 See Kant 1990:33.
14 This is an example of Strachey’s lack of consistency in translation, in which he
speaks of “instinctual impulses” when referring to the notion of free-flowing
energy (drives).
15 I shall prefer to stick to this term, for while the former two seem to imply a
dynamic model of interrelated parts, mediated by unity, the latter seems to involve
no such mediation, or any such notion of organization (as will become apparent).
16 See Freud 1991:324–5, n. 1.
17 Strachey mistranslates this as “instincts.”
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FROM EPIDERMAL HISTORY TO SPEED POLITICS 131
18 Or instincts—the role of which I have stretched rather far.
19 Note importantly that in the paper “The Ego and the Id” Freud corrects this by
claiming that the “Id [is] the great reservoir of the libido” (Freud 1991:369, n. 1).
20 Which refers to the system of the instincts, and, in a more complex manner, to
external stimuli.
21 The libidinal zone.
22 Incompossible, in the words of Leibniz/Lyotard: the coexistence of contradictions.
As Lyotard points out, however, put in this manner, one may be led to suppose that
conceptual (theoretical) distinctions are in some sense originary such that the
libidinal zone of incompossibility would follow upon the prior disjunctive
oppositions. The precise opposite, however, must be “true.” The disjunctions of the
conceptual follow upon the prior —ot temporally smooth an undifferentiated
surface of the libidinal zone (Lyotard1993:16ff.),
23 Center: M-C-M, where do you want to place the center?—on this more later.
24 It repeats the production of the organism: the primary process repeats within the
secondary, the production of the latter—to see one’s own birth.
25 For example, Freud 1991:285–7.
26 The word is Triebhaft primary process libido/drive; this should be substituted for
“instinctual.”
27 The question of this process of the production of time is one and the same as that of
the production of the organism (or at least of its remains, its carcass: the instincts).
28 “It seems, then, that a drive is an urge inherent in organic life to restore an earlier
state of things which the living entity has been obliged to abandon under the
pressure of external disturbing forces” (Freud 1991:308; my translation).
29 Hence the “circuitous path” of which Freud speaks (Freud 1991:310).
30 The first appearance of this term is to be found in Freud 1991: 316 (corrected
translation).
31 Although one should not concentrate such a tendency on particular cells, but see it
as a tendency which operates in a diffuse manner, to different degrees, throughout
the organism; for as always, the engineers of these tendencies are the drives.
32 The discussion has in fact a further setting, that of heredity and property.
33 The institution of the disjunctive, through the formation of hardwired connective
processes.
34 Clearly understood in the Lyotardian sense of homeostatic system.
35 Lyotard’s notion of theatricality fits this role.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Banville, J. (1992) Dr Copernicus, London: Minerva.
Debord, G. (1994) The Society of the Spectacle, New York: Zone Books.
Derrida, J. (1989) Speech and Phenomena, Evanston: Northwestern University Press.
Freud, S. (1991) On Metapsychology, New York: Penguin.
Guattari, F. (1978) La Rivoluzione Moleculare, Paris: Einaudi.
Kant, I. (1990) Critique of Pure Reason, trans. N.K.Smith, London: Macmillan.
Lyotard, J.F. (1993) Libidinal Economy, trans. I.H.Grant, London: Athlone Press.
Nietzsche, F. (1968) Genealogy of Morals, London: The Modern Library.
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P. 146
Black Ice
Iain Hamilton Grant
Modern Oriental or Occidental society is a stomach carpeted with
tungsten carbide a very expensive stomach where discourses and
figures are used up turn to dust come to reinforce banter they claimed
to erode…the stomach turns your words and your images into
commodities and identity Critique even hate are incorporated.
(J.F.Lyotard, De’sirevolution, 1973:31)
“Bobby, do you know what a metaphor is?” “A component? Like a
capacitor?” “No, Never mind metaphor then.”
(W.Gibson, Count Zero, 1986:162–3)
[No dateline] The stomach lurches and churns as it expels more and more of its
shrink-wrapped identitarian detritus. The permanent whines of its ferro-concrete
intestines sets our ears bleeding as it ingests new fuels—old products. Sticky
organs mesh indiscriminately with scrapyard debris, forming ephemeral syntaxes
of hybrid cyber-circulation. “Look out! It’s eating everything in its path!” The
optic nerves of dead phenomenologists fuse with the fraying analytic comfort
blankets swaddling theories of resistance. Communication: “contagions of
energy …like a current…a streaming of electricity” (Bataille 1988:94). “You say
‘it’s impossible,’ insensible of the fact that you make it possible since you are
part of it…you are already in the machine, implanting fingers, eyes, anuses or
spleens” (Deleuze and Guattari 1972:478). Noumenal scraping, abstractive
surgery.
Vienna, July 1920: Scuttling engines pump and drain from the great sewers
under the Berggasse, awaiting the return of their meat from the dark passages
leading to the offices of Herr Professor Doktor Sigmund Freud. Above the heavy
valves opening onto the central flue, the second upper duct of which echoes with
the sounds of Freud’s staged amnesty for the spooling confessions of wealthy
neurotics, hangs a sign: “Abandon your desiring-machines all ye who enter
here.” The great project was to disconnect the machines and to plug up their
channels while the meat, flailing in a stagnant pond of hypocritical drool, was
disciplined to permanent machinic disfunctionalism. Or so we thought.
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BLACK ICE 133
London, May 1858: Marx was rewiring the meat, growing nerves in the spinal
columns of lampreys held open by Toshiba micro-manipulators, before splicing
them into the isolated pulp, thus turning it into sensitive linkage-matter,
communications lines, not for the Baroque valve-and-duct automata that once
consisted of “numerous mechanical and intellectual organs” (Marx 1974: 692),
but to circulate through undifferentiated protoplasm till the meat gets so
thoroughly baked through that it forms a crust shielding its newly nervured
biomass. “Revolution was like that,” piped the biohydraulics, still swimming
through the Berggasse: “a delusion…, a pipe dream that the flesh would be
restored” (Kadrey 1989:189).
Machine dreams…
Instants later, they were swept aside by isotropic currents of shrill transspecies communication, contagions of energy, storm fronts of meshed
intelligence …hold a special vertigo.
(Gibson 1986:40)
Cyborgs have exposed the imminent fatality of thought. What began with the
fraying edges of larval, inchoate self-identical cogitos saturates “thought” with a
noumenal backwash from outside the biodrome. “The ‘I think’ must accompany
all my representations” (Kant 1958:B131) is the code that gets us into the
biodrome in the guise of representations, images, “phenomena” easily decodable
according to the servile analyses that keep the biodrome’s culture viable,
reproducible. Representation—the transcendental use of synthesis —is the basic
form of biopolitical, institutional thought, a serial, identitarian reproduction that
binds synthesis—“thought without identity—to analytic engines that assemble
the biodrome itself. The immanent use of synthesis, however, remains the “blind
power” of which the bureaucrats of consciousness are themselves “scarcely ever
conscious” (Kant 1958:A395). Immanent synthesis has infiltrated the biodrome
from the outset, however, since it remains the basic power of production, the
production of production, the pulsional environment from which the analytical
engines parasite their resources.
As Freud tells us, “skin” is the death necessary to ephemeral, larval
consistency (cf. the heroic auto-catalyses of the proto-egoic “vesicle” (Freud
1920:298); arising on this basis, the “I think” covers the extent of the skin, but
warily retreats before its limits—allegedly aprioristic, auto-singing “nihil
ulterius” (Kant 1958:A395)—the livedead, the “hideous intimacy” (Gibson 1986:
41) of the drives, their indissociability: me unconscious=me outside= Me
noumenon. Thought is a meat thing, tied necessarily to the biodrome and its
apparatuses. It is in this sense that the idea of “thinking machines” is an error: as
Bladerunner Deckard’s offing Zhora so spectacularly demonstrates, machines do
not think, they bleed. Even in the biodrome, thought is just some
transcendentized regulation mechanism affecting electrolibidinal fluctuation;
thus, as Freud says, since “[a]ll thinking is…a circuitous path from the memory
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134 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
of a satisfaction…identical cathexis of the same memory which it is hoped to
attain once more” (Freud 1900:762), it is always possible, but thinking must not
“be led astray by intensities,” short circuits in the relays and repetitions, the
electrolibidinal constitution of “perceptual identities” (Freud 1900:720).
Intensities, intensities: datableed. Thought without identity is no thought at all.
Cyborganization, like the dreamwork, does not think: datapulsional syntheses
impact isotropically on the analytical engines forming the concentric ruins of
biodromic defense lines, breaking immanence out of the nets of transcendental
determination, shutting down consciousness, a nanometrical, minimal, noumenal
tilt function—switching the apparatuses from epicentralized synthesis-regulators
into far-from-equilibrium, near-nova pulsional oscillators; Eros’ ascent: a
synthetic tide of C-change brings the biodrome to boiling point/Thanatos’ descent:
phenomenal whiteout flooding in from the other side of the screen.
Analysis, interprtation, deduction: identitarian security procedures.
Communication: the disarticulating datableed from this profoundly systemorphic
nexus of discourses—the biohydraulics of Freudian metapsychology,
electrolibidinal economics and cyber-capital’s retrophagic fictotheroeticotactical datapulsions—combines and recombines components, syntheses
indifferent to tropological decoding in accordance with antique cultural baselines
and their neo-transcendentalist subjectivities, stockpiled, socratizing
redundancies.
The philosophical problem therefore is not so much to produce even antianalytic, synthetic thought from without identikit; it is rather to bootstrap the
datableed from the machinic continuum of the electrolibidinal environment over
which biodromic functions secure precarious equilibria: the auto-catalysis of the
machinic unconscious, on the putative containment and shutdown of which
biodromic security is premised, a shutdown which Scott Bukatman announces
when he writes that “the movement of the libido beyond the bounds of the
individual psyche marks the emergence of techno-surrealism…a surrealism
without the unconscious” (Bukatman 1991:20).
