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Robin Mackay/Texts/Books/Editor/Robin Mackay-#Accelerate_ The Accelerationist Reader.pdf
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Merve
Verlag
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#AC
CEL
ERA
TE#
editors
ROBIN MACKAY +
ARMEN AVANESSIAN
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Published in 201"1 by
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CONTENTS
Robin Mackay+ Armen Avanessian Introduction
ANTICIPATIONS
Karl Marx Fragment on Machines
Samuel Butler The Book of the Machines
Nikolai Fedorov The Common Task
Thorstein Veblen The Machine Process and the
Natural Decay of the Business Enterprise
FERMENT
Shulamith Firestone The Two Modes of Cultural History
Jacques Camatte Decline of the Capitalist Mode of Production
or Decline of Humanity?
G illes Deleuze+Felix G uattari The Civilized Capitalist Machine
Jean-Fram;ois Lyotard Energumen Capitalism
1
51
67
83
91
109
131
147
163
Jean-Franc;:ois Lyotard Every Political Economy
is a Libidinal Economy 209
G illes Lipovetsky Power of Repetition
223
J.G. Ballard Fictions of All Kinds
Jean-Franc;:ois Lyotard Desirevolution
235
241
CYBERCULTURE
Nick Land Circuitries
lain H amilton G rant LA 2019: Demopathy and Xenogenesis
Sadie Plant+ Nick Land Cyberpositive
CCRU Cybernetic Culture
CCRU Swarmachines
ACCELERATION
Mark Fisher Terminator vs Avatar
Alex Williams+ Nick Srnicek #Accelerate: Manifesto
for an Accelerationist Politics
Antoni Negri Reflections on the Manifesto
Tiziana Terranova Red Stack Attack!
Luciana Parisi Automated Architecture
Reza Negarestani The Labor of the Inhuman
Ray Brassier Prometheanism and its Critics
Benedict Singleton Maximum Jailbreak
Nick Land Teleoplexy: Notes on Acceleration
Patricia Reed Seven Prescriptions for Accelerationism
Diann Bauer 4 x Accelerationisms
251
275
303
315
321
335
3 47
363
379
401
425
467
489
509
521
48-9, 106-7, 248-9, 332-3
<
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LIST OF SOURCES
Marx 'Fragment on
drisse, tr.
Machines',
edited
extract from
Grun
M. N icolaus, by kind permission of the translator:
Butler 'The Book of the Machines', edited extract from Ere
whon
(1871): Fedorov 'The Common Task', edited
from
What Was Man Created For? The Philosophy of the
extract
Common Task, trans.
E. Koutaissoff and M . Minto (London:
Honeyglen,
permission
Veblen
1990),
'The
by
Machine
Process',
Theory of Business Enterprise
of
Honeyglen
edited
extract
( N ew York:
Publishing;
from
Mentor,
The
1958):
Firestone 'Two Modes of Cultural History', extract from
The
Dialectics of Sex. Copyright © 1970 by Shulamith Firestone.
Reprinted by permission of Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC;
Camatte 'Decline of Humanity?', edited extract from The Wan
dering of Humanity tr. F. Perlman (Detroit: Black and Red, 1975);
Deleuze+Guattari The Civilized Capitalist Machine', edited extract
from Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, tr. R. Hurley, M.
Seem and H.R. Lane (London and New York: Continuum 200LJ). Copy
right © 1972 Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, by permission of Con
tinuum, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; Lyotard 'Energumen
Capitalism', review in Critique 306 (Nov. 1972), tr. R. Mackay for this vol
ume; 'Every Political Economy is a Libidinal Economy', from Economie
Ubidinale (Paris: Minuit, 197LJ), by permission of Editions Minuit,
tr. lain Hamilton G rant in Libidinal Economy ( London: Athlone,
1993): 'Desirevolution', from Derive a partir de Marx et Freud
(Paris: UGE, 1973), tr. lain Hamilton Grant for this volume; Lipo
vetsky 'Power of Repetition', from L'Arc 6LJ (1976), tr. Robin Mac
kay for this volume, by permission of the author. Ballard 'Fictions
of Every Kind', from Books and Bookmen 1971, Copyright © 1971,
J. G. Ballard, used by permission of The Wylie Agency (UK) Limited.;
Land 'Circuitries', from Pli LJ:1/2 (1992), republished in Fanged Nou
mena: Collected Writings 1987-2007 (Falmouth, U K and New York:
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Urbanomic and Sequence Press, 2011); Grant 'LA 2019', previously
unpublished conference paper presented at 'Justice and Post
Politics' conference, University of Bristol, 1996; CCRU 'Cybernetic
Culture', previously unpublished; 'Swarmachines', from Abstract
Culture Swarm 1 , 1996; Plant+Land 'Cyberpositive', from M.
Fuller (ed), Unnatural: Techno-Theory for a Contaminated Culture
(London: Underground, 1994); Fisher 'Terminato r vs Avatar', previ
ously unpublished, presentation at 'Accelerationism' symposium at
Goldsmiths University of London, 2012; Williams+Srnicek '#Accel
erate', first published online, 2013; Negri ' Refiections', first published
online by Euronomade at euronomade.info, 2014, tr. M. Pasquinelli;
Parisi 'Automated Architecture', previously unpublished; Ter
ranova ' Red Stack Attack!', first published online by Euronomade
at euronomade.info, 2014; Negarestani 'The Labor of the Inhu
man', earlier version published online by E-Flux at e-flux.com, 2014;
Brassier 'Prometheanism', developed from a presentation at PS1, New
York, 2013; Singleton, ' Untitled', earlier version published online by
E-Flux at e-flux.com; Land 'Teleoplexy', previously unpublished; Reed
'Seven Prescriptions', previously unpublished.
Bauer includes layered images as follows: Anticipations: patent diagram
for wireless telegraphy (1915); Ferment: central core of HAL9000 from
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968); Cyberculture: Lebbeus Woods's War
and Architecture (1996); Acceleration: computer simulation depicting
a solar neutrino event at Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (2011) .
Every effort hos been mode to trace copyright holders and to obtain
their permission tor the use of copyright material. The publisher would
be grateful if notified of any corrections any errors or omissions that
should be incorporated in future reprints or editions.
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Introduction
Robin Mackay
+
Armen Avanessian
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1858
The science which compels the inanimate limbs of the machinery,
by their construction, to act purposefully; as an automaton. does
not exist in the worker's consciousness, but rather acts upon him
through the machine as an alien power.
Karl Marx
1970
Just as the merging of the divided sexual, racial, and economic
classes is a precondition for sexual, racial, or economic revolution
respectively; so the merging of the aesthetic with the technological
culture is the precondition of a cultural revolution.
Shulamith Firestone
1994
Catastrophe is the past coming apart. Anastrophe is the future
coming together. Seen from within history, divergence is reaching
critical proportions. From the matrix, crisis is a convergence misin
terpreted by mankind.
Sadie Plant + Nick Land
2013
The most important division in today's Left is between those
that hold to a folk politics of localism, direct action. and relentless
horizontalism. and those that outline what must become called an
accelerationist politics at ease with a modernity of abstraction,
complexity; globality; and technology.
Alex Williams + Nick Srnicek
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Accelerationism is a political heresy: the insistence that the only
radical political response to capitalism is not to protest, disrupt, or cri
tique, nor to await its demise at the hands of its own contradictions,
but to accelerate its uprooting, alienating, decoding, abstractive ten
dencies. The term was introduced into political theory to designate a
certain nihilistic alignment of philosophical thought with the excesses
of capitalist culture (or anticulture), embodied in writings that sought
an immanence with this process of alienation. The uneasy status
of this impulse, between subversion and acquiescence, between
realist analysis and poetic exacerbation, has made accelerationism a
fiercely-contested theoretical stance.
At the basis of all accelerationist thought lies the assertion that
the crimes, contradictions and absurdities of capitalism have to be
countered with a politically and theoretically progressive attitude
towards its constituent elements. Accelerationism seeks to side
with the emancipatory dynamic that broke the chains of feudalism
and ushered in the constantly ramifying range of practical possibili
ties characteristic of modernity. The focus of much accelerationist
thinking is the examination of the supposedly intrinsic link between
these transformative forces and the axiomatics of exchange value
and capital accumulation that format contemporary planetary society.
This stance apparently courts two major risks: on the one hand,
a cynical resignation to a politique du pire, a politics that must hope
for the worst and can think the future only as apocalypse and tabula
rasa; on the other, the replacement of the insistence that capitalism
will die of its internal contradictions with a championing of the market
whose supposed radicalism is indistinguishable from the passive
acquiescence into which political power has devolved. Such conveni
ent extremist caricatures, however, obstruct the consideration of a
diverse set of ideas united in the claim that a truly progressive politi
cal thought-a thought that is not beholden to inherited authority,
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MACKAY+AVA N ESSIAN - I NT R O D U CT I O N
ideology or institutions-is possible only by way o f a future-oriented
and realist philosophy; and that only a politics constructed on this
basis can open up new perspectives on the human project, and on
social and political adventures yet to come. This assumption that we
are at the beginning of a political project, rather than at the bleak
terminus of history, seems crucial today in order to avoid endemic
social depression and lowering of expectations in the face of global
cultural homogenization, climate change and ongoing financial crisis.
Confronting such developments, and the indifference of markets to
their human consequences, even the keenest liberals are hard-pressed
to argue that capitalism remains the vehicle and sine qua non of
modernity and progress; and yet the political response to this situation
often seems to face backwards rather than forwards.
Despair seems to be the dominant sentiment of the contemporary
Left, whose crisis perversely mimics its foe, consoling itself either with
the minor pleasures of shrill denunciation, mediatised protest and ludic
disruptions, or with the scarcely credible notion that maintaining a
grim 'critical' vigilance on the total subsumption of human life under
capital, from the safehouse of theory, or from within contemporary
art's self-congratulatory fog of 'indeterminacy', constitutes resist
ance. Hegemonic neoliberalism claims there is no alternative, and
established Left political thinking, careful to desist from Enlightenment
'grand narratives', wary of any truck with a technological infrastructure
tainted by capital, and allergic to an entire civilizational heritage that
it lumps together and discards as 'instrumental thinking', patently
fails to offer the alternative it insists must be possible, except in the
form of counterfactual histories and all-too-local interventions into
a decentred, globally-integrated system that is at best indifferent to
them. The general reasoning is that if modernity=progress=capitalism
=acceleration, then the only possible resistance amounts to decelera
tion, whether through a fantasy of collective organic self-sufficiency
01
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# A C C E L E R A T E
or a solo retreat into miserablism and sagacious warnings against the
treacherous counterfinalities of rational thought.
Needless to say, a well-to-do liberal Left, convinced that technol
ogy equates to instrumental mastery and that capitalist economics
amounts to a heap of numbers, in most cases leaves concrete tech
nological nous and economic arguments to its adversary-something
it shares with its more radical but equally techoologically illiterate
academic counterparts, who confront capitalism with theoretical
constructs so completely at odds with its concrete workings that the
most they can offer is a faith in miraculous events to come, scarcely
more effectual than organic folk politics. In some quarters, a Heideg
gerian Ge/assenheit or 'letting be' is called for, suggesting that the best
we can hope for is to desist entirely from destructive development
and attempts to subdue or control nature-an option that, needless
to say, is also the prerogative of an individualised privileged spectator
who is the subjective product of global capital.
From critical social democrats to revolutionary Maoists, from
Occupy mic checks to post-Frankfurt School mutterings, the ideo
logical slogan goes: There must be an outside! And yet, given the
real subsumption of life under capitalist relations, what is missing.
precluded by reactionary obsessions with purity, humility, and senti
mental attachment to the personally gratifying rituals of critique and
protest and their brittle and fleeting forms of collectivity? Precisely any
pragmatic criteria for the identification and selection of elements of
this system that might be effective in a concrete transition to another
life beyond the iniquities and impediments of capital.
It is in the context of such a predicament that accelerationism
has recently emerged again as a leftist option. Since the 2013 pub
lication of Alex Williams and Nick Srnicek's '#Accelerate: Manifesto
for an Accelerationist Politics' [MAP]. the term has been adopted to
name a convergent group of new theoretical enterprises that aim to
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MACKAY+AVANESSIAN - I NTRO DUCTION
conceptualise the future outside of traditional critiques and regres
sive. decelerative or restorative 'solutions'. In the wake of the new
philosophical realisms of recent years, they do so through a recusal of
the rhetoric of human finitude in favour of a renewed Promethean
ism and rationalism, an affirmation that the increasing immanence
of the social and technical is irreversible and indeed desirable. and a
commitment to developing new understandings of the complexity
this brings to contemporary politics. This new movement has already
given rise to lively international debate, but is also the object of many
misunderstandings and rancorous antagonism on the part of those
entrenched positions whose dogmatic slumbers it disturbs. Through
a reconstruction of the historical trajectory of accelerationism, this
book aims to set out its core problematics. to explore its historical
and conceptual genealogy, and to exhibit the gamut of possibilities
it presents, so as to assess the potentials of accelerationism as both
philosophical configuration and political proposition.
But what does it mean to present the history of a philosophical
tendency that exists only in the form of isolated eruptions which
each time sink without trace under a sea of unanimous censure
and/or dismissive scorn? Like the 'broken. explosive. volcanic line' of
thinkers Gilles Deleuze sought to activate, the scattered episodes of
accelerationism exhibit only incomplete continuities which have until
now been rendered indiscernible by their heterogeneous influences
and by long intervening silences. At the time of writing we find a
contemporary accelerationism in the process of mapping out a com
mon terrain of problems. but it describes diverse trajectories through
this landscape. These paths adjust and reorient themselves daily in
a dialogue structured by the very sociotechnologies they thematize,
the strategic adoption of the tag #accelerate having provided a
global address through which to track their progress and the new
orientations they suggest.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
If a printed book (and even more so one of this length) inevitably
seems to constitute a deceleration in relation to such a burgeoning
field, it should be noted that this reflective moment is entirely in keep
ing with much recent accelerationist thought. The explicit adoption of
an initially rather pejoratively used term1 indicates a certain defiance
towards anticipated attacks. But it also indicates that a revisionary
process is underway-one of refining, selecting, modifying and con
solidating earlier tendencies, rebooting accelerationism as an evolving
theoretical program, but simultaneously reclaiming it as an untimely
provocation, an irritant that returns implacably from the future to
bedevil the official sanctioned discourse of institutional politics and
political theory. This book therefore aims to participate in the writing
of a philosophical counterhistory, the construction of a genealogy of
accelerationism (not the only possible one-other texts could have
been included, other stories will be told) , at the same time producing
accelerationism 'itself' as a fictional or hyperstitional anticipation of
intelligence to come.
This revisionary montage proceeds in four phases, first setting out
three sets of historical texts to be appropriated and reenergized by the
undecided future of accelerationism following the appearance of the
MAP, and subsequently bringing together a sequence of contemporary
accelerationist texts galvanized by the Manifesto's call.
ANT I C I PATIONS
The first section features late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-cen
cury thinkers who, confronted with the rapid emergence of an inte
grated globalised industrial complex and the usurpation of inherited
1. The term 'accelerationism' was initially coined by Roger Zelazny in his 1967
SF novel Lord of Light, and taken up as a critical term by Benjamin Noys in The
Persistence of the Negative (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010), 4-9.
Noys continues his meditation on accelerationism in Malign Velocities: Acceleration
and Capitalism (London: Zero, 2014).
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value-systems b y exchange value, attempted to understand the
precise nature of the relation between technical edifice and economic
system, and speculated as to their potential future consequences for
human society and culture.
