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Robin Mackay/Texts/Books/Editor/robin-mackay-speculative-aesthetics.pdf
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SPECULATIVE AESTHETICS
Editors
Robin Mackay, Luke Pendrell, James Trafford
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This e-Book edition published in 2014
by
Urbanomic Media Ltd,
The Old Lemonade Factory,
Windsor Quarry,
Falmouth TR11 3EX
United Kingdom
The roundtable discussion ‘Speculative Aesthetics’ took place in the
Gradidge room at the Artworkers’ Guild, London, on 4 March 2013.
Proceedings of the presentations and subsequent discussions
throughout the day were recorded for transcription and redaction prior
to publication. Publication of this volume was supported by University
for the Creative Arts.
© Urbanomic Media Ltd. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or
by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying,
recording or any other information storage or retrieval system, without
prior permission in writing from the publisher.
ISBN 978-0-9575295-7
www.urbanomic.com
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Introduction
In contemporary art today a constant reconceptualisation of artistic
practice goes hand-in-hand with a perpetual renegotiation of its relation
to the affective. The resultant thirst for new approaches has ensured a
somewhat hasty appropriation of concepts developed under the (now
rather splintered) rubric of ‘speculative realism [SR]’, to the point where
today those concepts have become little more than units of makeshift
cultural currency.
1
2
Given contemporary art’s cultural privileging as the site of negotiation
between the conceptual and the sensory, it is understandable that it
should have played host to the convergence of SR and aesthetics. Yet
such an alliance is puzzling when one considers what SR might bring to
this negotiation, in so far as its primary selling point (according to the
popularly diffused credo) is its dismissal of the mediating role of human
experience. Indeed, if this ‘movement’ is concerned with wresting
attention away from the primacy of intuition and interpretation, it could
be (and has been) construed as an anti-aesthetic tendency.
In fact the adoption of SR into art practice and (more prevalently) art
discourse has been determined less by an engagement with such
concerns than by a series of symptomatic synchronicities. Its
endorsement was boosted by the convergence of the anti-correlationist
theme with ruminations on climate change and the anthropocene (‘a
world without us’). Likewise, its concern with nonhuman actants or
material complicities speaks to the great inhuman networks within
which we know we are enmeshed, but whose complexity artists
struggle to figure.
Yet there are also specific and irresistible gains for art here: In its
object-oriented guise, where every object whatsoever subsists on the
same ontological plane, but simultaneously withdraws from our
experience of it, ‘SR art’ realizes, more economically than the avantgarde’s provocations or the social experiments of relational aesthetics,
that old dream of levelling the artwork with a non-art universe: An
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artwork is simply a thing, in meek and equal existence with other things
(fridge; wombat; pen-lid; asteroid; crime-report; proton, etc.). Yet
object-orientedness enlivens a retrenchment from expanded practice
back to the autonomous object with the thrill of philosophical profundity:
in a cosmic reinvigoration of the readymade, any object whatsoever,
when supplemented with a faith in the subversive power of objectality
as such, becomes not only art but also practical philosophy (multiple
juxtaposed objects drawn from disparate fields even more so—what
curator would not be invigorated by the notion that the People’s
Liberation Army is commensurate with a coffee cup?). Following
conceptualism’s acknowledged failure entirely to collapse aesthetic
experience into conceptual proposition, ‘SR’ makes possible a new ‘art
after philosophy’ in which a vacuously general concept (object, thing, or
material) can mysteriously transform any stuff whatsoever into an
aesthetically and philosophically significant experience. And finally, the
promise of a great levelling of the geological and the anthropic, culture
and nature, quarks and clerks into one gigantic objectal matrix
converges happily with the flat eclecticism of the New Aesthetic and
the Post-Internet generation—an endlessly multifarious universe that
comes prequantified into discrete and isomorphic tumblr thumbnails.
The concepts at work here are loose at best; the aesthetic effects as
desultory as the curatorial apologia are extravagant.
3
In the face of this disappointing (if sociologically intriguing)
phenomenon, the first stipulation for a project on ‘speculative
aesthetics’ had to be that it refuse to create further materials for the
construction of ‘a speculative aesthetic’ or to contribute further to the
mannerism of ‘speculative’ art practice. The discussion documented in
this volume, which initiated a longer-term project, focused on the
structure of the aesthetic component of experience. When the latter is
regarded as plastic rather than transcendentally immutable, it suggests
a set of definite questions in relation to the philosophical affirmation
that cognition grasps a real that is not of its own making, and that its
capacities may be reshaped as a function of that real. The participants
in this discussion explore ways in which a study of aesthetics can
provide pointers for interrogating the conceptual underpinning of
4
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representation, and can furnish materials for an understanding of how
experience is structured by various material regimes, from chemistry to
digital media; and how these determinations are miscognized in
received ideas of the ‘aesthetic’. This in turn gives onto the issues that
arise from considering the structuring of the aesthetic as an act of
political force, and its relation to subjectivation. As far from the idioms
of the SR art genre as this may seem, speculative aesthetics here
reaffirms a relation between the aesthetic and human creativity, but
within a conceptual framework that refuses to relinquish either of them
to ineffability or to immutability. Across the varied contributions to this
discussion, aesthetics is both naturalized (it is rooted in that vast
‘memory bank’ that is the evolutionary history of the species) and
denaturalized (the intuitive legitimacy of its spontaneous forms is
challenged by synthetic experiences), representation is rehabilitated,
abstraction materialized, and cognition accelerated.
But before moving beyond the closed circle of art so as to orient the
question of aesthetics in this way, the discussion sets out from an
analysis of the stance of the contemporary art genre in relation to the
aesthetic—that of a peculiarly ambivalent aesthesophobia.
An examination of ‘the image’ (i.e. aesthetic mediation) and its
relation to contemporary art’s quest for subversive political potency
reveals a contradiction: The image is seen to index a real beyond the
shackles of language, beyond temporal politics, beyond established
power and frameworks of measure and assessment, and thus in a
certain sense free of the constraining forces of the world. Yet despite
this faith in the radical potential of aesthetic experience, any actual,
particular image—including those that art itself produces—is assumed
inevitably to be corrupted by those same forces. Aesthetic experience,
incapable of realising its radical potential, can only gesture towards it,
and must constantly strive to evade determination (or delegate it to the
viewer). In the ensuing crisis, contemporary art vigilantly exposes its
own compromises with the aesthetic, in an ongoing admission of failure
and culpability.
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Thus art seeks to discover in the freedom, indistinctness and fluidity
of the aesthetic a figure for real freedom beyond politics, yet finds any
image that ‘works’ to be complicit with structures of power. In parallel
with certain strains of SR, it attempts to overcome these established
powers of representation by turning to forms of scientificity or literality
that would bypass them, undoing the culpable particularity of its images
(i.e., their correlational complicity with particular forms of
representation). It mimics a stance of scientific objectivity in relation to
its own methods and forms in order to pursue the chimera of an
unmediated (uncorrelated) image—the phantasm of a practice which,
finally directly accessing the radical level of aesthetic essence, would
be absolutely ‘free’.
The parallels between this predicament and SR’s central question—
How is it possible for thought to access that which is not alwaysalready mediated by thought?—are not coincidental, given the similar
institutional contexts within which they emerged. Both parties could
possibly benefit from a shared examination of their conceptual and
methodological problems, and their sometimes naive appeals to the
ruin of mediation and direct access to the real. Unfortunately the story
of this entanglement runs otherwise: art discourse and SR discourse
have often spurred each other on in the employment of a set of idioms
and mannerisms, mediations that gesture toward the dark rapture of
de-mediation.
The participants in the following discussion are largely concerned with
overturning this caricature of a speculative realist thought that seeks to
bypass human mediation. Instead they ask how aesthesis,
representation, and the image operate within the real—without their
being, for all that, foundationally constitutive of it. The project of
‘undoing the image to undo power’ may be futile; but this is not
because we must renounce the refusal to hypostatize human
experience as the master-category through which the world is to be
understood. Rather it is because we cannot simply slough off
entrenched constraints in order to access the real that has priority over
them. If speculation entails a release of thinking from the constraints of
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human phenomenality, this does not warrant our positing an absolute
breach between the two. For the danger then is that we either return to
naive realism, or deliver ourselves to ontological speculation that both
occults and doubles its epistemological conceits. Contemporary art’s
neurosis with regard to the aesthetic may well predispose it to collude
in this error.
In reality, then, contemporary art encodes and perpetuates a certain
set of propositions regarding the agency of the image. It is a cultural
project that deploys aesthetic mediation in a way no less
instrumentalised (if more perverse and obfuscated) than other such
projects. This deployment can therefore be considered and evaluated
alongside a broader range of aesthetic practices. Such a revocation of
contemporary art’s privilege in relation to the aesthetic is crucial since
the new modes of aesthetically-mediated practices that are bringing
about profound changes in the way that we produce, disseminate and
consume experience, do so with no regard to that privilege. It is the
technological augmentation of the human sensorium, indissociable from
the transformation of social forms and the mutation of subjectivity, that
places the greatest demands upon a thinking of aesthetics today.
The contemporary structure of representation is the product of an
interlocking series of augmented conceptual and sensory frameworks
that make the boundaries of our perception transitional and provisional
rather than fixed and impermeable. There are manifold new mediations
between the human sensorium, the massive planetary media network
within which it exists, and the wider universe of which both are minor
tributaries. They draw on the advanced resources of scientific and
technological abstraction (statistical analysis, mathematical modelling,
neuropsychology, big data, etc.); but they are deployed largely in
fortifying the comfort (and profitability) of what, following Wilfrid
Sellars, we can call the ‘manifest image’, the inherited, traditional
human self-conception. Take for example the aesthetic regime of social
media and the response patterns and behaviours it programs at the
symbolic-processing and sensori-motor level across whole populations.
Aesthetics meets with the sociopolitical in real abstraction, when
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capital is the precondition for all production and experience at the level
of material processes mediated by equally material images. These are
abstractions that ‘are not in the head but in everyday life’.
It is doubtful whether these aesthetic means of production can be
voluntarily redeployed in order that we might interface with this complex
system otherwise than as its passive client-producers. Retreat into a
localist, anti-technological agenda in the face of complexities and
abstractions that irrevocably exceed the compass of individual
aesthetic experience is thus an understandable option. But inversely,
the prosthetic extension of the human senses is a sine qua non of any
engagement with the political reality of a planetary society operating at
multiple scales of abstraction. Such realities perhaps cannot be
encompassed in anything like ‘an experience’ in the individual
phenomenological sense. Distilling them into images of complexity
figured through a technological sublime yields only an aestheticism that
invites passive resignation. A speculative aesthetics may well have to
operate in other terms altogether, rethinking aesthetics as a part of an
exercise in collective cognition.
A major axis of the discussion emerges here around a Promethean or
‘accelerationist’ project of the unbinding of imagination, thought, and
action oriented toward the enhancement of the human. It understands
images as providing new modes of epistemic traction by processing
sensory data through symbolic formalisms and technological devices.
This is not a flight from a supposed bedrock of concrete immediacy to
ideal abstractions, but a progressive reorientation to less localised
models—the movement towards a ‘universal address’ reconsidered as
a matter of cognitive navigation, and enabled by aesthetic
reconfiguration.
If this suggests a disturbing instrumentalisation of aesthetics, again it
should be recalled that a leisurely absorption in images, the rush of the
sublime, the staging of a multimedia micro-utopian happening, all
possess a certain purposiveness, form part of a project, and mandate
certain patterns of behaviour. It is incumbent upon us to assess their
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effects and effectiveness. If we accept that the emancipatory
epistemic function of aesthetic practice lies in its ability to undermine
urdoxa and to illuminate the socio-cognitive conditioning of experience,
it is crucial that this brings with it a commitment to something more than
the provocation of moments of alienation or evanescent sentiments of
liberation.
This conception breaks with the phantasm of an aesthetic realm that
is radically immediate, indeterminate, free of conceptual constraints, or
outside all extant power structures; it considers concrete and abstract
as relative terms, and the aesthetic and conceptual as inextricably
intertwined; and it entails a practice that no longer invests its faith in the
essential promise of the aesthetic as such, but instead acknowledges
the real force and traction of images, experimentally employing
techniques of modelling, formalisation, and presentation so as to
simultaneously ‘engineer new domains of experience’ and map them
through a ‘reconfigured aesthetics’ that is transdisciplinary and
indissociable from sociotechnical conditions.
1. On speculative realism, see Collapse vol. 2 (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2007), and ‘Speculative
Realism’ in Collapse vol. 3 (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2008).
2. The most baffling proof of this was ‘Speculative Realism’s surprise entry at no.81 into Art
Review magazine’s 2013 ‘Power 100’, ‘A ranked list of the contemporary artworld’s most
powerful figures’.
3. On ‘Object-Oriented Art’, see Peter Wolfendale’s Object Oriented Philosophy: The
Noumenon’s New Clothes (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2014), chapter 4.2, where he elaborates on
the readymade nature of the object-oriented art object.
4. The Speculative Aesthetics Research Project was initiated in 2013 by Dr. James Trafford and
Luke Pendrell for the consideration of open questions regarding the relation between aesthetics
(broadly construed), and new forms of realism within post-Continental philosophy (influenced by,
though not limited to positions identified with ‘Speculative Realism’).
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Amanda Beech
Art and its ‘Science’
What is art’s standard claim to the political? ‘Art’ is a general term used
in contemporary culture that, firstly, designates the images it produces
as a correlate of the real, a real that is supposedly free from law and
that embodies uncertainty, contingency and flux. At the same time, this
claim to the real is reliant upon the nature of the images that art
produces; upon their occupying a particular space that manifests the
innate and essential character of freedom. On account of this condition
of image-reality, art has come to symbolize an image of freedom from
law, a prepolitical state of infinite and dynamic uncertainty, openness
and flux; yet at the same time, art has tasked itself with the labour of
achieving freedom, in the project of social emancipation.
Two contradictory points follow from these characteristics. The first is
that a certain theory of aesthetic form emerges here, characterized by
the claim of the instability of the image as a condition that appeals to a
universal and prelinguistic experience. This produces an ontology that is
tied to a certain epistemology. For instance, in dialectical critical theory,
the alterity of the real, manifest as aesthetic experience, is mapped
onto a potential political project of social freedom. Thus, ironically, what
art is already supposed to possess inherently, it must now achieve in
actuality: it must realize its essence in the given. Secondly, this
diagnosis of art is centred on a moral axis that smacks of both Platonic
philosophy and Judeo-Christian theology: Images are powerful
because they are real, slippery and abstract; images dupe us into
believing that the malign forces in our lives are natural, when in fact
they are constructed. But at the same time images are weak, because
they are incapable of achieving emancipation in political terms; they can
only gesture towards this potential. Actual images are considered to be
disappointingly weak, with no power to effect social change, since the
image abides by the normative systems in which it operates, and in
fact it gives rise to the very malign power that demands critique. This
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mode of critique rehearses the standards of dominance that it rails
against, since it invests in and invents the fiction of stable forms of
power that it seeks to free itself from. In order to sustain this critique,
art and those systems must be somehow rendered unreal, called into
question as ‘mere images’, surpassed and destroyed in favour of a
more pure form of reality. Once Art is understood as representational
and interpretative in a particular modality, it becomes something that
supposedly hampers a natural access to the real in itself, since art is
never anything but always something. Which means that images are
considered to be weak, but special.
These points connect to the paradigm of difference around which
critique is centred, and which produces these contradictions that I’m
spelling out: Art is considered to be different from the norm, but it must
also struggle to be different. On the other hand, art is simultaneously
considered not to be different from the norm, and must struggle to
locate itself in empirical reality as part of the social. It must struggle to
normalize itself in particular ways.
As a consequence of these contradictions, art achieved a new selfconsciousness. It began to understand itself as being constituted by
this dilemma of its own invention, but from which it could not escape.
And post-conceptual ironic forms of practice, including Institutional
Critique, inform us readily that art is in crisis and will stay in crisis due
to its habituation to this critical methodology: Art justifies itself, as art,
by reflecting this condition; by giving us the facts about its own
materiality and ideals, its own limits and failures. It becomes a
knowledge economy, a metacritical reflection upon its own tragedy, and
a manifestation of itself as loss.
So one of the elements I want to address today is how art has
attempted to escape these dead ends, in part by claiming for itself
some sort of science through and with the image. I want to press
home how very often this claim towards scientificity has problematically
reproduced a self-annihilating culture of art—produced yet another
form of self-hatred, based in a resentment of the mediating faculty of
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the image.
This scientism proposed as a new self-conscious framework has
embedded itself as the primary paradigm of artistic critique, as a way
in which art in contemporary culture is more than comfortable in
defining itself. It can easily be recognized as the foundational moment
of many art practices that are regarded as conceptual or postconceptual. For example, it was taken up in the false nihilism of BritArt;
it swept through the Philistinism of the post-punk world; lapsed into the
houses of relational aesthetics; it has been reviewed under the
auspices of ‘glam’ or even a committed reenactment of cultural and
political stories; claimed woefully, but with a certain due pleasure,
through the games of irony, and harnessed with the new ‘edgy cool’ in
an aesthetics of dispassion, dispossession and cold-war technologies
that reoccupy the terrain of the sublime. It has exerted a constraining
dominance over art by defining the operations of art in terms of a
persistent claim for difference, naively constrained within its own
universalizing rule of infinitudinal pluralism, and as such is capable only
of an arbitrary commitment to the language that it takes up (its form
and matter).
In addition, certain claims towards science have tied together too
quickly the moral, the political, and the scientific as the connective
tissue of the artwork. Here I mean art practices which, in the name of
materialism, turn to method over form: the empirical research project,
the phenomenal experience, the ‘you just had to be there’ moment
where artworks turn towards (supposedly) ‘unmediated’ and pure
experience as the measure of art’s newfound delivery of the real. Much
performance art is testament to this correlation between the real, the
unmediated image, and the claim for a politicized practice, as is the
employment of the aesthetics of immediacy in documentary-inspired
art.
2
What I’m describing here is the following problem: artistic practice
has often sought to embed itself within certain territories that we might
call ‘scientific’ only in a weak sense. It has done this in order to escape
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the problematic weight of mediation that it carries, so as to better
progress towards the achievement of what it thinks of as a more pure
form. In order to do so, the work must abstract itself from itself, and
achieve freedom from the problematic ideality of representation. It
must become invisible. The concept of image-as-mediation now
becomes the dominant target of, and the victim of, the mission to undo
actual material power—at least this is the poetic claim that is made.
An example of this connection to science can be seen in popular
artworks that privilege the cult of the processual and the predilection
for the temporal. And to me, this is completely illogical. A denial of
representation (a kind of invisibility) is correlated with a cumulative gain
for an egalitarian concept of visibility in a political sense. Following this
logic, if a representational politics is evacuated, then we attain the ‘free
appearance’ of the multitude. This strange correspondence between
the annihilation of mediation and the access to the real is as evident in
the history of the dematerialization of the artwork of the 60s, as in
attempts to privilege the significance of our physical forms of being
together, towards life, as in those practices that we saw in 80s and
90s realism.
3
I would argue that material-based practices and realist practices
present two faces of a faith in empiricism that goes unaccounted for in
practice. In them we find an interest in the objecthood, temporality,
materiality, entropy and lifespan of the artwork shown to us as a set of
processes, or as a presentation of its existence as part of the
quotidian. On one hand we encounter the idealization of the object
made available through phenomenology, on the other hand the
idealization of the subject that can depict ‘world’ as a specific condition.
In both cases, Art must turn to the facts of life, to the matter of life, in
order to get its business in order and to move beyond the false fictions
that are stirred up through and by the image—an image which it
associates with the irrational faith of a universal and irrational
aesthetics: the bulwark to any science. In order to deny the false
idealising function of art, then, the empirical is advocated as the real
path to a more true and more real reality, as if to leave behind the
4
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confines of art as category-form.
5
This kind of attempted escape from art into science is in fact built into
art’s standard critical method. All of this adds up to a predilection for a
certain paradigm of art, and articulates a kind of ‘spontaneous
philosophy of artists’. Despite the supposed premise of a radical
unbinding from the conditions that would constrain the image to specific
referents, and despite the claim that art is now free from the
dominance of the principle of freedom, in fact this principle is
reasserted in new terms, terms that are compliant, conservative, and
really unable to see beyond an existing set of conditions that define
human agency—precisely because they are obsessed with human
agency and its power. So what we can’t get our hands on here is a
general theory of aesthetics that is capable of expressing reality in
such a way that we can consider how images participate in the
structure of the real.
We are faced with an art that is defined through its purchase in
difference; art’s employment of science embodies this difference.
Understanding this, we must distinguish this relative notion of difference
from the potential for a form of difference that can only be purchased
by refusing contingency as a paradigmatic thought for difference.
Freedom, in the contexts that I have described, is understood as the
nature and the task of art; and this is asserted on the basis of a
theoretical connection between image and reality—the notion that
these two are innately connected. This is manifested in practice in art’s
critical method, which exhibits its core values. But these methods are in
fact false. These methods, in turn, have resulted in a discourse of
tragedy and crisis: the figuring of finitude. In other words, they leave
art at a loss. The line that has been drawn between the mediated
image and the scientific image has exacerbated a form of tragic
parlance of the image, and a tragic conception of the political, where
the image as artwork is left to narrate its dual constraint: it is
constrained both by its task of vigilance and by its own spontaneous
nature.
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In these terms, we might think of the relation between art and politics
in relation to how politics, by necessity, demands the existence of
ideology, since it asks for a programme of some kind; and, as in the
context of Althusser’s Philosophy Course for Scientists, how the
political demands that the circle of decision produce lines of
demarcation. That particular discourse of Althusser’s was an attempt
to think a form of science and philosophy that couldn’t speak of art at
all (art was somewhere there on the trash-heap). For me, one of the
key problems with Althusser’s lectures is that they end up in a sort of
figuration, which risks becoming a standard philosophy itself, because
philosophical-scientific method cannot avoid a thinking of the image that
is connected to its disavowal of consistency and stability. As such, the
circle of decision that Althusser draws, and which for him is not a circle
at all, but rather the line of demarcation that arcs, is in fact very stable
in its reproduction of specific methodological principles that figure
philosophy as the stamp of ultimate power. I am interested in the way
that philosophy often, despite (and because of) itself, produces a figure
—and how, at that precise point, art, or the image, is suddenly invited
back in.
6
This reminds us of the essential and grounding distinction between
the recognition of the circle as a practice of power which bears no
relation to itself and can never know itself, and the production of the
circle as the figure of thought as nature reinstating itself in relation to
itself. Here we witness the shift from a practice of non-knowledge to a
practice that is thoroughly conscious on the one hand, and yet on the
other hand relies upon the immemorial turning of the circle as a
ceaseless mark of an inaccessible reality. This is the distinction
between the production of lines of demarcation and the repetitive
stamp of the circle as a more mystical form.
7
François Laruelle talks about how no circle is required at all, and as
such there is no line of demarcation; and that leads me to ask some
other questions that seem unanswered. In The Concept of NonPhotography Laruelle says that the circle needn’t be entered in the first
place: the assumption that we are always already involved in the circle,
8
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and that a philosophy needs to work through it in order to overcome it,
is just another mark of spontaneous philosophy (and all philosophy is
spontaneous). In which case, how the image operates as part of a
scientific matrix becomes another question for me, because it means
that we must ask how we account for the category of difference—the
kind of difference that Laruelle is talking about: a difference that
refuses an account of difference, and a concept without difference.
One of the things I should bring up here is that Laruelle makes me
wonder whether this idea of a non-differential space of the generic
matrix poses some particular threats to art as we know it; whether it is
threatening to the paradigm that we know and which I have just
outlined.
The question for me is: What is the distinction between the paradigm
of art as we know it, and another category of art that we could imagine
in this new configuration? I ask this because naming is crucial to
politics. And I want to really rethink the question of how we employ the
name of art, and what that means when we are producing these things
that we call ‘art objects’. In Laruelle, I have the feeling that art itself—
as a general category—is put at risk: because why bother producing
this thing that we call art if the level of science is already achieved, a
level where the image is already adequate to the real? Here we can
identify two problems: On the one hand, we can say that we are
revisiting some sort of pragmatism: we’re already doing it, just do what
comes naturally…. And, of course, if we just do what comes naturally,
well, the risk is that art’s ‘critical’ claim will persist within the same old
aesthetic/ethical standards. This non-standard political or scientific
moment in itself risks a pragmatic naturalism that would turn a complex
refusal of existing structures into an unapologetic and naive affirmation
of the status quo and a new ontological normativity. If art already
embodies the potential of a non-standard existence, would this not
mean that we would be stuck in a semantic game of interpretational
formalism: reinterpreting the artwork in novel terms but without altering
the principles of its production? On the other hand, what possibility
remains for any investment in the category ‘Art’, and what is produced
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under its name? Is the generic matrix in the end an intolerant matrix,
with its own standards conditional upon the assertion of another
naturalism?