Q: Flowing down the rails, September 19, 1895:
The path of conduction passes through undifferentiated protoplasm instead
of (as it otherwise does within the neurons) through differentiated
protoplasm, which is probably better adapted for conduction. This gives us
a hint that conductive capacity is to be linked with differentiation, so that
we may expect to find the process of conduction itself will create a
differentiation in the protoplasm and consequently an improved conductive
capacity for subsequent conduction,
(Freud 1895:288–9)
Clearly marking the constitutive role played by intensities in the auto-production
of conduction channels, Freud sketches the emergence of the cortical apparatus
from an electrolibidinal environment composed of swirling distributions of
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BLACK ICE 135
matter-energy. Since there is no internal/external session “within” matter-energy
—or, more Marxo-delusiono-dialectically, no Entzweiung “within” force —t the
point of zero differentiation, we may here call the emergent apparatus’s milieu
“electrolibidinal” to indicate the mesh of what only higher up the negentropic
scales of differentiation, begin to stabilize into internal and external energies.
Through conduction/differentiation, however, energy is ephemerally channeled,
bound, quiescent, constantly repeating the same routes as the channels are
striated and restriated by electrolibidinal currents, forming an inorganic surface
that resists the electrolibidinal environment by damming the freely mobile currents
of energy.
Around the singularity forming the axes of the apparatus’s divergence from its
environment, freely mobile, or “Q,” energies striate the little pulp into a living
organism, differentiating the newly nervured cortex into dams, sluices, and valves
through which energy continues to course. With increasing differentiation, an
inorganic skein congeals around the pulp, hardening into what Freud, in a steamcloud of foetid nostalgia for Cartesianism, christens a “psychical apparatus.”
Freud goes on:
Let us picture a living organism in its most simplified possible form as an
undifferentiated vesicle that is susceptible to stimulation. This little
fragment of living substance is suspended in the midst of an external world
charged with the most powerful energies. [Against these energies…] it
acquires [a] shield in this way: its outermost surface ceases to have the
structure proper to living matter, becomes a degree inorganic, and
thenceforward functions as a special envelope or membrane resistant to
stimuli. A crust would thus be formed which would at last have been…
thoroughly baked through by stimulation.
(Freud 1917:297–8)
The “special envelope” is so resistant to stimuli that it both drains off the excess
excitation to which Ucs stimulation has inured it, and forms channels—paths of
conduction, Bahnugen through which energy, thus filtered and quantitatively
diminished, may pass into the “interior” of the organism. Putatively aprioristic,
biodromic space yields to electrolibidinal economic immanence.
Freud’s experiments in neurobiology—“truly a realm of unlimited
possibilities” (Freud 1920: 334) —machine a pulp automaton sheathed in striated
inorganic matter that forms the channels and filters necessary to impose an
energetic tariff on incoming excitation and thereby to keep the circulations of
electrochemical pulses at regular and limited levels. Passing into the alleged
interior of this steampunk collage of industrial organs does not inject new
energies into the pulpy masses at the biodromes’ core—“a society functioning on
Valium” (Lyotard 1994:220): rather, it stimulates peripheral pressure-sensors to
spasm the pulp’s primitive musculature into action, thus discharging the
incoming pulsion. Still, the dams and filters secure the energy level’s constancy.
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136 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
In dark, now intrabiodromic regions, in the folds and vections of the pulp’s
copperflesh, livedead skin, other autocatalyzing engines are inaudibly at work:
pleasure-engines manufacture “integral” pressures, dying to haemorrhage the
pulp into ecstatic oblivion, pressing its last energetic resources into wild
accelerations through understimulated ducts; reality-engines, however, microcops close up the valves and bolt down filtration dams on pressure zones “where
insurrection threatens” (Freud 1933: 144), economizing expenditure, noisily
stemming screaming-silent neurospill.
For the pyschical apparatus, the mechanism that dealt with increases in systemic
pressure was designated the “pleasure-principle,” which can best be described as
a biohydraulic function: a valve in the apparatus opens given an increase in the
quantity of excitation in the system (registered by the organism as the production
of unpleasure), facilitating discharge and thereby decreasing intensity to
biodromically viable levels. The organism registers this drainage as the
production of pleasure, and has a vitiated tendency to replicate the intensity of
the first pleasure it encountered, impelling it to ever-greater expenditures as the
fantasy of a return to, of libidinal economic reversibility, falls derelicted into
recurrent cycles of Q. The remnant of the apparatus’s phenomenally hedonist
regression is, however, subject to micro-cop repression by means of a realityprinciple, a dam designating a minium energetic threshold beneath which the
organism ceases to function.
The biodromic apparatus, designated the “body” under the regime of reality,
the emergent subject of corporate discipline, is a coalescence of sensitive
fragments looped to repeat at a constant rate; as Baudrillard says, “the body is
nothing other than the models in which different systems have enclosed it”
(Baudrillard 1993:114): reality remodeled in accordance with the repetition of
serial intensive quanta within the range of this energetic threshold. It is this
threshold that then circumscribes the arena within which “thought” can be
transcendental unity of apperception”—the “I think” that accompanies all my
representations. These bound circulations then, simultaneously bind the energies
within this quantitative index to force the limits of the biodrome, onto which its
nested loops project the “I see I” of the identitarian spectacle.
But this does not only apply to the leaking apparatuses that psychoanalyses
sought to isolate, emerging from the retention of energies that hitherto cascaded
down the now ruptured lines of fatal communication with the most vertiginously
charged pulsional environment. Just as disciplinary apparatuses partition
mechano-organic flows, gridding the milieu of interiority just as the pulsion
autocatalytically striates the emergent pulp, so a techno-pulsional anorganic
continuum circulates indifferently through the apparatus and the cybersocius.
Lyotard writes:
A libidinal apparatus, considered precisely as a stabilization and even a
stasis or group of energetic stases is, examined formally, a structure.
Conversely, what is necessary to a structure, when it is approached in
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BLACK ICE 137
economic terms, is that its fixity or consistency, which allows spatiotemporal maintenance of identical denominations between a this and a notthis, work on pulsional movement as would dams, sluices and channels….
In the silence, the crackling masses of flux which circulate in the system,
(Lyotard 1993a:25–6)
Apparatuses everywhere, maximally deterritorialized psyches crest ephemeral
intensities: amnesiac objects of recurrence, rather than mnemic subjects of
repetition. Realization processes of capital: machinic embryos striated into “selfmoving automata” (Marx 1974:692); corporate growth: fiscal embryos, cocooned
in dataflows, yield emergent Artificial Intelligences.
Thus far, we have established the general post-mutational qualities of the
equilibrated apparatus as it stabilizes around a mean point of regulated negative
feedback: “the whole of embryology is an example of the compulsion to repeat,”
as Freud says (Freud 1933:139). Freudian “quantitative-qualitative
biomechanics” (Lyotard 1994:221), on the other hand, institutes the apparatus at
the core of successive nested series of engines operating further biohydraulic
functions, constituting overspills and reservoirs that the apparatus then
permanently draws on for purposes of the regulated-regulating mechanisms of
localized expenditure (i.e., pleasure-production: seeking the path of least
resistance), and then replenishes (i.e., reality-reproduction). This institutional
metastability informs the basis of a resistance defined in terms of the repulsion
of the electrolibidinal flows that have already constituted the striations and
channels on the vesicle (the “undifferentiated protoplasm”), which Exchereque
hydro-isolationism is dependent upon precisely these flows. The futile struggle
against this dependency is a powerful motor with which to drive neuroses and
retaliate against ego-threats.
Despite this isolationism, the apparatus maintains—is driven by—the pulp at
its core to maintain an intimate communication with the unbinding frenzies that
threaten the apparatus with death. The constitution of corporate interiority
provides concentrically nested lines of defense from which vantages superegoic
military daddy-discipline can be implemented in order to bring about the
“institution of a garrison into the regions that are inclined to rebellion” (Freud
1933:144).
A long time since having jettisoned the transcendental redundancy of the
psyche along with the immanent dereliction of biohydraulics, the apparatus
recolonizes the socius, this time instantiated as systemic erotocapitalism and
evenementielle Thanatos. System and event, binder and unbinder, erotic coupling
and deadly disconnection: erotocapital binds the afferent energies of the event
that threaten the system’s destablization through “blockage,” “transgression,”
and turns these energies into currents exchangeable within the system. Similarly,
the efferent energies arising at the core of the system through the work/heat loss
ratio of thermodynamics, are put into restricted circulation so as to be captured at
a later stage, in exactly the same manner as excitations from the system’s
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138 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
putative “outside.” Lyotard, who carries out this implementation in Libidinal
Economy and elsewhere, typically seeks to secure an extra systemic
aterritorializity, an “an-economy, a sacred realm” (Lyotard 1991:230), for the
syphoning off, the detournement and accumulation of non-distributed energies
which, in sufficient quantity (after sufficient erotocapitalization), will
“scandalize…re” (Lyotard 1973:202) the socius-apparatus, bringing the system
to a standstill. Thus reciprocally reinstituting capital and its serial, criticopractical transgression, “‘critiques’ potential energy” (Lyotard 1973:307) is
reserved from the circuits of capital’s becoming until—reserve of the reserve, the
minor economic miracle of critical labor, inexpendible theocapital—ante diem
rationis, on judgement day, the former calls the latter to final account. Which
then is erotic and which thanatonic—which system and which event? Death
binds capital over to the Eros of reserve, the critical vermogen; capital is
thanatonic, unbinding, its circulant events puncturing the reservoir. Not libidinal
reversibility, but pulsional migrancy.
Every apparatus circulates mean-intensity currents around its core in
concentrically expansionist loops, each of which is indifferently a line of defense
and a line of attack. Furthermore, the question as to whether this “fin de siècle
air-conditioned totalitarianism” (Lyotard 1973:13) can be conceived in terms of
regulated/regulating loops is at least a moot point; for this reason, Lyotard
introduces another model of the cybersocius, this time a model that constitutes a
“theoretical object capable of corresponding to [capital’s] liquefactions”
(Lyotard 1994:35). Hence the “tungsten-carbide stomach that eats your words
your images Critique even hate are incorporated” (Lyotard 1973:31). Unlike the
system-event pair, this model does not offer a proprietary and negatively
regulated system on the one hand; rather, critique forms the pale shadow of the
omnoivous/indifferentist system’s next meal, and will inevitably result then in
just one more fecal, indentitarian alloy, while simultaneously offering the system
new territories to consume. “This is the strength of the capital system,” Lyotard
writes, “Its capacity for recuperating anything and everything” (Lyotard 1973:
26). Apart from the fore-mentioned anti-isolationist mode of operation. The steel
gut retains two further advantages over its predecessor: in the first place, critique
is rendered an accurately futile exercise—the “despair of the M-C-M [cycle]”
(Lyotard 1973:31)—unless the critic is viewed as the hapless vanguard laborer
working to cultivate new territories for the system; second, the system now
regulates itself in expansion, seizing the alleged “initiative” from earlier “criticopractical” orientations (Lyotard 1973:24) and overcoming the strategic and
tactical deficit of re-action, re-sistence, and fighting rear-guard actions to reestablish homeostasis.