Karl Marx is represented in perhaps his most openly accelera
tionist writing, the Grundrisse's ' Frag ment on Machines'. Here Marx
documents the momentous shift between the worker's use of tools
as prosthetic organs to amplify and augment human cognitive and
physical abilities (labour power), and machine production properly
speaking, dating the latter to the emergence of an integrated 'auto
matic system of machines' wherein knowledge and control of nature
leveraged as industrial process supplant direct means of labour. Within
this system. the worker increasingly becomes a prosthesis: rather than
the worker animating the machine, the machine animates the worker,
making him a part of its 'mighty organism', a 'conscious organ' subject
to its virtuosity or 'alien power'. Individuals are incorporated into a new,
machinic culture, taking on habits and patterns of thought appropri
ate to its world, and are irreversibly resubjectivized as social beings.
In Erewhon's 'Book of the Machines', Samuel Butler develops
Marx's extrapolations of the machine system into a full-scale machinic
delirium, extending an intrinsic science-fictional aspect of his theoreti
cal project which also entails a speculative anthropology: if technology
is bound up with the capitalist decanting of primitive and feudal man
into a new mode of social being, then a speculation on what machines
will become is also a speculation on what the human is and might
be. In line with the integration that at once fascinates Marx and yet
which he must denounce as a fantasy of capital, Butler's vision, a
panmachinism that will later be inspirational for Deleuze and Guattari.
refuses any special natural or originary privilege to human labour:
Seen from the future, might the human prove nothing but a pollinator
of a machine civilization to come?
co
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Refusing such machinic fatalism, Nicolai Fedorov's utopian vision
reserves within a 'cosmist' vision of expansion a Promethean role
for man, whose scientific prowess he sees as capable of introduc
ing purposefulness into an otherwise indifferent and hostile nature.
Fedorov exhorts mankind to have the audacity to collectively invest in
the unlimited and unknown possibilities this mastery of nature affords
him: to abandon the modesty of earthly concerns, to defy mortality
and transcend the parochial planetary habitat. It is only by reaching
beyond their given habitat, according to Fedorov, that humans can
fulfill their collective destiny, rallying to a 'common task'.
Thorstein Veblen, famously the author of The Theory of the
Leisure Class, takes up the question of the insurrectionary nature of
scientific and technical change as part of his evolutionary analysis of
developments in modern capitalism (the emergence of monopolies
and trusts). For Veblen it is not the proletariat but the technical class,
the scientists and engineers, who ultimately promise to be the locus
of revolutionary agency; he sees the tendencies of the machine
system as being at odds with the ethos of business enterprise, which,
ultimately, is just one more institutional archaism to be sloughed
off in the course of its development. Significant also is Veblen's
refusal to conceive 'culture' narrowly in an ameliorative role, offering
compensation for the 'social problems' triggered by the reshaping of
individuals and social relations in accordance with the automatism
and standardization of the machine system: instead he insists that
this process be understood as a radical transformation of human
culture, and one that will outlive its occasional cause-an assumption
shared by Fedorov in his vision of a 'multi-unity' allied in the 'common
task' and armed with the confidence in the capacity of science and
engineering to reshape the human life-world.
All of the core themes of accelerationism appear in germ in the
projects of these writers, along with the variety of forms-descriptive,
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prescriptive, utopian, fictional, theoretical, scientific, realist-in which
they will later be developed. The speculative extrapolation of the
machine process, the affirmation that this process is inextricably social,
technical and epistemic; the questioning of its relation to capitalism,
the indifferent form of exchange-value and its corrosion of all previous
social formations arid subjective habits; and its effect upon culture
and the new possibilities it opens up for the human conceived not as
an eternal given, fated to suffer the vicissitudes of nature, but as a
historical being whose relation to nature (including its own), increas
ingly mediated through technical means, is mutable and in motion.
FERMENT
The second section belongs predominantly to a moment in modern
French philosophy that sought to integrate a theoretical analysis of
political economy with an understanding of the social construction of
human desire. Galvanized by the still uncomprehended events of May
'68 and driven to a wholesale rejection of the stagnant cataracts of
orthodox party politics, these thinkers of the 'Marx-Freud synthesis'
suggest that emancipation from capitalism be sought not through
the dialectic, but by way of the polymorphous perversion set free
by the capitalist machine itself. In the works of Deleuze and Guat
tari, Lyotard, and Lipovetsky, the indifference of the value-form, the
machine composition of labour, and their merciless reformatting of
all previous social relations is seen as the engine for the creation of
a new fluid social body. The immanence with universal schizophrenia
toward which capital draws social relations that promises emancipa
tion here, rather than the party politics that, no doubt, paled by
comparison with the oneiric escapades of '68. It is at this point that
the credo of accelerationism is for the first time openly formulated
most explicitly by Gilles Lipovetsky: '"[R]evolutionary actions" are not
those Which aim to overthrow the system of Capital, which has never
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# A C C E L E R A T E
ceased to be revolutionary, but those which complete its rhythm in all
its radicality, that is to say actions which accelerate the metamorphic
process of bodies'.
In 'Decline of Humanity?', Jacques Camatte extends the reflec
tions of Marx and Veblen on the 'autonomization of capital', arguing
that, in testing to the limit certain ambivalent analyses in Marx's
thought, it reveals shortcomings in his thinking of,capital . Marx claims
that capital blocks its own 'self-realization' process, the way in which
its 'revolutionary' unconditional development of production promises
eventually to subvert capitalist relations of production. Capital is thus
at once a revolutionary force (as evidenced by its destruction of
all previous social formations) and a barrier, a limited form or mere
transitional moment on the way to this force's ultimate triumph in
another mode of social relation.
According to Camatte, Marx here underestimates the extent to
which, particularly through the runaway acceleration of the 'second
ary' productive forces of the autonomic form of machine capital,
the revolutionary role of the proletariat is taken over by capitalism
itself. Manifestly it leads to no crisis of contradiction: rather than
the productive forces of humans having been developed by capital
to the point that they exceed its relations of production, productive
forces (including human labour power) now exist only for capital and
not for humans. Thus Camatte suggests we can read Marx not as a
'prophet of the decline of capital' but instead as a Cassandra augur
ing the decadence of the human. Capital can and has become truly
independent of human will, and any opportunity for an intervention
that would develop its newly-reformatted sociotechnological beings
into communist subjects is definitively lost.
Along similar lines to contemporaries such as Althusser and
Colletti, Camatte concludes: no contradiction, therefore no dialectic.
'On this we agree: the human being is dead': more exactly, the human
being has been transformed by capital into a passive machine part,
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MACKAY+AVAN ESS I AN - I NT R O D U CT I O N
n o longer possessed of any 'irreducible element' that would allow it to
revolt against capital. For Camatte the only response to this consum
mate integration of humans is absolute revolt. The entire historical
product of capitalism is to be condemned; indeed we must reject
production itself as a basis for the analysis of social relations. Revo
lutionary thought for Camatte. therefore, urges a refusal of Marx 's
valorization of productivism, and counsels absolute retreat-we can
only 'leave this world' (Camatte's work was thus a strong influence
on anarcho-primitivist trends in political thought). 2
Anything but an accelerationist, then, Camatte nevertheless sets
the scene for accelerationism by describing this extreme predicament:
Faced with real subsumption, is there any a lternative to pointless
piecemeal reformism apart from total secession? Can the relation
between revolutionary force, human agency, and capitalism be thought
differently? Where does alienation end and domestication begin?
Is growth in productive force necessarily convertible into a socialized
wealth? Camatte's trenchant pessimism outlines accelerationism in
negative: He commits himself to a belief that subsumption into the
'community of capital' is a definitive endpoint in capital's transforma
tion of the human. Still in search of a revolutionary thought, however,
and despite his own analysis, he also commits himself to a faith in some
underlying human essencethat may yet resist, and that may be realised
in an 'elsewhere' of capital-a position underlying many radical political
alternatives imagined today. In contrast, accelerationism, making a dif
ferent analysis of the ambivalent forces at work in capital, will insist on
the continuing dynamism and transformation of the human wrought by
the unleashing of productive forces, arguing that it is possible to align
with their revolutionary force but against domestication, and indeed
that the only way 'out' is to plunge further in.
2. For more on Camatte in relation to accelerationism, see R. Brassier, 'Wandering
Abstraction'. http: //www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/wandering-abstraction.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Gilles Deleuze + FelixGuattari'sAnti-Oedipus developed precisely
the ambivalences noted by Camatte, modelling capitalism as a move
ment at once revolutionary-decoding and deterritorializing-and
constantly reterritorializing and indifferently reinstalling old codes as
'neoarchaic' simulations of culture to contain the fluxes it releases.
ft is within this dynamic that a genuine accelerationist strategy
explicitly emerges, in order to reformulate the question that haunts
every Left political discourse, namely whether there is a 'revolution
ary path' at all. It is not by chance that probably the most famous
'accelerationist' passage in Deleuze and Guattari's work, included in
the extract from Anti-Oedipus here, plays out against the backdrop
of the dichotomy between a folk-political approach (in this case Samir
Amin's Third-Worldist separatism) and the exact opposite direction, 'to
go still further, that is. in the movement of the market, of decoding and
deterritorialization? For perhaps the flows are not yet deterritorialized
enough, not decoded enough, from the viewpoint of a theory and a
practice of a highly schizophrenic character. Not to withdraw from
the process, but to go further, to "accelerate the process".' Famously
Deleuze and Guattari, at least in 1972, opt for the latter. Rather than
contradictions precipitating collapse, on the contrary, ongoing crises
remain an immanent source of capitalist productivity, and this also
implies the production of ever new axioms capable of digesting any
arising contradictions. For Deleuze and Guattari, there is no necessary
conclusion to these processes, indeed the absence of any limit is their
primary assumption; and yet they suggest that, as the capitalist socius
draws into an ever-closer immanence with universal schizophrenia,
(further deterritorializing) lines of flight are a real prospect.
In his writings from the early 70s, Jean-Fram;:ois Lyotard ampli
fies Deleuze and Guattari's heresies, at the same time as he joins
Anti-Oedipus's struggle against reflective deceleration in theoretical
writing and critique. In a series of extraordinary texts the claim of the
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immanence of the political and libidinal is enacted within writing itself.
In Libidinal Economy Lyotard uncovers a set of repressed themes in
Marx, with the latter's oeuvre itself seen as a libidinal 'dispositif' split
between an enjoyment of the extrapolation and imaginary accelera
tion of capitalism's liquefying tendencies, and the ever-deferred will
to prosecute it for its iniquities (embodied in the dramatis personae of
' Little Girl Marx' and 'Old Bearded Prosecutor Marx').
Lyotard strikingly reads Anti-Oedipus not primarily as a polemical
anti-psychoanalytical tract, but as a stealth weapon that subverts and
transforms Marxism through the tacit retirement of those parts of
its critical apparatus that merely nourish ressentiment and the petty
power structures of party politics. He denounces the Marxist sad pas
sion of remonstrating and harping at the system to pay back what it
owes to the proletariat while simultaneously decrying the dislocations
brought about by capitalism-the liberation of generalised cynicism,
the freedom from internalised g uilt, the throwing off of inherited mores
and obligations-as 'illusory' and 'alienated'. From the viewpoint of a
schizoanalytics informed by the decoding processes of ' Kapital', there
are only perversions. libidinal bodies and their liquid investments, and no
'natural' position. Yet critique invests its energies in striving to produce
the existence of an alienated proletariat as a wrong, a contradiction upon
which it can exercise its moral authority. Instead, Lyotard, from the point
of view of an immanence of technical, social and libidinal bodies, asks:
How can living labour be dismembered, how can the body be frag
mented by capitalism's exchangeable value-form, if bodies are already
fragments and if the will to unity is just one perversion among others?
Thus he proposes an energetics that not only voluntarily risks anarchic
irrationalism, but issues in a scandalous advocacy of the industrial pro
letariat's enjoyment of their machinic dissection at the hands of capital.
Lyotard dares us to 'admit it...': the deracinating affect of capitalism,
also, is a source of jouissance, a mobilization of desire.
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Saluting Anti-Oedipus as 'one of the most intense products of the
new libidinal configuration that is beginning to gel inside capitalism,
Lyotard summons a 'new dispositif' that is like a virus thriving in the
stomach of capital: in the restless yet undirected youth movements
of the late 6os and early 70s 'another figure is rising' which will not be
stifled by any pedantic theoretical critique. As Deleuze and Guattari
assert, 'nothing ever died of contradictions', and the only thing that
will kill capitalism is its own 'excess' and the 'unserviceability' loosed
by it, an excess of wandering desire over the regulating mechanisms
of antiproduction.
Eschewing critique, then, here writing forms a pact with the
demon energy liberated by Kapital that liquidates all inheritance and
solidity, staking everything on the unknown future it is unlocking.
Few can read Lyotard's deliberately scandalous celebration of the
prostitution of the proletariat without discomfort. Yet it succeeds in
uncovering the deepest stakes of unstated Marxist dogma as to the
human and labour power: If there never was any human, any primary
economic productivity, but only libidinal bodies along with their invest
ments, their fetishes, where does theory find the moral leverage to
claim to 'save' the worker from the machines, the proletariat from
capital-or to exhort them to save themselves?
In ' Power of Repetition' Gilles Lipovetsky gives a broad exposi
tion of the ungrounded metaphysics of desire underpinning Libidinal
Economy's analyses (a metaphysics Lyotard simultaneously disclaims
as just another fiction or libidinal device). In laying out very clearly a
dichotomy between the powers of repetition and reinstatement of
identity, and the errant metamorphic tendencies of capital, Lipovetsky
makes a crucial distinction: Although capitalism may appear to depend
upon powers of antiproduction which police it and ensure the minimal
stability necessary for the extraction of profit, in fact these 'guard
dogs' are obstacles to the core tendency of capital qua 'precipitate
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experimentation' i n the 'recombination of bodies'-and this latter
tendency is the side that must be taken by emancipatory discourse
and practice. Resisting the 'Marxist reflex' to critique 'capitalist power',
Lipovetsky states that there is no such thing, but only and always
a multiplicity of powers, which in fact restrain capital's advance. He
thus repeats Lyotard's call for chaos and permanent revolution: there
is no way to prevent new alien recombinations settling back into new
forms of power; we must match and exceed capital's inhuman speeds,
'keep moving' in 'a permanent and accelerated metamorphic errancy'.
Lipovetsky also draws further attention to one of the important
departures from Marx that Lyotard had expanded upon: For Deleuze
and Guattari, more basic to an analysis of capitalism than human labour
power is the way in which capitalism mobilizes time itself through the
function of credit. (As Marx himself declares in Grundrisse. 'economy
of time. to this all economy ultimately reduces itself'). Lipovetsky
confirms that the supposed 'contradictions' of capital are a question
of configurations of time, and accordingly his accelerationism pits
capital's essentially destabilizing temporal looping of the present
through the future against all stabilising reinstantiations of the past.
This futural orientation is also at work in Lyotard's attempt at
an indistinction between description and prescription, between the
theoretical and the exhortatory, something that will be extended
in later accelerationisms-as Nick Land will write, there is 'no real
option between a cybernetics of theory and a theory of cybernetics':
The subject of theory can no longer affect to stand outside the process
it describes: it is integrated as an immanent machine part in an open
ended experimentation that is inextricable from capital's continuous
scrambling of its own limits-which operates via the reprocessing of
the actual through its virtual futures, dissolving all bulwarks that would
preserve the past. In hooking itself up to this haywire time-machine,
theory seeks to cast off its own inert obstacles.
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It would indeed be churlish to deny the enduring rhetorical power of
these texts; and yet the hopes of their call to permanent revolution
are poignant from a contemporary viewpoint: As we can glimpse in
the starkness of Lipovetsky's exposition, beneath the desperate joy
with which they dance upon the ruins of politics and critique, there
is a certain 'Camattian' note of despair (acceleration 'for lack of
anything better', as Lipovetsky says); and an unwitting anticipation of
the integral part that the spirit of permanent creative festivity would
come to play in the neoconservative landscape of late twentieth
century consumer capitalism.
