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Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick Land
Nick Land/Texts/Books/Author/Urbanatomy/Templexity_ Disordered Loops th - Nick Land.pdf
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Templexity
Disordered Loops through Shanghai Time
Urbanatomy Electronic
November 2014
CEO: Leo Zhou
Digital Project Manager: Bridget O’Donnell
Cover Design: Ivy Wei
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Foreword
Does time itself include the potential to surprise us? As soon as we
begin to suspect so, a reflective undertaking that is properly – and
even ultimately – philosophical has begun. This journey has ‘always
already’ started, as the transcendental criticism insists. The process
has only to learn what it is. That, however, takes time.
We can reach the end in a single moment: Cities are time machines.
Some will work better than others, and the workings of each have
been singular. (If grammatical tense and quantity are scrambled in
the process, it is not especially difficult to see why.)
Templexity, unlike ‘time-travel’, is not limited to its narrativization, but
is that which time-travel narrative – or drama – is ultimately about. To
salvage this proposition from casual dogmatism, it is necessary to
admit, hypothetically, that time-travel might be ‘about’ nothing. This is
even probable, if thoughtfully understood. Templexity is therefore an
emergent question, at least initially, and for ‘us’. If it is assumed here
that the reader has been waylaid upon return from a theatrical
production themed overtly – and to a still greater degree tacitly – by
time-travel in Shanghai, the sample audience envisaged drafts a ‘we’
that we can start with. To have seen Looper is unnecessary, if you
can at least pretend to have done so. Nothing more is required than
acquiescence to the (almost) entirely empty proposition: It has begun
(and been seen to have begun).
From the beginning, it is evident that Looper cannot bear even the
slightest theoretical stress, so its prominence is liable to disconcert.
There is no refuge to be found, however, in its dismissal from
consideration as a mere pretext, unless – once again – this term is
ascribed far greater cognitive density than is reasonable to expect.
The movie is first of all a complex cultural fact, and then a historic
metaphysical symptom, and finally a machine part. Its philosophical
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credibility plays only the most insignificant role in any of this. What is
added to our understanding of the world, once we are told it is such
that Looper has been produced within it? – That is the approximate
query sustaining its presence here.
The adhesion to Shanghai as a companion on the path to templexity,
and even as an investigative horizon, while more inherently dignified
than the attachment to a profoundly-flawed Hollywood popentertainment product, is also vulnerable to harsh interrogation.
Does even the generic city – let alone the specific city – make any
genuinely substantial contribution to a discussion of the abstract
fabric of the world? Is the role of the city – as already in the movie –
not in fact merely decorative? Such objections have undeniable force
insofar as they draw attention to the radical under-development of
the urban-thematic perspective, but in this regard they should be
considered a stimulus rather than a termination. If nothing obstructs
complete relapse into generic urbanism here, excepting vague
guidelines for historical study, and disconnected propositions of
extreme metaphysical pretension, a sympathetic evaluation would
begin elsewhere: with the degree to which this – as yet merely
suggestive project – converges upon a (comparably germinal) reinitiation of the question of time. It is through a re-integrated
exploratory horizon, determined by exact coincidence between the
problems of templexity and urban singularity, that advances,
retardations, and false leads are measured by an appropriate
criterion. To invoke the city as the emergent subject of the question
of time is not merely hypothetical but – when approached at the
scale appropriate to the real cognitive agency involved – fully
experimental. The tacit (and vulgarized) question: What is Shanghai
coming to think about this?
While discussing dramatic composition in the Poetics, Aristotle tells
us: “A whole is that which has a beginning, a middle, and an end. A
beginning is that which does not itself follow anything by causal
necessity, but after which something naturally is or comes to be. An
end, on the contrary, is that which itself naturally follows some other
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thing, either by necessity, or as a rule, but has nothing following it. A
middle is that which follows something as some other thing follows it.
A well-constructed plot, therefore, must neither begin nor end at
haphazard, but conform to these principles.” The judgment brought
to bear upon time-travel drama, while inexplicit, is nevertheless
conspicuously damning. Crucially, it provides a clue of inestimable
value to the structure of dramatization.
When templexity, time-anomaly, is staged as a drama – which is to
say, more controversially, aestheticized, produced as a public
presentation, or even manifested (to us) in general – it undergoes a
predictable, systematic transformation. The phenomenon (‘timetravel’) is a reconstruction, pre-selected for consistency with the
possibility of plot, which is, in turn, a proxy for intelligible agency.
Anything shown through actors has been formatted for them. Even if
we decide, eventually, that the ultimate shape of Topological MetaHistory has been adequately captured by Bruce Willis’ crooked
smile, it was at least prudent to explore the alternative case.
Templexity is indistinguishable from unbounded real recursion, so it
cannot be lucidly anticipated independently of a historical completion
– or ‘closure’ (apprehended in the multitudinous sense noted in the
text to follow). There could only have been a beginning – a
prolegomenon to the rigorous formulation of templexity as a question
– and the topic itself retracts this, even before its proposal. The real
process is not the resolution of the problem at the level it appears –
dramatically – to have been initially posed, but its re-absorption into
the alien cognitive matrix which inherits it. ‘Templexity’ – as a sign –
marks the suspicion that, if we are waiting for this to happen, we still
understand nothing.
For some among us, a final irritation is introduced by the systematic
decision in favor of logical (rather than conventional) punctuation.
Inverted commas are modeled approximately upon mathematical
parentheses, to enclose isolable statements. Semicolons are
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generally disparaged as pseudo-pneumatic fripperies. Several
additional maddening tics can no doubt be rapidly itemized.
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Let me explain entropy to you. It isn’t difficult. It’s the gradient of
temporal irreversibility. Imagine a video of someone dropping an
egg. It falls to the floor, and smashes. Now dismantle the video into
stills. Can you re-assemble the time-line? Of course you can. It’s
only necessary to follow the divergent wave. Eggs don’t
spontaneously un-smash. If you saw that, you’d know the snaps had
been arranged backwardly. The process of smashing – passing from
an improbable to a more probable state – marks out the arrow of
time. …”
“But teacher …”
“What is it?”
“How come there are eggs?”
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§1.0 “This time travel crap, just fries your brain like an egg,” says the
elder Joe (Bruce Willis) in Rian Johnson’s Looper (2012). By tangling
the story-line, it auto-dismantles a process of dramatic production.
Narrative ruin is the time-travel effect. When it works, it eventually
raises the suspicion that something else has happened instead.
§1.1 Shanghai reaches back across three decades to provide
Johnson with his city of the future. It’s been doing that a lot in recent
years. Before science fiction had a name, it had already been baked
into Shanghai’s Art Deco high-modernism. The re-opened city of the
early 1990s, once again, and without hesitation, made overtly
futuristic architecture its sign. In a process of double-dating, yet to be
patiently explored, 1994, 1999, 2008, and 2014 set re-envisioned
futures on the vertical outer-edge of the skyline.
§1.2 A ‘city of the future’ loops forwards, and back, through time
anomaly. Yet time-travel appears – ‘initially’ – to introduce more
specific complications. In China, these have been explicitly ideopolitical. In 2011, Chinese broadcast authorities denounced timetravel fictions, apparently concerned by mass-defections of the
citizenry into a pre-republican past, under the influence of narratives
that “casually make up myths, have monstrous and weird plots, use
absurd tactics, and even promote feudalism, superstition, fatalism
and reincarnation.” As English media coverage illustrates, it is all too
easy for Westerners to revert to glib comedy when interpreting this
official recognition of an emerging time-politics, even as the epoch of
Occidental superciliousness closes dramatically.
§1.3 “You should go to China,” Joe is told by his criminal overseer,
Abe. “I’m going to France,” Joe insists stubbornly. Abe responds with
what – for us – is the most critical line in the movie: “I’m from the
future. You should go to China.” With these words, Looper makes
Sino-Futurism its topic. The hyper-modern China Event overspills the
existing order of time.
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§1.4 Joe has been learning French. Perhaps it was too troublesome
to edit that out, when the script was revised. (We’re still talking
business, and not time-travel ‘yet’.) Hollywood discovered that doing
the future in Europe has become impractical. Paris had to go,
despite the language lessons, recorded – indelibly – in the first
version of the film-script. Historical and commercial realities were
constructing a palimpsest, over-written by Sino-Futurism. Production
economics and Chinese distribution opportunities fed-back into the
story-line. The Shanghai cityscape and Xu (‘Summer’) Qing were
grafted in.
§1.5 Passage from the business strategy of Looper’s Chinese coproducer, DMG Entertainment, to the cosmic disordering of time,
involves a traverse through thickets of revisionism. Rough-draft
versions of these multiple, intricately-entangled revisions are
immediately evident, in re-conceived production and distribution
plans, re-written scripts, ideological reconstruction, and a re-worked
world order. Running through all of these rectifications is the SinoFuturist time-loop, which Looper dramatizes for popular media
consumption. For so long as revisionism remains our theme, we are
still in the dramatic frame.
§1.6 Terminological rectifications are typically a fleeting indulgence.
Every word, or common term, is a packet of fate, resistant to
recommended usages. It is nevertheless necessary to note that
‘time-travel’ is in critical respects an unfortunate term. It suggests the
transportation of a body through time, which is a uniquely misleading
image of time-anomaly. To speak in this way, as it is convenient to
do, requires systematic irony if it is not to lead – by inevitability – to
grave conceptual error. ‘Time-travel’ can only be rigorously pursued
as the dramatization of something else. This is a qualification, and a
path.