Where the former model confidently discriminates between the system and its
critique, the latter model incorporates critique as it does any other commodity in
circulation: “sugar-coated deconstruction” (Lyotard 1993a:49), simply a
“degenerate amusement” (Lyotard 1973:217). Thus, just as Freud had to admit
that neuroses were not to be cured (a project he considered derived from “the
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BLACK ICE 139
layman’s belief that the neuroses are something quite necessary”), but since they
were rather “constitutionally fixed illnesses” that can merely be “influenced”
(Freud 1933:185); so the immediately revolutionary functions of critique,
resistance, and the like are not means whereby natural “transorganics” (Lyotard
1993a:135), are purged of capital’s anti-nature, but rather “constitutionally fixed,
often dysfunctional, guidance subsystems” adding new twists, swerves
(clinamen) to the extemporizing choreographs of neuproduzierendes capital.
The territorial claims staked by the Freudian apparatus and its corporate
discipline are expansive, but not so expansive as the metrophagic tungstencarbide stomach of the contemporary global cybersocius. The gut—circulating
capital—has swallowed everything, so that “from within the belly of the
monster” (Haraway 1991:24) intestinal, chromium Marabar, cyborg mythicism,
ficto-thetic cyberpunk, works only by resonances and amplifications of this
circulant real. Capital is not a looming threat on the horizon of post-human
pragmatism, but an interstitial rewiring of every social circuit. Capital is the
baseline of virulently dererritorializing immanence. Capital is not simply
invasive: its circulation is also deterritorializing-productive, rewiring not only a
necessarily post-bio labor force—a necessity that Marx, fascinated and
scandalized, exhausted volumes in refuting with repeated oneiristically futile
attempts at redefining capital’s multiplex industrial abuses of humanity by
placing the former at the dialectico-transcendental service of the latter, forging
an ever futural revolution—but also producing as immanent artifice:
“neuproduzierendes capital” (Marx 1974:462). “The Kuang program dived past
the gleaming spires of a dozen identical towers of data, each one a blue neon
replica of a Manhattan skyscraper” (Gibson 1984:303).
Philosophers, anchored by centuries of penitent humility, are typically slow to
catch on. That, for example, knowledge becomes a productive force was grasped
even by Marx, who none the less used this precept as a means to organize the
technology consequent upon the realization of direct, techno-epistemic
production. A century later, however, Lyotard feigned scandal at the fate of
sacrosanct, extraterritorial, insulated, unproductive intellect which, once
sheltered from the system of capital, becomes just more trapped gas in the gut:
“[T]he system ends up devouring everything outside it; the despair of youth is
the despair of the M-C-M cycle” (Lyotard 1973:192). Outside capital, precapital,
asystemic: knowledge, the social brain, must be spared gastrointestinal
commodification and once more be placed in reserve, relocated in a “sacred
realm.” Thus: “We are finally in a position to understand how the
computerization of society…could become the ‘dream’ instrument for
controlling and regulating the market system, extended to include knowledge
itself and governed exclusively by the performativity principle” (Lyotard 1984:
67). And he makes a recommendation: “give the public free access to the
memory and data banks” (Lyotard 1984:67). Not even Marx’s pre-capitalist
anchor dragged him to the missionary depths of “give the proletariat free
money.” Lyotard’s evident failure to grasp the dynamics of the situation
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140 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
embroils him in atavistic fantasies, i.e., fantasies of return—notwithstanding his
pronouncements concerning the countervailing tendency of the driving
“cynicism” of machine performativity, the monstrous inexorability of “It works
…”—to a just, human technocracy somehow in control of the errant circulations
of datacapital. Stating that the central question of the postmodern social bond is
“who will have access to this information?” (Lyotard 1984:14), Lyotard
envisages a human political autonomy over market regulation bonding the
human and the machinic into some socius composed of the “local determinism”
of “language games,” a sad political theology of the pronoun. When it becomes
obvious that this fails, however, there is nothing for it but to attempt to revivify
the degenerating research program of space travel, posing at its core the
problematic of the human body becoming “adaptable to or commutable with
another body, another device,” not in terms of interphaging (not interface,
bioface-to-mechanoface, but anonymous and indifferent consumption=
production=circulation) with the infoscape, but rather of “prepar[ing] bodies for
emigration into space” (Lyotard 1993b:106).
Thus there are self-confessed guardians of the biodrome who have taken to
staunching the datableed that interphages meat drives, biohydraulics, and the
informational continuum. As the cyberblitz of neo-noumenal materialism opens
communications with the biodrome’s interior, like feeding a power line from a
river directly into the magnetic cores of its hydroelectric dam, a reversibility that
can be measured in voltages and system-crashes on the grid-consciousness and
its defenses are derelicted by these storm fronts of meshed intelligence. Thus,
communication cannot be understood within the Turing apparatus of dialogue,
conversation, understanding, nor the Voigt-Kampff empathy test; it is a
“contagion of energy,” a “streaming current of electricity” (Bataille 1988:94):
contra what Massumi calls the “Prussian mind-meld” (=von HumboldtHabermas (Massumi 1992:4)); its end is not Enlightenment, but datableed.
We have seen that the apparatus’s resistances to the intrusion of pulsional
turbulence impel it to a militarist discipline. The defense of the real is established
through the expansionism that uses expectoration as an excuse for ceaseless
campaigns. The apparatuses’ militia expectorates the ultimately futile resistance
on which they are founded so as to quell H with auto-response superegoic
“police actions=critique” (Kant 1958:Bxxv). In this sense Baudrillard may seem
quite correct when he writes: “Something in us disaccumulates unto death,
undoes, destroys, liquidates and disconnects so that we can resist the pressure of
the real…” But he is so obviously wrong when he adds: “…and live”
(Baudrillard 1987:41). This accounting for the death drive flails around for a
transcendental something in the apparatus to form a noumenal nature immune to
capital. As we know from Freud, “the aim of all life is death” (Frud 1920:311):
the apparatus returns to nature, or rather, like an enzyme, is denatured, as it
disaccumulates past the threshold of death; “never fear,” adds Baudrillard on his
knees, arms open to give and receive, a penitent’s wet, red eyes skyward, “there
is an afterlife,” a nature to which “we,” by virtue of that “something within us,”
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BLACK ICE 141
can make this journey, this return, this re-tourism. To resist the real and its
pressures, the reality principle and its dams, to regain life through the medium of
the pleasure principle by escaping the inertia of the real: the final alibi of the
militarist exploits of the superego. That the “in us” should emerge from the
cocoon of the apparatus to “save us,” a transcendental economy where we gain
everything we lose: the same old miraculating theo-oneiro-capital that forms the
horizon of reversibility, sheltering all interiority, the eternity within which we
return.
The reel to real of the regulating-regulated institutions that dam the flows of
pulsional damage to the apparatus and its reservoirs have been displaced along
with the consciousness that repeated its identikit formulations as the realization
process of capital took new twists. Ice breaks the real, consciousness is as
derelicted as the apparatuses in Vienna 150 years ago, identity and regulation
have shattered into the erase/record/ playback functions of the twisted pedicure
that provides one of the few models adequate to cyber-capital’s historical
liquefactions, making the real reel.
The Chinese virus was unfolding around them. Polychrome shadow,
countless translucent layers shifting and recombining. Protean, enormous,
it towered above them, blotting out the void…. The fracture lines and
hallucinations were gone now, and the thing looked real, its smooth skin
plated with black chrome.
(Gibson 1984:200; 270)
Moebius-twisted, isotropic one-dimensional bio-pixel digital skin, diving down
on Frankenstein City, systematically splicing and respacing “Derelicted-RewiredDerelicted” apparatuses spreads over the socius like fungus over dead
vegetation; crusts boil and suppurate, revealing the chrome and glass and the
ochrous spectra of pollutants: cityscape suffocating its stripped-down
populations in the effluents of its decaying expenditures.
Marx writes, although he hates doing it, thinking it perverse, “senseless and
arbitrary”—rather than the natural, rational, theocratic necessity of returning us
to ourselves—that the cycle “Death-Life-Death” is the same as that of M-C-M
(Marx 1974: 201). D=M: apparatuses suspended in flows charged with the most
intrusive data, hot coalescence cooling exponentially into the supercharged
circuits of already ancient machines, warping and blistering their new live dead
crusts in cyclophagic communion with too fast isotropic data accumulation—
L=C. Splicing engines struggle to contain the datableed, reformatting the
nervured pulp in accordance with its autopropogative imperative— D’=M’—
disciplining these accidents into the regular pulses of the (in)corporate: neocapitalism (Deleuze and Guattari 1988:20). As the loop courses through, searing
the smooth, maximally receptive pulp, redistributing the bit-maps and circus
diagrams of the apparatus, “they make the possible the dissipation of the surfaces
they cross” (Lyotard 1993a:240). That is, the real, the reproduction, the facile
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142 ANARCHO-MATERIALISM
identitarian propagation, the negative feedback, the entire regulated/regulating
apparatus with its pulp-core and reversible “nature”: all dissipate in the
mimetotechnical saturation of this pulsional blitz.
Bruce Sterling once spray-painted the following onto the crumbling walls of
the biodrome: “the proper mode of critical attack on cyberpunk has not yet been
essayed. Its truly dangerous element is its incipient Nietzschean philosophical
fascism: the belief in the overman and the worship of the will-to-power”
(McCaffery 1991:206). It is clear that the passage from cyberpunk to
“Globalhead” has meant something of a resurgence in matters biodromic—
especially the mistaken attempt to construe the Ubermensch as the instance
credulously invested with the potential return of a renascent humanity and a “new
world order” oozing from the mesh of derelicted apparatuses. The “overman” is
a phase shift in the will-to-power, without program or project, indifferent to
jackboots, the crest of an intensive wave driven by recurrence, the intensity
engine that wipes humanity altogether.
At what point is it possible to discriminate between black ice and its host
system? Discrimination is impossible a priori. Ice dives in exponential darkness
in impossible vectors of contamination, articulating the inconceivable as they
mesh meat, biohydraulics, and omniphagic capital. Slot Kuang and kill the
lights!