Those writers included in the 'Anticipations' section had empha
sised in their analyses that the incursion of the value-form and of
machine production are not a ' merely economic' question, but one of
the transformation of human culture and indeed of what it means to
be human. As can clearly be seen in the mercurial topicality of Lyotard's
'Energumen Capitalism', under different cultural and sociotechnologi
cal conditions the same goes for the texts of this second phase of
accelerationism. The position is set out in exemplary fashion by radical
feminist activist and theoretician Shulamith Firestone. Beyond
Fedorov's arguably shortsighted dismissal of the aesthetic response
to the world as a squandering of energy that could be directed into
the technological achievement of real transcendence. Firestone insists
that the separation of these two modes of ' realizing the conceivable in
the possible' is an artefact of the same constraints as class barriers and
sex dualism. She envisages an 'anticultural' revolution that would fuse
them, arguing that 'the body of scientific discovery (the new produc
tive modes) must finally outgrow the empirical (capitalistic) mode of
using them'. In Firestone's call for this cultural revolution the question
is no longer, as in Fedorov, that of replacing imaginary transcendence
with a practical project of transcendence, but of erasing the separation
between imaginary vision and practical action.
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If we take Firestone's definition of culture as 'the attempt by man
to reaiize the conceivable in the possible' then we can see at once
that (as Veblen had indicated) the application of culture as a salve
for the corrosive effects of machine culture on the subject merely
indicates a split within culture itself: the Promethean potentiality of
the human, evidenced in 'the accumulation of skills for controlling
the environment, technology' is hobbled by the obstruction of the
dialogue between aesthetic and scientific modes of thinking. With
industry, science and technology subsumed into commerce and
exchange value. the question of other, aesthetic values becomes
a matter of a compensatory 'outside' of the market, a retreat into
private (and marketized) pleasures.
Closing this section of the volume, novelist J.G. Ballard echoes
Firestone's call for a merging of artistic and technological modes.
advocating the role of science fiction not only as 'the only possible
realism in an increasingly artificialized society', but as an ingredient in
its acceleration. SF dissolves fear into excited anticipation, implicitly
preparing readers for a 'life radically different from their own'. Accept
ing that 'the future is a better guide to the present than the past',
SF is not involved in the elaboration of the meaning of the present.
but instead participates in the construction of the future through its
speculative recombination: the only meaning it registers is the as yet
uncomprehended 'significance of the gleam on an automobile instru
ment panel'. Like Firestone, Ballard cheerfully jettisons the genius cult
of the individual artist and high culture, instead imagining the future
of SF along the lines of an unceremonious integration of fiction into
global industry and communications that is already underway.
Punctuating the end of this phase of accelerationism, Ballard's
world of 'the gleam of refrigerator cabinets, the conjunction of
musculature and chromium artefact' is echoed in the cut-up text
'Desirevolution' where Lyotard refuses to cede the dream-work of '68
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# A C C E L E R A T E
to institutional politics and Party shysters, countering its inevitable
recuperation through an acceleration of the cut-up reality of the
spectacle, an accelerated collage of 'fragments of alienation' launching
one last salvo against political and aesthetic representation.
CYBERCULTURE
Jn the gos the demonic alliance with capital's deterritorializing forces
and the formal ferment it provoked in writing was pursued yet further
by a small group of thinkers in the UK. Following Lyotard's lead, the
authors of this third section attempt not simply to diagnose, but to
propagate and accelerate the destitution of the human subject and
its integration into the artificial mechanosphere. It is immediately
apparent from the opening of Nick Land's 'Circuitries' that a darkness
has descended over the festive atmosphere of desiring-production
envisaged by the likes of Deleuze and Guattari, Lyotard and Lipovetsky.
At the dawn of the emergence of the global digital technology network,
these thinkers, rediscovering and reinterpreting the work of the latter,
develop it into an antihumanist anastrophism. Their texts relish its most
violent and dark implications, and espouse radical alienation as the only
escape from a human inheritance that amounts to imprisonment in a
biodespotic security compound to which only capital has the access
code. From this point of view, it seems that the terminal stages of
libidinal economics (as affirmation) mistook the transfer of all motive
force from human subjects to capital as the inauguration of an aleatory
drift, an emancipation for the human; while postmodernism can do
no more than mourn this miscognition, accelerationism now gleefully
explores what is escaping from human civilization,3 viewing modernity
as an 'anastrophic' collapse into the future, as outlined in Sadie Plant
+ Nick Land's 'Cyberpositive'.
3. For more on this strain of accelerationism see the extensive editorial introduction to
N. l..and, Fanged Noumem (Falmouth and New York: Urbanomic/Sequence Press, 2011).
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The radical shift in tone and thematics, despite conceptual continui
ties, can be related to the intervening hiatus: What differed from the
situation in France one or two decades earlier? Precisely that, par
ticularly in popular culture in the UK, a certain relish for the 'inconceiv
able alienations' outputted by the monstrous machine-organism built
by capital had emerged-along with a manifest disinterest in being
'saved' from it by intellectuals or politicians, Marxist or otherwise.
Of particular note here as major factors in the development of this
new brand of accelerationism were the collective pharmaco-socio
sensory-technological adventure of rave and drugs culture, and the
concurrent invasion of the home environment by media technologies
(VCRs, videogames. computers) and popular investment in dystopian
cyberpunk SF, including William Gibson's Neuromancer trilogy and the
Terminator, Predator and Bladerunner movies (which all became key
'texts' for these writers). As Ballard had predicted. SF had become
the only medium capable of addressing the disorienting reality of the
present: everything is SF. spreading like cancer.
gos cyberculture employed these sonic, filmic and novelistic fic
tions to turbocharge libidinal economics. attaching it primarily to the
interlocking regimes of commerce and digitization, and thanatizing
Lyotard'sjouissance by valorizing a set of aesthetic affects that locked
the human sensorium into a catastrophic desire for its dispersal into
machinic delirium. The dystopian strains of darkside and jungle intensi
fied alienation by sampling and looping the disturbing invocations of SF
movie narratives; accordingly the cyberculture authors side not with
the human but with the Terminator, the cyborg prosecuting a future
war on the battleground of now, travelling back in time to eliminate
human resistance to the rise of the machines; with Terminator /l s
'
future hyperfiuid commercium figured as a 'mimetic polyalloy' capable
of camouflaging itself as any object in order to infiltrate the present;
and against the Bladerunner, ally of Old Bearded Prosecutor Marx.
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# A C C E L E RA T E
agent of biodespotic defense, charged with preventing the authentic,
the human, from irreversible contamination (machinic incest), tasked
with securing the 'retention of [the fictitious figure of] natural human
ity' or organic labour.
Rediscovering lipovetsky's repetitious production of interiority
and identity on the libidinal surface in the figure of a 'negative cyber
netics' dedicated to 'command and control', cyberculture counters
it with a 'positive cybernetics' embodied in the runaway circuits of
modernity, in which 'time itself is looped' and the only command is that
of the feverishly churning virtual futurity of capital as it disassembles
the past and rewrites the present. Against an 'immunopolitics' that
insists on continually reinscribing the prophylactic boundary between
human and its technological other in a futile attempt to shore up
the 'Human Security System', it scans the darkest vistas of earlier
machinic deliriums, echoing Butler in anticipating the end of 'the
human dominion of terrestrial culture', welcoming the fatal inevitability
of a looming nonhuman intelligence: Terminator's Skynet, Marx's
fantastic 'virtuous soul' refigured as a malign global Al from the future
whose fictioning is the only perspective from which contemporary
reality makes sense.
This jungle war fought between immunopolitics and cyborg insur
gency, evacuating the stage of politics, realises within theory the literal
welding of the punk No with the looped-up machinic positivity of the
cyber-'N o demands. No hint of strategy. No logic. No hopes. No
end...No community. No dialectics. No plans for an alternative state'
(CCRU) -in a deliberate culmination of the most 'evil' tendencies of
accelerationism. Beyond a mere description of these processes, this
provocation employs theory and fiction interchangeably, according to a
remix-and-sample regime, as devices to construct the future it invokes.
Thus the performance-assemblages of the collective Cybernetic
Culture Research Unit (CCRU), of whichthe hypersemically overloaded
texts here ('text at sample velocity') were only partial components.
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ACCELERATION
The final section documents the contemporary convergence toward
which the volume as a whole is oriented. While distancing itself from
mere technological optimism, contemporary accelerationism retains
an antipathy, a disgust even, for retreatist solutions, and an ambi
tious interest in reshaping and repurposing (rather than refusing)
the technologies that are the historical product of capitalism. What
is most conspicuously jettisoned from 70s and gos accelerationism is
the tendency to reduce theoretical positions to libidinal figures. Gone
is the attempt to write with rather than about the contemporary
moment, and a call for Enlightenment values and an apparently
imperious rationalism make an unexpected appearance. If prima facie
at odds with the enthusiastic nihilism of its forerunners, however,
today's accelerationisms can be seen as a refinement and rethinking
of them through the prism of the decades that spanned the end
of the twentieth century and the birth of the twenty-first. Broadly
speaking, today the anarchistic tendencies of 'French Theory' are
tempered by a concern with the appropriation of sociotechnologi
cal infrastructure and the design of post-capitalist economic plat
forms, and the antihumanism of the cyberculture era is transformed,
through its synthesis with the Promethean humanism found in the
likes of Marx and Fedorov, into a rationalist inhumanism.
Once again this apparent rupture can be understood through
consideration of the intervening period, which had seen the whole
sale digestion by the capitalist spectacle of the yearning for extra
capitalistic spaces, from 'creativity' to ethical consumerism to political
horizontalism, all of which capitalism had cheerfully supplied. In a
strange reversal of cyberculture's prognostications, technology and
the new modes of monetization now inseparable from it ushered in
a banal resocialisation process, a reinstalling of the most confining
and identitarian ' neo-archaisms' of the human operating system.
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Even as they do the integrative work of Skynet. the very brand
names of this ascendent regime-iPod, Myspace, Facebook-ridicule
cyberculture's aspiration to vicariously participate in a dehumanising
adventure: instead, we (indistinguishably) work for and consume it as
a new breed of autospectacularized all-too-human being. At the same
time as these social neo-archaisms lock in, the depredations of capital
pose an existential risk to humanity, while finance capital itself is in
crisis, unable to bank on the future yet continuing to colonise it through
instruments whose operations far outstrip human cognition. All the
while, an apparently irreversible market cannibalization of what is left
of the public sector and the absorption of the state into a corporate
form continues worldwide, to the troubling absence of any coherent
alternative. Jn short, it is not that the decoding and deterritoralization
processes envisioned in the 70s, and the digital subsumption relished
in the gos, did not take place: only that the promise of enjoyment, the
rise of an 'unserviceable' youth, new fields of dehumanised experience,
'more dancing and less piety', were efficiently rerouted back into the
very identitarian attractors of repetition-without-difference they were
supposed to disperse and abolish, in sole favour of capital's investment
in a stable future for its major beneficiaries.
When Mark Fisher, former member of CCRU, returned in 2012
to the questions of accelerationism. outlining the current incon
sistency and disarray in left political thought. the notion of a 'left
accelerationism' seemed an absurdity. And yet, as Fisher asks, who
wants or truly believes in some kind of return to a past that can only
be an artefact of the imaginary of capitalism itself? As Plant and
Land had asked: 'To what could we wish to return?' The intensifica
tion of sociotechnological integration has gone hand in hand with
a negative theology of an outside of capital; as Fisher remarks, the
escapist nostalgia for a precapitalist world that mars political protest
is also embedded in popular culture's simulations of the past. The
accelerationist dystopia of Terminator has been replaced by the
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primitivist yearnings of Avatar. Fisher therefore states that, in so far
as we seek egress from the immiseration of capitalist realism. 'we
are all accelerationists'; and yet, he challenges, 'accelerationism has
never happened' as a real political force. That is, insofar as we do not
fall into a number of downright inconsistent and impossible positions.
we must indeed, be 'all accelerationists', and this heresy must form
part of any anticapitalist strategy.
A renewed accelerationism, then, would have to work through
the fact that the energumen capital stirred up by Lyotard and co.
ultimately delivered what Fisher has famously called 'capitalist realism'.4
And that, if one were to maintain the accelerationist gambit a la
cyberculture at this point, it would simply amount to taking up arms
for capitalist realism itself, rebuffing the complaint that capitalism did
not deliver as sheer miserablism (Compared to what? And after all,
what is the alternative?) and retracting the promises of jouissance
and 'inconceivable alienations' as narcissistic demands that have no
place in an inhuman process (Isn't it enough that you're working for
the Terminator, you want to enjoy it too?)-a dilemma that opens up
a wider debate regarding the relation between aesthetic enjoyment
and theoretical purchase in earlier accelerationism.
Alex Williams + NickSrnicek's '#Accelerate: Manifesto for an
Accelerationist Politics' can be read as an attempt to honour Fisher's
demand for a contemporary left accelerationist position. In provoca
tion of the contemporary Left's often endemic technological illiteracy,
Srnicek and Williams insist on the necessity of precise cognitive
mapping, and thus epistemic acceleration, for any progressive political
theory and action today. With full confidence that alternatives are
thinkable, they state the obvious, namely that neoliberal capitalism is
not just unfair or unjust as a system. but is no longer a guarantor of
dynamism or progress.
4. M. Fisher. Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative? (London: ZerO, 2009).
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Intended as a first draft of a longer theoretical and political project,
MAP found immediate notoriety (being translated into numerous
languages within months of appearing online) but was also criticised
for not yet offering new solutions beyond focussing on three general
demands: firstly for the creation of a new intellectual infrastructure,
secondly for far-reaching media reform, and thirdly for the reconstitu
tion of new forms of class power. Following the example of Marx
according to them a 'paradigmatic accelerationist thinker'-Wiliams
and Srnicek attempt to overcome the mistrust of technology on the
left in the last decades. And closely affiliated to the rationalist wing
of current speculative philosophy, they adopt the topos of 'folk psy
chology' for their polemic against a folk politics, opposing a politics
based on inherited and intuitively ready-to-hand categories with an
accelerationist politics that conceives its program on the basis of 'a
modernity of abstraction, complexity, globality, and technology' that
outstrips such categories.
A key element of any left Promethean politics must be a con
viction in a transformative potential of technology, including the
'transformative anthropology' it entails, and an eagerness to further
accelerate technological evolution. Thus this new accelerationism
is largely dependent on maturing our understanding of the current
regime of technology and value. Even though Antonio Negri's
response is critical of what he calls the 'technological determinism'
of the Manifesto, he agrees that the most crucial passage of the
manifesto-concerning the relation between machinic surplus value
and social cooperation-cannot really be understood independently of
the technological dimension implied. Clearly it is not enough to valorize
the 'real' human force of labour over the perversions of technocapital
or to attempt to recover it: if 'the surplus added in production is derived
primarily from socially productive cooperation', as Negri says, and if it
must be admitted that this cooperation is technically mediated, then
the project of reappropriation cannot circumvent the necessity to deal
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with the specific 'material and technical qualities' that characterise
this fixed capital today.
With Negri's response, the first of several contributions by Italian
authors linked to 'post-operaismo' who address precisely this point,
we are dealing with a tradition that is already heretical to official
Marxism. Both in theory and in political practice the 'operaismo'
(workerism) of the 1960s and 70s was opposed to official party politics
and its focus on the state. Operaism's molecular politics, focused
on concrete activities in factories, is also the background for recent
(post-operaistic) investigations of immaterial labour and biopower.