9
I think there are certain risks in the theory that I’m interesting in
exploring and which are necessary; and which are also vital in terms of
art-making itself, because when I make art, I’m constantly thinking
about this: I don’t want to make art under the name ‘Art’ as I know it;
but I’m an artist, I’m making art! So what is it that I’m clinging to?
That’s the personal moral question: What is it that I’m clinging to, when
I say I’m an artist? Does it (‘art’) matter, and how does it matter, and
what are the politics of that mattering when we do not invest in a
concept of art’s causal relation to the political, nor one of its essential
relation to the real? This is something I’m working through constantly in
my practice, something my practice is constantly questioning: The role
of naming, the authority of producing names, the authority that art has
in generating force in the name of that production, and the way that art
cannot apologise for the fact that it is an image, that it mediates, and
that it can be a participant in organising and producing power. This
returns us to the question of the necessity of the name and its
operation within and as another system of power: the name beyond
aesthetics.
I think that a lot of these theories that we inherit from art practice
very much assume stable and fixed moral identities that are often
located within their claims to the invisible, to dispersion and to
pluralism. And these theories are where we see the standard moral
definition of a liberal arts practice, where ‘evil’ power is ‘over there’ and
we can just go and work out our critique of it, and art is ‘good’ and is
‘over here’. Extending from this is the guilt-laden critique of art’s selfconscious grappling with its own corruption, and its love affair with
critiques that would antagonise and brutalise its own set of standards.
So that, if art is good, then it must deny itself. Often, as I have tried to
demonstrate here today, the way in which it denies itself is by
performing this very weak ‘science’ for which the mediated image is the
prime target. In doing so, however, it reinstates both the mysticism of
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aesthetics as a process, and, along with it, the reification of the
subject. This is my problem with art as it stands. For me, to claim art
as science is also to claim some sort of demanding power within the
political, and this requires a serious investment in a scientific method
and a materialism. This is a question of how an artwork might always
already inhabit this science, and also a question of how the artwork
articulates that crucial and political shift from standard aesthetics to
non-standard aesthetics.
The difficulties that art has faced when attempting to do just this
compel us to look at how the images that we construct permit and
actually promise such a science, rather than offering the thought of the
world that we perceive as its correlate. This might not mean asking
what images mean, or if it is possible to mean what we say, but rather
understanding their persistence in a mechanics of force, as forces that
are mobile and institutionally no more ‘free’ than any other form. To
take the image seriously is to understand how images exact force. This
is not a modification of art under the name Art, but an interrogation, a
traversal, and a leaving behind of the name itself, the name as we
know it. This is to understand the power of semblance and to
comprehend images as representational action.
An artwork can only effectively participate in such a transformation,
then, by participating in an interdisciplinary project of a scientific
realism where the force of any concept of art lies in a grasping of
relations—what might be understood as a type of montage—that is,
direction without ground. This is a leaving behind of the category of the
uncategorisable, an unraveling of a politics that requires an order of
ontological and non-ontological dimensions, and an overcoming of the
fear of representation as a connector to our anxieties of consistency
and stability. It is also to understand the image again, as a criticalpolitical project.
1. This science is diverse in interpretation and implementation, and includes an appeal to the
aesthetics of science in the name of a materialism, often with an ultimate attempt to think past
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the humanist-inspired role of the author and to overcome the investment in representationalism.
Together their mutual destruction would overcome the faith-based assertions and habits of a
self-conscious crisis-ridden and/or naive artistic practice that turn out to guarantee the legitimacy
of stable and fixed identities.
2. For instance, the populism of the observational lens common in video and film artworks
ranging from socially-committed documentation of warzones or sites of conflict to the fascination
with the computer-generated image in an aesthetics of gaming technologies. In both cases the
aesthetics of art enjoys producing a mythological association of technology with alterity,
objectivity and neutrality.
3. The historical cultural critique of the dematerialization of the art object into or with ‘life’ stands
as testament to this faith in invisibility. If the artwork can evade its promise of representation then
so much the better—it has merged with ‘life’. This evasion of representation is also evident in
modernist painterly abstraction. However, in both cases, for the artwork to be understood as
egalitarian it must claim that it produces an egalitarian experience of a special and abstract
language; or vice versa, an ordinary language that is offered as a special experience. In this
sense, the equality that is aspired to within the denial of representational form is lost through the
framework that presents the experience, as much as the claim that the artwork can achieve the
great escape from the modality of its actual material (that is, inorganic) construction.
4. Jean-François Lyotard, ‘Answering the Question, What is Postmodernism?’, in The
Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (Manchester: Manchester University Press,
1984). Lyotard makes the crucial distinction between two forms of art: those of a social realism
and those that move towards another form of realism, and into the territory of the sublime.
Performative and processual works are set out as the perfect mode of containing and
expressing this shift to another alternative register of thought-perception. However, in Lyotard’s
analysis we return to the same problem of a hierarchical iteration of one form of expression
versus another: One form of art that better benefits a theory of the real than another.
5. We can see this move towards life again in the legacy of the Duchampian paradigm, which
set out the strategy of the convergence of art and life from the 1920s onwards. Here the
institutional borders of galleries and artistic and economic power were called into question by
artworks and collapsed, on one hand, as a primary form of critique and on the other hand, in
order to live out the claim of art as accessing/being its essential reality. The problem here is that
the exact conditions of art’s generic paradigm vis-à-vis Duchamp—the principle that art can be
anything and therefore must indicate this potentiality of ‘the anything’—encouraged all forms of
art to proliferate, but the principle itself that supports this system stands strong. Practices that
imagined an outside to the system of Art and their ability to occupy this as a real and occupied
space quickly rethought their positions and ended up with the status of ‘institutional critique’. As
such, the game of institutional critique lived out its self-conscious reinforcement of the trap of
Art’s own mythology. Other approaches to the attack on the concept of art itself deserve more
attention here. Work (such as Alan Kaprow’s, for example) that sought to ‘un-art’ the Art
paradigm is key, but also demonstrates the problems of the hierarchy of the concept of the genre
of the generic over the concept of the generic that would promise the unbinding of all such
relations.
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P. 24
6. ‘I entered the necessary circle deliberately. Why? To show even crudely that whilst it is
indispensable to leave philosophy in order to understand it, we must guard against the illusion of
being able to provide a definition—that is, a knowledge—of philosophy that would be able to
radically escape from philosophy or a “meta-philosophy”; one cannot radically escape the circle
of philosophy. All objective knowledge of philosophy is in effect at the same time a position within
philosophy. […] There is no objective discourse about philosophy that is not itself philosophical’.
L. Althusser, Philosophy and the Spontaneous Philosophy of the Scientists and Other Essays
(London: Verso, 1990), 73.
7. P. Macherey, ‘Althusser and the Concept of the Spontaneous Philosophy of the Scientists’, tr.
R. Mackay, Parrhesia 6 (2009), 14–27. Macherey’s text identifies certain errors implicit in
Althusser’s critique that cannot be accommodated by Althusser’s self-reflexive argument. First
Macherey identifies ‘an absolute confidence in the impartial mission of philosophy’. He then goes
on to articulate a final problem latent in this description of the circle: ‘This intervention consists in
tracing the lines of demarcation, which in reality only retread the lines already traced, and
demand to be retraced again, with no assignable issue, in so far as the conflict of forces that it
brings to light cannot emerge as a definitive division that would once and for all isolate all its
manifestations. One might see in this approach the index, not so much of a vulgar theoreticism,
as of a mystique of the philosophical, which would fundamentally be the last word of
Althusserianism, a last word which no “autocritique” would succeed in rescinding’ (26).
8. F. Laruelle, The Concept of Non-Photography (Falmouth and New York: Urbanomic and
Sequence Press, 2010).
9. Problematically for Laruelle, the concept that stands as the truth upon which the image can be
unbound from aesthetics, and by which thought can be free from philosophy, risks producing a
more basic form of philosophy. This is both despite and due to a ‘theoretical autonomy of the
visual order’ that is, ‘a function of the vision-force alone—of the Identity of the real—rather than of
the World’ (Concept of Non-Photography, 76). For it is here that the real remains defined in
relation to the image by thought, and non-philosophy cannot give up on its determination of
philosophy as the axiom against which it determines its own purchase.
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Benedict Singleton
Speculative Design
The work I’m going to talk about concerns the ways in which we can
and might conceive of design. We live in an environment that’s densely
textured with the products of design, and yet our ideas about design
are strangely primitive in comparison. Actually, they’re riven with all
kinds of unexamined assumptions, historical vagaries and stowaway
politics, even when they’re presented, as in the better assays in the
philosophy of technology, with some sophistication. So I’d like to offer
you some ideas about this, beginning with some thoughts about the
limits of design, one of which is usually thought to be the extension of
its application from nonliving materials to human behaviour.
I started thinking about this back in 2004–5, a point at which a lot of
designers began to talk about taking services or organisations as the
objects of design. Ideas to this effect had been floated since the early
1990s, and they’re still kicking around now, basically unchanged. But
this was when they started showing up in the mainstream of design.
There was a sense that this was a really contemporary thing, the first
fresh air since digital interface design. There was much talk about the
so-called service or knowledge economy; plus, the message had really
sunk in about design historically being the handmaiden of a socially
corrosive and environmentally detrimental consumerism. So the
possibility of getting away from designing plastic things no one
ultimately gave a shit about piqued the interest of a fair few.
We’d been making stuff for services for an awfully long time, but this
was supposed to be about more than just putting together a website
for a service or designing the seating for a bus. There was a sense
that this should be a collaborative thing, and that designers should give
up their aspirations towards aesthetic dictatorship and work
collaboratively with non-designers—people had been rendered ‘passive
consumers’ in the past, to invite them to engage as equals was to
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liberate them, and this was basically democracy. The people most
interested were actually governments like New Labour in the uk who
were already obsessed with rethinking public services along more
‘participatory’ lines, with ‘community’ as the response to any given
problem. Combined with low budgets and nervous public or third-sector
clients, in form and content this actually quite closely mirrored what
was happening with relational aesthetics in art at the same time—a
tendency to drift towards working with some old people on the plan for
a community garden….
I found this basic idea of services and organisations as a medium for
design to be much more interesting than what people were making of
it. If you took it seriously, you were talking about human behaviour
being taken as the object of design—after all, a service, at the bare
minimum, involves two people and no artefacts or other conventional
design outputs at all, and if you’re saying that design can design
services…. But what would this mean? After all, lawyers, politicians,
economists, psychiatrists and so on all make these normative decisions
about how people should act around each other. It is, quite literally,
their job. But it’s totally taboo for design to do so. People who were
actually doing this kind of thing in design—very senior, high profile
people in the field—were explicit and insistent that what they were
doing should not be understood as ‘designing behaviour’; but then,
without blinking, they’d talk about how important it was for their work to
‘encourage’ or ‘facilitate’ certain forms of behaviour. How is this not
designing behaviour, however subtly? I wanted to understand what was
going on here, and a way to explore this, I thought, was to look at a
history of suspicions about designers, suspicions that they might
extend their material palette from wood, bone, stone, metal, cloth, and
latterly plastics and pixels, to human beings.
The version of these suspicions that predominates today, as I
probably don’t need to tell you, is that designing human behaviour is an
awful thing to do. It implies ‘treating people as things’, determining their
behaviour from the top down. A really quite abhorrent state of affairs.
Now, historically speaking, these are ideas that arrive in the wake of
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the factory, and in their comparison of people to things, it is factorythings they have in mind. Objects that are interchangeable, generic,
anonymous, their behaviour exhaustively prespecified; things that do
the same thing again and again, and so on. And while I’m glossing over
nuance in the interests of being very compact, it’s fair to say that a kind
of moral outrage was precipitated by the factory, and the way in which
people, in close proximity to machines, had to conform to their
operation. I think it is probably quite difficult for us to imagine just how
alien an incursion this was into the landscape of the time, and we’re not
even talking about a sort of Foucauldian panoptic environment
necessarily (although that was part of it); people literally had to
conform to the operational dynamics of machines, or lose a finger or an
ear to them.
So whether it starts by detailing the exploitation of workers, the
technical mindset of seeing the world as a standing reserve, the tight
programming of workplace conduct, or whatever, after the advent of
the factory comparisons between people and things tend to converge
on the demand that the two must be seen as different, with things
being obedient servants to people. To refuse this difference would
mean that people would have to conform to demands technology
places upon them, literally having to act with the gestures and pacing
demanded by objects; and that in turn they would end up being
‘reduced’ to ‘mere’ machines themselves. In these terms, to objectify is
to dehumanize, and it’s pretty straightforward to see why ‘designing
human behaviour’ is seen as repellent, especially overcoded by the
twentieth century, which added Taylorism and totalitarianism to the mix.
These ideas are surely familiar—they’re reiterated endlessly, by
Marx, Heidegger, the Frankfurt School, to pick an influential few. The
same kind of thing goes way back—the language is almost identical all
the way back to the Luddites and various other frame-breakers in the
period around the turn of the eighteenth century into the nineteenth. But
not before. Before the Industrial Revolution, as it turns out, as well as
in a lot of non-Western traditions of thought, you get a very different
kind of suspicion about the people that today we’d call designers. If the
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factory replaced something, it was craft work, and that’s often still held
up as being authentic and wholesome, the work of someone skilled
rather than what’s practically an automaton, and where it seems that
simple tools operate to further what a person wants to do rather than
the other way around. This might seem to be a perennial view of craft,
but it turns out this is absolute nonsense; it’s one hundred percent a
product of the factory. What’s interesting is that older views of craft
enterprise had their own, let’s say, pattern of detraction. And even if it’s
not discussed any more, it’s still there in everyday language—in
English, in the link between ‘craft’ and ‘being crafty’, ‘having designs on’
someone or something, even simple terms like ‘fabrication’, meaning
both a lie and a process of manipulation; or, for that matter, the idea of
being ‘manipulative’ in itself.
Where does this come from? It’s actually a very widespread point of
view, one that’s emerged seemingly independently in many different
places and times but is remarkably consistent across them. To take
one example, Plato, in the Laws, written about 350 BCE. His remarks
on design in that book are contained in a series of passages about
how, in the perfect society, people would not be taught to make traps.
Making a hunting trap would foster in the populace a certain kind of
intelligence, one that looks at the environment and sees in it certain
tendencies—like an animal’s preference for a certain kind of food—and
finds roundabout ways of manipulating that tendency. A hunting trap
doesn’t seek to ‘master’ the animal, in the sense of physically
dominating it in a fair fight, but rather enlists the animal’s unwitting help
in its own demise. A snare that kills its prey by turning its attempts to
escape into the tightening of the noose is an example. In this sense,
the trap is the means by which the weak prevail over the strong. It
embodies an insurrectionary sensibility: ‘I can’t change this situation
myself, but I can construct this kind of mechanism that approaches it in
a roundabout way, and gets this to do this, and then this to do this…’.
And the funny thing is, this was immediately associated not just with
the creation of traps, but with artifice in general. The message here is
not solely about design as it turns up in the construction of traps, but
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that all design is the construction of traps. Smithing, weaving, etc., all
are about finding ingenious ways of exploiting the behaviour of
materials, and that can include human beings. In fact it includes an
awful lot of very interesting things. The ancient Greeks called the kind
of intelligence expressed in the construction of a trap mêtis, which
labels a certain guileful ingenuity. As a shorthand, it’s the intelligence
implied when extraordinary effects are elicited from unpromising
materials. It works with situations that are volatile, slippery, stubborn,
or some combination of the three, and it finds ingenious ways to
transform their current arrangement into a new one.
If this links design, understood in conventional terms as the
production of nonliving artefacts, to situations involving human beings,
then it is in the sense of things like plots, conspiracies, coups d’état,
entrepreneurial success, guerrilla warfare and so on. All of which are
things that are usually seen as a deviation from ‘how the world should
be’. The habits of thought we’ve inherited in the West have tended to
suppress any discussion of things like mêtis—even Plato didn’t talk
about it, he just said ‘this kind of stuff: no’. Instead we’ve spent a lot of
time talking about ends, rather than means; we have a huge intellectual
deficit there. Western political theory, as a rule—and obviously I’m
glossing here!—has a tendency to couple a description of the present
with the elaboration of a desired future, how things are contrasted with
how they should be. The bit between, the transition phase, even if it’s
laid out, is often pretty rudimentary. Even the phrase ‘the ends justify
the means’, the very fact that it’s a cliché shows you where the
cognitive priority is placed. Mêtis, on the other hand, is the logic of
means. It’s a general diagram of how to get things done.
It’s interesting to draw out the implications of this, which is really a
project of speculative design—to think about where this stuff takes us.
Certainly it begins to offer some traction on the idea of, say,
constructing very new kinds of political platforms. And it connects this
to some recent developments in philosophy—like them, it sees the
world as an obscure environment, and applies some kind of abductive
logic in the form of extreme hypotheses in trying to understand the
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relation of things to each other. As in Reza Negarestani’s work, or the
stuff that came out of the CCRU in the 1990s about capitalism as an
insurgent artificial intelligence busy constructing itself. If philosophy
manifests this kind of geotraumatic worldview that’s very much like the
work of forensics, establishing the modus operandi of the world by
reconstructing the evidence it leaves behind from the crimes it commits,
then this speculative design flips it around into a process not of
reconstructing plots but of constructing them. Every Holmes needs his
Moriarty, after all.
1
1. See R. Mackay and A. Avanessian (eds.), #Accelerate: The Accelerationist Reader (Falmouth
and Berlin: Urbanomic/Merve, 2014).
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Tom Trevatt
The Cosmic Address
In an unpublished fragment of Robert Smithson’s writings on Donald
Judd from the late 1960s, the former reveals his antagonism to the
latter’s ‘literal’ or ‘interesting’ art. For Smithson, art was not to be
interesting, which always presupposed a human addressee, preserving
the personal, anthropocentric sense of authority, but to be ‘a cosmos’,
addressed to the universe rather than only the human. Contra Judd’s
humanism, which recentred the subject, Smithson held that his work’s
scientific concerns enabled it to go past the phenomenology embraced
by minimalism. I want to propose that Smithson’s proposition of a
cosmic address can give meaning to an art that does not rely on human
subjectivity as a final guarantor. This address, I suggest, proceeds via
an ungrounding logic that disarticulates the co-constitution of the world
by thought that dominates our contemporary condition as articulated by
the Duchampian concept of the art coefficient. The cosmic address is a
true atheism. An address that does not locate a God position, but
articulates itself towards, and within, a decentred and dispersed
immanence constituted by what Reza Negarestani calls a universal
continuum.
1
In the following I want to outline art in the historical conditions
inherited from Duchamp, to determine how Smithson’s work might offer
an alternative axis to this continuum as an immanent given without
givenness, and to propose the concept of the cosmic address. To
quote Duchamp:
The gap, representing the inability of the artist to express fully his intention, this difference
between what he intended to realize and did realize, is the personal ‘art coefficient’
contained in the work. In other words, the personal ‘art coefficient’ is like an arithmetical
relation between the unexpressed but intended and the unintentionally expressed. To avoid a
misunderstanding, we must remember that this ‘art coefficient’ is a personal expression of
art à l’état brut, that is, still in a raw state, which must be ‘refined’ as pure sugar from
molasses by the spectator.2
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So for Duchamp, this refining of the work is a performative
interpretation, a reflection on the work which co-constitutes it; the
spectator completes the work. As he continues, ‘the creative act is not
performed by the artist alone; the spectator brings the work in contact
with the external world by deciphering and interpreting its inner
qualification and thus adds his contribution to the creative act’.
3
This conservative preservation of the subject/object distinction
articulated by a reflection produces a dominant subject that activates
the ‘dumb matter’ of the object as though it were distinct from and
dominant over it. The project of critique in which art has been complicit
relies precisely on this distinction between a human subject and a
material object, the organic and the inorganic, or between thought and
world. So, the conditions inherited from this project allow art to
presuppose a separated and dominant human subject, revealed in the
world as a figure distinct from its ground. While art might be able to
talk in an abstract language, its interpellating structure is figurative. It
figures the human via its address. What we call the Duchampian
address is the locating of a work of art for articulation by thought within
an interpretive structure. We are built in to the conditions of
contemporary art as an external guarantor required for the work to
have meaning as such, and in some cases to exist at all. The
contemporary condition defines itself precisely via an ahistorical copositioning that determines the artwork by its concurrency. Art exists in
correlation to the human; this correlation whereby art not only exists in
temporal proximity to us but is defined as such by that proximity—by
being shown, exhibited, put on display or presented for the purposes of
interpretation. This co-relation produces us as viewers in a very
specific way. We are the meaning of art, art is thus addressed to us in
a banal circle of finitude determined by terrestrial cognitive limitations.
So, it ratifies the dominant subject that capitalizes on the object of the
world and reinvests it with a moral superiority, as afforded by the
supposed ‘ethics’ of left-leaning contemporary art. Because such art
proposes a privileged relation to the political and critical project, but at
the same time undermines that relation by appealing to the subject as
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the topos of localised meaning production, thus producing a structure
of human domination that forecloses the ethical or political via a
restricted logic of localism. Following the work of Ray Brassier, we
may say that art produces a manifest image of us as dominant that
relies on the myth of human figuration over a ground; an image that is
in contradistinction to the scientific image. As Brassier points out, the
manifest image of man is a ‘subtle theoretical construct, a disciplined
and critical “refinement or sophistication” of the originary framework in
terms of which man first encountered himself as being capable of
conceptual thought, in contradistinction to animals that lack this
capacity’. This capacity for conceptual thought that founded
philosophy, according to Brassier, following Sellars, must be integrated
with the scientific image ‘such that the language of rational intention
would come to enrich scientific theory so as to allow the latter to be
directly wedded to human purposes’.
4
5
Accordingly, art, under the manifest image, mobilizes a conservative
conception of the real as bifurcated between subject and object,
allowing thought to take a prioritised position in relation to the
uncognized/uncognizable object. This bifurcation and preservation of
the terms that art performs, provides the ground for a subject to reflect
on the work as though thought were distinct from it and yet able to
determine that work as such. Art, under the Duchampian condition,
acts ideologically to produce forms of subjectivity that reiterate the
bifurcation between culture and nature. My aim here is to understand
the interpretation of artwork as a part of a universal continuum that
stretches through the organic and inorganic, not as separated from or
higher than that continuum.
Following Freud, Brassier describes the way a cell membrane is
formed to protect the cell from external stimuli:
A primitive organic vesicle (that is, a small bladder, cell, bubble or hollow structure)
becomes capable of filtering the continuous and potentially lethal torrent of external stimuli
by sacrificing part of itself in order to erect a protective shield against excessive influxes of
excitation. In doing so, it effects a definitive separation between organic interiority and
inorganic exteriority.6
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This he describes as a traumatic cut, a separation of the organic from
the inorganic. This negentropic process of self-organisation is
described by Brassier as a technology, or techné:
The contention is that the history of technology overlaps with the history of life understood
as originary synthesis of techné and physis. There is no ‘natural’ realm subsisting in
contradistinction to the domain of technological artifice because matter—whether organic or
inorganic—already possesses an intrinsic propensity to self-organization.7
Thus thought is included as an ongoing negentropic technological selforganisation; thought is immanent to, and not distinct from, material
process. For Negarestani, the cut within and by the universal continuum
is a way to think local regional horizons as part of the interweaving of
the particular and universal. This becomes a ‘true to the universe logic
[…] synthetic and fully Copernican’ that can only be conceived in terms
of an ‘absolute reflexivity of the universal where the independent
relation of the universe to itself takes shape’.