§1.7 Panning back from the movie to its production process, we see
Paris lose the future. It could not easily be any simpler, or more
graphic. Relic French lessons tell a story that has ceased to be part
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of the story. It was unaffordable. There is, of course, much that could
be said, but we’re finished with it. Like Joe, we shall have no
occasion to go there. It is our shelved ‘elsewhere’.
§1.8 America, too, has lost the future, but in a very different way. It
has become the theater of entropy, still central to a cinematic drama
in which the accumulation of disorder holds the stage. As expected
in an environment of degraded information, we know little. In
consistency with the great Anglophone tradition of dark futuristic
fiction, critically relayed by William Gibson’s Neuromancer, it is not
even clear whether America still exists as an integrated polity. We
find ourselves, in any case, in a grim, deteriorated, crime-wracked
Kansas City, where history has spectacularly gone wrong. “I’m from
the future, you should stay in America,” – no one in Looper says that.
§1.9 Looper’s Kansas City is a body dump. The movie’s only
significant macro-political agency is a criminal syndicate that uses
on-set Kansas City time (2044) as a secret graveyard. Awkward
corpses are retro-deposited there, to disappear. That is how entropy
dissipation is configured as a pop-culture plot device. The present
we have yet to reach will be a waste dump for its future. A structural
production of meaninglessness can be discharged there. Derelicts
shamble through it, perhaps pausing to squint uncertainly into the
camera, drugged on senseless ruin. Threaten them with a weapon
and they move on, heading nowhere. The only point left here is to
die.
§2.0 There are innumerable ways in which the core Looper scenario
is absurd. To wring sense from it requires some care, and a stubborn
attention to drama. Above all, it is necessary to focus upon the
principal protagonist of the time-travel narrative – its archetypal hero
– the double. Insofar as the sheer prominence of this topic is
concerned, Looper cannot be faulted. Its twin-lead promotional
presence was built entirely around it. All time-travel – or Wellsian
liberation of a body within the time-line (we will come to that) – is a
process of duplication. When staged by an agent, within the span of
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an individual life, this doubling is dramatized – most starkly, by a
potential self-encounter. Two segments of the same life-time are
folded into anomalous proximity. Joe-1 (Bruce Willis) and Joe-2
(Joseph Gordon-Levitt) converse about the strangeness of timetravel, which is the framing oddity of the conversation occurring at
all. Twisted time is staged as a semi-broken identity.
§2.1 The acme of time-travel drama is a short loop back. This trip is
bounded by the wave-length of the human life-span, within which the
anomalous folding, and consequent doubling, is encapsulated. One
meets itself, and is no longer one, at least straightforwardly. I is an
other. This meeting, which modernity has so long awaited, is at once
uncanny, dramatic, and absurd.
§2.2 As previously intimated, working backwards from the absurdity
is the laziest path, pre-arranged by rules of convenience, and
packaged for facile consumption. The dramatic imperative is for
time-travel to be shown, which requires that it be radically delimited.
It is from this delimitation, or depotentiation, that a dazzling absurdity
emerges.
§2.3 Looper suffices entirely as an illustration. In outlining the
movie’s absurdity, we can speak quite rigorously of a dramatic
stupidity. The principal fictional agents truncate their potential
achievements, to a comically extreme degree. While it might be
hyperbolic to describe a functioning time-travel procedure as a
source of infinite virtual power, such a description is plausibly
suggestive. Crude – or dramatically stark – time-travel capability
allows for an open-ended revision of the past, and consequently of
everything that follows from it. Additionally, and (at least superficially)
infinitely, this capability is reiterable. Outcomes arising from ‘prior’
time revisions can be fed-back through loops, generating ‘new’
outcomes, which are themselves resources for further interventions.
It is difficult to set logically-consistent limits on the potential of such
recursive time-modification. Absolute power is exhibited as a
program. Yet Looper’s time-gangsters, apparently uninhibited by
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cosmic constraints or moral qualms, find almost nothing to do. Their
negative opportunism is so extreme it blinks out, self-exempted from
the bounds of dramatic perception. Whatever their business is
supposed to be, it involves a steady trickle of killings, and that is all
we learn. Godlike capability has shrunken down to a miserable little
racket. Of course, it’s stupid.
§2.4 Once seen, it’s immediately time to move on. Dramatic stupidity
is far less a mistake than a deliberate decision. Its significant frame
is not logically-consistent time-disturbance, or coherent non-linear
narrative, but apparent consistency, and coherence effect. Even in
the age of cinema, the dominant imperatives are theatrical. In other
words – cast into a philosophical register – they are weakly
transcendental. When questioned about Looper ‘plot-holes’, director
Rian Johnson is frank, even cynical about them. Doesn’t the movie’s
dramatically-satisfying ending unravel its chrono-plastic consistency?
“If it's important to you to really justify that beyond 'It makes sense in
a story type way,' you'll have to get into multiple time lines existing in
never-ending loops of logic.” Which is to say, get lost (in the off-stage
time-spaghetti). It isn’t something that Johnson needed to work. After
all, he isn’t a time-gangster, but an entertainment orchestrator. The
cinematic order imposes its own (sovereign) rules on the
phenomenon.
§2.5 Brad Brevet puts it a little differently: “Any movie involving time
travel is going to have problems, without fail. … Why is this?
Because, shocker, time travel doesn't exist. Therefore to make it a
reality in a feature film is an impossibility without problem spots.” To
avoid tripping over Brevet’s dogmatic metaphysics, it is sufficient to
re-iterate – and parenthetically extend – the terms of our working
usage: time-travel is the dramatization of something else (which
might not exist). It is essentially simulation. Cinema has an entirely
plausible claim to it. The story comes first. Once upon a time
anomaly.
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§2.6 For ease of comprehension we can follow the plot (that’s what
dramatization is for). There’s only one time-traveling agency – the
Rainmaker’s criminal syndicate – and perhaps only one time
machine. (If there are more, it makes no difference.) Further
restrictions are implicit. The machine only works backwards, and –
as far as we are aware – it crosses exactly 30 years (the same 30
years). It is less a general time-travel capability than a specific
wormhole, connecting two definite dates, whose arrival and
departure times are differentiated from themselves by no greater
distance than is required to avoid congestion. It does not become
clogged. Once again, we immediately see, dramatic imperatives
reign. The machine is shown as a single gate. It cannot (apparently)
be duplicated, and fed through itself. It does not proliferate. It is
abstract stage machinery, supporting a dramatically delimited
narrative function. Looper’s time machine is the objectification of a
twisted script, and nothing significantly more.
§2.7 The movie has one conceit that merits particular attention, since
it is accompanied by an instance of unique terminological assertion.
‘Closure’ – a word interlocked tightly with the discourse(s) of
temporal nonlinearity – receives an innovative sense in Looper. As
might be expected, it is dramatically stretched. While retaining its
geometrical and / or topological denotation as a complete twist (of
time), it is invested with a supplementary specificity as the
completion of a life, through auto-assassination, of the double. The
three decades of a looper’s professional career is consummated
when he is sent back to die at his own hand. This special act of
murder-suicide ‘closes the loop’ that the assassin is. Death is
personally and precociously settled. From this formula, which is
presented as a standard arrangement, or regular procedure, the plot
of Looper departs into exception.
§3.0 To reduce the potential of time-travel technology to economic
calculations is indubitably simplifying, but it helps with the accounts.
Looper is conveniently forthcoming about how its exchange circuit
works. The killers of 2044 are paid in bars of precious metal – silver
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for ‘ordinary’ hits, gold for ‘closing loops’ (in singular acts of selftermination). The bullion is sent back from 2074, and circulated
through an internal exchange operation, which normally swaps it for
(Chinese) paper currency.
§3.1 What Looper presents as merely a payments system tacitly
describes an under-performing money-making machine. By
operating it, one realizes a monetary process that exceeds the most
feverish Austrian School economic nightmares. The time-machine
prints precious metals.
§3.2 Consider an ingot of gold. Assuming perfect durability – no
great stretch across historically-relevant time-scales and in the
absence of abnormal nuclear processes – its physical substance can
be understood as existing throughout the whole of the time-line.
Once mined, and consolidated as a standard unit, it lasts ‘forever’.
Now place this unit of bullion in a time-machine, and deposit it threedecades back in time. Like the human time-traveler, it is ‘now’
doubled. Since it already existed at every moment in the past, at the
point of its retro-arrival it now occupies the same position in time
twice, and continues to do so, throughout all subsequent time. Place
it then beside its original instance, in a vault. After thirty years have
passed, there are two ingots available for reverse chronoportation.
Remove them from the vault, and put them into the time-machine …
§3.3 If this seems like a thirty-year doubling period, appearances can
be deceiving. It is ‘in fact’ (or at least in consistent fiction)
instantaneous. Set up the time-machine beside the vault, and
envisage the procedure from the perspective of the operator, in
2074. Open the vault. It contains one gold bar. Remove it, place it in
the chronoporter, set the destination to 2044, activate. Cross
immediately to the vault. It now contains two gold bars. Remove
both, return to the chronoporter, repeat. Cross immediately to the
vault. It now contains four gold bars. Quite soon, we’re going to need
a bigger vault. This is the model for a bullion fast-breeder. Assuming
– preposterously – that value persists under such conditions, the
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time machine generates a smoothly exponential increase in wealth,
approximately for free.