In the present context this tradition contributes towards a greater
insight into the nature of technological change (an insight which also
owes something to the bitter experience following early optimism with
regard to the Internet's liberatory possibilities). This allows a much
subtler reading of the relation between technology and acceleration
than cyberculture's championing of positive feedback and networks,
which in certain ways reiterates the horizontalism of Lyotard's meta
physics of the flat 'libidinal band'. Not only has this horizontalism (as
MAP indicates) been an ineffective paradigm for political intervention,
it also significantly misrepresents the mode of operation of 'network
technology' in general. For the latter's technological and subjectiv
izing power (as substantially anticipated in Veblen) resides in the
progressive and hierarchical ' locking in' of standardized hardware and
software protocols each of which cannot be understood as means
to a particular end, but rather present an open set of possibilities.
Tiziana Terranova suggests a reappropriation of this logic in
the form of a 'red stack' bringing together the types of autonomous
electronic currencies that are currently emerging outside the bounds
of nation-state or corporate governance, social media technology, and
the 'bio-hypermedia' that is thriving in the interference zone between
digital and bodily identities. This vision of a digital infrastructure
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# A C C E L E R A T E
of the common enacts MAP's shift from abstract political theory
('this is not a utopia') to an experimental collaboration with design,
engineering, and programming so as to activate the latent potential
of these technologies in the direction of another socius.
In 'finally grasp[ing] the shift from the hegemony of material
labour to the hegemony of i mmaterial labour' (Negri ) , a particular
focus is the increased importance of the algorithm as the general
machine regime in the information economy, which takes the baton
from Marx and Veblen's 'machine system' in continually accumulating,
integrating, linking and synergizing 'informational fixed capital' at every
level of collective production, commercial circulation and consump
tion. As has been widely discussed, the rise of the algorithm runs
parallel to the visible absorption into the integrated machine system
of human cognitive and affective capacities, which are also now (in
Marx's words) 'set in motion by an automaton'-or rather a global
swarm of abstract automata. The algorithms at work in social media
technologies and beyond present an acute test case for reappro
priation. Unlike heavy metal machines, algorithms do not themselves
embody a value, but rather are valuable in so far as they allow value
to be extracted from social interaction: the real fixed capital today, as
Negri suggests, is the value produced through intensive technically
coordinated cooperation, producing a 'surplus beyond the sum' of
its parts (the 'network externalities' which economists agree are the
source of value in a 'connected economy').
To reduce of the value of software to its capacity for monetization,
as Terranova suggests, leaves unspoken the enthusiasm and creativity
in evidence in open source software movements. Perhaps the latter
are better thought of as a collective practice of supererogation seizing
on the wealth of opportunities already produced by capitalism as a
historical product, in the form of hardware and software platforms,
and which breaks the loop whereby this wealth is reabsorbed into
the cycles of exchange value. This invocation of the open-source
co
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movement i s a powerful reminder that there are indeed other moti
vating value systems that may provide the 'libidinizing impulse' that
Fisher calls for in the search for alternative constructions; it also
recalls Firestone's call for a cultural revolution in which the distinction
between aesthetic imagination and technical construction is effaced.
Next Luciana Parisi turns to computational design to ask what we
can learn from the new cutting-edge modes of production that are
developing today. Carefully paring apart the computational processes
from their ideological representations, Parisi suggests that these new
computational processes do indeed present a significant break from
a model of rationality that seeks command and control through the
top-down imposition of universal laws, aiming to symbolically con
dense and circumscribe a system's behaviour and organization. And
yet computation driven by material organization cannot be regarded
as simply entering into a dynamic immanence with the 'intelligence
of matter'. Rather, these algorithmic operations have their own logic,
and open up an artificial space of functions. a 'second nature'. For
Parisi these developments in design figure the more general move
ment toward systems whose accelerated and extended search and
evaluation capabilities (for example in 'big data' applications) suggest
a profound shift within the conception of computation itself.
It is often claimed that through such advanced methods acceler
ated technocapital invests the entire field of material nature, com
pletely beyond the human field of perception. Such a strict dichotomy,
Parisi argues, loses sight of the reality of abstraction in the order of
algorithmic reason itself, moving too quickly from the Laplacean uni
verse of mechanism governed by absolute laws to a vitalist universe of
emergent materiality. Instead, as Parisi argues. the action of algorithms
opens up a space of speculative reason as a Whiteheadian 'adventure
of ideas' in which the counter-agency of reason is present as a motor
for experimentation and the extraction of novelty.
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Reza Negarestani addresses a related dichotomy to the one Parisi
critiques lies behind contemporary political defeatism and inertia
namely, the choice between either equating rationality with a discred
ited and malign notion of absolute mastery, or abandoning all claim for
the special status of human sapience and rationality. In the grip of this
dichotomy, any possible platform for political claims is nullified. Rather
than an abdication of politics, for Negarestani accelerationism must
be understood precisely as the making possible of politics through a
refusal of such a false alternative. In 'The Labor of the Inhuman', he
sets out a precise argument to counter the general trend to identify the
overcoming of anthropomorphism and human arrogance with a nega
tion of the special status of the human and the capacities of reason.
The predicament of a politics after the death of god and in the
face of real subsumption-and the temptation either to destitute
subjectivity, leaving the human as a mere cybernetic relay, or to cling
to obsolete political prescriptions made on the basis of obsolete folk
models of agency-is stripped down by Negarestani to its epistemic
and functional kernel. Drawing on the normative functionalism of
Wilfrid Sellars and Robert Brandom. he criticizes the antihumanism
of earlier accelerationisms as an overreaction no less nihilistically
impotent than a yearning for substantial definitions of the human.
In their place Negarestani proposes an 'inhumanism' that emerges
once the question of what it means to be human is correctly posed,
'in the context of uses and practices'.
What is specific to the human is its access to the symbolic and
sociotechnological means to participate in the construction and revi
sion of norms; the task of exploring what 'we' are is therefore an
ongoing labour whose iterative loops of concept and action yield 'non
monotonic' outcomes. In this sense, understanding and committing to
the human is synonymous with revising and constructing the human.
Farfrom involving a voluntaristic impulse to 'freedom', this labour entails
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the navigation of a constraining field of collateral commitments and
ramifications, through which the human responds to the demands of an
agency (reason) which has no interest in preserving the initial self-image
of the human, but whose unforeseeable ramifications are unfolded
through the human-'a future that writes its own past' in so far as
one views present commitments from the perspective of their future
ramifications, yielding each time a new understanding of past actions.
In other words, whereas the human cannot 'accelerate' within the
strictures of its inherited image, in merely rejecting reason it abdicates
the possibility of revising of this image at all. Acceleration takes place
when and in so far as the human repeatedly affirms its commitment
to being impersonally piloted, not by capital, but by a program which
demands that it cede control to collective revision, and which draws
it towards an inhuman future that will prove to have 'always' been
the meaning of the human. 'A commitment works its way back from
the future', and inconceivable vistas of intelligence open up through
the 'common task' or duty of the labour of the inhuman.
In the absence of this indispensable platform of commitment and
revision. Negarestani insists, no politics, however shrill its protesta
tions and however severe its prescriptions, has the necessary motor
with which to carry a project forward-indeed it is this inability to
'cope with the consequences of committing to the real content of
humanity' that is according to him at the root of today's political inertia.
In effect, then, Negarestani re-places the infinite will-without-finality
within reason rather than capital, and rethinks the inhuman futural
feedback process through which it conducts human history not as a
thanatropic compulsion but as social participation in the progressive
and self-cultivating anastrophism of in/humanity.
Design strategist Benedict Singleton. in a contemporary return
to Fedorov's project, rethinks the question of the mastery of nature
through the question of perhaps humankind's most Promethean
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project: space exploration. Continuing Negarestani's examination of
the pragmatic momentum that drives a continual opening up of new
frontiers of action, he finds in the logic of design a way to think this
'escape' otherwise than in the form of a creative 'leap of faith': as an
'escapology not an escapism', a twisted path in which the stabilisation
of new invariants provides the basis for new modes of action, and,
reciprocally, new modes of action and new instrnments for cognition
enable new perspectives on where we have come from and where we
are going: design is a dense and ramified leveraging of the environment
that makes possible the startling clarity of new observables, as well
as enabling the transformation of apparently natural constants into
manipulable variables required for constructing new worlds.
Drawing out a language of scheming, crafting, and plotting that
declares itself quite clearly in the vocabulary surrounding design, but
which has been studiously ignored by a design theory rather too
keen to ingratiate itself with humanist circles. Singleton elaborates
a counter-history of design that affirms this plotting or manipulative
mode of thought, and even its connotations of deception, drawing
on Marcel Detienne and Jean-Pierre Vernant's unearthing of the
Greek notion of metis-'cunning intelligence'. As Singleton suggests,
metis is exemplified in the trap, which sees the predator adopting
the point of view of the prey so that its own behaviour is harnessed
to ensure its extinction. Metis thus equates to a practice in which, in
the absence of complete information, the adoption of hypothetical
perspectives enables a transformation of the environment-which
in turn provides opportunities for further ruses, seeking to power its
advance by craftily harnessing the factors of the environment and
its expected behaviours to its own advantage.
Important here is the distinguishing of this 'platform logic' from
a means-end 'planning' model of design. In altering the parameters
of the environment in order to create new spaces upon which yet
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more invention can be brought to bear, cunning intelligence gradually
twists free of the conditions in which it finds itself 'naturally' ensnared,
generating paths to an outside that does not conform to the infinite
homothetism of 'more of the same' but instead opens up onto a
series of convoluted plot twists-precisely the ramifying paths of
the 'labour of the inhuman' described by Negarestani. Ultimately this
escapology, Singleton insists, requires an abduction of ourselves by
perspectives that relativize our spontaneous phenomenal grasp of
the environment. Echoing Fedorov, he calls for a return to an audacity
that, far from seeking to 'live in harmony with nature', seeks to spring
man out of his proper place in the natural order so as to accelerate
toward ever more alien spaces.
Taking up this Promethean theme, Ray Brassier launches a
swingeing critique of some of the absurd consequences entailed by
the countervailing call to humility, and uncovering their ultimately
theological justification. Whence the antipathy toward any project of
remaking the world, the hostility to the normative claim that not only
ought things to be different but that they ought to be made differ
ent? Examining Jean-Pierre Dupuy's critique of human enhancement,
Brassier shows how the inflation of human difference into ontological
difference necessitates the same transcendental policing that lain
Hamilton Grant explores in his reading of Bladerunner: what is given
the inherited image of the human and human society assumed as
transcendental bond-shall by no means be made or indeed remade.
Certain limits must be placed on the ability of the human to revise
its own definition, on pain of disturbing a certain 'fragile equilibrium'.
As Brassier remarks, since the conception of what a human can be
and should tolerate is demonstrably historical, it is only possible to
understand this invocation of a proper balance or limit as a theological
sentiment. This reservation of an unconceptualisable transcendence
beyond the limits of manipulation devolves into a farcical discourse
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on the 'reasonableness' of the suffering inflicted by nature's indif
ference to the human-a suffering, subjection, and finitude which is
understood to provide a precious resource of meaning for human life.
However Prometheanism consists precisely both in the refusal of this
incoherency and in the affirmation that the core of the human project
consists in generating new orientations and ends-as in Negarestani's
account of the production and consumption of norms, echoed here in
the 'subjectivism without selfhood [...] autonomy without voluntarism'
that Brassier intimates must lie at the core of Prometheanism. The
productivism of Marx, too, as Brassier reminds us, holds mankind capa
ble of forging its own truth, of knowing and controlling that which is
given to it, and of remaking it. Like Negarestani, Brassier holds that the
essential project here is one of integrating a descriptive account of the
objective (not transcendental) constitution of rational subjectivation
with an advocacy of the rational subject's accession to self-mastery.
Against these new approaches, Nick Land, in 'Teleoplexy', insists
that it is the practice of forward-looking capitalization alone that can
produce the futural dynamic of acceleration. Against Williams and
Srnicek, for whom 'capitalism cannot be identified as the agent of true
acceleration', and Negarestani, for whom the space of reasons is the
future source from which intelligence assembles itself, Land argues
that the complex positive feedback instantiated in market pricing
mechanisms is the only possible referent for acceleration. And since
it is capitalization alone that gives onto the future, the very question
Whatdo we want-the very conception of a conditional acce\eration
ism and the concomitant assertion that 'planning is necessary', about
which MAP and Negri agree, in order to instrumentalise knowledge into
action-for Land amounts to nothing but a call for a compensatory
movement to counteract acceleration. For him it is the state and
politics per se that constitute constraints, not 'capital', and therefore
the claim that 'capitalism has begun to constrain the productive forces
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of technology' is senseless. Land 's 'right accelerationism' appears
here as an inverted counterpart to the communitarian retreat in the
face of real subsumption: like the latter, it accepts that the historical
genesis of technology in capitalism precludes the latter from any
role in a postcapitalist future. If at its most radical accelerationism
claims, in Camatte's words, that 'there can be a revolution that is not
for the human' and draws the consequences of this, then one can
either take the side of an inherited image of the human against the
universal history of capital and dream of 'leaving this world', or one
can accept that 'the means of production are going for a revolution
on their own'. This reappearance of accelerationism in its form as a
foil for the Left (even left-accelerationism), with Land still fulfilling
his role as 'the kind of antagonist that the left needs' (Fisher), rightly
places the onus on the new accelerationisms to show how, between
a prescription for nothing but despair and a excitable description
that, at most, contributes infinitesimally to Skynet's burgeoning self
awareness, a space for action can be constructed.
If 'left accelerationism' is to succeed in 'unleashing latent pro
ductive forces', and if its putative use of 'existing infrastructure as
a springboard to launch towards postcapitalism' is to issue (even
speculatively) in anything but a centralized bureaucracy administering
the decaying empty shell of the historical product of capitalism, then
the question of incentives and of an alternative feedback loop to that
of capitalization will be central. This is one of the 'prescriptions' that
Patricia Reed makes in her review of the potentials and lacunae of
the Manifesto that concludes the volume. Among her other interven
tions is the suggestion that a corrective may be in order to address
the more unpalatable undertones of its relaunch of the modern-a
new, less violent model of universalisation.
It also does not pass unnoticed by Reed that the MAP's rhetoric is
rather modest in comparison to earlier accelerationism's enthusiastic
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invocations and exhortations ('maximum slogan density'). A tacit
aim in the work of Plant. Land, G rant and CCRU is an attempt to find
a place for human agency once the motor of transformation that
drives modernity is understood to be inhuman and indeed indifferent
to the human. The attempt to participate vicariously in its positive
feedback loop by fictioning or even mimicking it can be understood
as an answer to this dilemma. The conspicuous fact that, shunned
by the mainstream of both the 'continental philosophy' and cultural
studies disciplines which it hybridized, the Cyberculture material had
more subterranean influence on musicians. artists and fiction writers
than on traditional forms of political theory or action. indicates how
its stance proved more appropriable as an aesthetic than effective
as a political force. The new accelerationisms instead concentrate
primarily on constructing a conceptual space in which we can once
again ask what to do with the tendencies and machines identified by
the analysis; and yet Fisher's initial return to accelerationism turned
upon the importance of an 'instrumentalisation of the libido' for a
future accelerationist politics. Reed accordingly takes MAP to task
in its failure to minister to the positive 'production of desire', limiting
itself to diagnostics and prognostics too vague to immediately impel
participation. She rightly raises the question of the power of belief
and of motivation: Whatever happened to jouissance? Where is the
motor that will drive commitment to eccentric acceleration? Where
is the 'libidinal dispositif' that will recircuit the compelling incentives
of consumer capitalism. so deeply embedded in popular imagination.
and the bewildered enjoyment of the collective fantasies of tempo
rary autonomous zones? As Negri says, 'rational imagination must
be accompanied by the collective fantasy of new worlds'. Certainly
however much one might 'rationalise' the logic of speculation. it still
maintains a certain bond with fiction; yet earlier accelerationisms
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had attempted to mobilize the force of imaginative fictions so as to
adjust the human perspective to otherwise dizzying speculative vistas.