8
So the relationship between the interpretation of the work of art and
the work of art itself is precisely the synthetic binding of thought to the
world. In other words, the synthesis between the local interior and the
exterior, or universal continuum. To think in this way positions the work
of art and the thought of it within a nested traumata of cuts from, and
by, the unbound open. For Negarestani, ‘trauma is not a rupture
marking the centrality or discreteness of the regional subject with
regard to its outside, but a regionalizing cut made by a higher universal
order in its own continuous field’. This Copernican revolutionary logic
thinks a decentred relation between human and world, not the
prioritised relation of subjective dominance that sees human capacity
as the defining factor governing relations as such. I would argue that
contemporary art, acting through a Ptolemaic counter-revolutionary
mode, rehabilitates us to the trauma of the cut by grounding us in a
subjective distinction from the world, providing the sufficiency of the
world as a ground on which we can stand. But to follow an ungrounding
logic true to the Copernican revolution, we can resituate art within a
cosmic region that ‘interconnects the particulate, the galactic, the
stellar, the chemical, the biological, the sociocultural and the
9
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P. 37
neuropsychological
within
a
continuous—albeit
counterintuitive—universal gradient’.
topologically
10
Rather than simply being opposed to the ‘human’, we should
understand this in relation to the means by which we are bound as
‘human’ by biological continua. Thus, far from proposing we abandon
the human, as suggested by some reactions to the expanded field of
philosophy to which Gabriel Catren’s essay ‘Outland Empire’ nominally
belongs, I want to pursue a logic of scientific realism that describes
the universal absolute not as an infinite or alternative outside, but as a
continuum of the immanent real that necessarily includes and implicates
the human. Art is yet to adequately address the implications of these
demands from Catren. The ineradicable desire for the new, the
expansion of art into non-art via representation, the figuration of the
hero artist from the generic field, the exoticization of the ‘other’, the
romanticism of the alternative and the expectation of the bolt of
inspiration from the blue are just some examples of the platitudes by
which art progresses. The operation of reflexive analysis that Catren
proposes for the ‘different “transcendental” conditions of research’
that can go beyond anthropocentricism, the limitations placed on the
experiments of science by the limits of the human, implicates us in a
speculative mode of thought. A wound has been stitched up by the
Kantian conservative revolution. To perform a dehiscence, we must
analyse the conditions under which thought is performed and speculate
beyond those conditions. This dehiscence, Catren suggests, will finally
make philosophy modern: ‘Philosophy will finally be modern only if it
can sublate the critical moment, crush the Ptolemaic counter-revolution
and deepen the narcissistic wounds inflicted by modern science.’ From
a philosophy synchronous with science, Catren proposes a speculative
absolutism that can think beyond the limits of the correlation between
human and world that has been transcendentalized in post-Kantian
thought. A Copernican revolution must be capable of thinking the
absolute, which in Catren’s terms comes to mean the real,
decorrelated from human access.
11
12
13
Through a decentring logic of true-to-the-universe thought, can we
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P. 38
reconceive art’s role no longer as that of the production of the fantasy
of human dominance, but as that of the furthering of the work of the
absolute? Or to put it another way, that of producing a cosmic address
that situates itself as part of the nested regional cut within and by the
universal continuum? Or to put it still another way, can art partake in a
Copernican revolution that shifts the locus of meaning from the local
sufficiency of thought to a dispersed and abstracted infinite? In doing
so, art would be thrust into ‘cosmic exile’, a term coined by analytic
philosopher Willard Quine to describe an impossible position outside of
the limit of human access, but which is taken up by Smithson as a
positive project. This exile, or adherence to the cosmic logic of the
inhuman, provides us with an asymptotic orientation out of the finitude
of human interpretation, radically eviscerating the anthropocentric
counter-revolutionary co-relation between thought and artwork. Any
escape from the contemporary requires an inhuman material lure,
rather than an avant-gardist human hero to lead the way. The trajectory
is not mapped by intellection alone, but by a synthetic ecology of hybrid
geo-networks that immanently organise. Thus, Smithson’s spiral works
dislocate a segment of the dizzyingly infinite, becoming, as Thomas
Crow points out, ‘the sign and imprint of a perpetual tropism, always
unfulfilled, towards the “thing itself”’. This segmentation perpetually
indexes the infinite spiral from which it is cut, rendering the continuum,
rather than the discrete, the object of appreciation.
14
15
1. Recent critiques of Continental philosophy have named the doxa of human subjectivity as final
guarantor ‘correlationism’. Theorised predominantly by Quentin Meillassoux in After Finitude, tr.
R. Brassier (London and New York: Continuum, 2009), correlationism is the dogmatic reliance
on occluded fideism in post-Kantian philosophy. Meillassoux embarks on a radical critique of this
form of anthropocentric thinking that only thinks the object through its correlation with the subject.
Much recent ‘speculative’ philosophy takes up the task of thinking the object apart from its
appearance to a human subject.
2. M. Duchamp, ‘The Creative Act’, in M. Sanouillet and E. Peterson (eds.), Salt Seller: The
Writings of Marcel Duchamp, (London: Thames & Hudson, 1975), 74.
3. Ibid.
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
P. 39
4. R. Brassier, Nihil Unbound (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 3.
5. Ibid.
6. Ibid., 237
7. Ibid., 225.
8. R. Negarestani, ‘Globe of Revolution: An Afterthought on Geophilosophical Realism’, Identities
17 [2008], 17–24: 17).
9. Ibid., 18.
10. Ibid.
11. Reactions to the field of philosophy known as Speculative Realism seem to caricature it as
an abandonment of the human.
12. G. Catren, ‘Outland Empire’, in L. Bryant, N. Srnicek, G. Harman (eds.), The Speculative
Turn: Continental Materialism and Realism (Melbourne: re.press, 2011), 334.
13. Ibid., 335.
14. As discussed in T. Crow, ‘Cosmic Exile’, in E. Tsai and C. Butler (eds.), Robert Smithson
(Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 2004), 52.
15. Ibid, 54.
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P. 40
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P. 41
Discussion
PETER WOLFENDALE:
Amanda, the task you outlined was that of a
differentiation of a general notion of art from a twisted conception of
art that developed in the twentieth century. And I think that’s a very
crucial task we need to be focused on: it’s a great way of framing a lot
of the important issues involved here. It’s like an attempt at a thinking
of the general concept of art. I’d like to ask your opinion on this, but the
intervention I’d bring in is that, in order to think that general concept,
we have to get back to an even more general concept, and see art as
a species of beauty, in a very literal sense. That also means rescuing
the concept of beauty from a certain way in which it’s been conceived
both recently, and throughout history. I think it’s important to see it as a
very general notion which isn’t to be taken as denoting general
‘prettiness’. There’s an important sense in which the sublime artwork is
beautiful. It doesn’t have to be pleasant, in that sense, to be beautiful.
So, I thought I’d open that up as a potential way of thinking about the
dialectic of redefining art.
AMANDA BEECH: Of course, I agree that the question is about the name
‘art’; but also, what art constitutes for us is crucial. Especially given
that, as I said, all of the definitions of the paradigm of art itself are
simply not good enough, or are logically suspect. I think that’s where
my interest in realism has always come from: for a long time I’ve been
asking these questions, and mainly it comes out of a frustration that art
just doesn’t seem logical to me! It’s made up of certain propositions,
and when I test them out, they seem contradictory. I’m not interested in
contradictions. I’m very much interested in my work being
noncontradictory. Whether I achieve that or not is another thing, but
that’s what motivates my practice.
Now, the question of what kind of critical framework to use in order to
ask what art could be in new terms is a difficult one, because one can
easily lapse back into certain Kantian (as well as Duchampian)
dynamics. Tom’s paper tried to think through the sublime in this way,
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P. 42
and I fully understand that—and your example of understanding the
sublime in terms of beauty is a strong way out of these problems. This
has been captured as a mode of expressing a relation between the
incomprehensible and the irrational as the site of aesthetics; a site that
is required also to conjure some universal gestalt of the political. Art,
and the issues facing art, were very much committed to questions of
the sublime in the late 60s and 70s in terms of how aesthetic
experience could correlate with social transformation. Central to this
was the work of Lyotard, who associates the processual method of art
with a sublime experience that can counter the dominance of social
realism and its means-to-an-end allegorising. But as I said, my issue
with that is that it resulted in practices, or theories of practices as
experience, that attempt to articulate the ‘real’ as a condition of
aesthetics; but that became quickly subsumed back into art’s selfreification. The sublime struggles to manifest beyond the fiction of
abstract perception and the tradition of an intact subjectivity, held in
contradiction. This contradiction preserves politics at the level of private
experience and fails to transcend the subject of self-consciousness that
‘finds itself’ in this experience. I am also unsure of this distinction
between aesthetics and unreason, given my interest in the ways in
which art is rational.
PW: I agree, but the point was that, rather than see the sublime as an
alternative to the beautiful, it has to be incorporated into a more
general definition of beauty.
AB: Yes, absolutely, I agree with your attempt to think of a general
modality of image-experience. But when we have had theories around
that, they’ve struggled to think the generic nature of the image. I think
people struggle with the point at which things are pictured and figured.
As soon as the general becomes the specific, things break down. We
can go into analytical philosophy and have a kind of systems theory or
a language-based theory, of the kind that we encountered in
structuralism and as also seen in artworks by Nauman, for instance,
that explore the limits of language as infinite, hysterical and tragic
repetition. A kind of dead end of language that reinstates the
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transcendental claim that is conjured in the sublime. Quine writes about
the infinite regression that is encountered when one claims an ontology
of language, since every claim is also a part of that language that it
describes: we see the horror of the infinite before us as a form of the
sublime, because there’s no way out of this entrapment of the
everything and the particular, between reality and appearance and
thought and image. I’ve been trying to think about how we deal with
meaning, in a really simple way, so that we can hold on to the question
of the generic and these modes of abstraction that we are dealing with
in terms of the concept; that is, how images can operate without a
standard aesthetics.
PW: I have this dream that we can reclaim this sense of beauty in which
we incorporate all of the ways in which it’s historically been figured. I
think the theories may seem contradictory, but they are actually talking
about different objects or different species of beauty, that are beautiful
in their own subtle way. For example, Socrates says beauty is its use.
So something is beautiful if it does what it’s supposed to do really
really well.
AB: But the question of judgement keeps coming back, and we can’t
seem to escape the production of value. That’s the kind of thing I was
trying to work through with Laruelle: What happens to concepts of
value in thinking equality? How we name something as art, and how we
value something as art, and what structures are involved in that; and I
think this question of judgement demands more than an archival relation
to the beautiful; what might be called appreciation, and this notion of
function that you mention. My key concern about the beautiful is its
connection to a certain form of passivity.
SIMON O’SULLIVAN:
Because art has got a history, it’s got a set of
problems, a certain pitch to it, it’s in a certain arena; you’re entering
into something that, although it produces problems, also opens up
solutions.
My question is for Tom, and it’s about the evacuation of the subject.
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P. 44
One thing that seems quite apparent to me is that everything was once
a subject, and Smithson made that remark—though, of course, he
wasn’t an artist. And secondly, I feel that the subject/object distinction
that you depicted is monolithic—there is this object, and then there is
this subject, and this relation is fixed. But the thing about art is that it
often pulls something out from the subject, demanding that it transform
itself, presuming some sort of mutability of the subject. Indeed, that
seems to be one of its achievements. If you just have these fixed
categories, you miss all of that. Then, for me, the danger is that a lot of
the baby does get thrown out with the bathwater.
TOM TREVATT : I don’t think I was eliminating the subject. What I was
trying to do was to understand how subjectivity erupts from objectivity,
rather than saying, let’s just get rid of subjectivity. As Catren says, we
can’t jump over the shadow of the subject but instead, through a
continual deepening of scientific labour, we can seek to locally absolve
it from its transcendental limitations. I see this kind of jump occurring
within attempts to reach the absolute through the sublime within
Romanticism, for example. The vector that I propose at the end is
precisely the idea of not trying to make that jump. It’s not a kind of
evacuation, it’s an understanding of this continuum that includes the
subject as part of it. This plasticity of subject and object you describe
is precisely impossible when you think this distinction as definite. I’m
suggesting that the Duchampian paradigm relies on a strong distinction
between the two, with the final sublation of the object by the subject.
ALEX WILLIAMS: I had a question for you Tom, and it’s related to Simon’s
point. I’m on board with a lot of the theoretical influences you are trying
to synthesize, but my question is, why talk about this in terms of art
anymore? What is art still doing here? I think there is something
interesting that art could do here, but I’m not sure where you end up
with this. You said you wanted to get rid of the figure-ground element,
or introduce something that will problematize it—I understand the
resonance of that. But what does the particular ‘cut’ of art do within this
sort of massive cosmic continuum?
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P. 45
TT : I’ve often asked the same question, why would I care about art?
But coming from my position as a curator, I feel the responsibility to
unpick this problem that we have inherited for art, rather than just
saying, this is a problem for philosophy, etc. Let’s try to solve this. To
answer the question of why I would care about art: because art has a
certain capacity; a capacity to produce a type of subjectivity. If my
claim is that, currently, art produces a dominant type of subjectivity, can
we understand art as harbouring the possibility of producing another
type of subjectivity too? This is to question the correlation. The reason
why art might be at stake here is that, if it has produced certain types
of subjectivity historically, how can we see that playing out in the kind of
world in which we live today?
AW: Is there something in the angle you are taking, this kind of ‘true-to-
the-universe thought’, that could offer not just a way of thinking the art
that already exists, but could have a prospective element to it, offering
normative criteria that could change the way artists make art?
TT : I very much see this as a challenge to, and within, practice. Within
my curatorial practice I also see my role as being to challenge artists
and art within that sort of relationship.
AB: Going back to Simon’s question, I was saying at the end of my talk
how important it is for art to be assertive, and not to hide away from its
mediating faculty, as I’ve seen it often do historically and as it still does
in its attempt to evacuate itself into the problem of politics and
philosophy: Art imagines itself as not being art because it has a hangup
about not being useful enough in terms that it can recognise and
measure; or because it identifies itself as frivolous or decorative in
relation to philosophy, perhaps. What art in this case forgets is that
politics and philosophy share these problems. These disciplines are no
more free, no more direct, than art. So for me, when I make my work,
it’s equally important that my work passively destroys all other art, and
sets itself up as the art that should be called art.
MARK FISHER: I feel that the expectations when entering an art gallery
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P. 46
are disappointed as you enter it. As the level of inflation goes up for
expectation, the satisfaction decreases greatly. If a Hollywood film was
as bad as the level of aesthetic texture that we find in most art
galleries these days, you would walk out, you’d be furious, and rightly
so! So why bother with the pretence that it’s about aesthetic texture at
all. It’s all about consumerism these days, money. But there has to be
this pretence, because it’s part of what art is, the context of art. But
there have always been tedious arguments about what art is, and we
should try to keep it interesting. So why not invest in design, and not
art?
TT : That’s hard, but I’d go harder than that actually. Not only is art used
to money-launder, it provides the conditions under which it’s possible
for those kinds of subjectivities to exist that want to money-launder. But
it’s not the only game on the table, and I think to abandon it somehow
says that we’ve lost that game. The reason I say that the answer to
the question is to stay within the game, is to try to change that
possibility. If art can take account of the ways it actually produces
those types of subjects, then it can possibly change the game.
PW: In my opinion art is all about this excess, and there’s this wonderful
word from philosophy of value, supererogation, which basically means
being better than it needs to be. Its value lies in its being beyond
what’s expected. For me this is an interesting way of thinking about
beauty. Design is about producing something that is more than is
required. Finding those potentialities that you aren’t sure how they are
going to be exploited yet, but which open up further possibilities of
further action. Which also maximises freedom, to be frank.
BENEDICT SINGLETON: If you look at how the Western concept of ‘the
artist’ took shape in the Renaissance, it was a straight-up hustle.
People hyping the importance of things regarded then as craft, like
doing paintings, so as to inveigle their way into royal courts and get in
with patrons and so on. We should remember that, maybe, when we
talk about ‘the artist’ as that figure appears today—not just that
successful contemporary artists are hustlers, which, okay, but that the
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P. 47
whole idea of ‘art’ was hatched as a sort of really great con.
That history aside, I tend to see design and art as continuous to
some extent. In any event, I came to design late and knowing nothing
about it; I knew nothing about art either; and so I had no conception of
a gap between the two fields. I’m more aware of it now, but I ignore it
as far as I can. Although needless to say, while design might be
appealing in terms of budgets and effecting changes in how people live
everyday and so on, it’s very difficult to pursue some kinds of ideas—
you have to justify what you do to people who, let’s say, are interested
in achieving what’s required according to quite specific goals, and are
not much swayed by speculative possibilities.
AB:
There’s loads of stuff that you said that I totally disagree with,
Mark, so I don’t know where to begin! Artists go and shoot a video on
location, and get to know the locals and they do some anthropology.
And then they bring it back and show it, they go visit an archive, and
there’s the bit of archive they visited; it’s presented as ‘here is evidence
of all the research that I do’…. I find these to be hideous modes of
practice in art. The word ‘research’ has really made that difficult. But
then there’s another side to what you were saying which is, to quote
Robin, the ‘intellectual jewellery’ that goes on with art talks—if you’re
running a public space and you want to add gravitas to some exhibition,
you invite certain people to do the talk. No one listens, they’re not
bothered about what you say, it’s just the presence that matters. It’s a
form of review or validation.
I guess what I’m saying is that there’s a whole set of problems going
on in the art world and I think it’s unfair to say that it’s because the art’s
crap. I go around art studios all the time and there’s great art. I also
think it’s wholly unfair to say that curators are crap. One of the things I
really want to try to address is that there is something wrong with the
bottom-line nature of the belief systems we go to work with. Somehow
there’s something wrong with the overall framework, with the way that
we actually operate everyday in terms of the structure of ‘let’s show
another black and white video of people suffering—that’s political’; and,
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you know, ‘let’s have another long drawn-out video because that’s how
we portray the labour through the lens, which equals politics’. There
are certain correlations that are made between image and meaning
that have habituated the definition of good art and good politics. I think
that these are the responsibility of all of us, but at the same time,
they’re sort of beyond the modes of the belief systems themselves.
They’re in it but they also go beyond it.
MF: See, I’m not saying art is crap because artists or curators are; but
curators are certainly more interesting than the art they curate. I meet
a lot of artists, and I have nothing against them or any artists. But, as
interesting as they are, their work is not as great. It seems there is an
obligation for it to not be that great.
ROBIN MACKAY: Firstly, I would disagree that contemporary art is about
aesthetic texture or lack of it. The interplay between the conceptual
and the aesthetic is far more complex and diverse across different
artists’ work. Nevertheless I do agree that the experience on the whole
is a disappointing one. Tom, you said that you believe in art because
you believe it has the power to transform subjectivity, or to produce
new types of subjectivity. But isn’t that precisely one of these articles of
faith that Amanda is attacking? The key distinction I would make is
between art as a set of institutions, in its social role—whether
transformative or merely symptomatic—the increasingly mystifying role
that it plays in mediating subjectivity and shaping popular culture, which
does indeed have an importance in the production of subjectivity; and
the actual encounter with specific artworks, which does vanishingly little
in terms of the transformation of subjectivity or even in terms of simple
affect. I agree with Mark that the kind of force we are taught to expect
from art is entirely absent from the experience of contemporary art
shows; it lies elsewhere, in other cultural forms. The institutional logic
of contemporary art does indeed have effects, insidious effects, but not
on the level of that direct aesthetic experience. So what is the link (if
any) between the institution of art and the way it produces certain
types of subjectivity and a certain type of enthralled audience, and the
aesthetic dimension of artworks themselves?
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P. 49
NICK SRNICEK:
Ben, hearing your paper, I’m thinking of things like
behavioural economics. It’s the idea of nudging behaviour slightly and
nudging it in the proper direction. There are also things like neuromarketing. And one of my favourite stories, I think it was a New York
Times article, is about this young girl who got pregnant, and was
buying some stuff online, and the marketers recognised her behavioural
patterns and started sending her material for pregnancy, coupons and
these sorts of things. Her parents saw these coupons and were pissed
off, like ‘you’re not pregnant, why are the companies sending this to
you?’—and then they found out that she actually was! It seems like a
lot of modern capitalism is using this as a means to seek profit. My
question would be, would you consider design as mêtis to be a weapon
of the weak?
BS: Yes, I’ve used that phrase before. Classically, it’s the intelligence at
work in hatching courtly intrigues, daring military stratagems, and so
on, as much as in the design of artefacts—this is, of course, why it
constitutes a link between the design of human behaviour and design
more generally, as I said. But what it labels is design as performed
within a hostile environment that you can’t control directly, it’s a way out
of being overwhelmed—like pulling a trap door from the air. The few
people who have even mentioned it in the last few decades have totally
romanticised it, so it becomes ‘the way the little man can stand up for
himself against the boss’, or something like that. A sort of minor
heroism, very humble. Michel de Certeau, for instance, insists that
what mêtis wins, it doesn’t keep. Where does that come from? How
does that follow? It’s complete fantasy on his part to think that it’s
limited to these harmless little ruses, or to identify ‘the weak’ as the
huddled masses. Sure, it’s the weapon of the weak, but when you have
the board of directors meeting up with marketing to orchestrate a
campaign, you’re talking about a tiny group of people who are using a
technological apparatus to manipulate an entire field of activity to their
benefit. They’re ‘the weak’ too.
PW: This idea of mêtis as designing behaviour, and the idea of mêtis as
self-manipulation, is quite interesting in the context of Metzingerian
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P. 50
positions with regard to the illusion of subjectivity. Self-conception and
self-deception: Self-deception isn’t a bad thing, it’s this really
productive thing where we have to deceive ourselves to make
ourselves.
1
BS: Yes. A trap doesn’t have to damage anything, it can just…structure
the environment, and that fixity can be used, quite literally, for leverage.
You might say that one of the most interesting targets to consider
trapping is your future self, in order to ensure that you act the way then
that, right now, you want yourself to, then…. And this sort of thing is
one of the reasons why it’s worth resurrecting these old concepts
about cunning that no one speaks about these days. At the same time,
historically this sort of cunning has been largely characterised as
immoral, in all different kinds of cultures, but always for the same kind
of reasons. If it’s how the weak prevail over the strong, it’s totally
indifferent to the question of which party is the more sympathetic. And
so it’s really at odds with any moral project decided in advance. I
mean, you conceive of a world that would be good to live in, and then
you try to bring it about, but you need to use mêtis to do so, which has
its own logic and…you’re not going to get the world you want, you’re
going to get the world mêtis gives you. And its whole logic is that of
sedition against established structures, which of course some people
may be rather fond of. Its only policy is absolute insubordination
against the given, really. Strictly speaking, though, cunning isn’t
immoral, it’s amoral. Amoral not in the sense that people think
psychopaths are amoral, because they aren’t—they just have a moral
compass that diverges profoundly from the norm, one that’s highly
idiosyncratic and inflexible. It’s enormously difficult to imagine what
actual, persistent amorality would be like. Something totally alien, I
suspect. Like a trickster figure. We don’t really have those in the West
anymore. Con artists and such, yes, but not really intense and
disturbing ones like Coyote.
AW: It’s a form of rationality though, so surely it does have a set of
norms. It is still a form of practically mediating practice.
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P. 51
BS:
Yes, that’s true. The question for me is, though, what kind of
normative angle does it have? Mêtis yields a sort of aesthetics of ‘how
to get things done’, and the harder a thing is to do, and the more
intelligence that goes into it, the ‘better’ it is. It possesses its own sort
of very self-contained dynamic. It sees everything as material that
might be recomposed, and there’s no kind of limiting mechanism. I
mentioned before the trickster, and there are a lot of myths about how
a trickster invents the first trap. Usually it’s something like: the
trickster’s hungry, and only has a bit of food, but in this moment of
empathy without any sentimentality, he realises that other creatures are
hungry as well…so the concept of bait is born. And once the trickster
does that for the first time, it’s a hairline crack in the order of things
that quickly begins to ramify. You can’t rise above traps, you can’t just
say ‘I, for one, shall not be trapped’; it doesn’t work that way. Being
pure of heart makes you predictable, and that’s not a good thing here.
You’re locked into a system where the only way you can avoid being
trapped is to engage this world on its terms, i.e. the logic of the trap.
The normative schema glimpsed in that escalation is, well, terrifying.
MATTHEW POOLE: What I wanted to ask Tom relates, through Duchamp,
to the idea of trapping, to Smithson with the spirals that he makes, and
the amorality of it that Benedict mentioned as well. I wanted to ask
you, Tom, why you were pitting Duchamp against Smithson, as if
Smithson’s works reveal greater, more cosmic truths than Duchamp’s?
The problem I have is that, firstly, in art-historical terms, Smithson, in
his writings and in the ‘design’ of his artworks, acknowledges the debt
to Duchamp many times. Both of their practices as artists and writers
are highly allegorical. So it was the allegorism of Duchamp’s ironism
that Smithson writes about, and this is where I was worried you had
slipped a little on the banana skin that Duchamp sometimes puts down,
particularly in the writings, which appear to be sober and reflective
when they are not—they are highly charged allegorical vectors that
are, at the very least, ambivalent. So, when he writes about the
coefficient of art, I always consider that to be a trap. It’s a highly
metaphorical interpretation, which in some ways is impossible. It’s an
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P. 52
icy ground that he writes on. Duchamp brings you in as a subject in the
horizon of the semblance of what might be the constituency of your
subjectivity, but at the same time you are brought into it, and you feel
that vector of force, of being brought to that horizon.