§3.4 It would be surprising if the linkages between time-travel and
political economy were anything other than nonlinear. Neither the
economics nor the politics of time-travel is a compact, still less a
straightforward topic. As public drama, time-travel is a production, in
a sense that absorbs logistic and commercial attention, no less than
theatrical direction. The relevance of monetary theory is, perhaps,
less expected. Yet it is quite clear that a hard money criterion
satisfies a selective function in respect to the operation of time
machines. Elimination of all inflationary time machines automatically
re-integrates a singular timeline, however topologically complicated it
might be. Conservation laws are preserved. Economic analysis is
applicable to questions of time discipline, which selects out ‘timetravel’ trajectories as non-serious as soon as they change the past.
§4.0 Approaching the same problem from a very different direction,
H. P. Lovecraft insisted upon time discipline as a literary principle,
most notably in a letter to Clark Ashton Smith (1930): Your idea for a
time-voyaging machine is ideal — for in spite of Wells, no really
satisfactory thing of this sort has ever been written. The weakness of
most tales with this theme is they do not provide for the recording, in
history, of those inexplicable events in the past which were caused
by the backward time-voyagings of persons of the present and
future. It must be remembered that if a man of 1930 travels back to
B.C. 400, the strange phenomenon of his appearance actually
occurred in B.C. 400, and must have excited notice wherever it took
place. Of course, the way to get around this is to have the voyager
conceal himself when he reaches the past, conscious of what an
abnormality he must seem. Or rather, he ought simply to conceal his
identity — hiding the evidences of his "futurity" and mingling with the
ancients as best he can on their own plane. It would be excellent to
have him know to some extent of his past appearance before making
the voyage. Let him, for example, encounter some private document
of the past in which a record of the advent of a mysterious stranger
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— unmistakably himself — is made. This might be the provocation
for his voyage — that is, the conscious provocation.
§5.0 Remembering that ‘time-travel’ is the dramatization of
something else, these musings from inter-bellum Providence initiate
a virtual tour of the Shanghai time-travel industry. It’s not new
(unsurprisingly), but it is growing fast. Looper is unmistakably part of
it. The City of the Future entangles urban spectacle inseparably with
prophecy. One sees, now, what is yet to come. The impression is
anachronism. Even the strangest idea, given only sufficient
capitalization, can be constructed as a communicable intuition.
§5.1 It begins, in the middle, with Deco. Art Deco, we are told, from
one side, in little more than a whisper – for this is a ‘tradition’
remarkable for its verbal inarticulacy. There was no Art Deco
Manifesto. For over three decades, there was not even a name. The
opportunity for theoretical self-comprehension – if it ever existed –
was missed (and no remedy is yet in sight). Decoding is its basic
impulse, we might presume, when its concrete accomplishments are
registered. It is scrambled code, in any case. Decopunk has been
irreverently recommended as the name for its anachronistic or ‘retrofuturist’ return. ‘Deco’ will eventually do, as the sign of a vivid yet
unspoken modernity.
§5.2 As we know, what spoke of modernity – to the point of radical
identification, usurpation, or near-total absorption of the historical
impulse self-apprehended as modernist – was the ‘International
Style’, defined by an uncompromising logic of functional and
geometrical idealization. By projecting an elimination of all
discernible geo-historical or cultural reference from the urban
landscape, such ‘modernist’ designs aspired to the universality of a
negative cosmopolitanism, liberated from the entrapments of
peculiarity. Abstraction was to be attained through monumental anticonstructions, the world’s first absolute edifices, unfixed from the
coordinates of space, time, and tribe, and thus supporting – whether
by incidental necessity or strategic design – a discourse of intrinsic
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global authority, combining the most exhaustive programmatic
practicality with the loftiest theoretical purity. Through the
International Style social structures of all kinds, spearheaded by
exemplary public buildings, were to find their consummate
reconciliation with the universally communicable Idea.
§5.3 This is the modernity from which ‘postmodernity’ has noisily
departed. Since the 1960s, postmodern criticism has
condescendingly reconstructed (and aggressively ‘deconstructed’) a
model of cosmopolitan modernism that conforms to the vision of its
most clearly outspoken architectural proponents, the partisans of the
International Style, whose complacent assumptions of cultural
neutrality and universal authority provide an organizing object of
disparagement. This self-demolishing digression is designed solely
to announce the irrelevance of its topic, in the name of Deco (the
world’s essentially undeconstructible modernity). Postmodernity has
no application to Shanghai.
§5.4 ‘Decopunk’ is the sign of a return. Its complexity can seem
overwhelming. It folds back, exorbitantly, into that which had already
folded into itself. Nothing expresses the cultural tendency of positive
cosmopolitanism more completely, more cryptically, or more
surreptitiously than the Deco modernist matrix thus re-activated. Its
mode of abstraction is inextricable from an ultimate extravagance,
intractable to linguistic condensation, and making of decoration a
speechless communication, or ecstatic alienation, through which
interiority is subtracted. Emerging from the fusion of streamline
design trends with fractionated, cubist forms and the findings of
comparative ethnography, it exults in cultural variety, arcane
symbolism and opulence of reference – concrete colonial
epistemology and metropolitan techno-science are equally its
inspirations – as it trawls for design motifs among the ancient ruins
of Egypt and Mesoamerica, Chinese temples, recursive structures,
sphinxes, spirals, ballistic machine-forms, science fiction objects,
hermetic glyphs and alien dreams. It is neither language nor antilanguage, but rather supplementary, ancillary, or excess code,
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semiotically-saturated or over-informative, hyper-sensible, deviously
circuitous, volubly speechless, muted by its own delirious fluency. It
has no specific ideology, but only every ideology. If it ever existed, it
always has.
§6.0 Every singularity is an exception. No emergent real individual is
able to fall, without remainder, under a general law. ‘Shanghai timetravel’ cannot merely be a typical phenomenon, or the instance of a
wider regularity, whether socio-political or philosophical. Each such
anomaly is scaled to the city, capturing its absolute, cosmic contour.
(The way it happened is telling.)
§6.1 The architecturally-incarnated time-structure of Shanghai
modernity has four principal – but intricately interconnected –
‘layers’. These correspond approximately, and coincidentally, to
orders of historical succession, structural elevation, and capital
density.
§6.11 The first stratum is composed of a thoroughly, and repeatedly,
reworked exhibition of the city’s pre-modern legacy. Now
concentrated in the iconic cluster of the Old City, and distributed
among the city’s gardens and temples, it has acquired a fully
contemporary – and primarily recreational – function as urban
historical stage-scenery. This ‘Ancient Shanghai’ is a theatrical
simulacrum of native (Jiangnan) tradition, whose modernity lies
specifically in its strategic inauthenticity. Even during the relatively
early years of the colonial period, the Old City was adjusting itself
pragmatically to this role, through experimental branding of lost time
as commercially re-packaged antiquity. In Shanghai, it is the
enduring tradition of historical re-staging, and not the durability of the
re-staged object, that trawls up the deep sediment of urban time.
§6.12 Secondly, and traditionally constituting the preponderant mass
of Shanghai’s modern architectural substance, is a stratum built
gradually from lane housing blocks (lilongs or longtangs), over the
course of a century (from roughly the mid-19th century to the mid-
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20th). As modernity ignited in Shanghai – under foreign protection –
the city was infolded by compressive growth, which had made it the
world’s most intense urban space by the late 19th century. The lilongs
were its most distinctive contribution to the world of architectural
possibility. Fundamentally hybrid, practical, and opportunistic, they
synthesized Western terracing with Chinese courtyard-centered
arrangement to produce an innovative mass housing solution local to
the city, characterized by fractal involution, commercial-residential
micro-fusion, and design diagonalization between mass-production
of standard units and resilient idiosyncrasy. This level of the city is at
once the most tractable to formalization, and the most elusive in its
integral secrecy. It is into the discreet bulk of the lilongs that Old
Shanghai slips, when it disappears from casual scrutiny, as if into an
implexed, urban hinterland. Somewhere in these ‘mazes’ or
‘warrens’ lies the Sphinx’s lair.
§6.13 Rising above the lilongs, and clustered in zones of exceptional
early 20th century economic current (especially the major
thoroughfares of the International Settlement), are the edifices of
Shanghai modernity’s third – Deco-dominated – stratum. These are
buildings that most definitively symbolize the historical city, by
making its high-modernist ‘Golden Age’ a theme. In Deco, Shanghai
modernity is instantiated as, or at least alongside, a non-verbal
philosophical reflex, which seizes the urban time-structure as a selfreferential object. It is this silent self-commentary (through which
modernity becomes modernist) that connects Deco to the infinite –
as unbounded recursive potential – and thus initiates the forward
time-loop of Shanghai’s peculiar destiny. Whatever happens
henceforth, its return has been anticipated, with mute lucidity, and
intricately encrypted within the signs of the city’s high-modern
futurism. An ultimate epoch is reached, and scrambled within a retrosilted code.
§6.14 Finally, therefore, there is a retarded arrival of mainstreamed
global modernity – still adorned by the tattered ideological
iconography of the International Style – but pre-emptively ironized by
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the precocious retro-futurism of Shanghai Deco. At its moment of
arrival it has already been obscurely outflanked, or outstripped, by
an ignited time-circuitry immunized against its specific teleological
pretensions. This is a condition that might be consistently labeled
Neo-Modern. On one continuum, it extends from the vulgar Bauhaus
garbage of the command economy era, through utilitarian
construction of more recent times, to the glistening super-tall towers
designed by international architectural giants, but it extends far
further – and perhaps even more consequentially – across a myriad
renovation projects of wildly variable grandeur, which have as their
common principle an explicit absorption of modernity into something
new, precisely equivalent to a dispersed exhibition of modernist
heritage. The complex trend built-out through the city’s contemporary
architectural evolution inclines towards a display-casing of itself –
simultaneously self-referential and retro-futural – a repetition, a
subsumption, and a return. It would be easy to be persuaded that
Shanghai’s sole profound obsession is time travel.