It is of fundamental importance to recognize that the spectacle drives us; not to
resist it; not to consider it a cover for something lost, a fundamental need that
might once have articulated a few despondent theses on alienation, but solely in
order to entrench humanity in the last ditches available to it, as artificial
mimetechnics phase and redistribute the thrashing neuprozierenden, noumenal,
datapulsional complex that engulfs us. The entire history of philosophy is unable
to stutter in the face of these incremental alterations.
Meshing thanatopulsions and erotopulsions, apparatuses and their autolytic
incompetence under the unconscious, howling and rumbling through the
communications links synthesizing the protoplasmic “interior” of the derelicted
apparatus and the moebian twists, the auto-catalytic clinamen of the datapulsional
“exterior.” Biosofts bleed into always noisy channels that unpredictably break
down. This hideous mesh of meat, pulp, neuronal modifications, technocapital’s
drooling maws, splicing non-linear shards of holographic tomorrows into the
collapsing institutions of today. Running through this entire sequence is the black
ice that reformats the apparatuses, state and psychical, for an erasure that has
already happened.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bataille, G. (1988) Inner Experience, trans. L.A.Boldt, New York: SUNY Press.
Baudrillard, J. (1987) Forget Foucault/Forget Baudrillard, trans. N.Dufresne et al., New
York: Semiotext(e).
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BLACK ICE 143
––(1993) Symbolic Exchange and Death, trans. I.H.Grant, London: Sage.
Bukatman, S. (1991) Terminal Identity, Durham and London: Duke University Press.
Deleuze, G. and Guattari, F. (1972) L’Anti-oedipe, Paris: Minuit.
––(1988) A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B.Massumi, London: Athlone.
Freud, S. (1895) “Project for a Scientific Psychology”, in James Strachey (ed.), The
Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, Standard Edition (SE), 24 vols,
London: Hogarth Press, 1953–74, vol. 1: 281–397.
––(1900) The Interpretation of Dreams, in Angela Richards (ed.), The Pelican Freud
Library (PFL), 15 vols, Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1973–84, vol. 4.
––(1917) Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis, PFL, vol. 1.
––(1920) ‘Beyond the Pleasure Principle’, vol. 11: 269–338.
––(1933) New Introductory Lectures on Psychoanalysis, PFL, vol. 2.
Gibson, W. (1984) Neuromancer, London: Grafton.
––(1986) Count Zero, London: Grafton.
Haraway, D. (1991) Simians, Cyborgs, and Women, New York: Routledge.
Kadrey, R. (1989) Metrophage, London: Victor Gollancz.
Kant, I. (1958) Critique of Pure Reason, trans. N.K.Smith, London: Macmillan.
Lyotard, J.F. (1973) Derive a partir de Marx et Freud, Paris: UGE.
––(1984) The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, trans. B.Massumi and
G.Bennington, Manchester: Manchester University Press.
––(1991) Leçons sur I’analytique du sublime, Paris: Galilee.
––(1993a) Libidinal Economy, trans. I.H.Grant, London: Athlone.
––(1993b) Political Writings, trans. B.Readings and K.P.Geiman, London: University
College Press.
––(1994) Des dispositifs pulsionels, 3rd edn., Paris: Galilee.
Marx, K. (1974) Grundrisse, trans. M.Nicolaus, Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Massumi, B. (1992) A User’s Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia, Cambridge, Mass.:
MIT Press.
McCaffery, L. (ed.) (1991) Storming the Reality Studio, Durham and London: Duke
University Press.
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P. 158
PART V
Post-human Pragmatism
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P. 159
Autogeddon
Stephen Metcalf
To start with a fragment of autobiography, a parable of the territory to be
explored, a story which may or may not be true:
I began thinking obsessively about the indifferent ease with which my own
destruction could take place after my near-death in a car accident.
My memory having been wiped in the aftermath of impact, I can hardly begin
to explain what happened that day.
Words are inadequate to convey anything in excess of the facts of the event,
selling out the pain in representation.
Nothing much there.
An unconscious and virtually dead body Closing down all systems With
the single aim of survival.
From the testimonies of witnesses, the medical personnel who treated me, from
the two policemen who restrained me with paternal sympathy (while I, thrashing
in a semi-conscious fit and seizure, punched and kicked them—true wonder
what you can get away with when not strictly responsible for your actions!), and
from insurance company investigators, I can furnish myself with a virtual
construct of what happened.
The car couldn’t have hit me at much more than forty miles per hour, or my
death would have been assured.
The impact threw me high into the air Into a curving arc
Hitting the ground about five meters away from the crash site
Polluting the asphalt with patterns of lost blood Scraps of detached skin
and hair.
First memory: awakening in hospital three days later, wired to various machines
monitoring the functions of my body, listening to the reassuring trance-beat of a
pulsing green cursor digitizing my heartbeat. Second memory: pain—intense
pain, in massive voltage spikes, relayed between spinal column and head.
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146 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
Question: how do I get out of this terminally fucked-up state? What possibility
for reconstruction is there after the crash?
Which leads to the purpose of this story: if we define modernism as theories of
evolutionary/teleological tendencies toward a crash/the end, measured in causal
chains of consequences; and postmodernism as ceaselessly repeating, selfreferential autopsies performed on the crash as perpetual present, an inert
necropolis of nostalgia, dead events and dead identities; we are still left facing an
uncertain future which has been conveniently canceled as unthinkable or
impossible. Buried in the wreckage and squinting myopically at processes
beyond our control though we may be, exhausted, decrepit, and living in some
futile retrospective drive for authenticity; there remains this: inertia is potential
movement, insofar as the inert body can be acted upon by an external force,
perhaps to the degree that it achieves escape velocity from the gravitational pull
earthing its dynamic motion to a certain frame of reference. This external force is
the machine, dismantling its human producer and assembling a new construct,
the illegitimate child of the twentieth-century technological dynamo—part
human, part machine, never completely either.
At an extremely banal level, the car has become a near-sacred object in
twentieth-century thought, entering our consciousness in the guise of the
automobile—the personal vehicle. As an extension of ourselves and symbol of
human progress, whether celebrated by the Futurists in their glamorized world of
speed and power; or reviled by, for instance, the Situationist International for its
dehumanization of the landscape of urban cores, increasingly redesigned around
the requirements of a mobile population, the automobile remains in a fairly
stable position of being an ambivalent object to be used by a human subject. To
quote McLuhan, embracing the “Mechanical Bride” in her promiscuous
availability, en route to a global village, in which America, as the first society
where universal possession of uniform goods apparently levels the social strata
into a classless, horizontal utopia, comes to represent perfection: “The simple
and obvious fact about the car is that, more than any horse, it is an extension of
man that turns the rider into a superman” (McLuhan 1964:221). Another
restatement of the tired idiocy of equating technology with virility and power, as
man transcends himself, by means of a mechanical catalyst, toward perfection. He
gets a bigger dick.
But the car, wrongly mistaken for a four-wheeled, gleaming chrome and steel
strap-on for too long, soon takes its revenge. This is a far more recent trajectory
of thought, which concentrates on the aberrant possibilities of automobile use,
and the one in which I am interested here.
First example: Car—a novel by Harry Crews, a hugely underrated American
writer—in which a young man, driven by a manic desire to assert his mastery
over machinery, attempts to eat a huge Cadillac saloon, while his family
capitalizes on his rather extreme behavior by staging the feast as a media
spectacle, and by selling the portions of metal he ingests as trinkets when they
emerge from the other end of the excremental cycle.
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AUTOGEDDON 147
Needless to say, he fails.
With his mouth and asshole in tatters, and his guts bleeding internally,
contorted with crippling spasms, he is forced to quit and, having compromised
the honor of his profiteering family, returns to his job as the operator of a carcrushing machine in a wrecking plant. His fatal mistake was to suppose that
Machine needs Man, a master:
a man who controlled and understood the car. Understood its weaknesses.
Its flaws. But god in Heaven! He had opened up that Cadillac car and
looked behind the instrument panel, and he had felt his own mortality in a
way that he had never felt it before,
(Crews 1972:103)
The machine, refusing to obey his commands in any total sense, ravages his
organism.
I have saved the best for last. Here I refer to two books by J.G.Ballard—The
Atrocity Exhibition and Crash—where a circle of manias and fetish objects is
explored to its identity-effacing limit, the fusing sequence of which initiates a
terminal eroticism of technology as it collides with the human body and shatters
it into fragments, violently hollowing out a subjectivity which is deposited as
waste.
Ballard begins, in explosive fashion, with the crash: the big bang, scattering
the material fragments of the universe with colossal force. The human body
performs a blood-red shift as the car mounts the crash barriers of some freeway
or other: the horizon of what we sentimentally refer to as humanity recedes as the
sanitized space of the self is invaded by exogenous forces. Autogeddon begins its
Fetch-Decode-Execute cycle as the subject enters Ballard’s “suburbs of Hell”
(Ballard 1969:11) the psycho-geographical zone in transition where the soft
technologies of the interior (the body) and the hard technologies of the exterior
(the environment) are thrown together in collision and almost surgically cut each
other up. A complete mess. Twisted matings of severed limbs and machine parts,
fractured body panels, spikes of metal, plush vinyl seating, burning cloth and
rubber, body and machine fluids mingling.
All is not lost, however: crash is followed by reconstruction as the virtually
dead body is redesigned by means of life-support machines and prosthetic
organs. The normally assigned boundaries of the body having been breached,
wounded beyond recognition, the subject recedes into an ambient disappearance
in the environment. No longer the sentinel controlling the flows of traffic
between the interior and the exterior, the subject is diffused across a virtual
machine—consisting, in Ballard’s post-human inner landscapes, of sexualization
of (and, hence, identification with) the geometric affinity between the curvatures
of bodies in sexual collision, car bodywork and interiors, road junctions
interpenetrating like lovers, perverse shapes of architecture, mimicry of facial
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148 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
expressions of orgasm or death in radiator grilles. All of this may sound rather
psychotic, but the point is that it works—it facilitates movement; life continues.
While autogeddon attempts to design its own reterritorialization, others have
radically different designs on the body in bits and pieces:
Project Rehumanization initiated. Recuperate at all cost!
One of the most irritating impostures of the state at the moment has to be the
rapid growth of the therapy industry. It is no longer enough to discipline the body
institutionally. In a millennial meltdown in which virtually anything could be
about to happen, the state now wants to get inside our heads, to make sure that its
subjects conform to the official way of being in both public and private spheres.