RM :
I was wondering whether you’d say something about Duchamp
here, Matthew. It’s interesting to make the distinction between design
as a distressed practice (as Benedict suggested, necessity as the
mother of invention) and art as a practice centred around an axiom of
indeterminacy, as Suhail Malik has argued. But it’s rather more porous
than that, since most design today is not produced as the outcome of
an urgent situation; and equally, design, like advertising, draws
increasingly on the supposedly indeterminate aesthetics and conceptual
devices of art.
2
This led me to thinking about Duchamp and his chess game: what’s
always insidious and endlessly fascinating about Duchamp is that his
work doesn’t seem to be indeterminate. That is to say, the figure of the
game means that it doesn’t fall squarely within this ‘uselessness’ that is
today understood to form the indeterminate ‘space of freedom’ of art—
even if in a certain sense it inaugurates that space. Duchamp seems to
be playing a game with you, you actually don’t have much choice about
your place in it, and you’re never sure what it is. But there is a
pervasive sense that there is some purpose, even if it’s hidden, and
indeed cunning.
BS: Most of the stuff that goes on in design studios and engineering
labs around the world is, in a way, less creative than recreative, or at
least it’s concerned with minor modifications to what exists performed
in a pretty stable environment. Mêtis is present there, but not, as it
were, in full flight. Which is not to say that it has to announce itself
loudly or be dramatic. Necessity is the mother of invention, as the
cliché goes—yes, but an assault on a constraint that is perceived as
‘necessary’ doesn’t have to be done under the gun in any sort of overt
way. Getting out of Earth’s gravity, for instance: Nikolai Tsiolkovski a
hundred or so years ago designs the multistage booster rocket, which
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P. 53
works by successively jettisoning stages as it ascends, when the fuel in
each is gone. This allows the final stage to achieve escape velocity far
more easily than the whole thing could, but it goes against every
intuitive engineering principle—seriously, the thing falls to bits in the air,
it doesn’t sound so promising, does it? But it’s incredibly ingenious, and
the process of putting together the designs was a quiet one involving a
lot of thought, not a spectacular improvisation. Anyway, as to purpose,
I think launch technology is actually a good example of design
exceeding a specific purpose; we don’t have to go to space, we got by
fine without it…. But you do it precisely because it explodes the
possibilities of what we might do next; that’s the central contention of
what has been called Cosmism, the philosophical school of thought that
insists on just this principle in regard to going to space.
AB: But isn’t one of the key distinctions between art and design, as we
have been discussing here, that it’s about purposiveness? Although art
enjoys its crisis so much, it also enjoys the self-conscious knowledge of
its own limitations. There’s an almost smug claim there. So it’s not
about art having a lack of purpose; what we are discussing are just
different purposes. Maybe we need to be more clear about that: my
whole problem here was the fact that art certainly does have a
purpose, but it’s simply not the right one!
BS: Certainly there’s a degree of continuity between art and design. A
lot of senior design people, who basically get to set their own briefs,
have the creative autonomy one might typically associate with artists—
though they might not be seen as good ones—and on the other hand,
you could say that art is a subcategory of design. I mean, it might be
tricky to argue when you get into the details…but it’s viable to suggest
that art is a form of design that aims to have a function in a very
particular environment, a space bracketed from ‘everyday’ encounters
with objects, in the form of the gallery. When you take art out of a
place specific to presenting it, it has to contend with all the design
that’s already out there. I’m biased, of course, but I find it faintly
monstrous that it’s socially acceptable to put so much concerted
creative labour into things that are bound for a gallery, yet so little goes
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into so much that’s outside. It feels…not modern, to me.
AB: If you think about the rise of ‘the curatorial’ over the last twenty-five
years (I know it’s been going on for longer than that, but especially in
the last quarter century), just as we have all these names for curators
—organisers, facilitators, etc.—‘designer’ is also an easy word to use:
there are BAs now in ‘Designing Life Experiences’, which are basically
curating BAs; you have ‘Experience Design’ and stuff like that, but it’s a
form of curatorial design. In the sense of the whole organisational turn
in art which moves towards choreographing experiences, and which
came out of the happenings of the 60s, I would see the curatorial as
being evidence of the collapse of art and design.
BS: Or the collapse of art into events management!
1. See T. Metzinger, Being No-One: The Self-Model Theory of Subjectivity (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2004).
2. S. Malik, On the Necessity of Art’s Exit from Contemporary Art (Falmouth: Urbanomic,
forthcoming 2015).
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Nick Srnicek
Accelerationism—Epistemic, Economic,
Political
In recent discussions, ‘accelerationism’ has arisen as an expression
which purports to unify a wide swathe of seemingly disparate
movements under its referential gesture: from ultramodern
epistemology to Promethean dreams to cosmist utopianism to postcapitalist economic organising. My aim is to try to highlight some of the
connections between these tendencies, in particular emphasising a
subtle distinction between epistemic accelerationism and political
accelerationism. The former indexes an approach to knowledge that
involves expanding the scope of knowledge, synthesising disparate
fields through creative bridging constructions, and ramifying the space
of reasons. It is enlightenment principles of critique and rationality
shorn from their contingent humanistic basis. Political accelerationism,
on the other hand, indexes a postcapitalist order whereby the
limitations of the current accumulative logics are torn down and the
productive potentials of society unleashed. This paper will, firstly,
examine some speculative thoughts about the relationship between
these two accelerationisms. Secondly, it will attempt an initial answer
to the question: What does accelerationism reference in the context of
politics? And finally, it will present some thoughts on how technological
models and aesthetics can facilitate this accelerationism.
1
We start with this question of accelerationism, and the question is:
What exactly is the common basis for all of this—is there a common
basis, is there any meaningful sense to this term ‘accelerationism’? My
own interest was in the political aspect of it all, whereas it seems that,
for instance, Reza Negarestani’s interest is primarily in the epistemic
aspects. And it eventually became clear that there were two ideas of
accelerationism here: epistemic acceleration, which involves
broadening knowledge and synthesizing all these different fields; and
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political accelerationism, which essentially is the use of certain
technologies and social organisations in order to augment your own
capacities, and that sort of thing.
And then it was either Benedict [Singleton] or Pete [Wolfendale] who
highlighted that freedom is the fundamental commonality of all these
forms of accelerationism. On the epistemic side, freedom must be
contrasted with any naturalized or immanent vision of freedom
stemming from some unique attribute of the human condition. Freedom
instead is the binding of oneself to a rational rule and an adherence to
it. And then, on the political side, you have the use of these
technologies and these framing elements of social, political, and
economic institutions that make possible the implementation of such
freedom. The overall accelerationist aim must therefore be designated
as, in Benedict’s words, a ‘generalised escapology’ —an unrelenting
project to unbind the necessities of this world and to transform them
into materials for further constructing freedom, media for accelerating
human beings beyond current limitations.
2
I want to try to think about these things by tying together epistemic
accelerationism and political accelerationism, and by then taking some
tentative steps to try to filter this through, particularly, economic
knowledge as it exists nowadays. So primarily in terms of neoclassical
economic modelling—the sort of stuff the IMF and the World Bank use
in order to understand exactly how economic policies are going to
interact in and with the world.
The epistemic critiques of these things can actually lead to an
argument for something like postcapitalism. Two examples: one is that
at the foundation of this sort of neoclassical economics there is an idea
of equilibrium. The idea that between supply and demand there is a
certain set of points, a certain set of prices, that would allow an
equilibrium to be attained. This is the foundation of neoclassical
modelling. Now the problem is that, essentially, when people in 1954
proved this theorem—that there was this equilibrium—they never made
any argument for how an economy would actually get to this equilibrium
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point. They just assumed that such a possibility exists, and that
therefore every economy must orient itself towards it.
Today we understand that you have to take into account
disequilibrium economics—the idea that the economy doesn’t
necessarily tend towards equilibrium, that instead it can have positive
feedback loops and other sorts of things that result in wild fluctuations.
The idea is that once you take disequilibrium into account, you then
have to have some sort of governing hand that modulates the economy,
and that turns it away from a neoliberal free-market economy. So I
think that in one sense, epistemic accelerationism, the epistemic
critique of these economic models, actually leads to an argument for
something like postcapitalism. If one gives up on the myth of
equilibrium, the question shifts away from producing a ‘natural’ market
and towards the problem of how best to plan an economy.
Second example: one of the foundational arguments for capitalism
put forth in the 1930s by Friedrich Hayek concerned the socialist
calculation debate. This is the idea that the market functions best as an
information processing machine—this is what it does best, and the
price system is a means of transferring information efficiently
effectively and quickly throughout the entire economy. And Hayek’s and
von Mises’s argument was that socialist planned economies can’t do
this; instead, they have to route their information into a centralized
bureaucracy, where the bureaucrats decide how to set supply and
demand, and then send it out to the factories. The argument was that
such socialist calculation was irrevocably less efficient (slower and
more wasteful) than the calculations carried out in decentralized fashion
by the market. This is one of the foundational arguments for capitalism.
And I think Hayek was actually right in the 1930s—we just didn’t have
the capacities to beat the market as an information system. But what’s
interesting now is that we do have a certain number of technologies
that would allow us to beat the market at certain games.
And so now you can turn Hayek’s argument on its head and make an
argument for something like a planned economy (as in Paul Cockshott’s
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work) or some sort of decentralized planning (as in the Cybersyn
example). So in these two cases, I think, epistemic accelerationism
can facilitate the shift to a sort of political accelerationism. And then the
final element is the notion of freedom as binding yourself to a rational
norm, and understanding this in terms of an augmentation and
expansion of our capacities for action. From these two aspects you
can start to understand a shift to something that is beyond capitalism,
and to think about it in terms of freedom.
3
One traditional argument is that freedom is freedom from work—
which is implicit in Marx’s idea that in the morning you’re doing one
thing, in the afternoon you’re doing another thing, and at night you’re
doing another, and that most of it is leisure—there is very little work in
the sort of communist society Marx presents. I think this is right—
freedom from work should be one of the primary demands of the
postcapital society. But this is a thin idea of freedom, freedom simply
as the absence of constraint. I think the more substantial notion of
freedom is essentially, to put it in Nicolai Fedorov’s terms, that of
having a ‘common task’ for humanity, something you can actually build
that conscientiously works towards expanding our capacities—whether
it be space colonization as in Fedorov’s proposal or some other grand
collective project. So I think this adds some content to the idea of what
a postcapital society might mean, beyond just traditional Marxist
notions—namely that it would also involve common tasks.
4
What role, then, for aesthetics in such a project? Aesthetics here
indexes one of the primary problems of epistemic and political
accelerationism: how to transform a computational sublime, a data
sublime, into forms that are amenable to our limited simian brains.
How, in other words, do we transform something like a complex
economic model into a tool for the manipulation of economies?
Aesthetics, in such a project, is about design as a means of
manipulation, rather than about beauty. It is about translating the
technical sublime—a banal feeling of wonder at complexity—into
effective tools for navigation and transformation.
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Too often, cognitive mapping in the aesthetic field does not go beyond
the level of the technical sublime—mapping out intimate and detailed
connections between leaders, money, power, classes, and financial
interests. While pleasing in the sense of beauty, these cognitive maps
typically reproduce all the problems of global capitalism’s complexity.
Various attempts to transform global finance into an aesthetic form
often fall foul of this, mapping financial networks in exquisite detail but
offering no practical leverage for altering the financial world. An
opposite problem arises in the tendency for all data visualizations to
embody the same banal aesthetic of the network diagram. In this case,
a minor sense of beauty is mixed with a minor sense of cognitive
tractability, while the heterogeneity of the world becomes lost in the
nodes and edges of social network analysis.
The new modelling software Minsky illustrates one path towards this
attempt to visually mediate between complexity and accessibility.
Rather than rely on programming knowledge, Minsky operates via
visualizations of the economy (in particular, the monetary system). It
not only makes economic modelling more readily accessible, it also
provides tools for easily manipulating it. The entire model is scalable,
from detailed representations of agents to large models of monetary
systems. While still requiring some mathematical and computing
literacy in order to fully construct models, these tools allow users to
experiment and develop them in ways that go beyond the traditional
models of economics. They can provide some of the cognitive
technologies which will allow for a detailed critique of the existing
system (on its own terms), a navigational medium for making intelligible
the dynamics of global capitalism, and lastly, a basis for beginning to
think through what a postcapitalist, postsoviet economic order might
look like.
5
So this is one thing that can help out in the current conjuncture:
economic models which adopt the programme of epistemic
accelerationism, which reduce the complexity of the world into
aesthetic representations, which offer pragmatic purchase on
manipulating the world, and which are all oriented toward the political
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accelerationist goals of building and expanding rational freedom. These
can provide both navigational tools for the current world, and
representational tools for a future world.
1. See Mackay and Avanessian (eds.), #Accelerate.
2. See B. Singleton, ‘Maximum Jailbreak’, in Mackay and Avanessian (eds.), #Accelerate.
3.
See
P.
Cockshott
and
A.
Cottrell,
Towards
a
New
http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/~cottrell/socialism_book/new_socialism.pdf; and on
http://www.cybersyn.cl/.
Socialism,
Cybersyn,
4. See N. Federov, ‘The Common Task’, and B. Singleton, ‘Maximum Jailbreak’, in Mackay and
Avanessian (eds.), #Accelerate.
5. See http://sourceforge.net/projects/minsky/.
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James Trafford
Towards a Speculative Rationality
What I want to discuss today is a fairly nascent strand of thought
(which I develop in more detail elsewhere) that attempts to understand
the generative possibilities of the quasi-transcendental structure of
norms. In this sense, what I’m doing is related to aesthetics in the very
broad sense of outlining a kind of ‘rationalist creativity’ that abjures the
need to posit spurious metaphysical categories, and so helps us to
understand the problematic relation between ‘speculative realism’
(whatever that means now) and metaphysics.
Pinning down precisely what it is to be ‘speculative’ is a tricky gambit
that is fraught with the danger of rerouting thinking into metaphorbased metaphysics. However it seems that at the heart of the
speculative project is an attempt to release thought from a secure
relation with the earth and the structure of human representation. In
this respect, speculation entails a release of thinking from the
constraints of human phenomenality, but without thereby also
warranting a breach between the two.
Broadly speaking, then, we have the twofold suggestion that
conceivability does not straightforwardly entail possibility, and that
humans have no privileged access to reality. But this sort of move
towards a kind of dissolution or at least displacement of the epistemic
role of human experience and thinking, seems to render any project
relating to aesthetics difficult, to say the least. Whilst human
experience may not have any privileged access to reality, we still, by
necessity, begin from within its strictures. So it is important to figure out
exactly what those strictures are, and then to understand their potential
manipulability. In part, I take it that a great deal of the tendency toward
speculations regarding weird realism and eldritch objects owes to an
impatience regarding this fact. But there is no easy formula for the
sloughing off of human conception and the ‘manifest image’ of the
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world. Indeed, in forgetting this, we run the risk of simply smuggling
extant intuitions and beliefs into ontological categories.
When we look at these intuitions, beliefs, and so on, what is striking
about the research in cognitive science over the past fifty years or so is
the identification of human doxastic conservatism. Here the study of
human reasoning has led to a pretty solid eradication of Piaget’s
paradigm according to which reasoning, broadly speaking, follows the
rules of classical logic. The experimental psychology of human
reasoning suggests that humans have a fundamental bias in ‘the
tendency to automatically bring prior knowledge to bear when solving
problems’. In the literature around this, it is often suggested that most
reasoning revolves around what is called ‘representative heuristics’
judgment, which results in a fundamental ‘belief bias’ across human
reasoning. So, it looks like humans have a tendency towards doxastic
conservatism, in that we routinely seek to confirm our existent beliefs
(even when they lead to ‘incorrect’ reasoning measured against, for
example, classical probability and so on).
1
2
This makes sense if we think that a lot of cognition is (at least to an
extent) driven by heuristics and connections at some sort of level of
representation matching, associations, and so on. More interesting
though, in relation to philosophical methodology, is the question of
whether or not philosophy solidifies this human disposition towards
doxastic conservatism (through an appeal to intuitions, etc.). In much of
philosophy, our theories are judged by a set of criteria that certainly
includes their intuitive pull, and are often decried where they are
‘counterintuitive’. But if this were the sole criterion then philosophy
would be stuck within the structure of the manifest image of the world,
formatting reality for the human subject. I’m not suggesting that this is
bound to be the case, and surely this is the starting point for much of
the impetus behind speculative realism. But I think what’s important is
that our speculation cannot just ‘leap free’ of where we are because we
run the risk of producing empirically overdetermined ontologies that are
ultimately conditioned by our intuitions and associative tendencies. Our
intuitive beliefs and semantic associations, as expressed in natural
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languages, have no cognitive authority; but this does not preclude
mechanisms that revise and extend that language, starting from such
inchoate beginnings.
My suggestion here is that we can utilise the development of formal
languages in mathematics and logic to provide mechanisms by which
we might radically revise the ‘manifest image’ precisely because of
their immanent ability to ‘suspend’ the world.
However, this is a feature of formal language that has often been
misunderstood. Meillassoux, for example, argues that the structural
nature of formal logic and mathematics furnishes his position in two
ways. Firstly, they provide a way of suspending natural language
semantics by operating only with ‘meaningless signs’ (in the sense,
presumably, that they are not interpreted by a world external to that
language). Secondly, according to Meillassoux, this structure
supposedly allows access to a reality independent of thought. In this
regard, Meillassoux looks to sit staunchly in the fairly traditional
formalist project developed by Frege and Hilbert. The origins of this
project lie in the treatment of formal language as an expressive
resource, seeking an ex ante rigour. On this view, formalization is a
process of ‘making-perspicuous’—of clearing-up and clarification. Given
this ‘[m]echanical nature of formal transformation’, the received view is
that ‘there can never be surprises in logic’.
3
4
5
I think that this picture is largely (though not entirely) incorrect. I
agree with Meillassoux’s first suggestion that formal languages need
not make explicit semantic relationships in interpreted structures—this
is to think of them in terms of pure syntax. We can understand this as a
procedurality and operativity, which we can think of in terms of a
process of ‘de-semantification’. This way of understanding the role of
formal language allows for a ‘suspension of the world’ as encoded in
representational structures. Importantly, in contrast to the traditional
view of formalism, this also means that a formal language doesn’t
merely function as an expressive device. It also provides a mechanism
by which syntactical structures can be manipulated in order to reason
6
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and construct theories without the constraints of representation. Put
like this, we can accept that formal languages concern the mechanical
manipulation of signs without interpretation, while keeping open the
notion that such mechanisms may also be creative or generative in
some sense.
7
It’s important, though, that we don’t see the developments of
formalisms in terms of either a mere ‘game of signs’, or as just
modelling actual language use, behaviours, and so on. If we think about
this in terms of the rules of logic, for example, there is a perennial
attempt to try to justify sets of inference rules (usually in natural
deduction form), through an appeal to an underlying set of behavioural
dispositions, and so on, with expressions of natural language. But if, for
example, first-order classical logic is meant to model natural language
use (or a fragment thereof), it is difficult to see how this modelling
process is going to work, given the massive discrepancies between
model and reality. For example, the inferential patterns associated with
a logical expression often operate through ‘quick and dirty’ heuristics
and associations, where thinkers may rely upon a variety of
psychological phenomena such as preferences, emotions, desires and
so on. We cannot simply ‘read off’ and model the rules of logic from the
actual use of natural language terms, since there is nothing there
substantive enough to determine the correct interpretation within that
model.
In this sense, we ought to see that such intuitions are, at best, prima
facie; and moreover, that they are plastic. This is why it has been
possible to develop an understanding of alternative logical systems
which run against certain deeply held intuitions structured within our
representational architecture. The way in which logics develop is not a
matter of ‘reading off’ rules of inference from manifest-image reasoning
processes. Rather, logics are developed within a mixture of formal and
informal reasoning processes, with informal reasoning always a moving
target. What we have in formal languages, according to the view
proposed here at least, is a machine by which our intuitions can be
suppressed, and logics can be formulated and discovered.
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In this sense, the construction of the formal rules of a logic will neither
describe how human agents actually reason, nor how we think we
should reason, and so will be necessarily procrustean. But, in this
sense, the development of a set of inference rules defining the
behaviour of a logical connective can be understood as part of the
process by which ordinary reasoning is emended, rather than merely
described. This way of putting things meshes nicely with Sellars’s
construal of the inferential rules as ‘rules of criticising’ rather than ‘rules
of doing’. On this view, a set of inference rules are taken to constitute
normative (mutable) constraints upon agents’ actual practice. Then,
through the explication of the meaning of a logical expression utilising
formal methods, it becomes possible to emend (and perhaps even
replace) the unclear patterns of behaviour with those expressions in
natural language. In other words, there will inevitably occur an interplay
between the construction of a set of formal rules that we take our
practice to be governed by, and a process of emendation and
explication of that practice. This is immensely useful since certain
features of ordinary practice will inevitably be revised and the
resources of our ordinary language expanded in their construction. By
upturning the ground of reason in transparent introspective accessibility
through its necessary exteriorization in the nonintuitive mobility of formal
languages, it then becomes possible to consider multiple modes of
navigation across the normative structures of reason.
8
In general then, I suggest that a more profitable way of
characterising the relationship between languages is to understand
formal language as a kind of quasi-transcendental machine that both
operates upon natural language, and provides a mode of creative
reasoning that is possible only by way of a necessary suspension of
the world. This position is close to that developed by the second-wave
externalist conception of the technology of language. Language, for
one of the originators of this position, Andy Clark, is the ultimate
artefact, evolving in symbiosis with human cognition: ‘language as a
computational transformer that allows pattern-completing brains to
tackle otherwise intractable classes of cognitive problems’. In contrast
to an internal ‘language of thought’, Clark asserts a linguistic framework
9
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which functions as external scaffolding, extended memory, and a
coordination of activity via extra control loops through brain-body-world.
For Clark’s active externalism, a great many cognitive processes are
external to the brain; ‘the real physical environment of printed words
and symbols allows us to search, store, sequence, and reorganise
data in ways alien to the onboard repertoire of the biological brain’.
10
In this sense, the way in which syntactical operations can be
performed within formal languages is inherently machinic, since it
makes immanent a set of cognitive operations that can be performed
by a machine. This sense in which formal languages serve to suspend
the world can be made more precise by considering that, in allowing
signs to be manipulated without interpretation, we have a process
through which doxastic conservatism is combatted. That is, the
mechanical manipulation of syntax counterbalances ‘belief bias’ by
suspending interference from external information such as prior
doxastic and emotional states. Hence it is precisely through the
blocking of our prior beliefs (i.e. the suspension of the world) that
creative processes of deduction and reasoning become possible.
Consider, as an example, the development of non-Euclidean
geometry. Mathematics until around the mid-nineteenth century was,
for the most part, governed by intuitive or empirical considerations, for
which formal language was employed in its traditional role of
organisation and clarification. Euclidean geometry, until the nineteenth
century, was taken to be the best description of physical space, and
non-Euclidean axioms, while they were studied, were taken to be
articles of fiction. What is of particular interest in their development is
that the use of formal mathematical languages to investigate nonEuclidean axioms was developed in the hope of proving them wrong by
proving Euclid’s fifth postulate. So, for example, Beltrami’s and Klein’s
work on models for non-Euclidean geometries are motivated in this
sense, from within the intuitive space of Euclidean geometry. The
failure of this project to prove the incorrectness of non-Euclidean
geometry goes hand-in-hand with the increased formalization of the
mathematical project in the work of Poincaré and Hilbert, whose work
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takes a formal language to apply over any system of objects that
satisfy the specified axioms. It is precisely in so far as geometry is
released from the constraints of spatial intuitions that it becomes
capable of discovering non-Euclidean systems.
11
In this way, the nonintuitive mobility of formal language can be
understood to have a quasi-transcendental autonomy vis-à-vis
phenomenal intuition and the structure of representation. But, given the
way in which formal languages function in relation to natural language,
this at the same time forecloses the suggestion that those languages in
some sense have transparent access to a reality beyond thought. In
other words, we have a precise means by which doxastic structures
can be suspended, not in the service of metaphysical speculation that
understands mathematics and logics to index a plane of immanence or
Platonic realm, but in that of a ratiocination free from the constraints of
human experience. Moreover, the motor of creativity here is the logic of
discovery within the mechanical manipulation of syntactical and
axiomatic structures, rather than metaphysical speculation drawn from
intuitions regarding chaos, contingency, or absolutes—it is precisely the
suspension of such intuition by mechanisms that is the wellspring of
creativity.
1. See the work of C. Dutilh Novaes, e.g. Formal Languages in Logic: A Philosophical and
Cognitive Analysis, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012).
2. See K. Stanovich, What Intelligence Tests Miss: The Psychology of Rational Thought (New
Haven, CT: Yale University Press). This is seen in matching biases (P. Wason and J. Evans,
‘Dual Processes in Reasoning’, Cognition 3:2 [1975], 141–54); and deductive biases (D.