§7.0 The tombstone of Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann (1844-1906) is
capped by an inscription of his entropy formula S = k. log W. There
is no need for us to pause before the tangle of ironies here, which
can be left for the worms. It is merely an opportunity to speculate
upon a different – and virtual – tombstone, dedicated to Cyberpunk
innovator William Gibson (1948-20??) whose epitaph has long been
confidently predictable: The future is already here — it's just not very
evenly distributed. Even shallow digging quickly begins to reveal the
profound content that the two formulations share.
§7.1 A ‘city of the future’ is Gibsonian in precisely this sense. That is
nothing new, nor could it be. It has always leaked back, in
coincidence with modernity. Tomorrow is a social magnet, as has
been known for some considerable time, at first merely reflectively,
but ever increasingly as a techno-responsive object. It is in part an
excludable good, and not uncommonly even a positional one, even if
the simultaneous – and extraordinary – inclusiveness of futuristic
spectacle will also tend to delay us. Panoramas are rarely perfectly
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privatized, but the future is not available just anywhere. On the
contrary, it is the object of multi-level, intense competition. It is
something to be cultivated, tended, bought, sold, and built upon.
§7.2 Cities of the future are shaped by intense competition, because
tomorrow is a tight, fiercely contested niche. As a unit of Social
Darwinism, the futuristic city is comparable to an exotic tropical
flower. It competes, primarily, through attraction. There can be a few
of these cities, but only a few. Merely to speak of a ‘global city’ is
already to acknowledge all of this. Sustaining the singularity of the
time-line weeds out feeble pretenders, with unique ruthlessness.
Futurity is unevenly distributed because it is scarce.
§7.3 It is here, precisely, that the greatest threat of misdirection
arises, in a confusion between losing the future and being left
behind. Such an equation overlooks the most notable feature of
time-travel stories – their tolerance for retrospective science-fiction.
To speculate upon a future that unlocks time-travel technology is to
re-open the past, with progression twisted into an opportunity to
regress. In China, especially, where the super-massive gravity-well
of tradition has historically absorbed the preponderant part of
speculative imagination, this peculiarity offers science fiction a
chance to insinuate itself, around the back. Futurism enters the
culture cloaked as renascent antiquity.
§7.4 Advance into antiquity is no curiosity of ethnicity or genre. It is
rather a commonplace of modernity. Estimations of the earth’s age,
within modernity’s classical (Occidental) core, suffice to illustrate this
fact. The time-twinned figures describe an erratic yet unambiguous
trend. The traditional beginning of terrestrial time corresponds
approximately to the date implicit in the Hebrew Calendar, which
counts from one year before creation of the world, less than six
thousand years ago. By 1779 Buffon had pushed it back by an
additional 70,000 years, and stripped it of all metaphysical originality.
Kelvin’s calculations, although notoriously impaired by the absence
of a radioactive theory of heat, had nevertheless extended the
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earth’s age by well over two order of magnitude by 1862, to an
uncertain range from 20-400 million years. By the 1920s, scientific
consensus was closing upon the present (confident) figure – a few
billions of years. In this respect, time modernization has been an
exponential lurch into the deep past.
§7.5 As time modernization advances, it reaches back, but it also
pushes in. Considered as sheer quantified improvement, the
progress, or ingress, of temporal resolution through horology and
chronometry has far outpaced the expansive development of time.
The mechanical clockwork of the early modern period, up to the end
of the 16th century, had reached an accuracy of roughly one minute
per day. Pendulum clocks, based on the principles of Christiaan
Huygens from the final years of the 17th century, reduced time-drift
to less than a minute a week. H5, the maritime chronometer that won
John Harrison the Longitude Prize in 1759, drifted by less than a
half-second per day. By the 1920s, quartz oscillators had entered
onto a development path which would eventually achieve accuracies
of 10 seconds per year. Mid-20th century atomic clocks (cesium
oscillators) crushed error down to a second every 300 million years,
which the first quantum logic clock (2008) shrunk to less than a
second in a billion years. With each advance in accuracy came a
corresponding mechanical granularization of time.
§7.6 Modernization advances into the depths of time, in a double
sense (at least). It promotes a disciplined regression (into the past)
and an involution (into the ‘inner’ micro-structure of time). There is
an augmentation of the zoom function – a ‘liberation’ of sorts –
scrambling convenient discriminations between modernity and
tradition.
§7.7 Like time-travel, modernity in its distinctive, progressive sense
is the dramatization of something else. As an exoteric sign, public
display, or collective drama, its central theme is a break-out from
confinement within cyclical time. In this respect it bears a striking
theological message, recapitulating the understanding of Judaism as
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the ‘discovery of history’ – a revelatory transition distinguishing
Abrahamic from pagan religion, industrial from rural society, and
cosmic mission from indigenous peculiarity. The attractions of this
popularization are not hard to understand. After all, from the
perspective of progressive modernism, cyclical stability is a trap,
broken open (uniquely) by the ignition of self-reinforcing, cumulative
growth. So persuasive is this vision that its subversion counts as
perhaps the greatest of modern ironies.
§7.8 Though staged as a break from the cycles of time,
modernization is more realistically envisaged as a flight into cyclicity.
Its primary signature – accelerating change – is itself a product of
non-linear functions (epitomized by exponentiation). The modern,
industrial economy tends inexorably to the self-exciting circuit of the
robotic robot factory, and its autonomization is accompanied by
strengthening quasi-periodic oscillations – business cycles, and long
waves. As its culture folds back upon itself, it proliferates selfreferential models of a cybernetic type, attentive to feedbacksensitive self-stimulating or auto-catalytic systems. The greater the
progressive impetus, the more insistently cyclicity returns. To
accelerate beyond light-speed is to reverse the direction of time.
Eventually, in science fiction, modernity completes its process of
theological revisionism, by re-discovering eschatological culmination
in the time-loop. Judgment Day. The end comes when the future
reaches back, to seize us.
§8.0 The stretching and twisting of time propels a passage from
geometrical objectivity to topological abstraction. Yet, ‘paradoxically’
– to invest this term with the vague sense it bears in the time-travel
literature – the escape of time into topology begins with a
geometrization. H.G. Wells, in The Time Machine, conceives time’s
irreducibility to geometry as a constraint. Relative to spatial
dimensionality, time is a prison. Locomotion in time – time-travel – is
uniquely locked, even relative to the vertical axis within which
movement encounters its most obvious impediments. The
eponymous time machine breaks the shackles of the time
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dimension. This first modern time-travel narrative, therefore, is
primarily a treatise on freedom. Its greatest fictional innovation is an
intuitable ‘model’ of liberation within the time-line. (When referring to
‘time-travel’ it is the Wells model that durably anchors its meaning.)
§8.1 The integrity of the time-travel problem with the question of
metaphysical liberty is a key to both doors. The Grandfather Paradox
makes this evident. If an individual could return to his past, what
would prevent him from assassinating an ancestor, and thus making
an inconsistency of his own existence? The quandary tacitly
acknowledges a contradiction between time-travel and radical
private agency. In other words, no less than a paradox about timetravel, it is a depiction of self-contradictory freedom, in the absence
of temporal constraint. One cannot return to the past to do as one
wants, unless what it to ‘want’ anything (in reality) has already
undergone fundamental revision. The freedom to choose an action
inconsistent with one’s established existence as an agent makes no
sense. It is not a constructible circuit.
§8.2 A drama requires actors. If an inadequately-interrogated
conception of agency can disguise itself as a logical conclusion
about the shape of time, it is worth asking how far this dissimulation
can reach. To what extent has the world been fundamentally
dramatized? Could the basic framework attributed to ‘nature’ have
been conditioned by the requirement that it serve as a stage for
intelligible action? Such a question is nothing more than the
Grandfather Paradox inverted, and employed as an investigative
tool. Certain deeply-rooted intuitions about human agency, it might
be suspected, exercise surreptitious authority in respect to tolerable
conceptions of time. A dogmatic presumption of empirical human
freedom – long understood to be implausible, and even unthinkable,
by the tradition of transcendental-philosophical critique – has not
only survived the supposedly irresistible onslaught of mechanical
determinism, but has even maintained its dominion over the basic
(temporal-causal) structures of natural-scientific explanation, which
have been pre-programmed for conformity with its dramatic criteria.
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§8.3 This is, recognizably, the Nietzschean skepsis, sealed by the
figure of eternal recurrence, or ultimate nonlinearity of time. The
natural sciences, even in their apparent sovereignty over the entire
domain of empirical regularity, remain enslaved to an occluded idea
of freedom, in whose terms they are parametrized, and in
accordance with which ‘determinism’ is itself determined as a false
opposition, bound to confirm in profundity that which – superficially –
it denies. The keystone of this critique (and the entire preceding
tradition of critical philosophy) is the transcendental argument that
there is not, and cannot be, any conception of temporality properly
internal to the natural sciences. Time is a basic presupposition,
enabling access to phenomena, without constituting one itself.
Duration is known only indirectly, through changes scientifically
apprehended – measured – in reference to a cyclical criterion (which
is to say, a ‘clock’). The general relativization of duration within 20th
century physics has confirmed the status of change (speed) as the
scientific limit-concept, beyond which no rigorous objectification of
time is able to proceed. The theater cannot be subsumed into the
play.