In addition, as Reed notes, Accelerationism, far from entailing a
short-termism, involves taking a long view on history that traditional
politics is unable to encompass in its 'procedures ... based on finitude,
and the timescale of the individual human'; and equally needs to
engage with algorithmic processes that happen beneath the percep
tual thresholds of human cognition (Terranova. Parisi). Therefore a
part of the anthropological transformation at stake here involves the
appropriation and development of a conceptual and affective appara
tus that allows human perception and action some kind of purchase
upon this 'Promethean scale'-new science-fictional practices, if not
necessarily in literary form. and once again Firestone's 'merging of
the aesthetic with the technological culture'.
RETURN TO OR DEPARTURE FROM MARX?
Before closing this introduction, it is worth returning in more detail
to Marx, since much of the volume contends with his contributions.
whether implicitly or explicitly. The disarray of the Left fundamen
tally stems from 'the failure of a future that was thought inevitable'
(Camatte) by Marxism-the failure of capitalism to self-destruct
as part of history's 'intrinsic organic development'. for the conflict
between productive forces and capitalist relations of production to
reach a moment of dialectical sublation. or for the proletariat to con
stitute itself into a revolutionary agent. And theoretical analysis of
the resulting situation (real subsumption into the spectacle) seems to
offer no positive possibility of opposition, yielding only modes of oppo
sition frozen in cognitive dissonance between their 'disruptions' and
the inevitability of their recuperation. Accelerationism is significant
in the way in which it confronts this plight through a return to a few
fundamental questions posed by Marx upstream from various Marxist
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orthodoxies such as the dialectic, alienation, and the labour theory
of value. Indeed one feature of accelerationism is a repeated return
to these fundamental insights each time under a set of stringent
conditions related to the prevailing political conditions of the epoch,
a radical repetition that sometimes demands violent rejections. For, as
the MAP contends, there is an accelerationist strand to Marx's work
which is far from being the result of a tendentious reading.
According to the ' Fragment', then, the development of large-scale
integrated machine production is a sine qua non of Capital's universal
ascendency ('not an accidental moment', says Marx, later positing that
intensity of machinic objectification=intensity of capital). Machine
production follows directly from, maximally effects, and enters into
synergy with capital's exigency to reduce the need for human labour
and to continually increase levels of production. Undoubtedly the
absorption of the worker into the burgeoning machine organism
more clearly than ever reduces the worker to a tool of capital. And
yet, crucially, Marx makes it clear that these two forms of subsump
tion-under capital, and into a technical system of production-are
neither identical nor inseparable in principle.
In the machine system, the unity of labour qua collectivity of living
workers as foundation of production is shattered, with human labour
appearing as a 'mere moment [ ...] infinitesimal and vanishing' of an
apparently autonomous production process. And although it repro
cesses its original human material into a more satisfactory format for
Capital, for Marx the machine system does not preclude the possibility
of other relations of production under which it may be employed. It
is, however, inseparable from a certain metamorphosis of the human.
embedded in a system that is at once social, epistemic (depending on
the scientific understanding and control of nature), and technological.
Man no longer has a direct connection to production, but one that
is mediated by a ramified, accumulated objective social apparatus
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constructed through the communication, technological embodiment,
replication and enhancement of knowledge and skills-what Marx
calls the 'elevation of direct labour into social labour' wherein 'general
social knowledge [...] become[s] a direct force of production'. Once
again, however, this estrangement is not identical with alienation
through capital; nor is the former, considered apart from the strictures
of the latter, necessarily a deplorable consequence. It is precisely at this
point that Marx enters the speculative terrain of accelerationism: for
in separating these two tendencies-the expanded field of production
and the continuing metamorphoses of the human within it, and the
monotonous regime of capital as the meta-machine that appropri
ates and governs this production process and its development-the
question arises of whether, and how, the colossal sophistication, use
value, and transformative power of one could be effectively freed of
the limitations and iniquities of the other.
Such is the kernel of the MAP's problematic and a point of diver
gence between the various strains of accelerationism: Williams and
Srnicek, for example, urge us to devise means for a practical realization
of this separability, whereas for Nick Land and lain Hamilton Grant
writing in the gos, Deleuze and Guattari's immanentization of social
and technical machines was to be consummated by rejecting their
distinction between technical machines and the capitalist axiomatic.
Since the 'new foundation' created by integrated machine indus
try is dependent not upon direct labour but upon the application of
technique and knowledge, according to Marx it usurps capitalism's
primary foundation of production upon the extortion of surplus labour.
Indeed, through it capital 'works toward its own dissolution': the total
system of production qua complex ramified product of collective
social labour tends to counteract the system that produced it. The
vast increase in productivity made possible through the compaction
of labour into the machine system, of course, ought also to free up
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time making it possible for individuals to produce themselves as
new subjects. How then to reconcile this emancipatory vision of the
sociotechnological process with the fact that the worker increasingly
becomes a mere abstraction of activity, acted on by an 'alien power'
that machinically vivisects its body, ruining its unity and tendentially
replacing it (a power which, as Marx also notes, is 'non-correlated'
that is, the worker finds it impossible to cognitively encompass it) ?
Once again. Marx distinguishes between the machine system as
manifestation of capital's illusory autonomy, confronting the worker
as an alien soul whose wishes they must facilitate Uust as the work
er's wages confront them as the apparent source of their livelihood),
and the machine system seen as a concrete historical product. Even
as the process of the subsumption of labour into machine production
provides an index of the development of capital, it also indicates the
extent to which social production becomes an immediate force in
the transformation of social practice. The monstrous power of the
industrial assemblage is indissociable from the 'development of the
social individual': General social knowledge is absorbed as a force of
production and thus begins to shape society: 'the conditions of the
process of social life itself [...] come under the control of the general
intellect and [are] transformed in accordance with it'. Labour then
only exists as subordinated to the general interlocking social enter
prise into which capital introduces it: Capital produces new subjects,
and the development of the social individual is inextricable from the
development of the system of mechanised capital.
This suggests that the plasticity of the human and the social
nature of technology can be understood as a benchmark for progres
sive acceleration. Marx's contention was that Capitalism's abstraction
of the socius generates an undifferentiated social being that can
be subjectivated into the proletariat. That is, a situation where the
machinic system remained in place and yet human producers no longer
faced these means of production as alienating would necessarily entail
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a further transformation of the human. since. according to Marx, in
the machine system humans face the product of their labour through
a ramified and complex network of mediation that is cognitively and
practically debilitating and disempowering.
This 'transformative anthropology' (Negri) is what every com
munist or commonist ( Negri's or Terranova's post-operaismo) pro
gramme has to take into account. Granted the in-principle separability
of machinic production and its capitalist appropriation. the 'helpless
ness' of the worker in the face of social production would have to be
resolved through a new social configuration: the worker would still be
confronted with this technical edifice and unable to reconcile it with
the 'unity of natural labour'. and yet humans would 'enter into the
direct production process as [a] different subject'. ceasing to suffer
from it because they would have attained a collective mastery over
the process. the common objectified in the machine system no longer
being appropriated by the axiomatic of capital. This participation would
thus be a true social project or common task. rather than the endurance of a supposedly natural order of things with which the worker
abstractly interfaces through the medium of monetary circulation. the
'metabolism of capital'. while the capitalist. operating in a completely
discontinuous sphere. draws off and accumulates its surplus.
However. as Marx observes (and as Deleuze and Guattari empha
sise), capitalism continues to operate as if its necessary assumption
were still the 'miserable' basis of 'the theft of labour time', even as the
'new foundation' of machine production provides 'the material condi
tions to blow this foundation sky-high'. The extortion of human labour
still lies at the basis of capitalist production despite the 'machinic
surplus value' (Deleuze and Guattari) of fixed capital. since the social
axiomatic of capital is disinterested in innovation for itself and is under
the necessity to extract surplus value as conveniently as possible.
and to maintain a reserve army of labour and free-floating capital.
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The central questions of accelerationism follow: What is the rela
tion between the socially alienating effects of technology and the
capitalist value-system? Why and how are the emancipatory effects
of the 'new foundation' of machine production counteracted by the
economic system of capital? What could the social human be if fixed
capital were reappropriated within a new postcapitalist socius?
FORWARD
At the core of new accelerationisms, and responding in depth to
these questions so as to fill out the MAP's outlines, new philosophical
frameworks suggested by Negarestani, Singleton and Brassier reaf
firm Prometheanism, and bring together a transformative anthropol
ogy, a new conception of speculative and practical reason, and a set
of schemas through which to understand the inextricably social, sym
bolic and technological materials from which any postcapitalist order
will have to be constructed. They advocate not accelerationism in a
supposedly known direction, and even less sheer speed, but, as Reed
suggests, 'eccentrication' and, as Negarestani, Brassier and Singleton
emphasise in various ways, navigation within the spaces opened up
through a commitment to the future that truly understands itself as
such and acknowledges the nature of its own agency.
In earlier accelerationisms, 'exploratory mutation' (Land) was only
opened up through the search-space of capital's forward investment
in the future. As Land tells us; 'long range processes are self-designing,
but only in such a way that the self is perpetuated as something
redesigned'. However, for cybercultural acceleration, this 'self' can
be none other than capital's 'infinite will' as it absorbs modernity into
its 'infinite augmentation', its non-finality. In the account of Negar
estani, this non-finality is displaced into the space of reason progres
sively constructed by the advent of symbolic social technologies and
the space of norms they make possible and continually transform,
'
thus providing an underpinning to the MAP s aims and a framework
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within which its technological and social questions can be treated.
In Singleton's understanding of design, the opportunistic and cun
ning appropriation of the powers of nature progressively ratchets
open an uncircumscribable space of freedom, springing human intel
ligence from its parochial cage and extending it through prostheses
and platforms. Whereas earlier moments of accelerationism had been ·
a matter of a conviction in utopian projects or in the possible imminent
collapse of capitalism, and subsequently a delirious summoning of
revolutionary forces at work within it, today's accelerationism, no less
optimistic in certain respects, is undoubtedly more sober; a fact that
cannot be unconnected to the fact that it emerges in a climate of
combined crisis-and-stagnation for capitalism. It is indeed interesting
to note that accelerationism reappears at moments when the powers
of capitalism appear to be in crisis and alternatives appear thin on the
ground. As Fisher insists, today's crisis provides an opportune point at
which to reassess those previous moments.
The destiny of the authors included in the 'Ferment' section is
instructive here: Deleuze and Guattari arguably diluted the stance
of Anti-Oedipus in A Thousand Plateaus with calls for caution in
deterritorialization and a more circumspect analysis of capitalism.
As lain Grant recounts, Lyotard was soon to openly deplore his
'evil' accelerationist moment, and instead-in effect concurring
with Camatte's pessimism-set out to develop minor strategies of
aesthetic resistance. In similar fashion, Lipovetsky's 1983 collection
tellingly entitled The Era of Emptiness5 modulates the revolutionary
tone to one of acquiescent approbation: although still concerned
with an 'accelerating destabilisation', he now sees it largely operating
through a 'process of personalisation' whose overall liberatory vector
is balanced by a contraction into narcissism and the spectacular
consumption of ubiquitous 'communication'.
5. L:Ere du vide: essais sur /'individualisme contemporain (Paris: Gallimard, 1983).
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The cyberculture phase, in extending Lyotard's own 'branching-off'
from Deleuze and Guattari, arguably reproduced his failure to reckon
with the powers of antiproduction: Deleuze and Guattari drew atten
tion not just to the 'positive' schizophrenia of decoding and deter
ritorialization but to a certain schizophrenic dissociation within the
technical or scientific worker himself, who 'is so absorbed in capital
that the reflux of organized, axiomatized stupidity.coincides with him'
('Dear, I discovered how to clone people at the lab today. Now we
can go skiing in Aspen', as Firestone puts it). The transformation of
surplus value of code into surplus value of flux necessitates that, just
as technical knowledge is separated from aesthetics, so the potentially
insurrectionary social import of machinically-potentiated errant intel
ligence is itself 'split' and its surplus drawn off safely by capital.
Thus, under capital, the individual is sequestered from the
immense forces of production they make possible qua social beings,
and feedback is limited to a minimal 'reflux', a purchasing 'power'
qualitatively incommensurable with the massive flows of capital.
In 'Teleoplexy' Land continues to set store by the crossover between
consumer devices and economically-mobilizable technologies within
consumer capitalism itself. Yet the earlier expectation that technol
ogy would of itself disrupt antiproduction was overoptimistic
in line with the contemporary Thatcherite spirit of free enterprise,
which promised to empower every citizen with opportunities for
self-realization through access to the market. The explosion in share
ownership, consumer credit, and the burgeoning of consumer media
and information technology did little to dislodge this dissociative mech
anism that, for Deleuze and Guattari, constitutes 'capitalism's true
police'. Projects such asthose of Terranova and Parisi, of examining and
rebuilding technological platforms outside this value-system and its
ideological assumptions, benefit today from a greater appreciation of
the subtlety of antiproduction, and complement the new philosophical
resources emerging within contemporary accelerationisms.
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MACKAY+AVAN ESSIAN - J NT R O D U CT I O N
Herein lies the real divergence between Land's consolidated right
accelerationism and the burgeoning left-accelerationisms: whereas
one continues to see an ever increasing accumulation of both collec
tive intelligence and collective freedom, bound together in the mon
strous form of Capital itself. the other, as it develops, is proving more
;
speculative and more ambitious in its conception of both 'intelligence
and 'freedom', seeing Capital as neither an inhuman hyperintelligence
nor the one true agent of history, but rather as an idiot savant driven
to squander collective cognitive potential by redirecting it from any
nascent process of collective self-determination back into the self
reinforcing libidinal dynamics of market mechanisms. In this respect.
the work of Negarestani and Brassier forms the conceptual bulwark
preventing left-accelerationism from collapsing back into schizoid
anarchy or technocapitalist fatalism. By reviving the constitutive link
between freedom and reason at the heart of German idealism ( Kant
and Hegel), reconfigured and repurposed by pragmatist functionalism
(Sellars and Brandom), they not only provide a dynamic measure of
the emancipatory promise of modernity at odds with Capital's own
monotonous modes of valuation. but equally demonstrate how its
progressive realization implies, in contrast to the blind idiot cyborgod
of Kapital, the constitution of a genuine collective political agency.
This dialectic parallels that played out in artificial intelligence
research between dominant strains developing Al capable of parochial
problem solving and those increasingly concerned with characterising
artificial general intelligence (AGI). The shift from conceiving i �telli
gence as a quantitatively homogeneous measure of adaptive problem
solving to conceiving it as a qualitatively differentiated typology of
reasoning capacities is the properly philosophical condition of the
shift from the hyperstitional invocation of machinic intelligence of the
Cyberculture era to the active design of new systems of collective
intelligence proposed by MAP.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
The labour of constructing an accelerationist politics, its machines
and its humans, is a matter, as Marx says, of ' both discipline, as
regards the human being in the process of becoming ... [and] at the
same time, practice, experimental science, materially creative and
objectifying science, as regards the human being who has become,
in whose head exists the accumulated knowledge of society'.
If this space of speculation outside of capital is-.not a mirage, if 'we
surely do not yet know what a modern technosocial body can do',
isn't this labour of the inhuman not just a rationalist, but also a vital
ist one in the Spinozist sense, concerning the indissolubly technical
and social human
homo sive machina
-
-
in the two aspects of
its collective labour upon its world and itself: Homo hominans and
homo hominata?