Kahneman and A. Tversky, ‘The Psychology of Preferences’, Scientific American 246 [1982],
160–73). The latter are exemplified by the now infamous ‘Linda problem’ (Ibid.).
3. Q. Meillassoux, ‘Iteration, Reiteration, Repetition: A Speculative Analysis of the Meaningless
Sign’, in A. Avanessian and S Malik (eds.), Genealogies of Speculation: Materialism and
Subjectivity Since Structuralism, (London: Bloomsbury, forthcoming).
4. L. Wittgenstein, Tractatus 6.126.
5. Ibid., 6.1251.
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
P. 70
6. S. Krämer, ‘Writing, Notational Iconicity, Calculus: On Writing as a Cultural Technique’, in
Modern Languages Notes 118:3 (2003), further developed in Dutilh Novaes, Formal Languages.
‘A fissure of “operation” and “construction” on the one hand, and “interpretation” and
“understanding” on the other, is positioned in such a way that the specifically mechanical,
technical aspects of the symbolic cultural practices emerge’ (Krämer 2003, 531).
7. ‘The rules of calculus apply exclusively to the syntactic shape of written signs, not to their
meaning: thus one can calculate with the sign “0” long before it has been decided if its object of
reference, the zero, is a number, in other words, before an interpretation for the numeral “0”—
the cardinal number of empty sets—has been found that is mathematically consistent.’ (Krämer,
‘Writing, Notational Iconicity, Calculus’, 532).
8. W. Sellars, ‘Empiricism and the Philosophy of Mind’, in H. Feigl and M. Scriven (eds.),
Minnesota Studies in The Philosophy of Science, Vol. I: The Foundations of Science and the
Concepts of Psychology and Psychoanalysis (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press,
1956), 253–329.
9. A. Clark, Being There: Putting Brain, Body, and World Together Again (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 1998), 194.
10. Ibid., 207.
11. For further elaboration on the historical scenario, see A. Coffa, ‘From Geometry to Tolerance:
Sources of Conventionalism in Nineteenth-Century Geometry’, in R. Colodny (ed.), From Quarks
to Quasars: Philosophical Problems of Modern Physics (Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh University
Press, 1986), 3–70.
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Alex Williams
The Politics of Abstraction
What is at stake in posing the question of the aesthetic today, in light of
shifts in recent philosophy towards both the speculative and the realist?
Putting aside entirely legitimate concerns about the validity of such a
substantive object as ‘speculative realism’ as school of thought or
movement, and considering it instead as a moment or event reorienting
thought within contemporary Continental philosophy in light of ideas of
speculation on the one hand and realism on the other, how does this in
turn recontextualise our understanding of aesthetics? If there is to be a
positive upshot to such a conjuncture, it is surely to return us to the
problem of representation. Into this mixture I want to throw an
additional set of concerns. In essence, this is the question of a
speculative aesthetics of the sociopolitical. Many of the political crises
we are faced with are grounded in the problem of the abstraction,
complexity, and multiscalarity of the social—and in the difficulty we face
in adequately representing it. One way we could think about these
issues is through a development of Fredric Jameson’s notion of
cognitive mapping. This would involve investigating the ways in which
humans can marshal and master complex, abstract systems through
representational interfaces, control centres, and quantitative modelling.
1
2
3
I’m going to take a distinct but complementary approach, and try to
outline the broader meaning of sociopolitical abstraction. As we will
see, the term ‘abstraction’ in a sociopolitical context seemingly
delineates at least two notions—broadly speaking, abstract
phenomena emerging from material systems and processes, versus
the real causal effects upon material systems and processes of our
abstract representations. The key questions here are: Is Capitalism the
only engine of abstraction, or is it merely one driver among many? Is it
enough to oppose dangerous abstractions with ideology critique, or is
the plane of the abstract itself a battlefield upon which we ought to set
in play new abstractions of our own? If our age is one of increasing
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abstraction from our lived experience, is this something to be overcome
—or, alternatively, to be embraced?
Firstly I’m going to talk about the political context for this question of
abstraction. Many of the most pressing political issues of today’s world
pose the problem of seemingly intractable alienation from our everyday,
on-the-ground, lived experience—in particular, problems such as global
climate change, economic crisis, and indeed the question of how to
supplant capitalism more generally. Accompanying this alienation is a
powerlessness, whereby politics recoils in a kind of horror at the
vertigo of our abstract world. The best example of this is the rise of the
idea of ‘localism’. In the years following the financial crisis of 2008, a
fetishization of the local has emerged as a key political tenet across
the political spectrum: from far-right secessionists to the soft-right
triangulating manoeuvres of Philip Blond’s ‘Red Toryism’ and Maurice
Glasman’s ‘Blue Labour’, through to the left communism of
communization theory and neoanarchism, all partake in a new credo of
sustainable local communities, small-scale decision making, and
localised production.
4
The political economist Greg Sharzer has investigated some of the
problems with this aesthetic of localism, in terms of the economic
issues which confront a privileging of small business, ethical shopping,
local currencies, and small-scale community initiatives. Sharzer argues
that at the core of localist economic ideas is a refusal to think
systematically, to ignore structural Marxist analyses of the global
economic system in favour of an ethical and aesthetic discourse, where
small is beautiful, and moreover, virtuous. Such an economics is
ultimately incapable of challenging the very global system responsible
for generating the effects it seeks to address. Political and economic
localism is certainly damaging to politics on a practical level. But this
still leaves open the issue of how we are to think the abstractions that
it explicitly attempts to oppose or circumvent.
5
One of the most important attempts to think social abstraction is in
the Marxist tradition, in the idea of real abstraction. This concept shifts
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the notion of abstraction from being about illusion or occupying a
basically ideal register, towards the idea that abstractions can be
generated by material processes. The paradigmatic thinker of real
abstraction is Alfred Sohn-Rethel. For Sohn-Rethel, the commodity
form and value emerge as real abstractions because of actual material
spatiotemporal activities. What this means, as Alberto Toscano
clarifies, is that ‘abstraction precedes thought’. In other words, the
everyday practice of commodity exchange, rendering equivalent
incommensurate commodities, is an abstraction which occurs before
any individual or collective thought of abstraction.
6
7
Basically, on this account, real abstraction emerges from material
processes, practices, and behaviours. But there remains disagreement
among Marxians as to where real abstraction began or is presently to
be found. Sohn-Rethel locates exchange, i.e. the emergence of money,
as being the origin of real abstraction, whereas Roberto Finelli
counters that it proceeds on the basis of the reality of the labour
process under capitalism, i.e. within the sphere of production. But for
both Finelli and Sohn-Rethel, real abstractions emerge from historically
constituted practices, becoming hypostatised as abstractions, before
once again taking on a new causal efficacy. Capitalistic processes of
abstraction, embedded and emerging from real phenomena, become
self-reinforcing and dynamic, as material feedback loops act
recursively to generate entirely new domains of abstraction. The
implications for action are reasonably clear: within the capitalist reality
system, there exists no ‘real productive’ element to return to. Attempts
to reform the system from within radically misread the intrinsic nature
of the abstractions of capital. Moreover, because these abstractions
are not so much in the head as in everyday life, in capitalist practices,
mere ideology critique alone will never be sufficient to undo or
challenge them.
8
But while Marxian accounts of real abstraction have much to
recommend them, we ought to be wary of some of their more
speculative conclusions. The temptation with many accounts of real
abstraction is to shift immediately from explaining the complex
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
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dynamics of capitalism towards a rejection of abstraction in its entirety.
If the essential problem of capitalism is abstraction, and abstraction is
uniquely capitalistic, then this quickly leads, (perhaps detouring via the
Adornian critique of instrumental reason), to the fantasies of the new
localist political and economic thinkers. If abstraction is intrinsically
capitalistic, then emancipation can only come via a romantic politics
which seeks to undo modernity itself, in order to reclaim the vanished
immediacy of prelapsarian myth. Real abstraction, therefore, captures
some of the dynamics of sociopolitical abstraction, but fails to
encapsulate others. While the spatial strategies of capitalism, towards
globalization and greater integration of national markets, may partially
be explained through real abstraction, this fails to grasp other
globalized phenomena—for example, nonhuman ones, most seriously
anthropogenic global warming. At the same time, the dynamics of real
abstraction imply that sociopolitical abstraction, with its mutually
reinforcing feedback loops between ideal abstraction and real/material
systems, can also begin from the side of representation, as well as
from practice.
9
10
What does it mean to think the causal impacts of representative
abstraction from within a realist perspective? The starting point for a
realist ontology ought to be minimally that the world has a reality
independent of our thinking of it. In the case of social ontology then, as
Manuel DeLanda has argued, social entities such as cities, nations, and
communities would disappear were it not for the minds of the humans
which constitute them. As such, to be a realist here is simply to say
that the social may in fact be other than our representations of it—that
our representations might be wrong. But this is not to say that such
representations are incapable of having effects. The slippery reflexivity
of the social means that representations, even ones that fail to grasp
anything real at all about the social world, can, if properly embodied in
material processes, become enormously efficacious. For example, the
role played by DSGE economic theories in establishing an environment
in which our present economic crisis could occur has been widely
noted. To admit this is not to slide into the mire of a postmodern social
constructivism, which would be to erase or obviate the real in favour of
11
12
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an absolute determination of the social by our representations—in our
current example, to claim that, because of the social dominance of
DSGE theories throughout the neoliberal world, markets really did
always equilibrate. The reality is more complex. The causal efficacy of
DSGE economics was only made possible by its embedding within
material social structures—university economics departments,
thinktanks and central banks. The abstraction of DSGE theories,
embedded and implemented through such institutionalisation,
established a hegemonic framework in which financial actors could
readily engage in the most risk-taking practices to maximise
profitability.
It may be argued that such abstractions are not in themselves
causally efficacious, raising the question of nominalism, i.e. the claim
that abstract objects do not have ontological reality. In a sense,
however, the power of abstractions within the social field is distinct
from the domain of the natural sciences, or mathematics. This is
because, since the field is determined (at least in part) by human
collective behaviour, it is amenable to influence by the kinds of
representations that humans hold to be correct. Which means that,
while it is true that such abstractions have no causal power on their
own account, once they are coupled to human beings and the
institutions they create, they are capable of contouring the manner in
which human action operates. Another line of nominalist attack might
be that, in this case, it matters little what the abstraction itself actually
is (i.e. the structure or content of the concepts), and hence that, while
it is necessary that there be an abstract entity, it has no effect of its
own, as its specificity is irrelevant. But this ignores the history of ideas,
and the specific interactions or resonances between the conceptual
and the causal which lead certain abstractions to be favoured over
others.
13
Here, then, we find a mirror image of the Marxian real wherein
representations have real effects when mediated through human
behaviour, institutions, technologies, and so on. We have abstractions
which arise from real material systems, as well as abstractions which
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have real effects on such systems. But there is also perhaps a third
kind of abstraction, that which arises from the physical and cognitive
limitations of the human, emerging from the play of local and global.
Why is it that locality exists at all? We begin with the physical
constraints of the human body. Existing only at a determinate scale, the
ability of humans, without the addition of technological prostheses, to
intervene in the world around them is distinctly limited. A physical
scaling structure of nested localities immediately emerges as soon as
human society spreads beyond the reach of an individual’s immediate
senses and limbs. Such scaling also clearly relates to human cognitive
capacity. A good example of this is the existence of Dunbar’s number—
the finding that approximately 150 people is the limit for a transparent
unmediated social assemblage. Dunbar’s number appears throughout
social forms (from class sizes in schools to tribe numbers, and battle
groups in militaries). Beyond Dunbar’s number, and outside the
spatiotemporal locality implied by the body, abstraction necessarily
begins. In this sense, then, we can conceive of certain forms of
sociopolitical abstraction as being relational, the necessary effect of
mediation generated by the physical and cognitive limitations of human
anatomy. Our relation to an entity such as climate change, for example,
is largely the result of our inability to effectively cognize it outside of
technologically mediated models.
14
15
A question now arises as to the mind independence of globality and
locality as such. In other words, of locality-globality in-itself, or the
ground of the abstract in its maximal genericity. What is the most
general relationship of the local horizon towards its global or universal
container? If abstraction is, in a sense, about a transit between the
local and the more generic terrains of the global, what can we learn
about the manner in which such traversals may be conducted? Here
the most recent work of Reza Negarestani is informative. Working from
a basis informed by developments in contemporary mathematics, as
well as the pragmaticism of C. S. Peirce and the geometrically inspired
philosophy of science of Longo, Mazzola, and Châtelet, Negarestani’s
thinking on the relation between the global and the local begins with the
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
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idea of the continuum. Rooted in Peirce’s synthetic conception, the
continuum is theorised as being an absolutely general concept,
obtaining an absolute primacy over individual local instantiations. This is
a concept of an absolute continuum in a sense beyond even that
delineated by Georg Cantor, a ‘general whole which cannot be
analytically reconstructed by an internal sum of points’. It is within the
continuum that global and local properties are entangled. What Peirce
terms ‘secondness’, actual existence or determination, is produced via
breaks or cuts in the continuum, enabling the marking of differences to
become possible.
16
17
Negarestani follows Peirce in considering the relationship between
regional, localised horizons of the universal of the continuum in terms of
‘cut-outs’. Because all localities are cut from the cloth of the continuum,
regional interiors need to be considered as indefinite in nature, blurry
and fundamentally existing in a state of fusion, open both to other
localities, and remaining in relation to the global of the continuum.
Exteriority, therefore, always maintains multiple pathways by which it
might enter an interiorized horizon. These potential pathways by which
the exterior and more global can erupt into the local are considered to
be vectors of trauma—as Negarestani puts it, a piercing ‘from multiple
points of view, and nesting; it does not amputate, but transplants’.
Hence the Negarestanian injunction, or ‘eleventh commandment’, to
ramify every pathway, to explore the interconnections or addresses
existing between localities and more global topological structures.
What this kind of navigational rationalist account of the global and the
local points out is that neither the local or the global is primary over the
other; rather they are mutually bound up with one another, and there is
always potential for perforation, and possibilities for transplantation or
transition.
18
19
20
By way of concluding remarks, it is clear that abstraction is a
necessary consequence of complexity (on a formal or social level). The
nested structure of multiply-embedded localities, as well as mediational
political or economic structures, are the price that human social
systems pay for the benefits accrued through increasingly complex
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
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societal structures. As such, attempts to evade or otherwise obviate
abstraction appear fated to failure. Deleterious social abstractions,
such as those trafficked by neoliberal capitalism, cannot be destroyed
through ideology critique alone, given their grounding in everyday
practice. If abstraction is more than simply an effect of capitalistic
systems, structures, and processes, being instead the very substance
of modernity, we ought to disabuse ourselves of all notions of
prelapsarian return to an intrinsically tractable world of organic
wholeness. In its place, we must arrive at a coming to terms with
abstraction itself. This is to say that a new politics, and indeed a new
aesthetics, must aim towards an overcoming of the negative
relationship to processes of alienation which are simply the indicative
hallmark of our increasing ability to transcend the limits imposed on us
by our evolutionary heritage.
1. For an appropriately unequivocal dismissal of ‘speculative realism’-as-movement, see R.
Brassier, ‘I Am a Nihilist Because I Still Believe in Truth. (Interview with Marcin Rychter)’, Kronos,
2011, http://www.kronos.org.pl/index.php?23151,896; and Brassier’s postscript to Peter
Wolfendale’s Object-Oriented Philosophy (Falmouth: Urbanomic, 2014).
2. F. Jameson, ‘Cognitive Mapping’ in Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture (Urbana, IL:
University of Illinois Press, 1988), 347–57.
3. In this regard the recent work of Nick Srnicek is exemplary.
4. P. Blond, Red Tory: How Left and Right Have Broken Britain and How We Can Fix It (London:
Faber & Faber, 2010); A. Finlayson, Making Sense of Maurice Glasman (London: Renewal,
2011); B. Noys (ed.), Communization and its Discontents (New York: Autonomedia, 2011).
5. G. Sharzer, No Local: Why Small-Scale Alternatives Won’t Change The World (Winchester:
Zero, 2012).
6. A. Sohn-Rethel, Intellectual and Manual Labour: A Critique of Epistemology (Atlantic
Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1977), 21.
7. A. Toscano, ‘The Open Secret of Real Abstraction’, Rethinking Marxism 20:2 (2008), 280. It is
interesting to note here the similarity between this account of real abstraction and Bailly and
Longo’s theorisation of the gestural origins of mathematics in predatory eye tracking trajectories.
See F. Bailly and G. Longo, Mathematics and the Natural Sciences: The Physical Singularity of
Life (London: Imperial College Press, 2010), 68.
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
P. 80
8. R. Finelli, ‘Abstraction Versus Contradiction: Observations on Chris Arthur’s The New
Dialectic and Marx’s “Capital”’, Historical Materialism 15:2 (2007): 61–74.
9. T. Adorno and M. Horkheimer, Dialectic of Enlightenment (London and New York: Verso, 1997).
10.
N.
Pepperell,
‘Beyond
the
Exchange
http://uncomfortablescience.org/2011/08/19/beyond-the-exchange-abstraction/.
Abstraction’,
11. M. DeLanda, A New Philosophy of Society: Assemblage Theory and Social Complexity
(London; New York: Continuum, 2006), 1–2.
12. DSGE stands for Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibirum theory. For a thoroughgoing
critique of this field of economics, see S. Keen, Debunking Economics—Revised and Expanded
Edition: The Naked Emperor Dethroned? (London: Zed Books, 2011).
13. For an overview of the myriad approaches to nominalist problems, see D. M. Armstrong,
Nominalism and Realism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980). For an account
specifically of nominalist issues associated with abstract entities see A. Hazen, ‘Nominalism and
Abstract Entities’, Analysis 45:1 (1985), 65–8.
14. R. I. M. Dunbar, ‘Neocortex Size as a Constraint on Group Size in Primates’, Journal of
Human Evolution 22:6 (1992): 469–93.
15. For a recent take on the ‘becoming topological’ of human societies in the wake of
abstractifying technologies such as network science and economic modelling, as well as the
recent explosion in topological ideas in philosophy and social theory more generally, see C. Lury,
L. Parisi and T. Terranova, ‘Introduction: The Becoming Topological of Culture’, Theory, Culture &
Society 29:4–5 (2012): 3–35.
16. R. Negarestani, ‘Globe of Revolution’, Identities 17 (2011), 25–54.
17. F. Zalamea, ‘Peirce’s Continuum: A Methodological and Mathematical Approach’ (2001),
http://acervopeirceano.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Zalamea-Peirces-Continuum.pdf, 7–8.
18. Negarestani, ‘Globe of Revolution’, 25–7.
19. Ibid., 30.
20. R. Negarestani, ‘Abducting the Outside’ (Public lecture, Miguel Abreu Gallery, New York,
2012).
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Ray Brassier
Prometheanism and Real Abstraction
There are lot of materials here to try and synthesize; I’ll just try to talk
about a couple of things, and to pick out what I take to be the decisive
factors in Nick’s, James’s and Alex’s presentations.
First of all, Nick’s distinction between epistemic and political
accelerationism is absolutely crucial. Making this distinction allows us
to understand the core issue of acceleration and to frame the problems
of accelerationism correctly. The problem of acceleration has both an
epistemic and a political aspect, and it’s tied to this issue of
abstraction: to the epistemic status of abstraction on the one hand, and
to the political valences of abstraction on the other. So, I agree that the
question is how these two can be articulated.
Now this is also tied, I think, to the emphasis on navigation that Nick
indicated. That is, to understand the coordination of epistemic and
political abstraction is to understand how representation functions; and
this is to see representation from a naturalistic perspective as well as
in terms of what humans have in common with other animals—in other
words, we have a whole set of cognitive capacities that are basically a
navigational system. That the problem of thinking is tied to the problem
of movement is a very interesting hypothesis: you need to have a brain
because you need to be able to move.
Here it’s important to distinguish conceptual function from
representational function. Now, conceptual function is inferentially
articulated, whereas representational function is basically a mapping
function. And mapping is about navigation. The prospect of achieving a
stereoscopic synthesis of the so-called manifest and scientific images
is really about integrating conceptual function with representational
mapping. Now, both of these are practices—they are both forms of
knowhow. Knowing how to connect, combine, and dissociate concepts
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is a kind of knowhow, it’s a cognitive skill that human beings acquire by
being inducted into the cultural dimension. By way of contrast,
representational function is straightforwardly biologically determined on
some level. So achieving an integrated understanding of these two
aspects would require explaining how conceptual function can augment
or amplify navigational capacity.
In other words, the suggestion is that concepts can facilitate the
production of fine-grained mappings of reality. This is what I think
Wilfrid Sellars means when he talks about the stereoscopic synthesis
or fusion of images: the ideal end of cognitive inquiry consists in a
fusion of theoretical and practical knowledge in which our theoretical
understanding allows us to realise all our practical goals and purposes.
This would be the point at which the distinction between theory and
practice is dissolved.
Now, the key thing, I think, is the question of social construction,
because both conceptual function and representational function are
embedded in a sociocultural context. So in order for this stereoscopic
integration of the manifest and the scientific, the theoretical and the
practical, to be achieved, we must understand how each can be
virtuously injected into the other.
This is a speculative proposal, but I think there is a clear tie here to
the legacy of the Enlightenment, in so far as enlightenment is
understood as the achievement of autonomy, which is to say, selfdetermination through rational self-governance. So, in other words, the
stereoscopic integration of theory and practice, or of truth and
goodness, can only be achieved through a project of collective selfmastery. When human beings have understood themselves—including
their biological inheritance and their physical constraints—sufficiently
well to be able to refashion themselves, they can refashion the world to
make it amenable to rational ends.
This, I think, is the most philosophically significant component of the
Marxian legacy: its insistence on the need for the material realization of
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
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the Promethean prospects opened up by the Enlightenment. I take it
that this also underlies Marx’s claim about what is distinctive in human
species-being: human beings have this unique capacity to transform
themselves and their world because of the fundamentally social nature
of human existence.
Now, any attempt to expand both the cognitive and the political
ramifications of the mapping function will require a fuller understanding
of the political debilities that afflict much contemporary left theorizing.
For instance, Jameson’s emphasis on cognitive mapping seems to be
dissociated from any kind of practical political consequence beyond
that of critique. The critical task is to produce cognitive maps of
capitalist reality which will provide traction on the real abstractions
dominating every aspect of contemporary existence. This is certainly
valuable, but it does not seem to be tied to any kind of political
practice. Mapping for the purposes of critique alone is not going to help
you overcome capitalism.
This disjunction between critical theory and political practice is
paralysing. I think there is a long story to tell about how it has come
about, and I think that Jameson here is the inheritor of something that
arguably originates with Lukács. My suggestion is that, given that
Marxism is about achieving the integrated fusion of theory and practice,
of understanding and transformation, it is imperative that we reengage
with a hundred and fifty years’ worth of cognitive development in
physics, biology, cognitive science, etc. And here I think James’s
account of doxastic conservatism is related to the way in which
conceptual functions take conceivability as constraint, and are limited
by some combination of bio-socio-cultural functioning. So I take James
to be pushing forward with the project of epistemic acceleration.
Philosophical blindspots constrain conceptual possibility, and this
constraint on conceptual possibility has political consequences.
Now interestingly, what is controversial about this is finding a way of
rooting conceptual practice in social practice without simply identifying
the former with the latter. A straightforward criticism of this move is the
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claim that conceptual norms are overdetermined or constrained by
sociocultural norms. I think there is a way to overcome this kind of
objection, but doing so requires a theory of function that dissociates
conceptual function from representational function: conceptual function
involves a certain plasticity because it is equipped with a kind of inbuilt
machinery for self-revision.
This kind of conceptual revision becomes the condition for practical
revision, for the coordination of means and ends. Because if one
refashions one’s understanding of the space of conceivability, this has
obvious ramifications for how one understands what is possible, and
for what one can actually achieve in a given practical situation.
A few concluding remarks about abstraction: The key thing is to
understand the distinction between the abstract and concrete
methodologically rather than metaphysically, and I think this is precisely
what will prevent, for instance, the Marxist theorization of social
abstraction from lapsing into a kind of nostalgia for a prelapsarian unity
before social relations became mediated by abstract forms. The notion
that human means and ends will only be harmoniously coordinated
once reembedded in an organic community uncontaminated by
abstraction is a neo-Aristotelian fantasy that afflicts too many Marxists.
By the way, I think Alberto Toscano’s recent work on real abstraction is
really very important here. It’s an attempt to understand how epistemic
and political abstraction might be articulated from a Marxist
perspective.