§8.4 For backward or reverse causality to be an intelligible concept,
there has ‘first’ to be a time-gradient. The time ‘dimension’ – unlike
those of space – has to bear an intrinsic directionality, or asymmetry,
which classical mechanics does not provide. It is only with statistical
mechanics, and the formulation of entropy measurement, that time
acquires an ‘arrow’. Thus equipped, the natural sciences have
entitled themselves to a new, supplementary vocabulary. No longer
restricted to descriptions of causation, they are now (which is to say,
since the mid- to late-19th century) freed to enter into discussions of
production. From “A then B” to “A makes B” there is a shift into the
order of temporal irreversibility. Unlike classical-mechanical entities,
statistical-mechanical products bear intrinsic indices of succession,
of a general economic type. Entropy measures of a global (or
closed) system are production-time ordinates. The sequential order
of any production phase is inherent to it, as a natural property.
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‘Before’ and ‘after’ are not read-off from the time-line, but inscribed
within the terms of the series themselves. Within the directional time
of production, therefore, linearity is re-doubled, or reinforced.
Reversion is explicitly obstructed. (The thermodynamic argument
against time-travel is the strongest that exists.)
§8.5 Modernity only linearizes in order to delinearize more
thoroughly. The descendant of the thermodynamic time-gradient is
cybernetics, based upon the formulation of thermic regulation
through feedback (the steam-engine ‘governor’), and ascending
through increasingly sophisticated models of entropy dissipation – or
local entropy decrease – into the mathematical sciences of
turbulence, chaos, complex systems, self-organization, individuation,
and emergent (or spontaneous) order. The abstract object of all such
studies is the convergent wave, characterizing all natural process
with reverse time-signature. Any such local inversion of the arrow of
time is produced by an exportation of entropy, conducted by a
dissipative system, or real time machine. These systems typify the
self-assembling units of biological and social organization – cells,
organisms, eco-systems, tribes, cities, and (market) economies. In
each case, an individuating complex machine swims against the
cosmic (global) current, piloted by feedback circuitry that dumps
internal disorder into an external sink. The cosmic time-economy is
conserved, in aggregate, but becomes ever more unevenly
distributed as local complexity is enhanced. Self-cultivating – or
auto-productive – complexity is time disintegration (templexity).
§9.0 Real templexity cannot be time-travel. The same naturalscientific conceptual apparatus that enables its formulation
simultaneously installs the principles of thermodynamic economy
that discipline its models. When rigorously stressed under logical
examination, however, time-travel drama tends to release abstract
diagrams that converge upon real potentialities. Most significantly, it
arrives – through pure fictional hypothesis – at a schematics of autoproduction.
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§9.1 The auto-productive potential of time-travel circuitry attains
exact conceptual specification in the Bootstrap Paradox. Wikipedia
provides a succinct illustration: "A man travels back in time and falls
in love with and marries a woman, who he later learns was his own
mother, who then gives birth to him. He is therefore his own father
and, because of this, also his own grandfather, great-grandfather,
great-great grandfather, great-great-great grandfather and so on,
making his ancestry infinite, and also giving him no origin for his
paternal genetic material.” The Oedipus myth echoes this structure
so closely it is tempting to consider it a model of the Bootstrap
Paradox, unfolded into disentangled time. It illustrates templex autoproduction in a dramatic, anthropological form.
§9.2 Tim Powers describes a literary version of the Bootstrap
Paradox in his novel The Anubis Gates. In this telling, the death of
the father becomes the death of the artist – in the guise of a fictional
non-person, early 19th century poet William Ashbless, known only for
his work ‘The Twelve Hours of the Night’. Ashbless scholar Brendan
Doyle travels back to the poet’s time, seeking to meet him in the
tavern where and when the work was thought to have been
composed. There is no sign of Ashbless. Doyle wiles away the time
writing out the poem which he has exactly memorized. This copy, we
already suspect, was the original. The poem had no author, but only
a scribe, functioning within a closed-circuit of auto-genesis. (It would
distract us unduly to investigate how a fictional non-existence is to
be distinguished from a real one.)
§9.3 The Terminator mythos is by far the most important
dramatization of bootstrap mechanics, when gauged by cultural
impact. Of the multiple movies belonging to the franchise, the first
two are conceptually decisive. In the first, a robotic assassin is sent
back in time by Skynet to kill the mother of human resistance leader
John Connor, reprising the genealogical theme to which time-travel
narratives are so often attracted. It is eventually destroyed in a
hydraulic press. Sarah Connor survives to give birth to the savior. (A
decorously-displaced Oedipal loop casts John Connor’s friend and
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generational-peer as his father.) These events are dated to 1984. In
the second movie (Terminator 2: Judgment Day) it is revealed that
the control chip from the crushed Terminator machine has been
recovered, by Cyberdyne Systems, to supply the core technology
from which it will be built (in 2029). The Skynet threat is not merely
futuristic, but fully templex. It produces itself within a time-circuit,
autonomized against extrinsic genesis. The abstract horror of the
Terminator franchise is a matter of auto-production.
§9.4 Even in its comparatively tame, fully mathematico-scientifically
respectable variants, feedback causality tends to auto-production,
and thus to time-anomaly. Any nonlinear dynamic process, in direct
proportion to its cybernetic intensity, provides the explanation for its
own genesis. It appears, asymptotically, to make itself happen.
Cybernetic technicity — epitomized by robotic robot-manufacture —
includes a trend to autonomization essentially. Pure (or idealized)
capitalistic inclination to exponential growth captures the same
abstract nonlinear function. Capital, defined with maximum
abstraction (in the work of Böhm Bawerk), is circuitous production, in
a double, interconnected sense. It takes an indirect, technologicallyconducted path, routed through enhanced means of production, and
it turns back upon itself, regeneratively. As it mechanizes, capital
approximates ever more closely to an auto-productive circuit in
which it appears – on the screen – as something like the ‘father’ of
itself (M → C → M’). There’s no political economy without templexity.
(You’ll have plenty of opportunities to catch this movie again.)
§9.5 For over a century (but less than two) Shanghai Capitalism –
despite dramatic interruption – has been building a real time
machine, which Rian Johnson, among many others, stumbled into,
and tangentially fictionalized. Although the detailed workings of this
machine still escape public comprehension, its intrinsic self-reflexion
ensures its promotion, as an object of complex natural science, of
spectacular dramatization, and of multi-leveled commercialization. It
enthralls East and West in an elaborate exploration of futuristic myth.
At its most superficial, where it daubs the edges of the mind with its
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neon-streaked intoxication, it appears as a vague but indissoluble
destiny. What it is becoming remains to be recalled.
§9.6 “What the hell did we just watch?”
That’s always the question.
§9.7 Which leaves us, for the moment, with Joe talking to himself in
an American diner, his identity divided generationally, across a gulf
of unprocessed Shanghai memories. A Wells-class private time-pod
has been dramatically substituted for the city, but – because this is
cinema – everyone is overlooking the stage effects for now.
“This is going to end raggedly, isn’t it?” says the young Joe.
(He has a contract to execute.)
“It’s going to end?”
“When did this stop being about business, and become an
exercise in the topology of time?”
“It never stopped.”
“So what happens next?”
“Really, after all of this, you still don’t remember?”
“Well, now you ask, I think – at least I think that I think – it’s
coming back …”
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Cybernetics
The word ‘cybernetics’ is derived from the Greek ‘kubernetes’
(meaning ‘steersman’). As a self-reflective theoretical discipline,
cybernetics dates back to 1948, when it was formulated by Norbert
Weiner as “the science of control and communication in animal and
machine”. It sought to combine the emerging science of information
and new electronic computing technologies with a disciplined
attention to feedback mechanisms, which provide the key to the selfregulation of behavior. By adjusting its activity in response to sensory
feedback, a biological or technical machine was able to ‘home’ on a
targeted state.
An elementary example of such a feedback or cybernetic
mechanism is provided by a simple thermostat. A heater (or cooler)
is coupled to a temperature sensor, which returns information about
its actual performance, i.e. the external temperature produced. The
behavior of the device is then automatically adjusted, guiding its
performance towards the target temperature. A thermostat illustrates
the phenomenon of negative feedback, or homeostatic control. A
negative feedback loop is self-inhibiting. It works to restrain behavior
that exceeds pre-set performance targets, stabilizing a system.
In more complex, spontaneous, and diffuse systems, comparable
negative feedback mechanisms can be identified wherever a
process exhibits self-limiting behavior. Ecologies are replete with –
and even defined by – many examples. For instance, in predatorprey relationships, excessive predator ‘performance’ decreases food
supply (prey animals) which feeds back to reduce the predator
population. Reciprocally, a population explosion of prey animals
fosters growth of predator numbers, with similar self-limiting effect.
Weiner’s attention was almost entirely devoted to negative feedback
mechanisms, and thus to self-stabilizing systems. From his practical,
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engineering-oriented perspective, positive feedback, or ‘runaway’,
was best interpreted as control malfunction: an excessive
amplification that would be inevitably corrected when it reached the
limits of its expansion. There were (to anticipate a later term) strict
‘limits to growth’ that would eventually cage and drastically reverse
any self-reinforcing or accelerating trend. A well-designed cybernetic
mechanism would pre-empt the collision with hard external limits by
restraining itself, through negative feedback, to a stable and
moderate behavioral range.