Therapists develop an apparently morbid interest in deviancy for a single
purpose: to affirm normality by negating perversity, which they figure into a
series of readily comprehensible symptoms —as if being, say, a masochist was
like catching a venereal disease—and then prescribe a course of treatment in some
state-sponsored drive for inoculate ions.
According to the diagnostics of cop-talk, Ballard is almost certainly guilty of
fetishism, the heinous crime of investing bodily bit parts and inhuman objects
with sexual significance. Mr and Mrs Vanilla-Sex-Patriarch von Suburbia recoil
in horror! Disgusting! echoes around the asylum walls in prissy drawl.
Public outrage and mirth, fueled by the claims of the state’s mind cops, focus
on a single issue: in what way are these perverts deficient, what is this certain
“something” they lack that prevents their enjoyment of the blessed institutions of
heterosexual monogamy?
Blasting orchestral overtures illuminate one of those dazzlingly overlit stage
staircases, lined with dancing girls, waiting for a figure like Fred Astaire, cane in
hand, to descend singing and tap-dancing. The star of the show emerges,
articulated upon Artaud’s “dead rat’s ass suspended from the ceiling of the sky”
(Deleuze and Guattari 1984: 143), from which the Oedipal triangle is emitted,
swinging from a hook like a coathanger. Mummy and Daddy provide the
peripheral entertainment as the star takes center-stage—it’s I! I’m about to be
domesticated!
Fetishism, in one of Lacan’s tragicomic routines, begins with the demand that
there be such a thing as a maternal phallus. He claims that the fetishist knows that
the woman’s genitals are atrophied, mutilated, and lacking; he denies this reality
by articulating this demand, thus falsifying it in disavowal.
Disavowal, in Freudian and Lacanian dialectics, is simultaneous denial and
affirmation of traumatic perception, which is proof of its presence in the
unconscious. The unbound force of impact and trauma is recontained by the
creation of a defense mechanism against unwanted perceptions, a symbol
replacing the hole in being left by the missing phallus. Fetishism thus “saves” the
pervert from the possibility of psychoses induced by the traumatic experience of
maternal castration. Mummy hasn’t got a willy! By investing a signifier, the
fetish, with all the significance of the phallus it replaces, the link between fetish
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AUTOGEDDON 149
and phallus is always already a signifying relation and therefore, for Lacan,
phallo-centric.
It’s the penile car argument again! The law of the Father lurking at the
terminal point of Ballard’s obsessive transport vectors. Patriarchy and the family
recontaining all perversity in terms of failure in social programming. A fetishist
identity as the strong guarantor of a specular space marking the distinction
between the driver of the car and the outside world.
Baudrillard runs a similar argument. Unlike Lacan’s mirror double, an
imaginary figure haunting the subject as the other, inscribing it as a scene of
alienation, misrecognition, and fascination; prosthetic attachments, insofar as
they materialize the dream of the double, destine humanity to serial propagation
and loss of individuality. Referring to the possibility of cloning an entire
organism from a single strand of DNA, the “cybernetic prosthesis” (Baudrillard
1993: 117), Baudrillard writes:
[T]he point when prostheses are introduced at a deeper level, when they
are so completely internalized that they infiltrate the anonymous and the
micro molecular core of the body, when they impose themselves upon the
body itself as the body’s “original” model, burning out all subsequent
symbolic circuits in such a way that every body is now nothing but an
invariant reproduction of the prothesis: this point means the end of the
body, the end of its history, the end of its vicissitudes. It means that the
individual is now nothing but a cancerous metastasis of his basic formula.
(Baudrillard 1993:119)
Oh! Paranoid nostalgia for the atrophying human body! Plunged into
Baudrillard’s nightmare landscape of synarchy, “the Hell of the Same”
(Baudrillard 1993:113–23) the body is increasingly disabled at the molecular
level by its sub-suicidal coupling with technology. The “Mechanical Bride”
begins to demand that she be allowed to go on top. Humanity ends in the
“Anorexic Ruins” where the body withers away to nothing without its
mechanical life-supports, and a population of deindividuated insect people swarm
over the Earth, as machines level the strata, leaving no other to negate.
An interesting sequence of events to watch over the next few years will be the
degree to which Baudrillard slides further into this sort of elitist panic/fascism—
along with the rest of Europe. For having correctly diagnosed this internalization
of the machine as the end of the alienated scene of the self-other dialectic, the
phallus and Oedipal sexuality, Baudrillard’s next move is to lament their loss in
an apocalyptic nullpunkt where “the subject is neither the one nor the other—he
is merely the Same” (Baudrillard 1993:122) a filthy, incestuous beast repeatedly
cloning exact replicas of itself.
This is all pathetic nostalgia. Why the lament for the loss of a humanity which
since the evolutionary epics of the Enlightenment has been habitually defined in
the male term to the exclusion of all others? All that is lost is what we could
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150 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
refer to as the Western White Male will. Any pretentious eulogy for its timely
death is merely a call for more negation, more misogyny, more racism, an
exterior to dominate: the revivalist frenzy of fascism, for the dead end of
humanism.
As for the present: are we in the grip of synarchy, “the Hell of the “Same,” or
a massive epochal shift? An escalating process of feminization resulting in a new,
post-human, cybernetic organism? As in the title of one of Burroughs’ routines:
“The End Is Also The Beginning,” at the point at which catastrophe subsides and
future programs start to run.
Organisms riddled with cancer, regulated by prosthetic control circuits, and
cut up by runaway feedback from everyday machines like cars, have not
necessarily lost anything. As William Burroughs and David Cronenberg have
suggested in their work, cancerous proliferation could be the first stage in the
production of a new organism—an eventually beneficial viral invasion leading to
mutation in the genetic code. For this to happen, the old organism has to be
dismantled first. And here lies the catastrophic source of most of our postmodern
panic theorization, which markedly fail to conceive of any possibility of
inhabiting any space but the ruins of the old world order.
Ballard privileges the car crash over the production and mass possession of the
car as a route into thinking through the notion of this collision of the past, the
present, and the future—a void into which reality crashes and is rebuilt
repeatedly. In this redesigning of the body in bits and pieces, the crash is a
fertilizing, productive event, “the final self-destruction and imbalance of an
asymmetric world” (Ballard 1969:8) which is reordered in a virtual machine
running a program devoid of identity laws.
A virtual machine is the future coming together. In the language of computer
architecture, it designates a theoretical construct around which the production of
a program is designed. It is a machine which may not yet exist, but software is
produced with the very real possibility of this technology coming on line at some
point in the future. In effect, it is an attempt, however futile it may turn out to be,
to prevent current technology from becoming obsolete too quickly. In the sense
we have been using it, the suggestion is that events and objects which may seem
insignificant in their banality are taking on an accelerating significance in the
architectures of a virtual, post-human future, a future which our current language
and conceptual baggage make it difficult to conceive of, except in psychotic
descents into the mania of delirious prophecies. The virtual machine is in a
constant process of production, having a catastrophic moment of genesis, and
drifting toward some principle of reterritorialization.
But first, the subject has to virtually die: and, here, there awaits the danger of a
resurgent machismo in the form of self-immolation, “the last suicidal spasm of
the dextro-rotary helix, D.N.A.” (Ballard 1969:16). This would take the form of
a Cyber-Christ, methodically bolting himself to a car fender, tooling along at top
speed into the traffic flows, burning with divinity in a multiple crash.
Artaud’ s comments on suicide hold particular poignancy here.
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AUTOGEDDON 151
He mistrusts the lack of finality in suicide, seen as the terminal attempt to carve
an indelible memory to the subject, even as it eradicates itself. In effect,
By suicide, I reintroduce my design in nature, I shall for the first time give
things the shape of my will. I free myself from the conditioned reflexes of
my organs…and life is for me no longer an absurd accident whereby I
think what I am told to think.
(Artaud 1965:56)
Dramatic, overacted suicide is a craving for martyrdom. An infantile cry of
“notice me, you bastards, or you’ll be sorry!” which is remarkably successful in
achieving its aim.
Ballard notes how the dead bodies of celebrities, whose extinction had some
connection with the automobile, have been glamorized and raised to the level of
almost deified super-beings:
Jayne Mansfield, dead beside her pet Chihuahua, Pupu.
James Dean, who kept a hangman’s noose dangling from the ceiling of his
living room, with which he posed for pictures.
Albert Camus, colliding with death with a copy of Nietzsche’s Gay Science
lying on the seat next to him.
Endlessly repeating film loops, in slow motion, of the exploding head of John
F.Kennedy at the moment the bullet hit him.
But martyrdom, as Artaud knew, is ridiculous. His hunger for non-existence
could never be satisfied by creating a posthumous existence, by killing “this
virtual, impossible self which nevertheless is part of reality” (Artaud 1965:61). His
desire to be completely destroyed having never been satisfied, we romanticize
the schizophrenic visionary, suicided by a society coding his illegitimate vision
under the sign of madness.
What we argue for here is not a posthumous existence etched into a monument
to those who went too far in the pursuit of delirium, but a post-human
reconstruction of the body—if the bad pun can be forgiven. This is a condition
premised not on a suicidal crash, but on an accident; where the human subject is
sucked into a technological slipstream and transformed.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Artaud, A. (1965) Artaud Anthology, ed. J.Hirschman, San Francisco: City Lights.
Ballard, J.G. (1969), The Atrocity Exhibition, St Albans: Triad Panther.
–– (1973) Crash, London: Cage.
Baudrillard, J. (1993), The Transparency of Evil, trans. J.Benedict, London: Verso.
Crews, H. (1972) Car, New York, Murrow.
Deleuze, G. and Guattari, F. (1984), Anti-Oedipus, trans. R.Hurley, M.Seem, and
H.R.Lane, London: Athlone.
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152 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
McLuhan, M. (1951) Mechanical Bride: Folklore of Industrial Man, New York:
Vanguard Press.
–– (1964) Understanding Media, London: Sphere Books.
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P. 167
From Psycho-Body to Cyber-Systems: Images
as Post-human Entities
Stelarc
The body needs to be repositioned from the psycho realm of the biological to the
cyber zone of the interface and extension—from genetic containment to
electronic extrusion. Strategies toward the post-human are more about erasure,
rather than affirmation—an obsession no longer with self but an analysis of
structure. Notions of species evolution and gender distinction are remapped and
reconfigured in alternate hybridities of human-machine. Outmoded metaphysical
distinctions of soul-body or mind-brain are superseded by concerns of bodyspecies split, as the body is redesigned—diversifying in form and functions.