1
It’s also important to avoid giving a circular definition of real
abstraction by explaining the reality of abstraction in terms of its causal
efficacy, while defining causal efficacy as whatever makes a difference
in reality. This is not a very helpful explanation of what constitutes the
reality of abstraction. Once this is understood, one realizes that there
is nothing one can invoke as any kind of infallible index of the difference
between the concrete and the abstract. This is the whole point of
Sellars’s critique of the given. Once you have dispensed with the idea
of the given, you realise that nothing is either abstract or concrete in
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P. 86
itself: there is no metaphysical fulcrum for this distinction. Even at the
level of perception, no immediate experience would provide you with a
litmus test for distinguishing the two. Concrete immediacy is constituted
through abstract form. In this regard, alienation can be understood as
the constitutive fissure of self-estrangement through which sensation is
conditioned by conception. Understood in this way, alienation is
constitutive of rational agency and hence the condition of freedom. So
there’s a sense in which alienation can be understood as an enabling
condition for the achievement of collective self-mastery and
refashioning which I take to be constitutive of Prometheanism. There is
no going back to some allegedly originary state of organic immediacy.
To be rational is to have always already been expelled from the state
of nature. This is basically to ratify the realization of abstraction as a
kind of research programme.
Unless Marxism reasserts its commitment to Prometheanism, and to
the transformative power of conceptual rationality, the result will be a
politics of fear masquerading as a politics of emancipation. It is quite
striking to observe the extent to which the contemporary Left is
paralysed by fear of the future. A hundred years ago, it was the Left
that laid claim to the future, whereas the Right wanted to return to or
reestablish the past. Now the situation seems to have been reversed,
and what’s striking about the kind of abject terror sparked by
evocations of ecological catastrophe is that it is politically paralysing.
But you cannot have an emancipatory politics rooted in fear, because
freedom from fear is the precondition of emancipation. The politics of
fear is ultimately the politics of reaction, of self-preservation at all
costs. But a species whose only concern is its own perpetuation does
not deserve to exist. If the best we can hope for is just our own
perpetuation then there is no reason to perpetuate ourselves.
What are the implications of all this for aesthetics? Well, perhaps it’s
not so much a question of pitting the conceptual against the aesthetic,
or concepts against affects, but of developing a conception of
aesthetics which is not exclusively governed by either: one dedicated to
reconstructing sensation on the basis of new modes of
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conceptualization. A Promethean constructivism will engineer new
domains of experience, and it is these new domains that will need to be
mapped by a reconfigured aesthetics.
1. See e.g. A. Toscano, ‘The Culture of Abstraction’, Theory, Culture and Society 25:4 (2008),
57–75; ‘The Open Secret of Real Abstraction’, Rethinking Marxism 20:2 (2008), 273–87.
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Discussion
ALEX WILLIAMS: I find this very interesting, the idea James puts forward
of formal languages being a kind of technology, a technology which isn’t
just a way of organising intuitions about the world, but instead has the
potential to surprise us. Things could come out of them which are not
simply reducible to the input, in the sense that you can learn from them,
and that’s really intriguing. My question, given that abstraction of some
kind seems to be at the core of this (in that it’s not just expressive of
common sense) is how are we able to form these languages in the first
place—formal languages that are not just an abstract system, are not
disconnected from the world entirely to the point of just being a game.
They have some degree of traction within the real and yet they still
have abstraction. I wondered if you could expand on this, especially
given the current currency of the ideas of philosophers such as
Giuseppe Longo, who present a story about how abstractions,
mathematics for example, get ‘into’ us from the outside.
JAMES TRAFFORD:
Yes, it’s a good question; I think it’s tricky, partly
because there is no clear methodology for approaching it. I think the
short way of thinking about this would be to suggest that you take the
‘good’ bit of grounded cognition, where you can understand conceptual
activity as essentially grounded in some sense. We can think of this as
an essentially associative structure where there is a relationship
between this and the way in which a cognitive system is in bodily
interaction with the environment through various things like gestures,
etc. But this isn’t all that there is to cognition, reasoning, and so on.
Even six-month-old children, and even rats, seem to have some sort of
generalized association relating to negation—there are a bunch of
experiments suggesting that even very young children have some sort
of abstract concept of number, for example. These processes of
cognition are all going to be pretty mundane, and, of course, we use
things like elementary language to begin to structure these associations
and to modify them in different ways—systematizing social interactions
and that kind of thing. But that’s not the whole story—this is the point of
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the account of doxastic conservatism—because we can use the
technologies of formalization to combat this, and think of it in terms of a
generative process which expands the resources of our language,
differentiates our abilities to reason, and so on. In other words, we can
develop new abilities that far surpass our initial biosocial conditioning.
For example, I think that the traditional idea that we can tether logic to
some sort of independent logical structure really holds this back by
presuming we have some kind of transparent access to semantics.
Instead, we need to think of logic in terms of rational constraints, which
are open to processes of revision and navigation, and then whatever
we understand by logical consequence and semantics is going to need
to be far more flexible.
AW: I’m also interested from the point of view of the geometric aspect
of Longo’s work: How is it that you go from some kind of bodily
movement through space, or eye-tracking, the ability of predatory
animals to track the motions of their prey, to this kind of conceptual
structure? The question is, in a crude sense, how do you transpose
from these physical gestures towards some kind of cognitive or rational
process—i.e. make the ur-abstraction or original abstraction? And
having begun such processes, how is it that the ur-abstraction is
preserved, maintained throughout (with mathematics, for example)
thousand of years of transformations and elaborations? How do you
preserve the originary abstraction?
JT : Basically, the initial processes of cognition of these things are going
to be grounded in the world in some sense. For example, something
approximating negation is going to be learnt by children, possibly as a
very basic incompatibility relationship: something can’t be both red and
green at the same time. And what happens is that you’re going to get
this introduction into representational structures or semantic structures
that are associatively conditioned by input, by the habit of these things
being triggered. But then we’re using language to systematize those
structures, to revise them, and using something like logic to construct
community-level norms.
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TOM TREVATT : I was thinking of ways of drawing this whole conversation
into the more mundane sense of the aesthetic, of art. Ray spoke a bit
about this notion of Prometheanism. There are ways of connecting that
to things Benedict was saying earlier, about the role of design; and
there’s a way in which you can think of design as being precisely, in its
original function, to do with changing the world. This is a very important
aspect of design, but also, as Benedict pointed out, within this is a
disavowed sense of design as, increasingly, designing people’s
behaviour; and even reshaping their subjectivities—are they
comfortable with this?
To bring in art, now, what’s the relation of art to a promethean
Marxism? Can it be a tool within this sort of project of remaking
ourselves, remaking the world? Or is it something to do with the
structure of art—is its resistance to a purposiveness, to instrumentality,
going to be a block to that, limiting art to being a supplement to
something supposedly more instrumental? So basically, how do we
situate art in relation to that wider project?
RAY BRASSIER:
This is where the relationship of the aesthetic to the
conceptual becomes relevant, though also problematic. Art, whatever
physical medium it’s operating in, ultimately must have some
conceptual content. It must operate conceptually on some level. Now,
you can have a sophisticated understanding of conceptualization that
does not identify conceptual content with propositional content, so this
doesn’t have to be a banal claim. For instance, if you ask: How does a
piece of music embody thinking? Obviously it can do so in an incredibly
complicated way. The fact that its conceptual content cannot be
linguistically recoded in any kind of digestible propositional form doesn’t
mean that it doesn’t have conceptual meaning. The argument to the
contrary seems to run: Here’s a piece of music which is obviously
cognitively sophisticated in terms of everything that is actually going on
in it—but how could this possibly be conceptual if by ‘conceptual’ you
mean something that can be encapsulated in propositional form? I think
this is an unnecessary simplification. Although everyday
conceptualization—whose
primary
function
is
practical
or
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communicative—uses linguistic resources, this doesn’t mean that every
thought can be straightforwardly individuated in terms of a set of
propositions. And this is as true for literary art as for music or the
plastic and performing arts. If concepts are understood in terms of
their functional role, then perhaps what distinguishes the thinking
peculiar to art consists in constructing nonpropositional functions by
making materials—linguistic, sonic, plastic, etc.—do things we don’t
expect in ways we couldn’t have anticipated. Art is the construction of
function, as opposed to the relaying of preestablished function.
By obliging you to conceptualize its nonpropositional content, art may
make you think about the status of sensation, about what hearing is or
what seeing is, and ultimately, what feeling is. So art can perform a
subversive epistemic function which feeds into Prometheanism’s
broader emancipatory agenda. It seems to me that modernism in art is
the idea that by challenging clichéd ways of perceiving, you can
encourage people to think about the way they see things, rather than
continue to see the world as it is generally accepted to be. This is to
begin to understand things differently, but also to expose the various
invisible mechanisms that condition habitual perception. This link
between cognitive subversion and emancipation is what I would like to
retain from the modernist ethos.
So I would say that art can play an emancipatory role consonant with
the Promethean imperative, but not by proclaiming this ideal in some
platitudinous sense. Promethean art need not be about
‘Prometheanism’: it can challenge our beliefs about ourselves and our
world in a way that invites us to remake both without having to
enunciate this as a propositional injunction. Art can further the
Promethean project without subordinating itself to it as an extrinsic
goal. In other words, it can be useful, but precisely by preserving its
uselessness. It is the subversion of designated function that functions
revolutionarily, not the assertion of the need for a revolutionary function.
Perhaps this is a cliché but I still believe that genuinely revolutionary art
has to be abstract in the sense of uprooting default modes of thinking
and feeling. It should challenge bourgeois epistemic norms, by which I
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mean cultural conventions stipulating what we ought to think or ought to
feel. This is not a new idea, but I want to defend it, and insist that art
uses the sensible to teach you to distrust your sensations—don’t trust
what you feel!
PETER WOLFENDALE:
There’s a Deleuzian distinction between art as
communication and art as composition which is really useful here. I
think Deleuze’s critique of the communicative use of art, where the art
is giving a message to the viewer, as fundamentally reducing art to this
sort of discursive register, is valid. But you can easily go too far in that
direction and say that therefore art cannot have any sort of conceptual
element to it. I think the important point is that, even if you view art in
terms of composition of affects and percepts, concepts are materials
of composition. You can compose with concepts.
In relation to James’s presentation, I wanted to return to the whole
logic question, and why I think Brandom can answer the kind of things
you are talking about. In Between Saying and Doing Brandom gives a
really complicated story about what logic is and how we can have
logical abilities. His basic idea is called logical expressivism, and it’s
the idea that what logic does is enable us to make explicit—it’s a tool
for making explicit what’s already implicit in what we say. This doesn’t
mean there has to be a single logic—there can be different logical
vocabularies. I think this is interesting in relation to your idea of
doxastic conservatism. What I would add is that, if you take a sort of
Sellarsian approach to semantic content—if you see the semantic
content of a nonmathematical expression as constituted by its being
involved in material inferences, then you see these material inferences
as being fundamentally, principally, non-monotonic. You can tell quite an
interesting story about what it is to be caught up in a given horizon of
possibility, because basically what you get with non-monotonic
inference is that the inference is only good as long as you accept a
whole bunch of assumptions. Another way of explaining that would be
in terms of the shift from non-monotonic frames of inference to purely
monotonic frames of inference, which is what you get in mathematics.
So that is the way I saw your talk about semantic activation and
1
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desemantification, and how this relates to logic. What I want to say to
you is, do you really resist this sort of semantic picture? Or do you
think that there’s an alternative semantic picture?
JT : To an extent I might disagree with some of this picture, though it’s
going to depend upon how it’s cashed out. One thing that’s really
important is that I don’t think that you can define the meaning of logical
terms using inferential rules if they are supposed only to explicate
underlying implicit linguistic moves. There’s a whole set of issues that
are raised within this understanding of inferentialism. These concern,
for example, the ways in which the sort of proof-theoretic
characterization of logic in Dummett is connected with anti-realism and
its emphasis on provability. Then, of course, there are issues relating to
what we say about bad inferential patterns such as the famous
example of ‘tonk’. This relates to how we understand meaning to be
defined by certain inferential roles; which roles get to count as defining
meaning, and that kind of thing. We need, for example, some way of
‘weeding out’ the inferential rules that seem like they should be kosher,
but clearly aren’t. In this sense, I think we require a very flexible
understanding of the way in which the semantics of expressions is
determined by inferential rules. I do think that this is entirely possible
though, when we move to an understanding of rules in terms of rational
constraints. Also, if we start with Gentzen’s symmetric sequents, then
there’s a clear sense in which the syntax can be seen as generative of
semantics (using a generalized form of Lindenbaum-Asser
constructions), and so, semantics is, in a sense, internal to the way in
which we construe syntactical rules, i.e. without reference to an
external reference or independent reality.
PW: It feeds into what was said about functional classification: there are
levels of functional classification of logical operators that are not so
fine-grained as to pick out an operator within a particular domain—they
don’t distinguish between classical negation and intuitionist negation.
ROBIN MACKAY:
James talked about the operations of desemantified
formal languages; then Alex talked about the fact that we can’t evade
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the task of finding some new ways to grapple with the abstractions that
surround us. The question of how desemantification, abstraction from,
let’s say, the manifest image, works has emerged as a key question.
Now, if aesthetic experience is never preconceptual, if there’s no
ultimate guarantor of the distinction between abstract and concrete,
then surely all we are dealing with is abstractions (plural) from X to Y.
Certainly as far as animal perceptual behaviour is concerned, we can
say that it already operates through abstractions (Longo; but also,
already, Bergson’s point about perception always being a subtraction
from what is given).
New abstractions can come to command and direct the substrate
from which they emerged, and even potentially modify it in an enduring
way. It would be foolish to think that any abstract model can ever
perfectly fit the reality it’s trying to grasp, and therefore there is always
a gap where novelty can slip in, there’s always a kind of grinding of the
gears in which new problems are produced, no matter how powerful
the purchase of a given abstraction may be. Surely that production of
new problems simply is the story of collective cognition.
Because whatever may take place on an individual level in terms of
the loosening and shifting of these given abstractions only becomes
truly significant when it takes place within a collective cultural context.
And it seems to me that art (institutionally understood) simply doesn’t
do this: as an experience or set of experiences, it doesn’t have a longterm relation to behavioural feedback loops or to collectivity which
would enable it to make its abstractions real. Art doesn’t do that
whereas, for example, computer games, music, popular use of
technology, and so on, certainly do—they manifestly change behaviours
and modes of thought and gesture, action. Look at smartphones,
Facebook, Twitter: the way that people interact with the world
psychologically, physiologically, is genuinely being changed. It’s not
philosophers who are doing that, and it’s not artists, it’s corporate
design and strategy, and technology. It produces real change and real,
novel problems, pathologies even. Understanding the concretizing
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processes of abstraction, the way in which they make themselves real,
is the only way one can hope to direct them in the Promethean sense
that Ray suggested. And it’s not clear how art might contribute toward
that task given its obsession with providing indeterminate ‘spaces of
reflection’.
BENEDICT SINGLETON:
My question is actually related, and is about
Prometheanism. That idea seems very important to all of you. What I
wonder is how that relates to whether there’s a sort of contradiction
between certain embodiments, cognition or whatever, versus the myth
of the given. I think it was suggested that there was some sort of
tension between the two.
RB: I don’t think there’s necessarily a tension between acknowledging
the embodied aspect of cognition and rejecting the myth of the given.
The tension can be dissolved by distinguishing between
conceptualization and representation, or thinking and mapping. The
hypothesis that brains originally developed as navigational mechanisms
suggests that the most elementary function of cognition consists in
representing the environment well enough to escape predators and
seize prey. So from a biological point of view, representation’s primary
task is to map the organism’s environment. To the extent that all
thinking developed as a function of biological locomotion, then it’s
correct to say that mapping is thought’s originary function.
But even if thinking originates in movement, it would be a genetic
fallacy to insist that all thinking is necessarily subordinated to navigation
and the plotting of trajectories in space-time. This may well be
representation’s most elemental function, but concepts are not
representations, and the concept’s role is not representational. It’s
crucial to distinguish these two aspects of cognition: the conceptual
and the representational. Concepts are individuated in terms of their
inferential role, whereas the role of representations is mapping. In one
sense, the myth of the given consists in conflating concepts with
representations, or inferential function with mapping function.
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Of course, this is not to say the two modes of functioning are wholly
disconnected. We need to study the neurobiological mechanisms that
underlie our conceptual capacities using the resources of empirical
science. But the contemporary discourse of ‘embodiment’ is not
motivated by any regard for naturalism. It’s not concerned with
understanding the neurobiological basis of cognition. Embodiment is
understood in a phenomenological register as ‘lived experience’ and
inflated into an irreducible datum, an unexplained explainer. This is
precisely what a neurobiological understanding of embodied cognition
ought to displace. There is a way of understanding the constraining role
that our biological legacy exerts upon our conceptual capacity, but it
does not consist in reducing conceptualization to representation. To do
so is to fall back into the empiricist variant of the myth of the given by
treating concepts as representations. This is also to confuse reasons
with causes. The world causes representations and representations
may cause occurrences in the world, but even if concepts supervene
on representations, they are neither caused by things nor can they be
the causes of things. We have to use concepts to understand the
neurobiological processes that underlie conceptualization. But to
identify those concepts with the processes they are being used to
investigate is to engender paradoxes which threaten science’s
epistemic integrity.
BS: I think that perhaps in the account of Prometheanism there may be
a contradiction between the articulation of conceptual structures and
lived experience, which may be related to how we can understand
abductive thinking as being a kind of going back before going forward.
RB: Yes, perhaps there is. Abduction can be understood in terms of
cognitive neurobiology because it is rooted in association. Associative
synthesis is at the heart of connectionism. There’s good reason to
believe animal representational systems are basically connectionist. I
think James mentioned the kinds of associative networks that develop
these preestablished pattern configurations to synthesize information.
Churchland says something similar in A Neurocomputational
Perspective: a prototype vector is activated as the best explanation for
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a heterogeneous perceptual input. He proposes a neurocomputational
account of abductive inference. Such inferences facilitate the sorts of
recognitional prowesses exhibited by higher organisms. But I would
insist that there is a difference in kind between the connectionist
machinery at the heart of animal representational systems, whose
operations are associative and Humean, and conceptual explanation in
the strict sense, whose functioning is inferential and Kantian. In other
words, we can explain how animals are engaged in predicting their
environment, and we know that we rely on some of these same
neurobiological resources in predicting our own environment, but we
are also able to conceptualize these resources such that they become
reflexively articulated. We are self-conscious about the ways in which
we are engaged in predicting the world, in a way in which animals
arguably are not (I don’t mean ‘self-conscious’ in a phenomenological
sense here; I just mean reflexive). So although there is a definite
continuity from sentience to sapience, there’s also a discontinuity or
phase transition: something important happens in between sea slugs
and humans—there’s a difference in the kind of cognition at issue,
rather than a mere difference in the degree of cognition, although I
realize some naturalists would want to deny this.
2
NICK SRNICEK:
Building on Ben’s comment regarding the origins of
rational thought, I want to think about how we understand the ends of
rational thought. I think there’s a huge open question here. For instance
in Reza’s work I think there’s this idea of ramifying the pathways of
conceptual consequences, and tangentially approaching a complete
picture. Sellars is right I think to highlight this normative aim of a
complete and true picture of reality, and I think that answers to the
regulative ideal of rationality. But is this aim of scientific knowledge
sufficient to underwrite political projects? I’m not sure it is. And so I
think there’s this big question about what the normative end of this stuff
might be: What is accelerationism for?
RB: But isn’t it part of the definition of acceleration that we don’t know
where it might lead? How could we anticipate its end on the basis of
our current cognitive resources? Still, I agree we must be able to
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rationally conjecture certain necessary characteristics of this end,
otherwise it collapses into an ineffable alterity, which we have no good
reason to pursue. But this is not to say we can predict it.
AW:
There is certainly an element of that in Negarestani’s idea of
navigation—the notion that there isn’t a predetermined end point or
teleological objective, but there is a certain teleodynamic directionality.
I think this is part of what Nick Srnicek and I want to extract from
Reza’s work, to help develop a kind of leftism which is distinct from
traditional Marxism—the idea that we don’t know what the ultimate end
will be, and that processes of navigation, in thought and action,
inevitably open up new horizons, horizons which may be well beyond
our present imaginings.
RM :
Isn’t acceleration to do with hooking the project of human
emancipation to the essentially psychotic project of scientific rationality
which demands that, if any path can be explored, then it must be…?
Which is not an end as such, it’s just a protocol for escape.
BS: I think this relates to something which is a nice bit of a corporate
cosmology around platforms, and how companies like Facebook and
Google actually work, which completely wrongfoots traditional business
theories, because they are not products or services.
This relates to how we understand platforms, and how the design
aspects regarding platforms relate to plot form. One of the interesting
things about platform logic is the following: take Facebook moving into
Africa—‘the next billion Facebook users’, as they are quite explicitly
calling it. Is there a rationale for it? They just know if they do that then
there will be more stuff to do. I mean, it opens up massive space of
possibility. Because they are particularly in a capitalist position they are
able to persuade other people to give them money to do it. Effectively,
that kind of platform logic seems to be something which is in line with
certain of these ideas about acceleration and so on: you build it
because then you open up further possibilities….
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AW: That’s why epistemic accelerationism is still accelerationism: there
is this psychotic element to it. It does not become reasonable. It is
rational but it does not necessarily become reasonable.
1. R. Brandom, Between Saying and Doing: Towards an Analytic Pragmatism (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2010).
2. P. M. Churchland, A Neurocomputational Perspective: The Nature of Mind and the Structure
of Science (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1989).
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Mark Fisher
Practical Eliminativism: Getting Out of
the Face, Again
I want to talk about the problems around the concept of experience.
But I’ll start with an accelerationist genealogy, starting off with the
position that many of us were oriented around in the 90s, which was
Nick Land, Landianism. This was a kind of hyper-Deleuzianism, a dark
Deleuzianism, but one which was still organised around the problem of
experience, I think, in Nick’s theory. You can trace that back to Bataille,
the kind of impossible quest to experience not only the maximally
intense, but beyond that, the quest to experience from a position where
experience itself is not possible; i.e. death, death itself as the limit.
I think one of the crucial moves of the last few years was to move
against experience, actually. Rather than pursue this kind of quest for
an impossible experience, instead to point out the contrast between the
cognitive and what can be experienced. So, as it were, death—not just
individual death, but hyper-death, and not just the unexperienceable,
but the evaporation of the very possibility of experience, via extinction
or whatever—becomes contrasted to experience as such. You can’t
experience extinction, and so we no longer worry about that….
Instead, extinction becomes a speculative and cognitive challenge.
I think this was a crucial move, but it has serious consequences for
this question of the aesthetic. Put simply, how can one have the
aesthetic without experience, at all? If the aesthetic must involve some
kind of experience, how can we think about what experience is without
relapsing into familiar theories? On the face of it, the ‘speculative turn’
has little to offer aesthetics. In some ways, the emphasis on mindindependent reality, whether in its OOO-phenomenological mode or in
Ray [Brassier]’s anti-phenomenological form, can be construed as an
anti-aestheticist move, in the sense that it is a decisive rejection of
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deconstruction’s literary poetics of indeterminacy as well as the
Deleuzian ontology of affects and intensities.
One decisive move it makes—which separates it from the
accelerationist antihumanism of Nick Land—is the rejection of what
Ray, in ‘Genre is Obsolete’, calls the ‘myth of experience’. We can
understand this in terms of the impasses of affect theory, actually.
Affect theory was quickly taken up in various discourses around the art
world. And part of the reason why Ray’s work was important is that it
really called out the way in which affect theory is used as an alibi for all
kinds of anti-propositional, anti-argumentative, anti-rational, anti-lucid
kinds of discourses. It became a kind of theoretical aestheticism, which
became really boring. The hymning of sensation, affect, etc., became
really tedious. So for me it’s an issue: if we want the aesthetic, we
must have experience in some sense; but what do we mean by
experience, now?
1
I think in some ways this rehearses the old dispute between Hume
and Kant, with Deleuzian affect theory as a form of return to Hume,
and the idea that you can have sensations that do not require a subject
as their guarantor. But what I want to suggest is some sort of return to
a Kantianism. Not to Kantian aesthetics, nor to his metaphysics and
epistemology actually, but to the crucial difference between experience
and conditions of experience.
As Ray was asking earlier, what is the value of the alienating power
of the arts in modernism? It’s an experience that makes one question
one’s own experience. And one way of putting that would be, then, that
it is an experience which confronts one with the conditions of
experience. And beyond Kant is the move from Transcendental
Idealism into Transcendental Materialism, where plasticity goes all the
way down, where the conditions of experience themselves become
subject to transformation, etc.….