As cybernetics matured and expanded to encompass ever-larger
and more intricate ‘objects’ – typically under alternative names, such
as ‘general systems theory’ – it increasingly encountered very-longrange trends to continuous acceleration, bound only by weak and
transient limits. Through application to the core dynamics of
cosmological, biological, social, and technological evolution,
cybernetics shifted its emphasis. Runaway, self-reinforcing
processes became the central object of attention, and a ‘second
cybernetics’, emphasizing the role of positive feedback phenomena,
adopted the principal piloting role. Self-sustaining explosions, rather
than dampening mechanisms, were now the primary cybernetic
theme.
The universe is a continuing explosion. So is terrestrial life. The
development of multicellular animals (with brains) is explicitly
attributed to the Cambrian Explosion. With the emergence of homo
sapiens, culture explodes too, through the successive detonations of
literate civilization, industrial revolution, and electronic intelligence
production. For any sufficiently panoramic realism, it is accelerating
growth, rather than system stability, that defines normality.
Civilization is an accelerating process, not a steady state. As its
name suggests, it is channeled primarily through cities (which
explode). The incandescent intensity of a hypergrowth-dominated
urban future consumes our historical horizon, and an exceptionally
impressive perspective on this developing spectacle is to be found in
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21st century Shanghai – a fact Hollywood has no real choice but to
relay.
As cybernetics has eaten the world, it has retreated into invisibility,
rendered inconspicuous by the absence of significant contrast.
Nonlinear dynamics, as the old saw goes, is roughly as specific as
non-giraffe animals. If it is today more convenient to speak, for
example, of ‘the Anthropocene’ it is because something other is still
available for recall, or – at least – is imagined to be. Yet tangles
remain tangles, even for those inextricably tangled within them, and
the greatest tangles of all are still only very partially seen.
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Distribution
Cities are time machines in exactly the same way they are
anomalous distributions. Population concentration – thematized with
extraordinary theoretical and terminological inadequacy as
‘urbanization’ – is a key to the disorder of time which remains almost
completely unused.
There is a simple analogy that captures every immediately pertinent
aspect of the topic. During the late-19th century (from 1870)
statistical mechanics sought to establish probabilistic laws that would
predict the behavior of large populations (of particles). Its model
experiments involved compartmentalized tanks, in which different
gases could be combined, and their approach to a homogeneous or
fully-mixed distribution studied. Completely homogeneous
intermixture and diffusion was defined as the entropy maximum of
the system, its equilibrium state, with the departure from this limit
measurable as its ‘negative entropy’ (or disequilibrium).
Our analogy works best if the gas tank consists of two chambers,
one filled with gaseous hydrogen and the other a hard vacuum.
When the divider is removed, the gas diffuses explosively into the
empty space, tending to its equilibrium distribution (entropy
maximum) of homogeneous density.
If every hydrogen atom is made to represent a (proportional)
demographic unit, within an open system (capable of exporting
disorder into a wider environment), it is necessary to subtract the
assumption of normal physical behavior, and time signature. To run a
modernist-historical model is to reverse the natural trend or divergent
wave (as complex systems do), which is best illustrated by beginning
with a fully entropic distribution of homogeneous density. The tank
now describes a completely non-urbanized population (0%
urbanization).
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Gradually, as social order emerges, the atoms clump together into
small ‘settlements’, then into ‘towns’, then into ‘cities’. Once the
quantitative threshold for city status has been decided and reached,
urbanization begins. The distribution of the gas becomes
increasingly heterogeneous, as particles are attracted into larger and
larger clumps. The entropy of the system steadily falls. Eventually,
most of the particles will belong to ‘city-sized' clumps, and the
population will be predominantly urbanized. If all the particles
agglomerate into large clumps, total urbanization is reached (or,
more probably, closely approximated).
Be careful with this gas tank, by the way. Hydrogen is highly
inflammable, and could explode.
None of our clumped hydrogen atoms began fusing into helium upon
reaching a density crisis. In a real city they would, as new types of
social grouping and inter-linkage arise, driving innovation. Yet even
without the appearance of conspicuous emergent properties, the
basic lesson of our toy history is unmistakable. Played back, in
reverse, it displays a perfectly normal statistical-mechanical process,
as disequilibrium concentrations smoke-off in diffusive, divergent
waves. Civilization – in its strict, urbanistic sense – evaporates into
fizzing homogeneity. Upon reaching entropy maximum, it wanders
randomly through micro-states, while preserving an unchanging
macro-state, without time gradient. Video segments sampled from
the entropic epoch can be freely shuffled, played forward or
backward, without detectable consequence. The manipulations
remain lost in undifferentiated hiss.
Such cinema-format time-reversal ‘thought’ experiments involve no
special effects that history has not already demonstrably produced,
no trick that isn’t already manifested in the modernist core
phenomenon (and abundantly elsewhere). Run the recordings as
many times as you like, backwards and forwards, until even blatant
anomaly seems familiar, and natural. The city is unquestionably – or
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(to say what is in reality exactly the same, but this time with greater
caution) vividly – a time machine. It cannot be made without time
reversal, and everything we know about historical geography tells us
that it is coming to a screen near you.
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Notes
All note-numbers correspond to paragraphs above, with letters
added when required to distinguish multiple notes. URLs, in hard
brackets, are compiled at the end. For active links see the
Templexity page at Urban Future (2.1) [00].
#1.0a Looper at the Internet Movie Database [01].
#1.0b A process of self-reinforcement (or positive loop) is already
evident at the most mundane level of Looper’s socio-historical
realization. The movie’s framing geopolitical scenario has been
culturally anticipated, and thus works as a confirmation, which neatly
coincides with a concrete business opportunity: “Johnson felt that the
offer from his Chinese distributors helped the film fit into a common
idea about the future, which is that Asian megacities will be
tomorrow's lands of opportunity.” [02] Simply following this circuit,
with sufficient doggedness, tells us almost everything in advance.
#1.1 Since Reform and Opening reached the city, Shanghai’s
succession of vertical development-tidemark towers have all been
situated in Lujiazui, business-core of the Pudong New Area. Each of
these buildings – the Pearl Orient TV Tower (1994), Jin Mao Tower
(1999), Shanghai World Financial Center (SWFC, 2008), and
Shanghai Tower (2014) – makes an overt architectural statement
about historical time, formulated as a referential loop through
tradition. These display circuits have been consecutively dilated, as
they extend back through Sputnik-socialism, Deco, and Jiangnan
garden-design (encrypted with the lost moon-gate that was to top the
SWFC), to an opening scroll, in which the enveloping spiral of
civilization is recapitulated.
#1.2 Time-travel is a model of ultimate subversion, so its
manifestation can be expected to trigger a security response. To the
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P. 37
extent this is not seen, the deficiency can be confidently interpreted
as non-seriousness … but then it gets complicated. The signature of
time-travel is entangling irony, cross-linked to the plasticization of
memory, and this is most conveniently denounced as irreverence (or
non-seriousness of another kind). This allows for the categorization
of time disturbance as a non-serious issue, which merits serious
attention precisely on this account. The formal statement publicized
by the Chinese broadcasting authorities on the problem of emergent
time-travel ideology takes this approach, almost exactly [03]. The
Western reportage was – no less expectedly – frivolous in a perfectly
reciprocal sense [04].
#1.4 Even the most pedestrian (and, indeed, scarcely literate)
account of the concrete Looper production process finds itself drawn
into templex considerations of the spiral, the double, speed
modifications, and time disintegration: “The director of Looper Rian
Johnson … cut these scenes out of the movie but the Chinese
backers wanted [them] back in to showcase the streets of Shanghai
for Chinese audiences. The production came to a compromise and
the result was two versions of Looper. The scenes, involving
Gordon-Levitt’s character’s downward spiral, were cut out [of] the
American version because test screeners felt it slowed down the
pace of the film, while Chinese test screeners didn’t mind the
narrative slowdown.” [05]
#1.5 On another – hypothetical – time line, where the ideo-politics of
time disturbance were more consistently emphasized, the theme of
‘revisionism’ would have maintained a dominant position throughout.
Between revisions of the past, which constitute the principal
narrative permission of the time-travel plot, and revisions of
ideological doctrine – indissolubly bound to the topic of official history
– the boundary is wholly illusory. Insofar as such a border is taken to
exist, this is entirely due to systematic intellectual neglect.
#1.6 The stressed formula here, while echoing traditional
philosophical concerns about the relation of appearance to reality, is
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P. 38
situated by a fundamental intolerance for the epistemological frame.
The subject who pretends to know is a dramatic personification of
productive time circuitry. The staging of the philosophical dilemma
suggests – at a minimum – theatrical ironization. Hence the
expectation that cinematic depiction, considered as a contemporary
display mode of the urban process (or time machine), will
consistently run ahead of the philosophical proposition, while
providing its content, and even organizing its manifestation. The
socially-formalized philosophical position lacks the resources to
frame itself authoritatively, except through idealization. It is zoomedin (staged, enveloped, or embedded) relative to the operational
contexts accessed by capitalist mass media, which are technically
and financially empowered to make even the city a set.
#1.6 “What happened to America?” is the Cyberpunk question par
excellence.
#2.0 The double, or “temporal doppelgänger” [06], is the principal
dramatic representative of the uncanny in time-travel fiction. Freud’s
(1919) reading of ETA Hoffman’s ‘The Sandman’ is an inevitable
reference [07]. Shane Carruth’s Primer (2004) remains the most
extreme development of the device [08]. See also Christopher
Nolan’s The Prestige (2006), for a comparably brutal study of
redundant duplicates, in which the mechanics of time-travel are less
prominently foregrounded [09]. The theoretical synthesis of this topic
with that of near-futuristic mind-copies – such as Robin Hanson’s
‘ems’ [10] – can be anticipated with some confidence.