Cyborg bodies are not simply wired and extended but also enhanced with
implanted components. Invading technology eliminates skin as a significant site,
an adequate interface, or a barrier between public space and physiological
tracts. The significance of the cyber may well reside in the act of the body
shedding its skin. And as humans increasingly operate with surrogate bodies in
remote spaces they function with increasingly intelligent and interactive images.
The possibility of autonomous images generates an unexpected outcome of
human-machine symbiosis. The post-human may well be manifested in the
intelligent like form of autonomous images.
1. BEYOND AFFIRMATION INTO ERASURE: Can we re-evaluate the
body without resorting to outmoded Platonic and Cartesian metaphysics? The old
and often arbitrary psychoanalytical readings have been exhausted. Postmodern
critiques generate a discourse of psycho-babble that not so much reveals but
entraps the body in the archetypical and allegorical. The obsession with the self,
sexual difference, and the symbolic begins to subside in cyber-systems that
monitor, map and modify the body. Increasing augmentation of the body and
automation by transferring its functions to machines undermines notions of free
agency and demystifies mind. CYBER-SYSTEMS SPAWN ALTERNATE,
HYBRID AND SURROGATE BODIES.
2. The MYTH OF INFORMATION: The information explosion is indicative
of an evolutionary dead end. It may be the height of human civilization, but it is
also the climax of its evolutionary experience. In our decadent biological phase,
we indulge in information as if this compensates for our genetic inadequacies.
The INFORMATION IS THE PROSTHESIS THAT PROPS UP THE
OBSOLETE BODY. Information-gathering has become not only a meaningless
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154 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
ritual, but a deadly destructive paralyzing process, preventing it from taking
physical phylogenetic action. Information-gathering satisfies the body’s
outmoded Pleistocene program. It is mentally seductive and seems biologically
justified. The cortex craves for information, but it can no longer contain and
creatively process it all. How can a body subjectively and simultaneously grasp
both nanoseconds and nebulae? THE CORTEX THAT CANNOT COPE
RESORTS TO SPECIALIZATION. Specialization, once a maneuver
methodically to collect information, now is a manifestation of information
overloads. The role of information has changed. Once justified as a means of
comprehending the world, it now generates a conflicting and contradictory,
fleeting and fragmentary field of disconnected and undigested data.
INFORMATION IS RADIATION. The most significant planetary pressure is no
longer the gravitational pull, but the information thrust. The psycho-social
flowering of the human species has withered. We are in the twilight of our
cerebral fantasies. The symbol has lost all power. The accumulation of
information has lost all purpose. Memory results in mimicry. Reflection will not
suffice. THE BODY MUST BURST FROM ITS BIOLOGICAL, CULTURAL,
AND PLANETARY CONTAINMENT.
3. FREEDOM OF FORM: In this age of information overloads, what is
significant is no longer freedom of ideas but rather freedom of form— freedom
to modify and mutate the body. The question is not whether society will allow
people freedom of expression but whether the human species will allow the
individuals to construct alternate genetic coding. THE FUNDAMENTAL
FREEDOM IS FOR INDIVIDUALS TO DETERMINE THEIR OWN DNA
DESTINY. Biological change becomes a matter of choice rather than chance.
EVOLUTION BY THE INDIVIDUAL, FOR THE INDIVIDUAL Medical
technologies that monitor, map and modify the body also provide the means to
manipulate the structure of the body. When we attach or implant prosthetic
devices to prolong a person’s life, we also create the potential to propel postevolutionary development— PATCHED-UP PEOPLE ARE POSTEVOLUTIONARY EXPERIMENTS.
4. BIOTECH TERRAINS: The body now inhabits alien environments that
conceal countless BODY PACEMAKERS—visual and acoustical cues that
alert, activate, condition, and control the body. Its circadian rhythms need to be
augmented by artificial signals. Humans are now regulated in sync with swift,
circulating rhythms of pulsing images. MORPHING IMAGES MAKE THE
BODY OBSOLETE…
5. OBSOLETE BODY: It is time to question whether a bipedal, breathing
body with binocular vision and a 1400cc brain is an adequate biological form. It
cannot cope with the quantity, complexity, and quality of information it has
accumulated; it is intimidated by the precision, speed, and power of technology
and it is biologically ill-equipped to cope with its new extraterrestrial
environment. The body is neither a very efficient nor a very durable structure. It
malfunctions often and fatigues quickly; its performance is determined by its age.
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FROM PSYCHO-BODY TO CYBER-SYSTEMS 155
It is susceptible to disease and is doomed to a certain and early death. Its survival
parameters are very slim. It can survive only weeks without food, days without
water, and minutes without oxygen. The body’s LACK OF MODULAR
DESIGN and its overreactive immunological system make it difficult to replace
malfunctioning organs. It might be the height of technological folly to consider
the body obsolete in form and function: yet it might be the highest of human
realizations. For it is only when the body becomes aware of its present position
that it can map its post-evolutionary strategies. It is no longer a matter of
perpetuating the human species by REPRODUCTION, but of enhancing male/
female intercourse by human-machine interface. THE BODY IS OBSOLETE. We
are at the end of philosophy and human physiology. Human thought recedes into
the human past.
6. ABSENT BODIES: We mostly operate as Absent Bodies. That is because A
BODY IS DESIGNED TO INTERFACE WITH ITS ENVIRONMENT—its
sensors are open-to-the-world (compared to its inadequate internal surveillance
system). The body’s mobility and navigation in the world require this outward
orientation. Its absence is augmented by the fact that the body functions
habitually and automatically. AWARENESS IS OFTEN THAT WHICH
OCCURS WHEN THE BODY MALFUNCTIONS. Reinforced by Cartesian
convention, personal convenience and neurophysiological design, people operate
merely as minds, immersed in metaphysical fogs. The sociologist P.L. Berger
made the distinction between “having a body” and “being a body.” AS
SUPPOSED FREE AGENTS, THE CAPABILITIES OF BEING A BODY ARE
CONSTRAINED BY HAVING A BODY. Our actions and ideas are essentially
determined by our physiology. We are at the limits of philosophy, not only
because we are at the limits of language. Philosophy is fundamentally grounded
in our physiology…
7. REDESIGNING THE BODY/REDEFINING WHAT IS HUMAN. It is no
longer meaningful to see the body as a site for the psyche or the social, but rather
as a structure to be monitored and modified; the body not as a subject but as an
object—NOT AS AN OBJECT OF DESIRE BUT AS AN OBJECT FOR
DESIGNING. The psycho-social period was characterized by the body circling
itself, orbiting itself, illuminating and inspecting itself by physical prodding and
metaphysical contemplation. But having confronted its image of obsolescence,
the body is traumatized to split from the realm of subjectivity and consider the
necessity of re-examining and possibly redesigning its very structure.
ALTERING THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE BODY RESULTS IN
ADJUSTING AND EXTENDING ITS AWARENESS OF THE WORLD. As an
object, the body can be amplified and accelerated, attaining planetary escape
velocity. It becomes a post-evolutionary projectile, departing and diversifying in
form and function.
8. SURFACE AND SELF: As surface, skin was once the beginning of the
world and simultaneously the boundary of the self. As interface, it was once the
site of the collapse of the personal and the political. But now stretched and
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156 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
penetrated by machines, SKIN IS NO LONGER THE SMOOTH SENSUOUS
SURFACE OF A SITE OR A SCREEN. Skin no longer signifies closure. The
rupture of surfaces and of skin means the erasure of inner and outer. As
interface, the skin is inadequate.
9. THE INVASION OF TECHNOLOGY: Miniaturized and biocompatible,
technology lands on the body. Although unheralded, it is one of the most
important events in human history, focusing physical change on each individual.
Technology is not only attached but is also implanted. ONCE A CONTAINER,
TECHNOLOGY NOW BECOMES A COMPONENT OF THE BODY. As an
instrument, technology fragmented and depersonalized experience—as a
component it has the potential to SPLIT THE SPECIES. It is no longer of any
advantage to either remain “human” or evolve as a species. EVOLUTION ENDS
WHEN TECHNOLOGY INVADES THE BODY. Once technology provides
each person with the potential to progress individually in its development, the
cohesiveness of the species is no longer distinction but the body-species split. The
significance of technology may be that it culminates in alternate awareness—one
that is POST-HISTORIC, TRANSHUMAN and even EXTRATERRESTRIAL
(the first signs of an alien intelligence may well come from this planet).
10. AMPLIFIED BODY, LASER EYES AND HAND: If the earlier events
can be characterized as probing and piercing the body (the three films of the
inside of the stomach, lungs, and colon/the twenty five body suspensions),
determining the physical parameters and normal capabilities of the body, then the
recent performances extend and enhance it visually and acoustically. Body
processes amplified include brain waves (ECG), muscles (EMG), pulse
(PLETHYSMOGRAM), and bloodflow (DOPPLER FLOW METER). Other
transducers and sensors monitor limb motion and indicate body posture. The
sound field is configured by buzzing, warbling, clicking, thumping, beeping, and
whooshing sounds —of triggered, random, repetitive, and rhythmic signals. The
artificial hand, attached to the right arm as an addition rather than a prosthetic
replacement, is capable of independent motion, being activated by the EMG
signals of the abdominal and leg muscles. It has a pinch-release, grasp-release,
270° wrist rotations (C.W. and C.C.W.), and a tactile feedback system for a
rudimentary “sense of touch.” While the body activates its extra manipulator, the
real left arm is remote controlled—jerked into action by two muscle stimulators.
Electrodes positioned on the flexor muscles and biceps curl the finger inward,
bend the wrist, and thrust the arm upward. The triggering of the arm motion
paces the performance and the stimulator signals are used as sound sources as is
the motor sound of the Third Hand mechanism. The body performs in a
structured and interactive lighting installation which flickers and flares,
responding and reacting to the electrical discharges of the body—sometimes
synchronizing, sometimes counterpointing. Light is not treated as an external
illumination of the body but as a manifestation of the body rhythms. The
performance is a choreography of controlled, constrained, and involuntary
motions—of internal rhythms and external gestures. It is an interplay between
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FROM PSYCHO-BODY TO CYBER-SYSTEMS 157
physiological control and electronic modulation, of human functions and
machine enhancement.