The constitution of our subjectivity in everyday life is the product of
various forms of engineering and manipulation; the reality in which we
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are invited to live is constructed by PR and corporations, is a form of
libidinal informational engineering. So I think this mandates a kind of
counter-engineering practice that must be undertaken. To follow on
from Robin’s point at the end of the previous discussion, we’ve seen
massive behavioural mutations of the human population in the last
decade. But they’re turning towards banal ends, such as Facebook,
smartphones, etc. What you’re seeing are behavioural tics that have
passed through a population, i.e. looking at a screen, digital twitch, etc.
These behaviours were not in place ten to fifteen years ago; it was
impossible for them to be in place. Now they are ubiquitous.
The practical question, and it’s a schizoanalytic one, is whether that is
only possible on the basis of faciality. You’ve got a kind of
deterritorializing mutation here where, although the behaviours are quite
banal, they are nevertheless radical in terms of the addictions and
compulsions that are involved. Obviously people don’t undertake them
on the grounds that they are participating in this kind of mutational
vector. They undertake them on the grounds of folk psychology. The
brain and fingers can become this kind of libidinal assemblage only
because the mind is distracted by this pull of folk psychology. Folk
psychology is a practical kind of cultural proposition in which we live,
and I think one of the deep sadnesses, one of the miseries of the
twenty-first century, is the return of folk psychology and the depletion
of the resources of the depersonalization that culture once offered.
Much contemporary art has reached an extraordinarily decadent
pass, where a typical work is radically denuded of aesthetic texture. A
fear of content seems to have a tyrannical hold, motivating ’works’
which consist of banal discursive pre- (and post-) texts attached to
super-banal objects which, at worst, trigger neither thought nor
sensation (to expect either is, apparently, to be a vulgarian) and, at
best, indirectly invoke some mildly diverting process which led to their
construction. The justification for this kind of production seems to be a
worst-of-all-worlds mixture of post-conceptual cognitivism without
concepts (which makes aesthetic texture passé) and the postDeleuzian celebration of infinite creativity (which outlaws any negativity
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by imposing a mandatory affirmatory imperative—don’t complain!).
Yet, while contemporary art seems especially played out, it is not as
if the other cultural zones which had in recent years superseded visual
art as the leading edge of cultural experimentalism are immune from
the processes of inertia which have reduced contemporary art to an
anxious vacuum. There have been no significant transformations in
electronic music for about a decade, and the best we have come to
expect is minor incremental shifts and sophisticated pastiche rather
than any new sounds and/or sensations.
Meanwhile, mainstream culture has become increasingly reduced to
folk psychological interiority. Whether it’s reality tv or social networks,
people have been captured/captivated by their own reflections. It’s all
done with mirrors. The various attacks on the subject in theory have
done nothing to resist the super-personalization of contemporary
culture. Identitarianism rules. Queer theory might reign in the academy,
but it has done nothing to halt the depressing return of gender
normativity in popular culture and everyday life. Elements of ‘leftist’
politics not only collude in, but actively organise this rampant
identitarianism, corralling groups into ’communities’ defined according to
the categories of power: a Foucauldian dystopia.
So instead of this thing about dancing and games, that Robin talked
about, instead of that, increasingly cultural time is taken up with forms
which, at the psychological level, mirror people back to themselves in
the most banal possible kind of manifest image. The question now is
whether a certain kind of defacialization can be recovered—whether a
practical, not merely theoretical, eliminativist project can be resumed,
and whether we can start getting out of our faces again.
1. R. Brassier, ‘Genre is Obsolete’, in Multitudes 28 (Spring 2007).
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Robin Mackay
Neo-Thalassa: A Fantasia on a Fantasia
Sándor Ferenczi’s Thalassa, written in 1924 but based on ideas dating
from 1915–1920, is really a very peculiar book, described by the
author himself as the result of a strictly inadmissible synthesis of
‘natural science and mental science’. Its subtitle positions it as ‘A
Theory of Genitality’—that is, it presents an alternative account to
Freud’s own of how polymorphic, disorganised libidinal drives become
invested in the genital organs and thus aligned with the exigencies of
organic reproduction. How do unformed blind inorganic forces disposed
to perversity become integrated into and harnessed for the interests of
the organism? What kind of libidinal investments and psychic processes
correspond to this process of maturation? Freud’s 1905 Three Essays
gave an account of this process, whose ineluctable completion will
ultimately ensure the dominance of the ‘end-pleasure’ act of coitus—the
‘definite normal form’ of sexuality, the ‘new order of things’ in which
‘[t]he sexual impulse now enters into the service of the function of
propagation’. This is both the end of the path of sexual development
and the successful delivery of the adult from diverse and perverse
‘forepleasures’ to the reflex act of coitus. In short it is a question of
how psychic life adapts itself to organic life, rebinding contingent
pleasures to healthy organic function (a process interruptions of which
psychoanalysis aims to correct).
1
2
Ferenczi’s primary innovation in Thalassa is to extend this analysis to
the peculiar character of the act of copulation. This is an entertainingly
bizarre project in itself, but has a bearing on speculative aesthetics
through the theory of symbolism that emerges along the way.
In its first stage Ferenczi’s analysis supplements Freud’s account of
sexual development with the observation that the sexual act itself
seems to comprise a combination of the ‘evacuatory and inhibitory’
(‘urethral’ and ‘anal’): the act itself expresses an indecision between
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these two basic tendencies, and, as Ferenczi hears from his patients,
failure to successfully resolve their duality results in ‘a kind of genital
stuttering’ (ejaculation praecox or ejaculation retardata). This
amphimixis of erotisms, existing already in pregenital organization as
the mutual adaptation of hedonism and renunciation, furnishes the clue
for understanding the process of the ‘establishing of genital primacy’.
With the latter, warring instinct-components are amphimictically
subsumed under an ‘executive manager’ responsible for periodically
discharging tension ‘on behalf of the whole organism’; meaning that the
phallus, also, becomes a representative of the ego.
3
Guided by dream symbolism, Ferenczi reads sexual development in
terms of the postulation of a ‘continuous regressive trend toward the
reestablishment of the intrauterine situation’—the famous ‘back to the
womb’ theory. Whereas the reality principle, of course, is only attained
in renouncing such desires, Ferenczi insists on an ‘erotic reality sense’
that consists in its hallucinatory fulfilment. There is a threefold
identification and gratification at stake in this fulfilment which involves a
kind of relay between levels: as the sexual secretion closes the
biological circle of reproduction, actually ‘returning’ to the womb, the
genital organ—invested as a synecdoche for the organism as a whole
—physically discharges the tension of the body; and the whole psyche,
with the organism having appointed the genital as the executive agent
to drain off its stress, in a hallucinatory way returns, in fantasy, to a
harmonious prenatal state of rest.
4
Ferenczi’s claim that perigenesis recapitulates phylogeny (that the
prenatal environment of the individual preserves the postnatal
environment of its evolutionary forebears) is obviously a variant of the
notion that ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny (that, in the maturation of
any individual of the species, we find compacted all of the stages of its
evolutionary development). There can be few theories more
comprehensively refuted by twentieth-century advances in biology than
this notion, Ernst Haeckel’s ‘recapitulation theory’ or ‘biogenetic law’,
routinely denounced as a product of pseudomorphism and wishful (and
sometimes downright contradictory) thinking. In Stephen Jay Gould’s
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P. 109
encyclopaedic historical survey of the origins, uses and misuses of
recapitulation theory, Thalassa, ‘the boldest application of
psychoanalysis that was ever attempted’ according to Freud, trumps
even the latter’s lifelong devotion to Haeckel’s biogenetic law and its
flowering in his late speculative works. Although relatively harmless
compared to some of the dubious political causes into which
recapitulationism was pressed, Thalassa’s egregious psychoanalytical
fantasia holds pride of place for raising the theory to absurd
speculative heights.
5
And indeed Ferenczi now goes further with the theme of amphimixis,
connecting the frictional movements of coitus with ‘autotomy’—the
mechanism by which certain animals can simply detach parts of their
body, as a lizard leaves its tail behind when pursued. Phylogenetically,
he argues, anal-urethral amphimixis can be traced back to a more
fundamental conflict between a desire to physically detach (in order to
cast off ‘unpleasure’) and a desire to retain organic unity—a kind of
archetypal itching. Erection is incomplete autotomy, a ‘striving to
extrude’ the unpleasure of tension from the body, enacted ludically in
coitus and cut short by the vicarious ‘detachment’ of the sexual
secretion.
This is not even like the old crude joke among men, apropos of
l’origine du monde, that ‘I was born from there and I’ve spent my entire
adult life trying to get back there’; not even the idea that at the moment
of orgasm the individual absents itself and returns to the circle of
natural reproduction, becoming momentarily nothing but a member of
the species. No, given Ferenczi’s insistence on recapitulationalism,
desire for the prenatal state is ultimately a yearning for the stage of
evolution prior to the ascent onto land; in other words, the peculiar
nature of coitus is understood ultimately as a repercussion of
phylogenetic trauma. So the contention is that in coitus the intense
investment of libidinal energy in the genital organ aims at casting off the
itchy libidinal representative, which would symbolically swim back to the
Precambrian, playing an executive managerial role by taking the whole
organism’s pent-up stress with it!
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Thus is revealed the ultimate sense of a fourfold parallelism between
evolutionary history, biological reproduction, physical individuation, and
psychic fantasy life, as they momentarily enter into alignment. An
overdetermination combines the hallucinatory return to the intrauterine
situation and the replaying of the anxiety and rage generated at birth—
psychic echoes of ontogenetic echoes of phylogenetic traumata. In
pursuing an ‘extremely general biological tendency which lures the
organism to a return to the state of rest enjoyed before birth’, the
organism at once finds a balm for its congenital woes…and ensures
their perpetuity in its offspring. Through some ruse of evolutionary
history, the phylogenetically-inherited frustration of being expelled from
the beatific oceanic element is ‘worked through’ in the ontogenetic act!
6
What profit could there possibly be in attending to such an obsolete
and frankly embarrassing theoretical misadventure? As I said, I’d like
to draw attention to a theory of symbolism that Ferenczi sketches out
in passing:
Should our hypothesis some day be verified, it would in turn operate to clarify the mode of
origin of symbols in general. Genuine symbols would then acquire the value of historic
monuments, they would be the historical precursors of current modes of activity and
memory vestiges to which one remains prone to regress physically and mentally.
A ‘genuine symbol’, then, is the product of neither imagination nor
intellection, but a kind of encrypted artefact of material history. In
insisting, remarkably, that ‘the sea is not the symbol of the mother. The
mother is a symbol of the sea’, Ferenczi indicates a mechanism for the
formation of symbols that doesn’t pass primarily by way of human
imagination: the link between symbol and symbolised is not secured by
the interpretive mind; rather the symbolic relation and the interpreter
capable of cognizing that relation are produced alongside each other
as secondary symptoms or repercussions of another real relation.
What is inaugurated here is the possibility of a naturalized account of
the production of aesthetic relations wherein the human and its
aesthemes are produced side by side. Non-cognitive responses to
phenomena don’t pass by way of the unfathomable depth of the subject
nor by way of immaterial aesthetic essences.
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This question might be clarified by comparing Ferenczi’s with Kant’s
theory of symbolism: For Kant the symbol presents in experience, via
analogy, something that is supersensible—beyond experience—yet
which we must make use of (in an appropriately ‘oriented’ way) in order
to make collective sense of our experience. Whereas for Ferenczi what
is being evoked by the symbol is an actual experience—albeit one that
does not belong to ‘me’ except qua phylogenetic memory. Thus
Ferenczi does not stop at extending the biogenetic law into the thesis
that perigenesis recapitulates phylogeny. Whereas for Kant reason
determines the aesthetic as a relay of the idea, he suggests that
biotrauma determines the idea as a relay of archaeoaesthesis—and
therefore that symbogeny recapitulates phylogeny.
Here we are close to what Kielmeyer sought to construct: a ‘threefold
parallelism between geological or earth history, natural history or
phylology, and human culture civilization and thought’ whereby ideas are
natural products that ‘recapitulate, repeat, literally, the constitution or
the organization of all these series in everything we do’. Such a thesis
(once again, a disreputable one) also reasserts itself in DeleuzianBergsonian ‘universal sympathy’, a ‘florid vision’ discussed by Christian
Kerslake in his heterodox work on Deleuze, and according to which
evolutionary theory provides an account that both explains the
apparently preternatural ‘sympathy’ of the denizens of the biosphere in
terms of natural mechanisms, and at the same time reveals a process
of phylogeny whose complexity precludes any straightforward
recapitulation. Likewise, Daniel Barker states:
7
8
Haeckel’s widely discredited Recapitulation Thesis […] is a theory compromised by its
organicism, but its wholesale rejection was an overreaction. Ballard’s response [in The
Drowned World] is more productive and balanced, treating dna as a transorganic memorybank and the spine as a fossil record, without rigid onto-phylogenic correspondence. The
mapping of spinal-levels onto neuronic time is supple, episodic, and diagonalizing. It
concerns plexion between blocks of machinic transition, not strict isomorphic—or stratic—
redundancy between scales of chronological order. Mammal dna contains latent fish-code
(amongst many other things).9
If the unconscious is anything then it is a biological (and therefore
evolutionary) unconscious, and immanent fish-memory perfuses human
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aesthetics…. The Deleuzian development of the notion of repetition
evidently owes something to this same thought: ‘it is true that our loves
repeat our feelings for the mother, but the latter themselves repeat still
other loves, ones that we ourselves have not lived’. This is very much
a Jungian inheritance. As Kerslake recalls, Jung talks about intuition in
the human as ‘the irruption into consciousness of an unconscious
content, a sudden idea, or “hunch”’, a process of ‘unconscious
perception’ that owes precisely to this strange sympathetic community.
The genius would be one who is able to loosen the strictures of organic
specificity in order to move within this element of embryonic forces: to
paint like a lion, or to dance like a lizard…. Éric Alliez amplifies this
point in his discussion of the virtualizing labour of the painter, describing
how Delacroix in his Lion Hunt undoes the partitioning of species
through his attainment of an affective sympathy with the embryonic
forces that shape Geoffroy de Saint-Hilaire’s ‘plane of composition’; a
painting wherein all animate forms are essentially ‘unformed and
ambiguous beings’, constituting a ‘terrible community’ that calls for a
becoming-serpent of the painter….
10
11
(A note on delirious method seems apt: for Ferenczi it is as much a
matter of using the imaginary that emerges during analysis as a basis
for ‘decod[ing] the vast secrets of the developmental history of the
species’ as of enlightening ourselves on the meaning of said symbolism
through recourse to natural history. In other words this is one of those
singular points where psychoanalysis is indistinguishable from the
delirium it treats—‘As our teacher Freud has often repeated […] it is
certainly no disgrace if one goes astray in making such flights into the
unknown’).
There are a whole set of writings that extend the suggestion of this
contagious, immemorial sympathy operating via the aesthetic. In
Ballard, a given sensory environment might trigger virtual phylogenetic
regression, the ultimate suggestion being perhaps that affective
experience simply is nothing other than this: a transit within
archaeopsychic space, triggered by aesthetic response (symbolic
relations are routes back to real relations). But if, in traditional
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psychoanalytic terms, such a delirious method promises the
wherewithal to put development on the right track to ‘maturity’, we
should insist that this ‘terrible community’, must extend even beyond the
contingent history of the biosphere, offering a space for a truly artificial
aesthesis that experiments with unrealized portions of this virtuality.
Such a geotraumatics collapses the psychoanalytic account of trauma
and repetition into the recapitulation thesis: one would recover lost
memories not through a talking cure but by being immersed in the
stimuli of a certain environment, just like Ballard’s Kerans, or (the
Proustian) Madeleine as she is led into the forest in Hitchcock’s
Vertigo. And whereas for psychoanalysis symptoms are memories of
‘experiences’ that the subject at the time could not ‘experience’, for
geotraumatics aesthetic response is a matter of navigation within a
memory bank of experiences that the subject never had, except insofar
as he or she was produced alongside it as part of a broader and
deeper memory.
This complex of ideas has also been interesting to me in reading
Deleuze’s early text, ‘Desert Islands’, in many ways the most enigmatic
of his texts, where he speaks of the human as being the consciousness
of the island. During this period Deleuze had an intense friendship with
the novelist Michel Tournier, whose Friday, or the Other Island is a
retelling of Robinson Crusoe, from a kind of Jungian perspective,
where the protagonist ends up melting into the island, becoming a part
of its larger organism.
It is—quite evidently!—impossible in such a short time to extract the
kernel of conceptual insight here from its entertaining yet egregiously
pseudoscientific husk, and to reconstruct it in suitably ‘supple and
diagonalizing’ form. I would merely insist that any discourse on
aesthetics that doesn’t involve itself in decrypting human experience
down to at least premammalian strata can only be a quaint parochial
addressing protocol; it remains superficial in the sense that it’s stuck at
the stage where the geologist might name a geological stratum
‘Devonian’…. By the same token, though, if (notwithstanding the
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importance of neoteny, and the contributions of the memories formed in
a human lifetime) aesthetic experience is fundamentally archaeophanic,
this doesn’t guarantee that any device or trigger would promptly and
neatly draw to the surface some particular stratum. We are talking
about cryptography here (supple, episodic and diagonalizing—
remembering also that Freud’s very first theory of hysteria clothes itself
in the language of both cryptography and geology, simultaneously
disavowing them as mere rhetorical devices). And yet such strong
alignments are perhaps not impossible.
Now, I used the word aesthemes, enduring components of human
aesthetic experience (what Ferenczi calls ‘true symbols’) whose deep
resonance and transcendent qualities—in marketing and advertising as
well as in the visual arts—make appeal to a transcendent self which,
through sensory experience, is intimately touched by ideas that are
equally transcendent. (The blue of a painting can become the blue of
the sky and then a transcendent blue symbolising freedom, only to a
soul capable of sensing blue and of thinking freedom.) The
transcendence of the subject is reproduced or affirmed at the same
time as the transcendence of an aesthetic essence beyond any
particular material instantiation. But this beyondness and this
transcendence in fact should, in a moment of ‘descendentalism’ (to use
Iain Hamilton Grant’s word) be referred instead to the vast memory
system I just spoke about.
And what about an art that blocked this mirroring relation? One
dimension of Swiss artist Pamela Rosenkranz’s work seems precisely
to involve addressing certain inherited aesthemes (the play of light on
water, skin colour, the colour blue) not by symptomatically repeating
their gestures (reproduction and epidemic), but also not by simply
refusing them (the phantasm of a conceptuality entirely uncontaminated
by the aesthetic—which Rosenkranz’s work on Yves Klein
problematizes nicely).
12
What really struck me in her work—and I spent a long time trying to
explain over and over again to myself what it is that was going on—is a
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kind of formal congelation of these aesthemes. When they are made to
appear in opaque, objectal form, they’re no longer able to do this
mirroring, this transcendent reflection, but instead appear as objects—
or, better, products. For Rosenkranz’s work is also concerned with how
capitalism, while on one hand certainly making use of the
transcendence of aesthemes, tends on the other hand, operationally, to
automatically depose them through its unsentimental isolation, machinic
abstraction, intensification and mass-production.
In the series ‘Firm Being’ (2009) Rosenkranz takes plastic water
bottles and, in a gross reification of symbolic matter, fills them instead
with the silicone product Dragon Skin, intended as a prosthetic double
for human skin. This exemplifies the artist’s use of a palette of
readymade aesthemes in such a way as to strip them of their semantic
transparency. We no longer find in this bloc of skin tone the luminous
essence corresponding to our internal depth; and the product’s promise
to impregnate us with that indefinable something instead becomes
opaque and troubling.
But this does not assume an ‘elimination’ of aesthetic effect. It’s
instead to do with a treatment that (in the Laruellian sense) reduces its
sufficiency. It’s this method of blocking that is really interesting to me.
This refusal produces a new kind of object. It’s something like how
Laruelle describes his practice, in terms of the use of philosophy as a
material in order to produce something else. As he rightly says, the
only way to do that is to prepare the material by looking at it from the
point of view of this kind of sideways causality: the aesthetic relation is
produced alongside the apparatus of aesthesis.
If I were to talk about this as a ‘non-art’, I would want to distinguish it
from the art-history of various ‘non-arts’ which have been one kind of
negation or another—just as Laruelle wants to distinguish his nonphilosophy from the perpetual attempts of philosophy to escape itself.
It would be a kind of non-standard expansion of the domain of the
aesthetic in which aesthetic materials (aesthemes) are acknowledged
and utilised but their sufficiency reduced, Crucially, in doing so, some
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other kind of experience occurs in which, rather than being subject to
the perennial passions of the aesthetic, we enter a context that
challenges our ‘being prone to regression’, that scrambles memory,
concept, and sensation, triggering new responses that call up synthetic
memories of the future which, for the moment, we have no words to
describe.
1. S. Ferenczi, Thalassa: A Theory of Genitality, trans. H. A. Bunker (Albany, NY: Psychoanalytic
Quarterly, 1938).
2. Ferenczi, Thalassa, 2.
3. Following a distinguished psychoanalytical tradition, Ferenczi talks exclusively about male
sexual experience, with a characteristically Freudian promissory note that discussion of the
female aspect of the problem must be postponed to a subsequent occasion (Thalassa, 18n1).
4. Ferenczi, Thalassa, 20.
5. S. J. Gould, Ontogeny and Phylogeny (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press, 1977).
6. Thalassa., 19.
7. I. Hamilton Grant, in Hydroplutonic Kernow (Falmouth: Urbanomic, forthcoming 2015).
8. See C. Kerslake, ‘Insects and Incest: From Bergson and Jung to Deleuze’,
http://www.multitudes.net/Insects-and-Incest-From-Bergson/. According to this Bergsonianinspired theory even the predator in relation to its prey relies on a kind of mutual virtual
inheritance, an ‘inner history of nature’, that allows it to enter into ‘sympathy’ with the prey so as
to secure it, a type of intelligence which depends on a ‘lived intuition’ rather than a calculative
judgment and which, as Kerslake argues, is assimilated to a dissociative somnambulistic state.
9. Nick Land, ‘Barker Speaks,’ in Fanged Noumena: Selected Writings 1987–2007 (Falmouth
and New York: Urbanomic and Sequence Press, 2008), 501. Italics added.
10. G. Deleuze, Masochism: Coldness and Cruelty, trans. J. McNeil (New York: Zone Books,
1991), 87.
11. É. Alliez, L’Oeil-Cerveau: Nouvelle Histoires de la peinture moderne (Paris: Vrin, 2007),
chapter 2.
12. See P. Rosenkranz, No Core (Zurich: JRP Ringier, 2012), which contains a more extensive
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P. 117
essay by myself, and one by Reza Negarestani focusing in particular on the question of the
evolutionary provenance of blue as aestheme.
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Ben Woodard
Uncomfortable Aesthetics
The relation between aesthetics and nature, broadly construed,
appears doubly overdetermined. Firstly by the (now largely
abandoned) discussion of the sublime and the lingering phantoms of
thinking nature aesthetically in terms of the picturesque, the untouched
and the pristine which followed the degradation of the sublime. And
secondly, by an intertwined set of artistic practices that have
emphasised the attempt to avoid the use of nature as fodder for art
(and other material practices). I will attempt to trace this bifurcatory
map of nature and aesthetics as it recapitulates the temporal derivation
of aesthetics from nature. F.W.J. von Schelling’s thought, I will argue,
allows for a concept of artistic practice that indexes nature’s formalized
productivity without being determined by it.
The sublime can be understood as an instance of human nature as
seen from afar, the picturesque an instance of being too close to
nature as human. These tactics are discussed by Timothy Morton in
terms of ‘critical distance’ and ‘framing’, though I wish to enact an
implicit critique of the object-oriented philosophy he draws upon as I
proceed. Problematically, the two relations of distance and framing
feed into one another. The fundamental tactic of the Kantian sublime is
to wire the towering tidal wave, together with the flowing lava, back
into the powerful finitude of the subject as observer, based on that
minimal distancing. Framing, on the other hand, begins from a more
surefooted subject; it takes the world as a problem which we pass
through in order to come back to our own capacities—not to solve the
problem, but to revel in our own finitude.
1
An essential question then: What would an ecologically focused
speculative aesthetics be, other than a redoubling or exacerbation of
this oscillation? The obvious response, it would seem, would be to
either reinstate the Kantian sublime but orient it toward transcendental
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realism by moving the split of sense regarding space from the subject
to the object. Or else to restructure our interaction with nature in order
to seriously reconsider all material production as having a real
irreparable cost; i.e. to reverse framing so as to constantly be framing
our action according to nature, always attempting to determine our
speculative yet real or deromanticized finitude.