#2.1 Arthur Rimbaud’s “Je est un autre” was recorded in a letter to
Georges Izambard (13 May, 1871) [11]. This remark, together with
the pointed disturbance of the Cartesian cogito immediately
contextualizing it, tags a threshold of literary modernism, and thus –
retrospectively – an action of the future upon the past.
#2.4 Rian Johnson interview at slashfilm.com [12]. When asked by
Heat Vision, at The Hollywood Reporter, What are some of the
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P. 39
biggest hurdles for time-travel movies? Johnson answered: “Figuring
out how much to explain, figuring how to keep it simple. With this film
especially, because even though it’s a time-travel movie, the
pleasure of it doesn’t come from the mass of time travel. It’s not a
film like Primer … for instance, where the big part of the enjoyment is
kind of working out all the intricacies of it. For Looper, I very much
wanted it to be a more character-based movie that is more about
how these characters dealt with the situation time travel has brought
about. So the biggest challenge was figuring out how to not spend
the whole movie explaining the rules and figure out how to put it out
there in a way that made sense on some intuitive level for the
audience; then get past it and deal with the real meat of the story.”
[13]
#2.5 Brad Bevet blog post [14]
#2.6 The Chinese astro-calendric cycle, generated by the
combinatorial exhaustion of twelve annual ‘animals’ (or ‘branches’)
and five elements, is a 60-year period, alternating between (30-year)
phases of light and darkness. The synchronization of this rhythm
with the country’s modern history – most notably the duration of the
1949-79 command economy era – is (at the very least) casually
intriguing. A further associative leap to the 30-year (2044-74) Looper
cycle, however, might reasonably be accused of recklessness.
#2.7 Hypothetical templexity is investigated cosmo-physically under
the name of the ‘closed timelike curve’ [15]. As noted by Seth Lloyd
et al. (2011) "... closed timelike curves are a generic feature of highly
curved, rotating spacetimes ..." [16]. The apparently quite distinct
invocation of ‘closure’ within cybernetics, to describe the object of a
nonlinear function, is walled-off from this figure less by a definite
boundary than by a transient condition of theoretical
underdevelopment. The usage in Looper, of course, is merely a
theatrical sign, selected for pathos. Any profound connection is
coincidental.
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 40
#3.1 Mike Dickison’s excellent Looper commentary [17] succinctly
describes this implicit procedure for unlimited wealth, among other
(extreme) missed opportunities.
#3.4 The vulgar error of identifying ‘time-travel’ with changing the
past is explicitly dismissed by the Novikov Self-Consistency
Principle, which preserves hypothetical templexity while setting the
probability of any anterior state modification at zero. See the relevant
Wikipedia discussion [18], or, more technically, the critical 1990
paper by Novikov et al. ‘Cauchy problem in spacetimes with closed
timelike curves’ [19], (referenced under ‘Friedman, John).
#4.0 Referenced by Wikipedia [18], where the compatibility with
Novikov consistency is made explicit (see previous note).
#5.0 For a detailed engagement with Shanghai as a ‘City of the
Future’ see Wasserstrom (2010). [20]
#5.1 The positive – and thus non-universal – cosmopolitan
modernism of Deco has yet to reach us. Its peculiar temporality is
already indicated by an intrinsic retrospection, which is reciprocally
to say anticipation, such that the consolidation of the term ‘Art Deco’
did not take place until the 1960s, even though it was from the
beginning a reference to the Paris Exposition Internationale des Arts
Decoratifs of 1925. Ab initio, it is a term that encapsulates high
modernism within a loop.
#5.2 The "International Style" is most succinctly defined as the
abstracted, ideological framing of the Modern Architecture International Exhibition (New York, 1932), articulated by HenryRussell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson, and later crystallized as a
book-length architectural manifesto (The International Style, 1935).
[21]
#5.3 For reasons that are to a considerable extent sociologically
intelligible, based upon the professionalization of non-technical
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P. 41
academic disciplines within the era of mass tertiary education,
postmodernism has been uniquely devoted to its own difficulty (and
thus to the implicit special competence of its practitioners). Extreme
animosity to ‘vulgar’ summarization was its central practical (if not
professed) ethic. Even today, with its prestige greatly attenuated, an
aura of cultural deterrence still surrounds it. This will eventually seem
simply bizarre. Its intellectual content was almost entirely exhausted
by the more-or-less rigorous translation of macro-economic
management principles into humanistic disciplines. Pomo was
Keynes for literary theorists – displacement and postponement of
consequences, ontological dissipation, hyper-politicization on behalf
of an installed revolutionary power, and strategic inflationary laxity (in
respect to rhetoric, inference, reputation, and even grades).
#6.0 A projected transcendence of generic theory in the direction of
raw singularities has manifestly offered opportunities for ascetic
intellectual raptures. Cosmo-physical precedents for such a path –
most prominently in the study of black holes – suggest that such
exquisite cognitive torture, while undoubtedly entertaining, is typically
redundant and unproductive. The self-limitation of generic models
through immanent encounter with emergent singularities does not
seem to require supplementary metaphysical exhortation. Any
sufficiently sophisticated, reality-tested science reaches such a
threshold automatically. The acknowledgement of efficient urban
singularities within a disciplined, generic urbanism can be anticipated
as the normal outcome of proceedings, assuming only ordinary
standards of methodological integrity. As the computerization of the
natural sciences has demonstrated generally, the ability to run
complex simulations tends inevitably to an encounter with real
individuals (singularities). Attention to the exceptional, therefore,
should not be understood here as an appeal to theoretical heroism.
#6.11 As the problem of templexity is self-consciously localized, it
might be expected that this archaic urban stratum – through which
the ‘international’ city of Shanghai is conjoined to indigenous
‘national’ tradition – will prove especially conductive to ideo-political
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 42
tensions. Preliminary indications of the coming Chinese time-politics
(see note #1.2) have been highly suggestive in this respect. For a
non-local (and predominantly English-speaking) audience, however,
the more immediately significant urban time-circuits are those
enmeshed in a recognizable dynamic of capital accumulation,
operating in a code that unambiguously processes the fate of the
world.
#6.12 See in particular Hanchao Lu (2004).
#6.13 Shanghai has been as thoroughly saturated with Art Deco
heritage and influence as any city in the world. Prominent buildings
exemplifying the style include the Capitol Building (146 Huqiu Lu, CH
Gonda, 1928), the Grand Theater (now Grand Cinema, 216 Nanjing
Xi Lu, Hudec, 1928), the Peace Hotel (Bund 19-20, Palmer & Turner,
1929) and the Paramount Ballroom (218 Yuyuan Lu, Yang Ximiao,
1932). An especially remarkable Art Deco cluster can be found at the
‘Municipal Square’ intersection of Jiangxi Middle Road and Fuzhou
Road, dominated by Hamilton House (Palmer & Turner, 1931), the
Metropole Hotel (Palmer & Turner,1934) and the Commercial Bank
of China (Davies, Brooke and Gran, 1936). Much of this fabulous
architectural legacy has been documented in the work of local
photographer Deke Erh [22]. Art Deco styling became so deeply
infused into the fabric of the city that its patterning and distinctive
motifs (such as sunbursts, zig-zags and arcane signs) can be seen
on innumerable lilong gateways from the 1920-40s. At another
extreme, the city’s ultramodern Jin Mao Tower in Lujiazui (88
Century Avenue, Adrian Smith, SOM, 1999) synthesizes crystalline
forms, pagoda segmentation, and patterns derived from traditional
Chinese numerology, under the guidance of unmistakable Art Deco
influences. An even more pronounced example of contemporary Art
Deco construction and decoration is provided by the new Peninsula
Hotel (Bund 32, David Beer, 2009), designed as a conscious tribute
to Shanghai’s high modernist style.
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P. 43
#6.14 By suspending the introduction of prestige mainstream
modernist construction until the age of computer-assisted
architectural design, Shanghai has largely escaped the ravages of
rectilinear skyscraper minimalism. The boxy puritanism of
International Style functionalism has been absorbed into a more fluid
aesthetic of ‘clean design’ and (the crucial descriptor) ‘sleekness’
that discreetly tolerates curves, continuous irregularity, and subtle
expressions of extreme formal complexity. The designs of global
architecture giant KPF (Kohn Pedersen Fox) – massively involved in
the re-engineering of the Shanghai skyline – illustrates the new
‘modern’ style at a zenith of excellence [23]. Mainstream modernism
is comparable in profound ways to the Mao Zedong images on
Chinese paper currency. Everything has changed, but the signs of
formal continuity are preserved all the more scrupulously precisely
on that account.
#7.0 Since, with at least provisional plausibility, the transcendental or
(fundamental) ontological difference between time and
temporalization can be securely aligned with the distinction between
entropic and negentropic directionality, or the normal (cosmic) and
inverse (evolutionary) arrow of time, Gibson’s linkage of the future to
uneven distribution is bound to remain resiliently provocative. [24]
#7.1 Positive and negative externalities of urban spectacle, while
vast in their consequences, elude the scope of the present
discussion.
#7.2 The assumption of anarchy underlying realist international
relations theory, according to which order achieved above the level
of the nation state can only be an emergent property, derived from
systematic interactions between state actors, has considerable
application to the situation of world cities. These hubs relate to each
other through an abyss, theoretically represented by a subtraction of
authority. There is no power capable of protecting their global role,
which is settled in the frigid, ultra-thin atmosphere of world
metropolitan mountain peaks, at an altitude beyond state
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 44
competence or capability. To describe this environment as
‘Darwinian’ or ‘Hobbesian’ is not a positive claim, but a negative one.