R OBIN MACKAY + ARMEN AVANESSIAN
TRURO + BERLIN, APRIL 201Lj
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MACKAY+AVAN ESSIA N - I N T R O D U CT I O N
ACKNOW LEDG EMENTS
As should already be clear. the conception and production of this
volume has been a group effort (the editors. needless to say, take
responsibility for its failings). Aside from the authors and translators
who have contributed to the volume (several of whom also gave
invaluable help in the preparation of this introduction). the editors
would specifically like to thank, for their discussion, suggestions, and
support: Louise McDermott, Peter Wolfendale (whose contributions
to the introduction were crucial), Helen Hester, Tom Lamberty, Bernd
Klockener. Tavi Meraud, . Matteo Pasquinelli, Max Weber. Moham
mad Salemy, Diana Khamis, Florian Hecker, Terry Kernow Chilli, Nadja
Poderegin ( Honeyglen). Nick Beck (Wylie), Claire Weatherhead
(Bloomsbury), Magdalena Pieta (TJ International), Debbie Wyatt (BJ
Press), Simon Sellars, and all the participants in the Accelerationism
symposia and workshops in 2012-13; and Laphroaig.
Robin Mackay-#Accelerate The Accelerationist ReaderRobin Mackay / text
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P. 57
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Fragm ent
on
M achines
Karl M a rx
1 858
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Once adopted into the production process of capital, the means of
labour passes through different metamorphoses, whose culmination
is the machine, or rather, an automatic system of machinery (system
of machinery: the automatic one is merely its most complete, most
adequate form, and alone transforms machinery into a system),
set in motion by an automaton. a moving power that moves itself;
this automaton consisting of numerous mechanical and intellectual
organs, so that the workers themselves are cast merely as its con
scious linkages.
In the machine, and even more in machinery as an automatic
system, the use value, i.e. the material qualtty of the means of labour, is
transformed into an existence adequate to fixed capital and to capital
as such; and the form in which it was adopted into the production
process of capital, the direct means of labour, is superseded by a
form posited by capital itself and corresponding to it. In no way does
the machine appear as the individual worker's means of labour. Its
distinguishing characteristic is not in the least. as with the means of
labour, to transmit the worker's activity to the object; this activity,
rather, is posited in such a way that it merely transmits the machine's
work, the machine's action, on to the raw material-supervises it and
guards against interruptions. Not as with the instrument, which the
worker animates and makes into his organ with his skill and strength,
and whose handling therefore depends on his ·virtuosity. Rather, it is
the machine which possesses skill and strength in place of the worker,
is itself the virtuoso, with a soul of its own in the mechanical laws
acting through it; and it consumes coal, oil etc .. just as the worker
consumes food, to keep up its perpetual motion. The worker's activity,
reduced to a mere abstraction of activity, is determined and regulated
on all sides by the movement of the machinery, and not the opposite.
The science which compels the inanimate limbs of the machinery,
by their construction, to act purposefully, as an automaton, does not
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# A C C E L E R A T E
exist in the worker's consciousness, but rather acts upon him through
the machine as an alien power, as the power of the machine itself.
The appropriation of living labour by objectified labour-of the
power or activity which creates value by value existing for-itself
which lies in the concept of capital, is posited, in production resting
on machinery, as the character of the production process itself,
including its material elements and its material motion. The production
process has ceased to be a labour process in the sense of a process
dominated by labour as its governing unity. Labour appears, rather,
merely as a conscious organ, scattered among the individual living
workers at numerous points of the mechanical system; subsumed
under the total process of the machinery itself, as itself only a link of
the system, whose unity exists not in the living workers, but rather
in the living (active) machinery, which confronts his individual, insig
nificant doings as a mighty organism. In machinery, objectified labour
confronts living labour within the labour process itself as the power
which rules it; a power which, as the appropriation of living labour, is
the form of capital. The transformation of the means of labour into
machinery, and of living labour into a mere living accessory of this
machinery, as the means of its action, also posits the absorption of
the labour process in its material character as a mere moment of the
realization process of capital. The increase of the productive force of
labour and the greatest possible negation of necessary labour is the
necessary tendency of capital, as we have seen. The transformation of
the means of labour into machinery is the realization of this tendency.
In machinery, objectified labour materially confronts living labour as a
ruling power and as an active subsumption of the latter under itself,
not only by appropriating it, but in the real production process itself;
the relation of capital as value which appropriates value-creating
activity is, in fixed capital existing as machinery, posited at the same
time as the relation of the use value of capital to the use value of
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labour capacity; further, the value objectified in machinery appears
as a presupposition against which the value-creating power of the
individual labour capacity is an infinitesimal, vanishing magnitude;
the production in enormous mass quantities which is posited with
machinery destroys every connection of the product with the direct
.
need of the producer, and . hence with direct use value; it is already
posited in the form of the product's production and in the relations
in which it is produced that it is produced only as a conveyor of
value, and its use value only as condition to that end. In machinery,
objectified labour itself appears not only in the form of product or
of the product employed as means of labour, but in the form of the
force of production itself.
The development of the means of labour into machinery is not
an accidental moment of capital, but is rather the historical reshap
ing of the traditional, inherited means of labour into a form adequate
to capital. The accumulation of knowledge and skills, of the general
productive forces of the social brain, is thus absorbed into capital,
as opposed to labour, and hence appears as an attribute of capital,
and more specifically of fixed capital, in so far as it enters into the
production process as a means of production proper. Machinery
appears, then, as the most adequate form of fixed capital, and fixed
capital, in so far as capital's relations with itself are concerned, appears
as the most adequate form of capital as such. In another respect,
however, in so far as fixed capital is condemned to an existence within
the confines of a specific use value, it does not correspond to the
concept of capital, which, as value, is indifferent to every specific
form of use value, and can adopt or shed any of them as equivalent
incarnations. In this respect, as regards capital's external relations, it
is circulating capital which appears as the adequate form of capital,
and not fixed capital.
(Jl
(Jl
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Further, in so far as machinery develops with the accumulation of
society's science, of productive force generally, general social labour
presents itself not in labour but in capital. The productive force of
society is measured in fixed capital, exists there in its objective form;
and, inversely, the productive force of capital grows with this general
progress. which capital appropriates free of charge. This is not the
place to go into the development of machinery in .cletail; rather only in
its general aspect; in so far as the means of labour, as a physical thing,
loses its direct form, becomes fixed capital, and confronts the worker
physically as capital. In machinery, knowledge appears as alien, exter
nal to him; and living labour [as] subsumed under self-activating
objectified labour. The worker appears as superfluous to the extent
that his action is not determined by [capital's] requirements.
*
The full development of capital, therefore, takes place-or capital has
posited the mode of production corresponding to it-only when the
means of labour has not only taken the economic form of fixed capital,
but has also been suspended in its immediate form, and when fixed
capital appears as machine within the production process, opposite
labour; and the entire production process appears as not subsumed
under the direct skilfulness of the worker, but rather as the techno
logical application of science. [It is,] hence, the tendency of capital to
give production a scientific character; direct labour [is] reduced to a
mere moment of this process. As with the transformation of value into
capital. so does it appear in the further development of capital, that
it presupposes a certain given historical development of the produc
tive forces on one side-science too [is] among these productive
forces-and, on the other, drives and forces them further onwards.
co
lD
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Thus the quantitative extent and the effectiveness (intensity) to
which capital is developed as fixed capital indicate the general degree
to which capital is developed as capital, as power over living labour,
and to which it has conquered the production process as such. Also,
in the sense that it expresses the accumulation of objectified produc
tive forces, and likewise of objectified labour. However, while capital
gives itself its adequate form as use value within the production
process only in the form of machinery and other material manifesta
tions of fixed capital, such as railways etc., this in no way means that
this use value-machinery as such-is capital, or that its existence
as machinery is identical with its existence as capital; any more
than gold would cease to have use value as gold if it were no longer
money. Machinery does not lose its use value as soon as it ceases to
be capital. While machinery is the most appropriate form of the use
value of fixed capital, it does not at all follow that therefore subsump
tion under the social relation of capital is the most appropriate and
ultimate social relation of production for the application of machinery.
To the degree that labour time-the mere quantity of labour-is
posited by capital as the sole determinant element, to that degree does
direct labour and its quantity disappear as the determinant principle
of production-of the creation of use values-and is reduced both
quantitatively, to a smaller proportion, and qualitatively, as an, of
course, indispensable but subordinate moment, compared to general
scientific labour, technological application of natural sciences, on one
side, and to the general productive force arising from social combi
nation in total production on the other side-a combination which
appears as a natural fruit of social labour (although it is a historical
product). Capital thus works towards its own dissolution as the form
dominating production.
While, then, in one respect the transformation of the production
process from the simple labour process into a scientific process, which
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# A C C E L E R A T E
subjugates the forces of nature and compels them to work in the
service of human needs, appears as a quality of fixed capital in contrast
to living labour; while individual labour as such has ceased altogether
to appear as productive, is productive, rather. only in these common
labours which subordinate the forces of nature to themselves, and
while this elevation of direct labour into social labour appears as a
reduction of individual labour to the level of helplessness in face of
the communality represented by and concentrated in capital: so does
it now appear, in another respect, as a quality of circulating capital,
to maintain labour in one branch of production by means of coexist
ing labour in another. In small-scale circulation, capital advances the
worker the wages which the latter exchanges for products neces
sary for his consumption. The money he obtains has this power only
because others are working alongside him at the same time; and
capital can give him claims on alien labour, in the form of money,
only because it has appropriated his own labour. This exchange of
one's own labour with alien labour appears here not as mediated and
determined by the simultaneous existence of the labour of others,
but rather by the advance which capital makes. The worker's ability
to engage in the exchange of substances necessary for his consump
tion during production appears as due to an attribute of the part of
circulating capital which is paid to the worker, and of circulating capital
generally. It appears not as an exchange of substances between the
simultaneous labour powers, but as the metabolism [Stoffwechse�
of capital; as the existence of circulating capital. Thus all powers of
labour are transposed into powers of capital; the productive power of
labour into fixed capital (posited as external to labour and as existing
independently of it (as object [sachlich]); and, in circulating capital,
the fact that the worker himself has created the conditions for the
repetition of his labour, and that the exchange of this, his labour, is
mediated by the coexisting labour of others, appears in such a way
ro
LO
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M A RX - O N M AC H I N ES
that capital gives him an advance and posits the simultaneity of
the branches of labour. (These last two aspects actually belong to
accumulation.) Capital in the form of circulating capital posits itself
as mediator between the different workers.
Fixed capital. in its character as means of production, whose
most adequate form [is} machinery, produces value, i.e. increases
the value of the product, in only two respects: (1) in so far as it has
value: i.e. is itself the product of labour. a certain quantity of labour
in objectified form: (2) in so far as it increases the relation of surplus
labour to necessary labour, by enabling labour, through an increase of
its productive power, to create a greater mass of the products required
for the maintenance of living labour capacity in a shorter time. It is
therefore a highly absurd bourgeois assertion that the worker shares
with the capitalist, because the latter, with fixed capital (which is, as
far as that goes, itself a product of labour, and of alien labour merely
appropriated by capital) makes labour easier for him (rather, he robs
it of all independence and attractive character, by means of the
machine), or makes his labour shorter. Capital employs machinery,
rather, only to the extent that it enables the worker to work a larger
part of his time for capital, to relate to a larger part of his time as time
which does not belong to him, to work longer for another. Through
this process, the amount of labour necessary for the production of
a given object is indeed reduced to a minimum, but only in order to
realize a maximum of labour in the maximum number of such objects.
The first aspect is important, because capital here-quite unintention
ally-reduces human labour, expenditure of energy, to a minimum.
This will redound to the benefit of emancipated labour, and is the
condition of its emancipation. From what has been said, it is clear
how absurd Lauderdale is when he wants to make fixed capital into an
independent source of value, independent of labour time. It is such a
source only in so far as it is itself objectified labour time, and in so far
Ol
CD
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# A C C E L E R A T E
as it posits surplus labour time. The employment of machinery itself
historically presupposes [...] superfluous hands. Machinery inserts itself
to replace labour only where there is an overflow of labour powers.
Only in the imagination of economists does it leap to the aid of the
individual worker. It can be effective only with masses of workers,
whose concentration relative to capital is one of its historic presup
positions, as we have seen. It enters not in oFder to replace labour
power where this is lacking, but rather in order to reduce massively
available labour power to its necessary measure. Machinery enters
only where labour capacity is on hand in masses.
[... ] From the moment [ ..] when fixed capital has developed to
.
a certain extent-and this extent, as we indicated, is the measure
of the development of large industry generally-hence fixed capital
increases in proportion to the development of large industry's produc
tive forces-it is itself the objectification of these productive forces.
as presupposed product-from this instant on, every interruption of
the production process acts as a direct reduction of capital itself, of
its initial value. The value of fixed capital is reproduced only in so far
as it is used up in the production process. Through disuse it loses its
use value without its value passing on to the product. Hence, the
greater the scale on which fixed capital develops, in the sense in which
we regard it here, the more does the continuity of the production
process or the constant flow of reproduction become an externally
compelling condition for the mode of production founded on capital.
In machinery, the appropriation of living labour by capital achieves
a direct reality in this respect as well: It is, firstly, the analysis and
application of mechanical and chemical laws, arising directly out of
science, which enables the machine to perform the same labour as
that previously performed by the worker. However, the development of
machinery along this path occurs only when large industry has already
reached a higher stage, and all the sciences have been pressed into
0
co
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the service of capital; and when, secondly, the available machinery
itself already provides great capabilities. Invention then becomes a
business, and the application of science to direct production itself
becomes a prospect which determines and solicits it. But this is not
the road along which machinery, by and large, arose, and even less the
road on which it progresses in detail. This road is, rather, dissection
[Ana/yse]-through the division of labour, which gradually transforms
the workers' operations into more and more mechanical ones. so that
at a certain point a mechanism can step into their places. [ . . ] Thus,
.
the specific mode of working here appears directly as becoming trans
ferred from the worker to capital in the form of the machine, and his
own labour capacity devalued thereby. Hence the workers' struggle
against machinery. What was the living worker's activity becomes the
activity of the machine. Thus the appropriation of labour by capital
confronts the worker in a coarsely sensuous form; capital absorbs
labour into itself-'as though its body were by love possessed'.1
[... ] The exchange of living labour for objectified labour-Le. the
positing of social labour in the form of the contradiction of capital and
wage labour-is the ultimate development of the value-relation and of
production resting on value. Its presupposition is-and remains-the
mass of direct labour time, the quantity of labour employed, as the
determinant factor in the production of wealth. But to the degree that
large industry develops, the creation of real wealth comes to depend
less on labour time and on the amount of labour employed than on
the power of the agencies set in motion during labour time, whose
'powerful effectiveness' is itself in turn out of all proportion to the
direct labour time spent on their production, but depends rather on
the general state of science and on the progress of technology, or
the application of this science to production. (The development of
1. "Als hatt es Lieb im Leibe', Goethe, Faust, Pt I, Act 5, Auerbach's Cellar in Leipzig.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
this science, especially natural science, and all others with the latter,
is itself in turn related to the development of material production.)
Agriculture, e.g., becomes merely the application of the science of
material metabolism, its regulation for the greatest advantage of the
entire body of society. Real wealth manifests itself, rather-and large
industry reveals this-in the monstrous disproportion between the
labour time applied. and its product, as well as in ttie qualitative imbal
ance between labour, reduced to a pure abstraction, and the power
of the production process it superintends. Labour no longer appears
so much to be included within the production process; rather, the
human being comes to relate more as watchman and regulator to the
production process itself. (What holds for machinery holds likewise for
the combination of human activities and the development of human
intercourse.) No longer does the worker insert a modified natural
thing [Naturgegenstand] as middle link between the object [Objekt]
and himself; rather, he inserts the process of nature, transformed
into an industrial process, as a means between himself and inorganic
nature. mastering it. He steps to the side of the production process
instead of being its chief actor. In this transformation, it is neither the
direct human labour he himself performs. nor the time during which
he works, but rather the appropriation of his own general productive
power, his understanding of nature and his mastery over it by virtue
of his presence as a social body-it is, in a word, the development
of the social individual which appears as the great foundation-stone
of production and of wealth.