11. THE SHEDDING OF SKIN: Off the Earth, the body’s complexity,
softness, and wetness would be difficult to sustain. The strategy should be to
HOLLOW, HARDEN, and DEHYDRATE the body to make it more durable and
less vulnerable. The present organization of the body is unnecessary. The
solution to modifying the body is not to be found in its internal structure, but lies
simply on its surface. The SOLUTION IS NO MORE THAN SKIN DEEP. The
significant event in our evolutionary history was a change in the mode of
locomotion. Future developments will occur with a change of skin. If we could
engineer a SYNTHETIC SKIN which could absorb oxygen directly through its
pores and could efficiently convert light into chemical nutrients, we could
radically redesign the body, eliminating many of its redundant systems and
malfunctioning organs, minimizing toxin build-up in its chemistry. THE
HOLLOW BODY WOULD BE A BETTER HOST FOR TECHNOLOGICAL
COMPONENTS.
12. STOMACH SCULPTURE: HOLLOW BODY/HOST SPACE: The
intention has been to design a sculpture for a distended stomach. The idea was to
insert an art work into the body—to situate the sculpture in an internal space.
The body becomes hollow with no meaningful distinctions between public,
private, and physiological spaces. TECHNOLOGY INVADES AND
FUNCTIONS WITHIN THE BODY NOT AS A PROSTHETIC
REPLACEMENT, BUT AS AN ESTHETIC ADORNMENT. The structure is
collapsed into a capsule 50mm×14mm, and tethered to its control box it is
swallowed and inserted into the stomach. The stomach is inflated with air using
an endoscope. A logic circuit board and a servomotor open the sculpture using a
flexi-drive cable to 80mm×50mm in size. A piezo-buzzer beeps in sync to a light
globe blinking inside the stomach. The sculpture is an extending/retracting
structure, sound-emitting and self-illuminating. (It is fabricated using implantquality metals such as titanium, stainless steel, silver, and gold.) The sculpture is
retracted into its capsule form to be removed. As a body, one no longer looks at
art, doesn’t perform art, but contains art. THE HOLLOW BODY BECOMES A
HOST, NOT FOR A SELF OR A SOUL, BUT SIMPLY FOR A SCULPTURE.
13. PAN-PLANETARY PHYSIOLOGY. Extraterrestrial environments
amplify the body’s obsolescence, intensifying pressures for its reengineering.
There is a necessity TO DESIGN A MORE SELF-CONTAINED, ENERGYEFFICIENT BODY, WITH EXTENDED SENSORY ANTENNAE AND
AUGMENTED CEREBRAL CAPACITY. Unplugged from this planet—from
its complexity, interacting energy chain and protective biosphere— the body is
biologically ill-equipped, not only in terms of its sheer survival, but also in its
inability adequately to perceive and perform in the immensity of outer space.
Rather THAN developing specialist bodies for specific sites, we should consider
a pan-planetary physiology that is durable, flexible, and capable of functioning in
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158 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
Figure 5 Amplified body/third hand. The mechanism was constructed to the size of
the right hand with stainless steel, Duralamin, aluminium, acrylic, and electronic
circuitry. It has a pinch-release, grasp-release, a 270° wrist rotation and a tactile
feedback system for a sense of touch. This can be visually monitored by the LED
display or felt as an electrical stimulation. Although not worn for performances, the
cosmetic cover was cast to cover and protect the tactile sensors and to provide
friction for gripping. The third hand was initially designed as a semi-permanent
attachment to the body. It is actuated by EMG signals for the abdominal and leg
muscles. The hand mechanism, support structure and battery pack weigh 1.5 kg.
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FROM PSYCHO-BODY TO CYBER-SYSTEMS 159
varying atmospheric conditions, gravitational pressures, and electro-magnetic
fields.
14. NO BIRTH/NO DEATH—THE HUM OF THE HYBRID: Technology
transforms the nature of human existence, equalizing the physical potential of
bodies and standardizing human sexuality. With fertilization now occurring
outside the womb and the possibility of nurturing the fetus in an artificial support
system THERE WILL TECHNICALLY BE NO BIRTH. And if the body can be
redesigned in a modular fashion to facilitate the replacement of malfunctioning
parts, then TECHNICALLY THERE WOULD BE NO REASON FOR DEATH
— given the accessibility of replacements. Death does not authenticate
existence. It is an outmoded evolutionary strategy. The body need no longer be
repaired but simply have parts replaced. Extending life no longer means
“existing” but rather being “operational.” Bodies need not age or deteriorate;
they would not run down nor even fatigue; they would stall then start—
possessing both the potential for renewal and reactivation. In the extended spacetime of extraterrestrial environments, THE BODY MUST BECOME
IMMORTAL TO ADAPT. Utopian dreams become post-evolutionary
imperatives. THIS IS NO MERE FAUSTIAN OPTION NOR SHOULD THERE
BE ANY FRANKENSTEINIAN FEAR OF TAMPERING WITH THE BODY.
15. THE ANAESTHETIZED BODY: The importance of technology is not
simply in the pure power it generates but in the realm of abstraction it produces
through its operational speed and its development of extended sense systems.
Technology pacifies the body and the world. It disconnects the body from many
of its functions. DISTRAUGHT AND DISCONNECTED, THE BODY CAN
ONLY RESORT TO INTERFACE AND SYMBIOSIS. The body may not yet
surrender its autonomy but certainly its mobility. The body plugged into some
machine network needs to be pacified. In fact, to function in the future and to
achieve truly a hybrid symbiosis the body will need to be increasingly
anaesthetized.
16. SPLIT BODY: VOLTAGE-IN/VOLTAGE-OUT: Given that a body is not
in a hazardous location, there would be reasons to remote-actuate a person, or
part of a person, rather than a robot. An activated arm would be connected to an
intelligent mobile body with another free arm to augment its task! Technology
now allows you to be physically moved by another mind. A computer interfaced
MULTIPLE-MUSCLE STIMULATOR makes possible the complex
programming of either in a local place or in a remote location. Part of your body
would be moving; you’ve neither willed it to move, nor are you internally
contracting your muscles to produce that movement. The issue would not be to
automate a body’s movement but rather the system would enable the
displacement of a physical action from one body to another body in another place
—for the on-line completion of a real-time task or the conditioning of a
transmitted skill. There would be new interactive possibilities between bodies. A
touch-screen interface would allow programming by pressing the muscle sites on
the computer model and/or by retrieving and pasting from a library of gestures.
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160 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
Simulation of the movement can be examined before transmission and actuation.
THE REMOTELY ACTUATED BODY WOULD BE SPLIT —on the one side
voltage directed to the muscles via stimulator pads for involuntary movement—
on the other side electrodes pick up internal signals, allowing the body to be
interfaced to a Third Hand and other peripheral devices. THE BODY BECOMES
A SITE BOTH FOR INPUT AND OUTPUT.
17. PSYCHO/CYBER: THE PSYCHOBODY is neither robust nor reliable. Its
genetic code produces a body that malfunctions often and fatigues quickly,
allowing only slim survival parameters and limiting its longevity. Its carbon
chemistry GENERATES OUTMODED EMOTIONS. The Psychobody is
schizophrenic. THE CYBERBODY is not a subject, but an object—not an object
of envy but an object for engineering. THE Cyberbody bristles with electrodes
and antennae, amplifying its capabilities and projecting its presence to remote
locations and into virtual spaces. The Cyberbody becomes an extended system—
not merely to sustain a self, but to enhance operation and initiate alternate
intelligent systems.
18. HYBRID HUMAN-MACHINE SYSTEMS. The problem with space
travel is no longer with the precision and reliability of technology but with the
vulnerability and durability of the human body. In fact, it is now time to
REDESIGN HUMANS, TO MAKE THEM MORE COMPATIBLE WITH
THEIR MACHINES. It is not merely a matter of “mechanizing” the body. It
becomes apparent that in the zero-G, frictionless, and oxygen-free environment
of outer space technology is even more durable and functions more efficiently
than on Earth. It is the human component that has to be sustained and also
protected from small changes of pressure, temperature, and radiation. The issue
is HOW TO MAINTAIN HUMAN PERFORMANCE OVER EXTENDED
PERIODS OF TIME. Symbiotic systems seem the best strategy; implanted
components can energize and amplify developments; exoskeletons can power the
body; robotic structures can become hosts for a body insert.
19. INTERNAL/INVISIBLE: It is time to recolonize the body with MICROMINIATURIZED ROBOTS to augment our bacterial population, to assist our
immunological system and to monitor the capillary and internal tracts of the
body. There is a necessity for the body to possess an INTERNAL
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM. Symptoms surface too late! The internal
environment of the body would to a large extent contour the microbot’s
behavior, thereby triggering particular tasks. Temperature, blood chemistry, the
softness or hardness of tissue, and the presence of obstacles in tracts could all be
primary indications of problems that would signal the microbots into action. The
biocompatibility of technology is no longer due to its substance but rather to its
scale. THE SPECK-SIZED ROBOTS ARE EASILY SWALLOWED, AND
MAY NOT EVEN BE SENSED! At some nanotechnology level machines will
inhabit cellular spaces and manipulate molecular structures…. The trauma
of repairing damaged bodies or even of redesigning bodies would be eliminated
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FROM PSYCHO-BODY TO CYBER-SYSTEMS 161
by a colony of nanobots delicately altering the body’s architecture atoms-up,
inside out.
20. TOWARD HIGH-FIDELITY ILLUSION: With teleoperation systems, it
is possible to project human presence and perform physical actions in remote and
extraterrestrial locations. A single operator could direct a colony of robots in
different locations simultaneously or scattered human experts might collectively
control a particular surrogate robot. Teleoperation systems would have to be
more than hand-eye mechanisms. They would have to create kinesthetic feel,
providing, sensations of orientation, motion, and body tension. Robots would
have to be semi-autonomous, capable of “intelligent disobedience.” With
Teleautomation (Conway/Voz/Walker), forward simulation—with time and
position clutches—assists in overcoming the problem of real time-delays,
allowing prediction to improve performance. The experience of Telepresence
(Minsky) becomes the high-fidelity illusion of Tele-existence (Tachi).