There is no order to which they can appeal, transcending the fragile
one arising from their mutual, ‘unforced’ interactions.
#7.3 China’s striking cultural indifference to the futuristic literary
mode is only underscored by the efforts made to identify counterexamples. In a discussion angled only slightly differently, this ethnic
discrepancy might easily have been the central focus. A special
edition of Science Fiction Studies has been dedicated to the Chinese
contribution to the genre [25], but the specter of dogmatic normative
universality is unmissable throughout the debate.
#7.4 The Hebrew year, dating the age of creation, has been known
as the Anno Mundi (AM) since the integration of historical time in the
European Middle Ages. AM 5775 began (at sunset) on 24
September, 2014. While this historical duration is sufficiently modest
to serve as a baseline against which the modernist dilation of history
can be gauged, it is important to note that the very principle of
historical integration is not archaic, but dates back only to the early
medieval period.
#7.5 It presently appears as if the absolute limit of time
granularization is set by the Planck Time Unit, defined by the period
taken for a photon to cross a Planck Length in vacuum, or ~5.4 x 10^
-44 seconds.
#7.8 Cumulative rhythmic innovation is described neither by a
repeating cycle, nor by a linear departure into continuous growth, but
by a spiral. It is a figure approximately indicated by the popular
maxim: History does not repeat itself, but it rhymes. Contrary to
common opinion, Mark Twain probably never wrote these words, or
any very close to them. The uncertain provenance of the phrase,
however, does not detract from its acuity. According to Barry Popik:
“… the earliest published source yet located is by Joseph Anthony
Wittreich in Feminist Milton (1987) where he writes: ‘History may not
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 45
repeat itself but it does rhyme, and every gloss by a
deconstructionist need not be a loss, pushing us further into an
abyss of skepticism and indeterminacy’” [26]. (I confess to deep
shock, if this is really the original source.) Positive cybernetics is
spiro-dynamic. A web is a spiral. Spiromorphism envelops everything
said here, even if its explicit thematization still awaits its occasion.
#8.0 Wells’ geometric argument for the conceivability of time-travel
begins on the very first page of The Time Machine [27].
#8.5 Auto-production, or sustained local entropy reversal, translated
without residue into positive cybernetics [28].
#9.0 For the thermodynamic critique of time-travel see, for instance,
Musser (2014) [29]
#9.1 A creature of the Bootstrap Paradox, Oedipus mates with a
matrilineal ancestor to give rise to himself. The even more
thoroughly-popularized Grandfather Paradox tricks him into the
killing of a patrilineal ancestor, to make himself impossible. The
paternal contributor is not merely supplanted, but dramatically
terminated. What the hell happens in Thebes? (That’s the question
the Sophoclean chorus asks.) Since we already know this is a horror
story, we have a provisional answer: Nothing good. To step back
from the answer into the question is to pose again the Riddle of the
Sphinx, of which Wikipedia (very helpfully) remarks: “The Sphinx is
said to have guarded the entrance to the Greek city of Thebes, and
to have asked a riddle of travellers to allow them passage. The exact
riddle asked by the Sphinx was not specified by early tellers of the
stories, and was not standardized as the one given below until late in
Greek history. It was said in late lore that Hera or Ares sent the
Sphinx from her Ethiopian homeland (the Greeks always
remembered the foreign origin of the Sphinx) to Thebes in Greece
where she asks all passersby the most famous riddle in history:
‘Which creature has one voice and yet becomes four-footed and twofooted and three-footed?’ She strangled and devoured anyone
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 46
unable to answer. […] Oedipus solved the riddle by answering: Man
—who crawls on all fours as a baby, then walks on two feet as an
adult, and then uses a walking stick in old age. […] By some
accounts (but much more rarely), there was a second riddle: ‘There
are two sisters: one gives birth to the other and she, in turn, gives
birth to the first. Who are the two sisters?’ The answer is ‘day and
night’ (both words are feminine in Greek). This riddle is also found in
a Gascon version of the myth and could be very ancient. Bested at
last, the tale continues, the Sphinx then threw herself from her high
rock and died. An alternative version tells that she devoured herself.
Thus Oedipus can be recognized as a ‘liminal’ or threshold figure,
helping effect the transition between the old religious practices,
represented by the death of the Sphinx, and the rise of the new,
Olympian gods. […] Sigmund Freud describes ‘the question of where
babies come from’ as a riddle of the Sphinx.” [30]
#9.2 The Anubis Gates is perhaps peerless in its adherence to
rigorous time-travel fiction in accordance with the Lovecraftian law,
Novikov Consistency Principle, or Austro-Templex hard money
criterion [31].
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P. 47
References
For a more extensive range of relevant references, see the
Templexity page at Urban Future (2.1): [00]
Aristotle, Poetics (c.335 BC)
Billings, Lee, ‘Time Travel Simulation Resolves “Grandfather
Paradox”’, Scientific American (Sep 2, 2014) [32]
Brevet, Brad, ‘Got a Problem with Looper's Time Traveling Plot
Holes? Let's Talk about That...’, Rope of Silicon (01/10/2012) [14]
Deke Erh, and Johnston, Tess, Shanghai Art Deco, Old China Hand
Press (2006) [22]
Dickison, Mike, ‘Nine Problems with Looper (That Aren’t BrainMelting Time Paradoxes)’, Giant Flightless Birds (14/10/2012) [17]
Friedman, John; Morris, Michael S.; Novikov, Igor D.; Echeverria,
Fernando; Klinkhammer, Gunnar; Thorne, Kip S.; and Yurtsever,
Ulvi, ‘Cauchy problem in spacetimes with closed timelike curves’,
Physical Review D (1990) [19]
Hitchcock, Henry-Russell, and Johnson, Philip, The International
Style, (1935). [21]
Lloyd, Seth; Maccone, Lorenzo; Garcia-Patron, Raul; Giovannetti,
Vittorio; Shikano, Yutaka; ‘The quantum mechanics of time travel
through post-selected teleportation’, Physical Review D (13/07/2011)
[16]
Lu, Hanchao, Beyond the Neon Lights, University of California Press
(2004)
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 48
Moravec, Hans, ‘Time Travel and Computing’ (1991) [33]
Musser, George, ‘Time Machines Would Run Afoul of the Second
Law of Thermodynamics’, Scientific American (23/05/2014) [29]
Powers, Tim, The Anubis Gates, Ace Book (1983)
Rye, Justin B, ‘A Guide To SF Chronophysics’ (1997) [06]
Wasserstrom, Jeffrey, Global Shanghai, 1850-2010, Routledge
(2010) [20]
Wells, H.G. The Time Machine (1895) [27]
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 49
URLs
[00] http://www.ufblog.net/templexity/
[01] http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1276104/
[02] http://io9.com/5926757/why-looper-could-be-the-most-wellthought+out-time-travel-movie-in-years
[03] http://www.sarft.gov.cn/articles/2011/03
/31/20110331140820680073.html
[04] http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2011 /04/12/aking-tv-saferchinese-censors-crack-down-on-time-travel/
[05] http://www.giantfreakinrobot.com/scifi/ time-travel-movie-looperlonger-china.html
[06] http://www.xibalba.demon.co.uk/jbr/ chrono.html
[07] http://courses.washington.edu/freudlit/ Uncanny.Notes.html
[08] http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0390384/
[09] http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0482571/
[10] http://www.overcomingbias.com/tag/ems
[11] http://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/
Lettre_de_Rimbaud_%C3%A0_Georges_Izambard_-_13_mai_1871
[12] http://www.slashfilm.com/ten-mysteries-in-looper-explained-bydirector-rian-johnson/
[13] http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/looper-rianjohnsonjoseph-gordon-levitt-bruce-willis-368902
[14] http://www.ropeofsilicon.com/can-you-overlook-looperstime-traveling-plot-holes-and-one-question-i-have-about-the-film/
[15] http://www.its.caltech.edu/~kip/scripts/ ClosedTimelikeCurvesII121.pdf
[16] http://arxiv.org/abs/1007.2615
[17] http://www.giantflightlessbirds.com /2012/10/nine-problems-withlooper-hat-arent-brain-melting-time-paradoxes/
[18] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Novikov_self-consistency_principle
[19] http://authors.library.caltech.edu/3737/
[20] http://www.amazon.com/Global-Shanghai-1850-JeffreyWasserstrom/dp/0415213282
Templexity Disordered Loops th - Nick LandNick Land / text
P. 50
[21] http://www.amazon.com/International-Style-Henry-RussellHitchcock/dp/0393315185
[22] http://www.shanghaiartdeco.net/deke-erh-tess-johnstonshanghais-art-deco-pioneers/
[23] http://www.kpf.com/
[24] http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/ William_Gibson
[25] http://www.depauw.edu/sfs/covers/cov119.html
[26] http://www.barrypopik.com/index.php/new_york_city/entry/
history_doesnt_repeat_itself_but_it_does_rhyme
[27] http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/35
[28] http://pcp.lanl.gov/books/Maruyama-SecondCybernetics.pdf
[29] http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/criticalopalescence/2014/05/23/ time-machines-would-run-afoul-of-thesecond-law-of-thermodynamics-guest-post/
[30] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sphinx
[31] http://www.theworksoftimpowers.com /novels/the-anubis-gates/
[32] http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/ time-travel-simulationresolves-grandfather-paradox/
[33] http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/users/hpm/
project.archive/general.articles/1991/TempComp.html