The theft of alien labour time, on which the present wealth is
based, appears a miserable foundation in face of this new one. created
by large-scale industry itself. As soon as labour in the direct form has
ceased to be the great well-spring of wealth, labour time ceases and
must cease to be its measure, and hence exchange value [must cease
to be the measure] of use value. The surplus labour of the mass has
N
CD
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ceased to be the condition for the development of general wealth,
just as the non-labour of the few, for the development of the general
powers of the human head. With that, production based on exchange
value breaks down, and the direct, material production process is
stripped of the form of penury and antithesis. The free development
of individualities, and hence not the reduction of necessary labour time
so as to posit surplus labour, but rather the general reduction of the
necessary labour of society to a minimum, which then corresponds to
the artistic, scientific etc. development of the individuals in the time
set free, and with the means created, for all of them. Capital itself is
the moving contradiction, [in] that it presses to reduce labour time
to a minimum, while it posits labour time, on the other side, as sole
measure and source of wealth. Hence it diminishes labour time in the
necessary form so as to increase it in the superfluous form; hence
posits the superfluous in growing measure as a condition-question
of life or death-for the necessary. On the one side, then, it calls to
life all the powers of science and of nature, as of social combination
and of social intercourse, in order to make the creation of wealth
independent (relatively) of the labour time employed on it. On the
other side, it wants to use labour time as the measuring rod for the
giant social forces thereby created, and to confine them within the
limits required to maintain the already created value as value. Forces
of production and social relations-two different sides of the develop
ment of the social individual-appear to capital as mere means, and
are merely means for it to produce on its limited foundation. In fact,
however, they are the material conditions to blow this foundation
sky-high. 'Truly wealthy a nation, when the working day is six rather
than twelve hours. Wealth is not command over surplus labour time'
(real wealth), 'but rather, disposable time outside that needed in direct
production, for every individual and the whole society.'2
2. C. W. Dilke, The Source and Remedy of the National Difficulties (1821), 6.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Nature builds no machines, no locomotives, railways, electric tel
egraphs, self-acting mules etc. These are products of human indus
try; natural material transformed into organs of the human will over
nature, or of human participation in nature. They are organs of the
human brain, created by the human hand; the power of knowledge,
objectified. The development of fixed capital indicates to what degree
general social knowledge has become a direct force of production,
and to what degree, hence, the conditions of the process of social
life itself have come under the control of the general intellect and
been transformed in accordance with it. To what degree the powers
of social production have been produced, not only in the form of
knowledge, but also as immediate organs of social practice, of the
real life process.
[ ... ] The creation of a large quantity of disposable time apart from
necessary labour time for society generally and each of its members
(i.e. room for the development of the individuals' full productive forces,
hence those of society also). this creation of not-labour time appears
in the stage of capital, as of all earlier ones, as not-labour time, free
time, for a few. What capital adds is that it increases the surplus
labour time of the mass by all the means of art and science, because
its wealth consists directly in the appropriation of surplus labour time;
since value is directly its purpose, not use value. It is thus, despite
itself. instrumental in creating the means of social disposable time,
in order to reduce labour time for the whole society to a diminishing
minimum. and thus to free everyone's time for their own development.
But its tendency always, on the one side, to create disposable time, on
the other, to convert it into surplus labour. If it succeeds too well at
the first. then it suffers from surplus production, and then necessary
labour is interrupted, because no surplus labour can be realized by
capital. The more this contradiction develops, the more does it become
evident that the growth of the forces of production can no longer be
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M A R X - O N MACH I N ES
bound up with the appropriation of alien labour. but that the mass of
workers must themselves appropriate their own surplus labour. Once
they have done so-and disposable time thereby ceases to have an
antithetical existence-then. on one side. necessary labour time will
be measured by the needs of the social individual. and. on the other.
the development of the power of social production will grow so rapidly
that. even though production is now calculated for the wealth of
all. disposable time will grow for all. For real wealth is the developed
productive power of all individuals. The measure of wealth is then
not any longer. in any way. labour time. but rather disposable time.
Labour time as the measure of value posits wealth itself as founded
on poverty, and disposable time as existing in and because of the
antithesis to surplus labour time; or. the positing of an individual's
entire time as labour time. and his degradation therefore to mere
worker. subsumption under Jabour. The most developed machinery
thus forces the worker to work longer than the savage does. or than
he himself did with the simplest. crudest tools.
If the entire labour of a country were sufficient only to raise the
support of the whole population. there would be no surplus labour.
consequently nothing that could be allowed to accumulate as capital
If in one year the people raises enough for the support of two years.
one year's consumption must perish. or for one year men must cease
from productive labour. But the possessors of.[the] surplus produce
or capital [-.] employ people upon something not directly and imme
diately productive. e.g. in the erection of machinery. So it goes on.
3
l--l Real economy-saving-consists of the saving of Jabour time
(minimum [and minimization] of production costs): but this saving
is identical with development of the productive force. Hence in no
3. Dilke. The Source and Remedy of the National Difficulties. 4.
0)
01
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way abstinence from consumption, but rather the development of
power, of capabilities of production, and hence both of the capabili
ties as well as the means of consumption. The capability to consume
is a condition of consumption, hence its primary means, and this
capability is the development of an individual potential, a force of
production. The saving of Jabour time [is] equal to an increase of
free time, i.e. time for the full development of ;the individual, which
in turn reacts back upon the productive power of labour as itself
the greatest productive power. From the standpoint of the direct
production process it can be regarded as the production of fixed
capital, this fixed capital being man himself. It goes without saying, by
the way, that direct labour time itself cannot remain in the abstract
antithesis to free time in which it appears from the perspective of
bourgeois economy. Labour cannot become play, as Fourier would
like,� although it remains his great contribution to have expressed the
suspension not of distribution, but of the mode of production itself,
in a higher form, as the ultimate object. Free time-which is both
idle time and time for higher activity-has naturally transformed its
possessor into a different subject, and he then enters into the direct
production process as this different subject. This process is then both
discipline, as regards the human being in the process of becoming;
and, at the same time, practice [AusObung], experimental science,
materially creative and objectifying science, as regards the human
being who has become, in whose head exists the accumulated
knowledge of society.
'1. Fourier, Le Nouveau Monde industriel et societaire (1829), Vol. VI, 2'12-52.
co
co
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T h e Book
of th e
M achines
S a m u e l B utle r
1 872
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The writer commences:-'There was a time, when the earth was
to all appearance utterly destitute both of animal and vegetable life,
and when according to the opinion of our best philosophers it was
simply a hot round ball with a crust gradually cooling. Now if a human
being had existed while the earth was in this state and had been
allowed to see it as though it were some other world with which he
had no concern, and if at the same time he were entirely ignorant
of all physical science, would he not have pronounced it impossible
that creatures possessed of anything like consciousness should be
evolved from the seeming cinder which he was beholding? Would he
not have denied that it contained any potentiality of consciousness?
Yet in the course of time consciousness came. Is it not possible then
that there may be even yet new channels dug out for consciousness,
though we can detect no signs of them at present?'
[.-] The writer, after enlarging on the above for several pages,
proceeded to inquire whether traces of the approach of such a new
phase of life could be perceived at present; whether we could see
any tenements preparing which might in a remote futurity be adapted
for it; whether, in fact, the primordial ceU of such a kind of life could
be now detected upon earth. In the course of his work he answered
this question in the affirmative and pointed to the higher machines.
'There is no security'-to quote his own words-'against the
ultimate development of mechanical consciousness, in the fact of
machines possessing little consciousness now. A mollusc has not
much consciousness. Reflect upon the extraordinary advance which
machines have made during the last few hundred years, and note how
slowly the animal and vegetable kingdoms are advancing. The more
highly organised machines are creatures not so much of yesterday,
as of the last five minutes, so to speak, in comparison with past time.
Assume for the sake of argument that conscious beings have existed
for some twenty million years: see what strides machines have made
CJ)
CD
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in the last thousand! May not the world last twenty million years
longer? If so. what will they not in the end become? Is it not safer
to nip the mischief in the bud and to forbid them further progress?
'But who can say that the vapour engine has not a kind of
consciousness? Where does consciousness begin, and where end?
Who can draw the line? Who can draw any line? Is not everything
interwoven with everything? Is not machinery linked with animal life
in an infinite variety of ways? The shell of a hen's egg is made of a
delicate white ware and is a machine as much as an egg-cup is: the
shell is a device for holding the egg, as much as the egg-cup for holding
the shell: both are phases of the same function; the hen makes the
shell in her inside. but it is pure pottery. She makes her nest outside of
herself for convenience' sake, but the nest is not more of a machine
than the egg-shell is. A "machine" is only a "device".'
Then returning to consciousness, and endeavouring to detect its
earliest manifestations, the writer continued:There is a kind of plant that eats organic food with its flowers: when
a fly settles upon the blossom, the petals close upon it and hold it
fast till the plant has absorbed the insect into its system; but they
will close on nothing but what is good to eat; of a drop of rain or a
piece of stick they will take no notice. Curious! that so unconscious
a thing should have such a keen eye to its own interest. If this is
unconsciousness, where is the use of consciousness?
'Shall we say that the plant does not know what it is doing
merely because it has no eyes, or ears, or brains? If we say that it
a cts mechanically, and mechanically only, shall we not be forced to
admit that sundry other and apparently very deliberate actions are
also mechanical? If it seems to us that the plant kills and eats a fly
mechanically, may it not seem to the plant that a man must kill and
eat a sheep mechanically?
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[.. ] 'Either', he proceeds, 'a great deal of action that has been called
.
purely mechanical and unconscious must be admitted to contain
more elements of consciousness than has been allowed hitherto (and
in this case germs of consciousness will be found in many actions of
the higher machines)-Or (assuming the theory of evolution but at
the same time denying the consciousness of vegetable and crystal
line action) the race of man has descended from things which had
no consciousness at all. In this case there is no a priori improbability
in the descent of conscious (and more than conscious) machines
from those which now exist. except that which is suggested by
the apparent absence of anything like a reproductive system in the
mechanical kingdom. This absence however is only apparent. as I
shall presently show.
'Do not let me be misunderstood as living in fear of any actually
existing machine: there is probably no known machine which is more
than a prototype of future mechanical life. The present machines
are to the future as the early Saurians to man. The largest of them
will probably greatly diminish in size. Some of the lowest vertebrate
attained a much greater bulk than has descended to their more highly
organised living representatives, and in like manner a diminution in the
size of machines has often attended their development and progress.
'Take the watch, for example; examine its beautiful structure:
observe the intelligent play of the minute members which compose
it: yet this little creature is but a development of the cumbrous clocks
that preceded it; it is no deterioration from them. A day may come
when clocks, which certainly at the present time are not diminishing
in bulk, will be superseded owing to the universal use of watches, in
which case they will become as extinct as ichthyosauri, while the
watch, whose tendency has for some years been to decrease in
size rather than the contrary, will remain the only existing type of
an extinct race.
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'But returning to the argument, I would repeat that I fear none of
the existing machines; what I fear is the extraordinary rapidity with
which they are becoming something very different to what they are
at present. No class of beings have in any time past made so rapid a
movement forward. Should not that movement be jealously watched,
and checked while we can still check it? And is it not necessary for this
end to destroy the more advanced of the machines which are in use at
present, though it is admitted that they are in themselves harmless?
'As yet the machines receive their impressions through the agency
of man's senses: one travelling machine calls to another in a shrill
accent of alarm and the other instantly retires; but it is through the
ears of the driver that the voice of the one has acted upon the other.
Had there been no driver, the callee would have been deaf to the caller.
There was a time when it must have seemed highly improbable that
machines should learn to make their wants known by sound, even
through the ears of man; may we not conceive, then, that a day will
come when those ears will be no longer needed, and the hearing will
be done by the delicacy of the machine's own construction?-when
its language shall have been developed from the cry of animals to a
speech as intricate as our own?
'It is possible that by that time children will learn the differential
calculus-as they learn now to speak-from their mothers and
nurses, or that they may talk in the hypothetical language, and work
rule of three sums, as soon as they are born; but this is not probable;
we cannot calculate on any corresponding advance in man's intel
lectual or physical powers which shall be a set-off against the far
greater development which seems in store for the machines. Some
people may say that man's moral influence will suffice to rule them;
but I cannot think it will ever be safe to repose much trust in the
moral sense of any machine.
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'Again, might not the glory of the machines consist in their being
without this same boasted gift of language? "Silence", it has been
said by one writer, "is a virtue which renders us agreeable to our
feUow-creatures."
'But other questions come upon us. What is a man's eye but
a machine for the little creature that sits behind in his brain to look
through? A dead eye is nearly as good as a living one for some time
after the man is dead. It is not the eye that cannot see, but the
restless one that cannot see through it. Is it man's eyes, or is it the
big seeing-engine which has revealed to us the existence of worlds
beyond worlds into infinity? What has made man familiar with the
scenery of the moon, the spots on the sun, or the geography of the
planets? He is at the mercy of the seeing-engine for these things, and
is powerless unless he tack it on to his own identity, and make it part
and parcel of himself. Or. again, is it the eye, or the little see-engine.
which has shown us the existence of infinitely minute organisms which
swarm unsuspected around us?
'And take man's vaunted power of calculation. Have we not
engines which can do all manner of sums more quickly and correctly
than we can? What prizeman in Hypothetics at any of our Colleges
of Unreason can compare with some of these machines in their own
line? In fact, wherever precision is required man flies to the machine
at once, as far preferable to himself. Our sum-engines never drop a
figure, nor our looms a stitch; the machine is brisk and active, when
the man is weary; it is clear-headed and collected, when the man is
stupid and dull; it needs no slumber, when man must sleep or drop;
ever at its post, ever ready for work, its alacrity never flags, its patience
never gives in; its might is stronger than combined hundreds, and
swifter than the flight of birds; it can burrow beneath the earth, and
walk upon the largest rivers and sink not. This is the green tree; what
then shall be done in the dry?
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'Who shall say that a man does see or hear? He is such a hive and
swarm of parasites that it is doubtful whether his body is not more
theirs than his, and whether he is anything but another kind of ant
heap after all. May not man himself become a sort of parasite upon
the machines? An affectionate machine-tickling aphid?
'It is said by some that our blood is composed of infinite living
agents which go up and down the highways and byways of our
bodies as people in the streets of a city. When we look down from
a high place upon crowded thoroughfares, is it possible not to think
of corpuscles of blood travelling through veins and nourishing the
heart of the town? No mention shall be made of sewers, nor of the
hidden nerves which serve to communicate sensations from one
part of the town's body to another; nor of the yawning jaws of the
railway stations, whereby the circulation is carried directly into the
heart,-which receive the venous lines. and disgorge the arterial, with
an eternal pulse of people. And the sleep of the town, how life-like!
with its change in the circulation.'
Here the writer became again so hopelessly obscure that I was
obliged to miss several pages. He resumed:'lt can be answered that even though machines should hear never
so well and speak never so wisely, they will still always do the one or
the other for our advantage, not their own; that man will be the ruling
spirit and the machine the servant; that as soon as a machine fails
to discharge the service which man expects from it, it is doomed to
extinction; that the machines stand to man simply in the relation of
lower animals, the vapour-engine itself being only a more economi
cal kind of horse; so that instead of being likely to be developed into
a higher kind of life than man's, they owe their very existence and
progress to their power of ministering to human wants, and must
therefore both now and ever be man's inferiors.