One pressing problem is that these possibilities have already been
papered over by more affordable (and aesthetically overdetermined)
versions: The absorption of the sublime via a transcendental realism is
preempted aesthetically by the fantasies of eco-catastro-porn. And on
the other hand, critical material production is easily buried in what I call
a ‘cute’ ecology. In the former, nature exceeds our grasp but only
through our staging of the fantasy of ecological collapse. The
absolutely huge and absolutely destructive, or more precisely
purportedly unmappable complexity of ecological disaster seems to be
simultaneously a mathematical and dynamical sublime. Yet these
fantasies maintain a split between the world and earth, as the end of
the world allows for another to emerge, one that invariably begins
under the auspices of utopia. Cute ecology, on the other hand, relates
to but surpasses the aesthetics of ‘greenwashing’ capital which, by
urging superficial changes to consumption practices, aims to make
capitalism compatible with ecology (very much in line with Žižek’s
‘capitalism with a human face’). Our regular, or even increased,
purchases guarantee some amount of ecological stability in another
part of the world, but a stability only in so far as it is representable to
us. As opposed to the tacit passivity of catastro-porn, cute ecology
allows for a more proactive posture, in that it allows individuals to get
upset and to take (economic) action to protect particular species or
landscapes they find aesthetically appealing.
In both eco-catastrophics and cute ecology, the tension between local
and global is paramount, but serves primarily to reinscribe the
incapacity of the human, in the wake of the sublime, to do anything
other than vicariously experience it and then pass it off to preexisting
governmental or capitalist safety nets. This massive global level stands
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in contradistinction to the atomized consumer, who can only view
themselves, and even large organizations, as incapable of addressing
any aspect of ecological crisis, never mind ecological crisis as a whole.
This in turn leads to the abandonment of large-scale conceptual
schemas: What could the terms ‘nature’ or ‘ecology’ mean, given the
ineffectuality of ecological intervention? Furthermore, since these
interventions evidently bind us to capitalist practices, we either doubt
the potential of developing truly green technologies because of the
bottom line, or simply dismiss designed technological solutions (as in
the anti-technoscience attitude often found within ‘Continental’
philosophical thought).
As for cute ecology, Morton has argued that cute animals bring a
dangerous sentimentality to ethics and create obstacles to thinking
ecologically. However he still seems to think that there is some use for
the cute as opposed to an ‘into the wild’ mentality. Morton argues that it
is the barrier between the cute and non-cute that needs to be removed
—but how could this ever be possible? While renegotiating the
conceptual bulwark of nature’s aesthetics is problematic enough,
cuteness goes far beyond the aesthetics of nature. A cute ecology has
strange consequences for environmental aesthetics, as for example
when endangered animals are chosen to be taken to zoos for
preservation only if they can attract sufficient revenue. Cuteness
determines the cultural capital of animals, and endangered species in
particular. The problem for any speculative aesthetics of nature is that
this kind of affectivity comes at the price of epistemology. The
problematic aesthetic of cuteness can be further articulated following
Magnani’s use of Gibson’s concept of affordance: affordance is defined
as the action potential of part of the environment in relation to the
perception of the individual. This is discussed by Magnani in terms of
ecologically rooted chances. In Magnani, perception is understood as
an act, not a reaction between agent and environment. In this sense,
the manipulative nature of cuteness can be interpreted as the
technological extension of the hardwired disposition to be protective of
the features of the young—paedomorphism across species lines (which
sounds worse than it is!).
2
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P. 122
In comparison to the multiple shifts of perspective Kant must perform
to justify the appreciation of the sublime, the cute appears as an
asymmetrical acceleration of the aesthetic fascination of our own
potential as gene carriers. Cuteness is an asymptotic poison flowing
out across every form of aesthetic mediation. Yet cuteness points, in
however warped a way, to the material potential of nature, constricted
as it is in our being of our species. In cute ecology, design
asymmetrically synthesizes ecocatastrophics; as such, it is the best
means of overturning an ecological aesthetics trapped in the doublebind described above, without challenging the naturalness of our
concepts of nature or being increasingly divorced from our interaction
with nature (whatever that means) and the forms of thought stemming
from it. Ecological design attempts to be hypermodern on the outside
while eco-friendly on the inside, which indicates a return to a
naturalness; a stability made of fantastic nature but without material
nature. As recent discussions with Simone Ferracina make clear, the
trick becomes how to sell uncomfortable design that erodes the
packaged stability of nature-as-home. But how can you unbind
sedimented desires from each of the articulations of renewal—one
global, one local, though each points to its other: the cleaning of the
earth for ecocatastrophics, the saccharine promise of new life for cute
ecology?
3
Our purported distance from nature and its opposed framing
assumes a prior nature-thinker distinction, a distinction internal to
thinking but one that is illuminated by Schelling. Following his reading of
Kant’s methodology, which reinstates the problems of representation,
Schelling identifies a problem complicated by a nature, which is not
prethinkable. This nature is a complex of dynamic forces that creates in
spite of itself an identity of spacetime which, in trying to rip itself to
pieces, produces actualities as well as nature’s continuum of
movement. Taken up by human minds, movement engenders productive
computation and intuition through embodiment, and is translated in the
transcendental as a timing and spacing out of thoughts on construction.
Given such a nature, design becomes a form of auto-manipulation
where the production of objects warps our own concepts of nature
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
P. 123
while also requiring the reduction of nature to manipulable materials in
order to think design as such.
Here one can see the ecological benefits of Schelling’s claim that the
plastic arts represent nothingness as inexistent as opposed to
impossible or otherworldly. Designed objects seek to materially
embody new forms that can capture at once nature’s forming of us and
our forming of nature. Usually treated as the transcendental side of the
equation, the creation (or perhaps more accurately discovery) of form
suggests the capacity of new objects to produce new methodologies or
new fictions, the possibility of manipulating concepts so as to assist in
the production of the actual. Ecology requires an aesthetics of
manipulation that emphasises the razorblades of contingency over the
fantasy of catastrophe and the futurity of cuteness (or maybe the
cuteness of futurity).
But here another bifurcation arises, that between the creation of
norms or productive fictions and the production of manipulative objects.
The sinew between them is a realist philosophy of nature, a nature that
forces thought into a moving production of itself, within nature’s
entropic tendency towards self-rendering, towards restless
proliferation—with the caveat that we depend on the actual in a way
nature does not.
1. See T. Morton, Ecology Without Nature: Rethinking Environmental Aesthetics (Cambridge,
MA: Harvard, University Press, 2009).
2. L. Magnani, Abductive Cognition: The Epistemological and Eco-Cognitive Dimensions of
Hypothetical Reasoning (Berlin: Springer, 2010).
3. See http://simoneferracina.com/.
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P. 124
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P. 125
Discussion
SIMON O’SULLIVAN: I’ve got a question for Robin, but I think it might be
going to Mark as well. Robin, one of the things that strikes me, and it’s
a bit like what I was saying to Tom, is that one can have the
‘aestheme’, but it’s kind of an evacuation of the human, and yet,
whether it’s a story by Ballard or a Smithson, it’s all human. And so that
seems to be a real issue, that while aesthemes evacuate the human
from these things, yet the human comes in as the person reading the
fiction or the person who wrote it.
If I remember rightly, Friday is a story where Robinson goes through
this series of rituals and practices and performances, as you know with
the goats in the trees, and he buries himself in the island, doesn’t he?
He does all these various practices in order to save the island. And it
strikes me that there’s something really interesting about that practice
that’s not a million miles away from what you were saying, Mark, in
terms of schizoanalysis and counter-engineering. That it’s not so much
a practice in the sense of an art practice that’s ‘about’ something,
about depicting something; it’s a series of practices or rituals or
performances that allow transformations to take place.
There are two questions here really: one is about aesthemes and the
way the human comes back in; but the broader question is whether
bringing art and speculative realism together is more interesting if we
think of it in terms of practices that themselves allow one to become
different, to step ‘outside’, etc.
ROBIN MACKAY: Of course art is made by humans for other humans to
experience. The notion of the aestheme doesn’t at all try to evacuate
the human; that’s why I think it’s interesting. If we take an aestheme,
cuteness would be one, the sublime would be one. What are they?
They’re relations between certain material objects and certain ideas,
and the traditional way in which we think of them is to understand the
idea as belonging to a transcendental subject and the aesthetic
qualities somehow to exist in a purified form elsewhere, beyond the
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P. 126
particular object in which they are presented. What’s interesting for me
in what I would call the ‘sideways causality’ at work in Ferenczi is that
the relation itself does not constitute the aestheme; the aestheme can
be said to exist independently of it. So it’s not really a case of
evacuating the human, but it’s a case of conceptualising the aestheme
in a different way, in which one’s investment in it shifts and the subject
is actually transformed. And this is particularly interesting in relation to
the sublime, because as people have always noticed, it’s really difficult
to write about the sublime, a sublime painting, say, without writing in a
sublime way. It’s difficult not to propagate it, one is indeed ‘prone’—and
this propagation is indeed a question of ritual. And I think this kind of
blocking procedure is a genuinely interesting way in which to break
from this epidemic dimension of art in a new way, by presenting these
things in a ‘desufficient’ form. Presenting them in this different way,
rather than separating ourselves from them or trying to leap outside of
or beyond them—not to try and jump outside again, but to take a
perspective in which we are already outside the circle.
MARK FISHER: This is the crucial issue for me, this question of leaping
outside; this came up this morning as well, leaping too quickly over the
subject, over the human, etc. We can see the CCRU, early Land etc.,
as being haunted by this problem, I think. It is as if the argument is: If
the real isn’t human in some sense, then everything about being a
human is total illusion. Okay, that might be true, but then so what?
Things would carry on anyway. I think there was a kind of struggle as
to what kind of practice would link the two; and I think it ended up in a
kind of self-hatred, because it couldn’t be writing, that wasn’t good
enough, that was just a relation of transcendence and not what will
actually take us out of being a human…. But if we see writing as a
practice, which of course it is, things look different.
At the same time, what is called lived experience is a product of
ideology, which is fundamentally ritualistic—it is not first of all ideas, but
behaviours. Which is just to say that I think the way out of this bind is to
do what they say in pedagogical practice and to start where people
are, as it were. That we are here now, but whatever it is that
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constitutes the ‘for us’ is mutable, is subject to change.
So, I think the link then between the philosophical project of
eliminativism and actual cultural practice, I think that’s the key. It might
well be true that, as Metzinger says, there’s no self, but selves persist,
as ritualised performances, and this has a clear aesthetic dimension.
So maybe here the role of the aesthetic would be much stronger than
that of theory. And maybe the role of the aesthetic is to culturally
propagate things, so as to interrupt the ritualistic reiteration of a
subjectivity which may well be pure simulation, but nevertheless is
highly effective.
RM : The most amusing thing about the ‘performative’ aspect of Laruelle,
and the reason why his writings really annoy people is that they are
nonplussed by the fact that he says he’s doing non-philosophy, but then
how come his writing isn’t like some kind of crazy beat poetry, how
come it still looks like, and uses, philosophy? That’s what really annoys
people: that he’s continuing to practice and do something and yet he’s
claiming this kind of indifference. Similarly, in conversations I’ve had
with people about Pamela’s work, some people find it just impossible
to engage with and I believe it has to do also with this kind of blocking,
this refusal to mirror. And yet obviously it’s in art galleries, and it’s in
the institution, and it is artwork. So yes, it’s more interesting to actually
practice rather than get obsessed about this immanentization question;
but to think seriously about how to practice otherwise.
AMANDA BEECH:
Because we know that this rhetoric of escape, this
desire to escape the paradigm that we know is art, is very much a kind
of standard politics of resistance that requires a relation to what is
resisted. You know, its negation produces a relation. But Robin, what
you’re describing is I think something like a non-relational resistance of
some kind, and I find that compelling.
But then I think also, what kind of relations are being formed and
grasped here? If we’re not thinking about a relation with what is being
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resisted, what are we producing in terms of new forms? Is it
reengaging its own history, the history of art for example? If so, what is
being affirmed in those connections and the interpretations that are
going on in a practice? What is being grasped as a relation, and why?
That leads me to pick up on your question of future and past, Ray.
This question about the future is really important here, because what is
it we are grasping in the non-relation? I am a little anxious that, if we
can’t perfect a non-relational resistance, we might end up with some
reinvention of autonomy for art and a remystification of the aporia of
the aesthetic and those kinds of dynamics.
So this question of islands is interesting in its resistant form, but it
also promises something like shamanistic autonomy for the image and
that worries me, because that would be to suppose a discrete territory
without purpose, if you like. But this seems to me to be the primary
mode in which art aids and abets capital and produces it, and that’s the
art that we love as capitalists. So while on the one hand it’s claimed as
being deeply politicised because of its separateness if you like, its
resistant form, that, as we also know, is the very form around which
we pivot our relations in terms of capitalist accumulation. So I guess
those two figures that I’m identifying here seem to be close but very
different in many ways as well.
PETER WOLFENDALE: I thought I’d try and pick up on what Mark was
saying about art after experience. I get what you meant with the
relationship between Hume and Kant, and how this figures a lot of stuff.
And I thought it’d be interesting just to pick up what seems to be one of
Kant’s crucial insights: the fact that for him the experience of beauty
and the experience of the sublime, these things that are subjectively
universal, they’re cognitive, fundamentally cognitive in a way that, say,
having a nice meal, that’s like ‘mmm, tasty’, just isn’t. So that’s the
difference between aesthetic judgements of taste and aesthetic
judgements of the beautiful and the sublime. And I think this can lead
you into an interesting open space for getting past phenomenological
conceptions of art. If we start having this more complicated
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understanding of social cognition, then we have to start talking about
cognitive systems, sociocognitive systems like collective agents and
other kinds of mechanisms which simply have no phenomenology. In
what sense does a group form themselves as a collective agent that
has an artistic experience? Well, if there’s cognition, there’s some
sense in which there might be some sort of artistic relationship; but it
couldn’t possibly be described in any phenomenological terms.
MF: I think my problem here is that it’s still like rushing too quickly out of
the human. You have to pass through the phenomenological in a certain
way in order to attain the cognitive response. I don’t mean you have to
stay at the phenomenological, of course, and I think that there are
ways of getting beyond that. One is the extent to which the cognitive is
always implicated in the phenomenological anyway, which is already
there in Kant; and secondly, what cognitive judgements do particular
phenomenological manifestations mandate or call up? But this is much
more than the idea that you can just rule out the phenomenological
entirely or that we can just leap over it to a purely cognitive account of
art or whatever; that seems to me just going nowhere really.
RAY BRASSIER: I totally agree. Kant transforms the account of experience
into one of cognitive experience—it becomes experience as a cognitive
accomplishment, because experiences can be structured through
judgement and through conceptual synthesis. So I think the point at
which they manifest, some phenomenal level, some stratum of
phenomenal experience, is indispensable. It’s possible to embrace it as
a post-Kantian conception of phenomenology, which is that phenomenal
experiences are conceptually mediated and propositionally structured in
some complicated sense, as opposed to a more problematic sense of
the term, which would say that the world has this predetermined
categorical structure. So I completely agree. I mean, you can’t get
beyond the empirical; the manifest is indispensable. But the point is a
dialectic between the phenomenal and the noumenal such that the
possibilities of experience, of perceptual experience, are enlarged
through conceptual, through cognitive revolution; so aesthetic
experience in that sense is something that is an enlargement, an
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P. 130
expansion of the horizon of perception. Aesthetic experience in that
sense is indispensable and illuminable because it is perceiving things
that transcend any merely sensible synthesis. So I’m just reiterating
this point—this is why you cannot leap over the manifest image.
MF:
Isn’t that the danger of wanting to go beyond Kant, into
transcendental materialism?
RB:
The boundary between the phenomenal and the noumenal is
constantly renegotiated. And the point is that there are no phenomena
without noumena, and the noumenon is the reality of the phenomenon.
It’s something that is embedded in the structure of the phenomenon.
So, in other words, phenomena are real. This is Kant’s point; they’re
not illusions. Phenomena, shadows, are real. But to understand how
phenomenal experiences are dimensional projections of a higherdimensional reality is a cognitive task. And then the point about the
cognitive is that you can enlarge it: we perceive things that were
imperceptible several centuries ago.
MF: Isn’t that then Kant instead of phenomenology? Schematically, we
can divide this post-Kantian account of phenomena from these
dominant neo-Humean models of phenomenology and also much of
Deleuze, where you’ve got this idea of autonomous sensation. But we
can perhaps see the whole schizoanalytic project as much more to do
with the former, as a reengagement with Kant over the question of
conditions of experience, which are now seen as mutable rather than
fixed. But the idea of sensation, accessible without conditions of
experience of any kind, isn’t that a kind of Humean temptation in
Deleuze’s work?
RB: I think it’s also a legacy of Bergson. Bergson is the real culprit,
Phenomenology in the early Husserl and Heidegger is about the
inapparent within appearances. It’s not just describing what things
seem like, or what they could feel like. But the problematic claim of
Bergson is that there is this dimension of absolute individual
experience, there’s this absolute dimension you can intuit. There’s a
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P. 131
point where thinking and feeling fuse, and what you find in Bergson is
the idea of recovering this sub-representational, sub-conceptual
stratum of experience, which is always individual.
This is tied to an attack on the sociality of human perceptual
experience. The gregarious self is a merely superficial crust hiding this
deeper, more profound individual. Whereas Kant’s point is that what
makes you a subject of experience is the fact that when you have an
experience, you’re having an experience that could be had by any
human. This is the difference between Erfahrung and Erlebnis in
German philosophy; Erfahrung is cognitive experience which is
necessarily social and collective; Erlebnis is lived experience which is
supposedly private and intersubjectively effable. And that’s
problematic, since it’s that model of experience as Erlebnis that has
become potentially capitalist idealogy, the idea that what you feel and
what you directly experience is this inalienable fulcrum for everything
else.
RM : Very schematically: art has always dealt with images of the real,
and at one time maybe there was a belief that there were ‘good’ and
‘bad’ images of the real, and now we’re in this position where it seems
(as Amanda was saying) that we worry that there are only ‘bad’
images, since representation itself is somehow inherently ideologically
tainted; and yet we still have to go through them. This is the variously
tragic, ironic, or self-satisfied predicament. But why does that
peculiarly moral judgement have such a hold? I wonder whether we
could instead talk about images as being models of the real, or fictions;
fictions in the sense in which Laruelle uses the term, Or lowdimensional projections, as Ray was saying. To think about this in
terms of models and what they do, what they allow us to do in the real
world, is to learn a lesson in Copernicanism. ‘We cannot escape
mediation through a form of images, but images are evil’—This is just a
form of narcissism, whether you’re bemoaning it or whether you’re
celebrating it as a correlationist.
MF: But haven’t you just evacuated aesthetics there, in the sense of
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what is specifically aesthetic? You could have models that have no
aesthetics whatsoever. That would be my problem.
RM : That would be intellectual intuition, surely?
MF:
Yes, but the point is that given that you’re thinning down the
aesthetic content by doing that.
ALEX WILLIAMS: Why would you necessarily want to do that to models?
Thin down the aesthetic content? I don’t know why you’d want to.
Because that aesthetic content may be vital in enabling you to gain
traction.
RM : Yes, surely it’s the compelling nature of the aesthetic content that
makes a model effective, as well as its purchase on the real or, if you
prefer, its capacity to further abstraction and therefore action. It comes
back again to the notion of cunning, and methods. And that’s all about
being in the middle of models and their powers, and not having an
absolute viewpoint; it’s about, very literally, putting yourself in another’s
place, not sentimentally but through prosthetic use of ‘aesthetic
technologies’; and thus refusing to accept that you’re trapped forever in
one reality, one set of rituals, along with their attendant abstractions.
AW: I was thinking about what Amanda was talking about, this question
of relations and the potential political content of aesthetic forms. So,
there’s this idea that says that resistance is bad because it ends up
regenerating the thing you’re trying to get away from; on the other hand
we get this sort of subtractive or non-relation which you were pointing
towards, Robin, to some extent, with Laruelle. I think that Amanda also
raised this idea of the realist engagement with a future, and this is
something that I think might provide another kind of way out of this
nightmare whereby all left politics get turned into a politics of
resistance, which, as Ray was saying, is basically a reactionary politics
of fear, with a reactionary imagination. And maybe to move outside of
this situation where we’re obsessed with this thing we can’t get away
from, where the best we can do is to create a vacuole that is effective
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P. 133
temporarily, to reengage the future and therefore generate something
on that basis—this would be a speculative aesthetics. With Landian
accelerationism there is certainly a suggestion that it is through
aesthetics and through aesthetic representations and experiences,
through thinking from the standpoint of this future, that you can
generate that future.
MF:
But the problem with that was that the future had already
happened, so all you could do was get on board with it or not; and that
produced a kind of self-hating impotence, actually: It doesn’t matter,
Kapital, the Terminator, has already happened and we’re just this sad
relic waiting around for termination, cheerleading along, and the
Terminator will show no more mercy to us than those who decide to sit
around campfires, hymning the natural beauty of the earth or whatever.
But what’s hinted at sometimes in those texts is that the future will only
happen if it’s made to happen now, so that gives you a positive
immanence rather than an impotent negative transcendence.
I just want to come back to the broader themes that have come up
today, this relationship between purposiveness and non-purposiveness,
etc. I think what also relates to this is that the Landian ideology of that
moment did fit with neoliberalism in that it was the idea that control and
organisation are inherently oppressive. Whereas I think with Alex and
Nick’s accelerationism, there can be a role for management and control
where, rather than inhibiting a certain kind of acceleration, it can
intensify it, raising this question of aims and ends. And I think also the
important point about the supererogatory is that there can only be a
supererogatory excess when you do have a determined aim. If you
don’t have any aim or lure, then you don’t get any excess. And I think
this points to a crisis of ‘experimentalTM’ culture, which has no real
experiment in it because there’s no concept of success or failure.
There’s no real aim, the form is negatively defined in relation to the
non-experimental. There’s nothing taking place in these experiments;
you’re not finding anything out.
That’s one thing that’s come out for me really strongly today, is that
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dialectic between aim and a purpose and purposiveness of a certain
kind. Genuine experimental practice would have specific determinate
aims, that’s how you open up things into an unknown.
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P. 135
Notes on Contributors
is an artist and writer whose work proposes a new
realist politics of the artwork and its possibilities in the context of
contingency. She is Dean of Critical Studies at California Institute of the
Arts.
AMANDA BEECH
is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the American
University of Beirut. He is currently working on a book about the
American philosopher Wilfrid Sellars, entitled Reasons, Patterns, and
Processes: Sellars’ Transcendental Naturalism.
RAY BRASSIER
MARK FISHER is the author of Capitalist Realism and Ghosts Of My Life:
Writings on Depression, Hauntology and Lost Futures (both published
by Zero books). He is the Programme Leader of the MA in Aural and
Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London.
ROBIN MACKAY is Director of Urbanomic and editor of Collapse: Journal
of Philosophical Research and Development.
is an artist and writer based at the University of
Brighton. His work, which explores the interstices of science,
technology and the supernatural, has been exhibited at The Barbican,
London; MoMi, New York; and Le Salle de Legion d’honneur, Paris,
amongst others.
LUKE PENDRELL
BENEDICT SINGLETON is a strategist
with a background in design and
philosophy. He is based in London, where he divides his time between
consultancy work, self-directed and pro bono projects, and running a
graduate architecture studio at the Royal College of Art.
NICK SRNICEK is a Teaching Fellow in Geopolitics and Globalisation at
UCL. He is the author, with Alex Williams, of Inventing the Future: Folk
Politics and the Left (London: Verso, forthcoming 2015), and the editor,
with Levi Bryant and Graham Harman, of The Speculative Turn
robin-mackay-speculative-aestheticsRobin Mackay / text
P. 136
(Melbourne: re.press, 2010).
JAMES TRAFFORD is Senior Lecturer in cultural theory at University for the
Creative Arts, Epsom. He works primarily on the intersections of
rationalism, non-standard logic and mathematics.
is a London based writer, lecturer, curator and PhD
candidate at Goldsmiths University of London. He is an Associate
Lecturer at Goldsmiths, The Bartlett and University for the Creative
Arts. His research revolves around the intersection of neoliberal politics
and economics, the environmental impact of fossil fuels and
contemporary art.
TOM TREVATT
ALEX WILLIAMS is currently completing a PhD thesis entitled Complexity
and Hegemony in the politics department of the University of East
London. He is the author, with Nick Srnicek, of the forthcoming
Inventing the Future: Folk Politics and the Left (London: Verso,
forthcoming 2015).
BEN WOODARD is a PhD student in theory and criticism at University of
Western Ontario. His work focuses on naturalism in the thought of
F.W.J. von Schelling.
The editors would like to thank The Artworkers’ Guild, University for
the Creative Arts, the participants and audience of the roundtable
discussion, and Linda Stupart for transcribing the day’s proceedings.