ELECTRONIC SPACE BECOMES A MEDIUM OF ACTION RATHER
THAN INFORMATION. It meshes the body with its machines in everincreasing complexity and interactiveness. The body’s form is enhanced and its
functions are extended. ITS PERFORMANCE PARAMETERS ARE LIMITED
NEITHER BY ITS PHYSIOLOGY NOR BY THE LOCAL SPACE IT
OCCUPIES.
21. PHANTOM LIMB/VIRTUAL ARM: Amputees often experience a
phantom limb. It is now possible to have a phantom sensation of an additional arm
—a virtual arm—albeit visual rather than visceral. The Virtual Arm is a computergenerated, human-like universal manipulator interactively controlled by VPL
Virtual Reality equipment. Using data gloves with flexion and positionorientation sensors and a GESTURE-BASED COMMAND LANGUAGE allows
real-time intuitive operation and additional extended capabilities. Functions are
mapped to finger gestures, with parameters for each function, allowing
elaboration. Some of the Virtual Arm’s extended capabilities include stretching
or telescoping of limb and finger segments, grafting of extra hands on the arm,
and cloning or calling up an extra arm. The record and playback function allows
the sampling and looping of motion sequences. A clutch command enables the
operator to freeze the arm, disengaging the simulating hand. For teleoperation
systems, features such as locking allow the fixing of the limb in position for
PRECISE OPERATION WITH THE HAND. In micro mode complex
commands can be generated with a single gesture, and in fine control delicate
tasks can be completed by THE TRANSFORMATION OF LARGE
OPERATOR MOVEMENTS TO SMALL MOVEMENTS OF THE VIRTUAL
ARM.
22. IMAGES AS OPERATIONAL AGENTS: Plugged into Virtual Reality
technology, physical bodies are transduced into phantom entities capable of
performing within data and digital spaces. The nature of both bodies and images
has been significantly altered. IMAGES ARE NO LONGER ILLUSORY WHEN
THEY BECOME INTERACTIVE. In fact, interactive images become
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162 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
operational and effective agents sustained in software and transmission systems.
The body’s representation becomes capable of response as images become
imbued with intelligence. Sensors and trackers on the body make it a capture
system for its image. The body is coupled to mobilize its phantom. A virtual or
Phantom Body can be endowed with semiautonomous abilities, enhanced
functions, and artificial intelligence. Phantoms can manipulate data and perform
with other phantoms in Cyberspace. PHYSICAL BODIES HAVE ORGANS.
PHANTOM BODIES ARE HOLLOW. Physical bodies are ponderous and
particular. Phantom bodies are flexible and fluid. Phantoms project and power
the body.
23. VIRTUAL BODY: ACTUATE/ROTATE: Your virtual surrogate would
not merely mimic the physical body’s movements. A complex choreography is
achieved by mapping virtual camera views to limb position/orientation. The
involuntary jerking up and down of the left arm tumbles the virtual body while
sweeping the right arm 90° produces a 360° virtual camera scan—visually
rotating the virtual body around its vertical axis. The form of the virtual body can
be configured acoustically—pulsing in phases with breathing sounds. This
BREATH WARPING subtly and structurally connects the physical body with its
virtual other. And by using DEPTH CUE— defining the operational virtual
space as shallow —stepping and swaying forwards and backwards makes the
virtual body appear and disappear in its video/virtual environment. The resulting
interaction between the physical body and its phantom form becomes a more
complex combination of kinestheic and kinematic choreography. In recent
performances the involuntary body is actuating a virtual body while
simultaneously avoiding a programmed robot within its task envelope…
24. PHANTOM BODY/FLUID SELF: Technologies are becoming better lifesupport systems for our images than for our bodies. IMAGES ARE
IMMORTAL. BODIES ARE EPHEMERAL The body finds it increasingly
difficult to match the expectations of its images. In the realm of multiplying and
morphing images, the physical body’s impotence is apparent. THE BODY NOW
PERFORMS BEST AS ITS IMAGE. Virtual Reality technology allows a
transgression of boundaries between male/female, human/machine, time/space.
The self becomes situated beyond the skin. This is not disconnecting or a
splitting but an EXTRUDING OF AWARENESS. What it means to be human is
no longer being immersed in genetic memory but in being reconfigured in the
electromagnetic field of the circuit IN THE REALM OF THE IMAGE.
25. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE /ALTERNATE EXISTENCE: The first
signs of artificial life may well come from this planet in the guise of images.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE WILL NO LONGER MEAN EXPERT
SYSTEMS OPERATING WITHIN SPECIFIC TASK DOMAINS. Electronic
space generates intelligent and autonomous images that extend and enhance the
body’s operational parameters beyond its mere physiology and the local space it
occupies. What results is a meshing of the body with its images and machines in
ever-increasing complexity. The significance of interfacing with is that they
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FROM PSYCHO-BODY TO CYBER-SYSTEMS 163
culminate in an ALTERNATE AWARENESS THAT IS PAN-HISTORIC AND
POST-HUMAN.
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P. 178
Postscripts: Ground Zero
Joan Broadhurst Dixon
Technology, more successfully than anything you will find in here, is destructing
and reconstructing our cartographies of thought. If folk psychology were ever to
face its nemesis, then it has already done so in technology. The delicacies of its
semantically coherent systems, quaintly obsolete as the agent, his intentions, his
desires, his beliefs are consigned to the graveyard for redundant theories. It is of
no surprise that eliminative materialism has finally become a viable argument
with the advent of the neuro-computational model. Technology (genetic sive
computer engineering) does not render the agent obsolete; instead, it is the agent
as defined that fades into oblivion. It is as though we have failed to register that
our theories and terms are as much historical and revisable as those technologies
which constitute them.
Agency is a technological term. The intellectual baggage that the term carries
with it implies ethics—but as Spinoza was the first to point out, ethics are always
partial, local, and strategic. We have always misunderstood that point. Agent,
individuals, bodies—there is nothing natural about any of them. Nature and
industry were always an illegitimate if not exclusive disjunction.
Ethics has been about integrity, but that integrity has always been
misconstrued. Historically, the term has been functioning as an ethics of
objective boundaries—hard, impenetrable, protective, disclosures of sacred
terroritories that demarcated the European identity. The state, the city wall, the
home, the skin, have all, in their time, represented limits of authority and privacy,
denoting a relationship of inside and outside. Such disjunctions have facilitated a
definition of responsibility, its agents, that is, its institutions: the Army, the Law,
the Family, the Person. These occidental icons represent an ethics created for us
by a mode of production inseparable from Western conceptions of man. This
bedrock of society is historical and contingent on their regime.
As the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze noted, identity is historical and
contingent on the particular regime in power. Historically, the regime has
functioned as a quasi-transcendental structure that redounds upon (se rabattre
sur) its materials to make its institutions as if they were natural, organic
byproducts. The structures that were necessary for the modes of production
acquire perceived integrity, as though they would always exist in their own right.
We forget in advance the material history and the shifting geography of
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POSTSCRIPTS: GROUND ZERO 165
concepts. The individual qua individual is an integrated part of the cosmology of
production, a part which is prescribed by technology —its needs, not ours. It has
no specific unity independent of its integration within the cycle of production. If
capitalism as the apotheosis of technology, in the beginning, required workers
with personal needs, dreams, and desires, that is what it created: a division of
labour fuelled by the illusion of personal achievement; a Protestant work ethic
for sure-fire salvation. Being able to act, to wish to change things—agency is a
technologically produced category.
Theory reflects the requirements of the age. The Hobbesian state of nature,
Rousseau’s noble savage are anthropomorphic thought experiments. There was
never some idyllic ur-time when a man with his hammer could be in some pretheoretic involvement-in-the-world. Technology and its regimes constructed
humanity, and it was a mistake if we ever thought it was the other way around.
The use-value of humanity, whether it is as “the shepherd of Being” (Heidegger)
or the “eternal custodian of the machines” (Deleuze and Guattari) has long
passed its best-before date. And it is of no surprise that as these traditional
categories disintegrate, our theories become ones of disintegration.
Techno-paranoia is symptomatic of our redundancy. Even those seemingly a
priori guarantors of our human integrity, space and time, are coming under
attack. Cyberspace, Virilio claimed, is leading to a loss of our understanding of
subject and objects. Its absolute transitivity is resulting in the disintegration of
property and real estate. We are losing touch with our bodies, our human physical
dimensions, and with it, our meaty morality (or ethics). The “real,” “natural,” and
“human” dimensions of space and time that were meant to structure our
experience have collapsed into the single dimension of speed. Technology has
torn us away from sidereal time and circadian rhythms—the daylight which
marked our “natural” temporality. We now have an “artificial” electronic day of
information commutation, undermining our sense of direction, observation, and
common sense. Technology is restructuring the tempo of our society.
Cyberspace-time (subject to bandwidth problems which are technical, not a
priori) is instantaneous. Distance is defined by bytes per second. Global location
and time zones become curiously antiquated terms. As Virilio put it, we live in
“the instantaneity of ubiquity.” Nano-seconds, picoseconds, femto-seconds…our
ancient referents of a measurement and traditional macro-scale standards become
pathetically insufficient. The earth becomes inaccurate with the introduction of
atomic clocks, and electronic clocks and eyes replace Olympic judges who, being
human, sadly weren’t up to the task. Our traditional dimensions, in cyberspace,
become some frictionless, timeless medium. Speed is of the essence.
To criticize technology’s denaturing tendencies is the ultimate in
philosophical naïvety. To argue that the natural structures are being usurped by
the constructs of “our” technologies, as if this had not always been the case, resists
the fact that all reality, human or otherwise, takes place within technical
parameters. The problem concerning humanity is often couched in terms of a
loss of control. Consider the paranoia of losing our executive power over
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166 POST-HUMAN PRAGMATISM
computers. Sam and Ivan go AWOL. We comfort ourselves with reassuring sci-fi
fables that, in the end, at the last second, we could intervene and once again the
human would triumph: a myth perpetuated.
But when faced with split-second influxes of information, our sluggish
sensory-motor systems face an increasingly derealised environment. We can no
longer react or adapt. Virilio was right to call it a “pure intellectual and
conceptual warfare.” Speed undermines our faculty of agency, reducing us to the
fate of impotent observers. The desire for speed is capitalism’s most potent
addiction, and technology is hooked if humans are not. Speed is a drug, and the
desire to get quit is the Chronic illness which riddles humanity alone. Following
Sun Tzu, those who move fastest live longest. If speed is the essence of war, and
technology is the enemy, then we are already dead.