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'This is all very well. But the servant glides by imperceptible
approaches into the master; and we have come to such a pass
that, even now, man must suffer terribly on ceasing to benefit the
machines. If all machines were to be annihilated at one moment, so
that not a knife nor lever nor rag of clothing nor anything whatsoever
were left to man but his bare.body alone that he was born with, and
if all knowledge of mechanical laws were taken from him so that he
could make no more machines, and all machine-made food destroyed
so that the race of man should be left as it were naked upon a desert
island, we should become extinct in six weeks. A few miserable indi
viduals might linger, but even these in a year or two would become
worse than monkeys. Man's very soul is due to the machines; it is a
machine-made thing: he thinks as he thinks, and feels as he feels,
through the work that machines have wrought upon him, and their
existence is quite as much a sine qua non for his, as his for theirs.
This fact precludes us from proposing the complete annihilation of
machinery, but surely it indicates that we should destroy as many of
them as we can possibly dispense with, lest they should tyrannise
over us even more completely.
'True, from a low materialistic point of view, it would seem that
those thrive best who use machinery wherever its use is possible
with profit; but this is the art of the machines-they serve that they
may rule. They bear no malice towards man for destroying a whole
race of them provided he creates a better instead; on the contrary,
they reward him liberally for having hastened their development. It is
for neglecting them that he incurs their wrath, or for using inferior
machines, or for not making sufficient exertions to invent new ones,
or for destroying them without replacing them; yet these are the
very things we ought to do, and do quickly; for though our rebellion
against their infant power will cause infinite suffering, what will not
things come to, if that rebellion is delayed?
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'They haye preyed upon man's grovelling preference for his material
over his spiritual interests, and have betrayed him into supplying that
element .of struggle and warfare without which no race can advance.
The lower animals progress because they struggle with one another;
the weaker die, the stronger breed and transmit their strength. The
machines being of themselves unable to struggle, have got man to
do their struggling for them: as long as he fulfils.this function duly, all
goes well with him-at least he thinks so; but the moment he fails
to do his best for the advancement of machinery by encouraging
the good a'ld destroying the bad, he is left behind in the race of
competition; and this means that he will be made uncomfortable in
a variety of ways, and perhaps die.
'So that even now the machines will only serve on condition of
being served, and that too upon their own terms; the moment their
terms are not complied with, they jib, and either smash both them
selves and all whom they can reach, or turn churlish and refuse to
work at all. How many men at this hour are living in a state of bondage
to the machines? How many spend their whole lives, from the cradle
to the grave, in tending them by night and day? Is it not plain that
the machines are gaining ground upon us, when we reflect on the
increasing number of those who are bound down to them as slaves,
and of those who devote their whole souls to the advancement of
the mechanicaJ kingdom?
'The vapour-engine must be fed with food and consume it by
fire even as man consumes it; it supports its combustion by air as
man supports it; it has a pulse and circulation as man has. It may be
granted that man's body is as yet the more versatile of the two, but
then man's body is an older thing; give the vapour-engine but half
the time that man has had, give it also a continuance of our present
infatuation, and what may it not ere long attain to?
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'There are certain functions indeed of the vapour-engine which will
probably remain unchanged for myriads of years-which in fact will
perhaps survive when the use of vapour has been superseded: the
piston and cylinder, the beam, the fly-wheel, and other parts of the
machine wil probably be permanent, just as we see that man and
many of the lower animals share like modes of eating, drinking, and
sleeping; thus they have hearts which beat as ours, veins and arter
ies, eyes, ears. and noses; they sigh even in their sleep, and weep
and yawn; they are affected by their children; they feel pleasure and
pain, hope, fear, anger, shame; they have memory and prescience;
they know that if certain things happen to them they will die, and
theyfeat death as much as we do; they communicate their thoughts
to one another, and some of them deliberately act in concert. The
comparison of similarities is endless: I only make it because some may
say that since the vapour-engine is not likely to be improved in the
main particulars, it is unlikely to be henceforward extensively modified
at all. This is too good to be true: it will be modified and suited for an
infinite variety of purposes, as much as man has been modified so as
to exceed the brutes in skill.
'In the meantime the stoker is almost as much a cook for his
engine as our own cooks for ourselves. Consider also the colliers and
pitmen and coal merchants and coal trains, and the men who drive
them, and the ships that carry coals-what an army of servants do
the machines thus employ! Are there not probably more men engaged
in tending machinery than in tending men? Do not machines eat as it
were by mannery? Are we not ourselves creating our successors in
the supremacy of the earth? daily adding to the beauty and delicacy
of their organisation, daily giving them greater skill and supplying
more and more of that self-regulating self-acting power which will
be better than any intellect?
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'What a new thing it is for a machine to feed at all! The plough, the
spade, and the cart must eat through man's stomach; the fuel that
sets them going must burn in the furnace of a man or of horses. Man
must consume bread and meat or he cannot dig; the bread and meat
are the fuel which drive the spade. If a plough be drawn by horses,
the power is supplied by grass or beans or oats, which being burnt
in the belly of the cattle give the power of working: without this fuel
the work would cease, as an engine would stop if its furnaces were
to go out.
'A man of science has demonstrated "that no animal has the
power of originating mechanical energy, but that all the work done
in its life by any animal, and all the heat that has been emitted from
it, and the heat which would be obtained by burning the combustible
matter which has been lost from its body during life, and by burning
its body after death, make up altogether an exact equivalent to the
heat which would be obtained by burning as much food as it has used
during its life, and an amount of fuel which would generate as much
heat as its body if burned immediately after death." I do not know
how he has found this out, but he is a man of science-how then can
it be objected against the future vitality of the machines that they
are, in their present infancy, at the beck and call of beings who are
themselves incapable of originating mechanical energy?
'The main point, however, to be observed as affording cause for
alarm is, that whereas animals were formerly the only stomachs of the
machines, there are now many which have stomachs of their own,
and consume their food themselves. This is a great step towards their
becoming, if not animate, yet something so near akin to it, as not to
differ more widely from our own life than animals do from vegetables.
And though man should remain, in some respects, the higher creature,
is not this in accordance with the practice of nature, which allows
superiority in some things to animals which have, on the whole, been
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long surpassed? Has she not allowed the ant and the bee to retain
superiority over man in the organisation of their communities and social
arrangements, the bird in traversing the air, the fish in swimming, the
horse in strength and fleetness, and the dog in self-sacrifice?
'It is said by some with whom I have conversed upon this subject,
that the machines can never be developed into animate or quasi
animate existences, inasmuch as they have no reproductive system,
nor seem ever likely to possess one. If this be:; taken to mean that
they cannot marry, and that we are never likely to see a fertile union
between two vapour-engines with the young ones playing about the
door of the shed, however greatly we might desire to do so, I will readily
grant it. But the objection is not a very profound one. No one expects
that all the features of the now existing organisations will be absolutely
repeated in an entirely new class of life. The reproductive system of
animals differs widely from that of plants, but both are reproductive
systems. Has nature exhausted her phases of this power?
'Surely if a machine is able to reproduce another machine sys
tematically, we may say that it has a reproductive system. What is
a reproductive system, if it be not a system for reproduction? And
how few of the machines are there which have not been produced
systematically by other machines? But it is man that makes them do
so. Yes; but is it not insects that make many of the plants reproduc
tive, and would not whole families of plants die out if their fertilisation
was not effected by a class of agents utterly foreign to themselves?
Does any one say that the red clover has no reproductive system
because the humble bee (and the humble bee only) must aid and
abet it before it can reproduce? No one. The humble bee is a part
of the reproductive system of the clover. Each one of ourselves has
sprung from minute animalcules whose entity was entirely distinct
from our own, and which acted after their kind with no thought or
heed of what we might think about it. These little creatures are part
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of our own reproductive system; then why not we part of that of
the machines?
[ ...] 'The misery is that man has been blind so long already. In his
reliance upon the use of steam he has been betrayed into increasing
and multiplying. To withdraw steam power suddenly will not have the
effect of reducing us to the state in which we were before its introduc
tion; there will be a general break-up and time of ar.iarchy such as has
never been known: it will be as though our population were suddenly
doubled, with no additional means of feeding the increased number.
The air we breathe is hardly more necessary for our animal life than
the use of any machine, on the strength of which we have increased
our numbers, is to our civilisation; it is the machines which act upoh
man and make him man, as much as man who has acted upon and
made the machines; but we must choose between the alternative
of undergoing much present suffering, or seeing ourselves gradually
superseded by our own creatures, till we rank no higher in comparison
with them, than the beasts of the field with ourselves.
'Herein lies our danger. For many seem inclined to acquiesce
in so dishonourable a future. They say that although man should
become to the machines what the horse and dog are to us, yet that
he will continue to exist, and will probably be better off in a state of
domestication under the beneficent rule of the machines than in his
present wild condition. We treat our domestic animals with much
kindness. We give them whatever we believe to be the best for them;
and there can be no doubt that our use of meat has increased their
happiness rather than detracted from it. In like manner there is reason
to hope that the machines will use us kindly, for their existence will be
in a great measure dependent upon ours; they will rule us with a rod
of iron, but they wHI not eat us; they will not only require our services
in the reproduction and education of their young, but also in waiting
upon them as servants; in gathering food for them, and feeding them;
0
CXJ
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in restoring them to health when they are sick; and in either burying
their dead or working up their deceased members into new forms of
mechanical existence.
'The very nature of the motive power which works the advance
ment of the machines precludes the possibility of man's life being
rendered miserable as well as enslaved. Slaves are tolerably happy
if they have good masters, and the revolution will not occur in our
time, nor hardly in ten thousand years, or ten times that. Is it wise
to be uneasy about a contingency which is so remote? Man is not a
sentimental animal where his material interests are concerned, and
though here and there some ardent soul may look upon himself and
curse his fate that he was not born a vapour-engine, yet the mass of
mankind will acquiesce in any arrangement which gives them better
food and clothing at a cheaper rate, and will refrain from yielding to
unreasonable jealousy merely because there are other destinies more
glorious than their own.
'The power of custom is enormous, and so gradual will be the
change, that man's sense of what is due to himself will be at no time
rudely shocked; our bondage will steal upon us noiselessly and by
imperceptible approaches: nor will th ere ever be such a clashing of
desires between man and the machines as will lead to an encounter
between them. Among themselves the machines will war eternally,
but they will still require man as the being through whose agency
the struggle will be principally conducted. In point of fact there is no
occasion for anxiety about the future happiness of man so long as
he continues to be in any way profitable to the machines; he may
become the inferior race, but he will be infinitely better off than he is
now. Is it not then both absurd and unreasonable to be envious of our
benefactors? And should we not be guilty of consummate folly if we
were to reject advantages which we cannot obtain otherwise, merely
because they involve a greater gain to others than to ourselves?'
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The
Com mon
Tas k
N i co lai Fed o rov
1 90 6
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A classless agricultural commune, where the intellectuals would be
the teachers and where cottage industries would be carried on dur
ing the winter months, would end competition, speculation, social
unrest. revolutions and even international wars, because all those vital
forces now squandered on quarrelling would find a boundless field of
application. In the worldwide activity of the classless rural communes
.
there would be scope for peaceful labour and also for daring courage,
the spirit of adventure, the thirst for sacrifice, novelty and exploits.
And any commune is likely to have a percentage of such innate abili
ties. Out of such stuff were made knights errant, the ascetics who
opened up the forests of the far north, Cossacks, runaway serfs,
and the like. Now they would be the explorers, the new explorers of
celestial space.
The prejudice that the celestial expanse is unattainable to man
has grown gradually over the centuries, but cannot have existed ab
initio. Only the loss of tradition and the separation of men of thought
from men of action gave birth to this prejudice. However, for the sons
of man the celestial worlds are the future homes of the ancestors,
since the skies will be attainable only to the resurrected and the
resurrecting. The exploration of outer space is only the preparation
for these future dwelling places.
The spread of humanity over the planet was accompanied by
the creation of new (artificial) organs and coverings. The purpose
of humanity is to change all that is natural, a free gift of nature, into
what is created by work. Outer space, expansion beyond the limits of
f
the planet, deman s precisely such radical change. The great feat of
courage now confronting humanity requires the highest martial virtues
such as daring and self-sacrifice, while excluding that which is most
horrible in war-taking the lives of people like oneself.
The destiny of the Earth convinces us that human activity cannot
be bounded by the limits of the planet. We must ask whether our
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knowledge of its likely fate, its inevitable extinction, obliges us to do
something or not. Can knowledge be useful, or is it a useless frill? In
the first case we can say that Earth itself has become conscious of
its fate through man, and this consciousness is evidently active-the
path of salvation. The mechanic has appeared just as the mechanism
has started to deteriorate. It is absurd to say that nature created
both the mechanism and the mechanic; one must admit that God
is educating man through his own human experience. God is the
king who does everything for man but also through man. There is
no purposefulness in nature-it is for man to introduce it, and this is
his supreme raison d'etre. The Creator restores the world through us
and brings back to life all that has perished. That is why nature has
been left to its blin d ness, and mankind to its lusts. Through the labour
of resuscitation, man as an independent, self-created, free creature
freely responds to the call of divine love. Therefore humanity must
not be idle passengers, but the crew of its terrestrial craft propelled
by forces the nature of which we do not even know-is it photo-,
thermo- or electro-powered? We will remain unable to discover what
force propels it until we are able to control it. In the second case,
that is to say, if the knowledge of the final destiny of our Earth is
unnatural, alien and useless to it, then there is nothing else to do than
to become passively fossilised in contemplating the slow destruction
of our home and graveyard.
The possibility of a real transcendence from one world to another
only seems fantastic. The necessity of such movements is self-evident
to those who dare take a sober look at the difficulties of creating a
truly moral society, in order to remedy all social ills and evils, because
to forgo the possession of celestial space is to forgo the solution of the
economic problem posed by Malthus and, more generally, of a moral
human existence. What is more of a fantasy-to think how to realise
a moral ideal while closing one's eyes to the tremendous obstacles in
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the way, or to boldly recognise these obstacles? Of course, one can
give up morality, but that implies giving up being human. What is more
fantastic-to create a moral society by postulating the existence of
other beings in other worlds and envisioning the emigration thither
of souls, the existence of which cannot be proven, or to transform
this transcendental migration into an immanent one-that is, to make
such a migration the goal of human activity?
The obstacle to the building of a moral society is the absence of
a cause or task great enough to absorb all the energies of those who
spend them at present on discord. In world history we know of no
event which, although threatening the end of the society in question,
could unite all its forces and stop all quarrels and hostilities within that
society. All periods of history have witnessed aspirations that reveal
humanity as unwilling to remain confined within the narrow limits
of our Earth. The so-called states of ecstasy and ravishments into
heaven were manifestations of such aspirations. Is this not a proof
that unless mankind finds a wider field of activity, eras of common
sense, or rather of fatigue and disillusionment with fruitless longings,
will be succeeded by eras of enthusiasm, ecstatic visions. and so on?
Throughout history these moods have alternated. Our era confirms
·
all this, for we see alongside 'the kingdom of this world', with its
filthy reality, a 'Kingdom of God' in the form of revivalist movements,
spiritualistic table-turning, and the like. So long as there are no real
translations to other worlds. people will resort to fantasies, ecstatic
rapture and drug abuse. Even common drunkenness is apparently
caused by the absence of a wider, purer, all-absorbing activity.
The three particular problems-the regulation of atmospheric
phenomena, the control of the motion of the Earth and the search for
'new lands' (to colonise) form one general problem, that of survival or,
more precisely, the return to life of our ancestors. Death can be called
real only when all means of restoring life, at least all those that exist in
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nature and have been discovered by the human race, have been tried
and have failed. It should not be assumed that we hope that a special
force will be discovered for this purpose. What we should assume is
that the transformation of the blind force of nature into a conscious
force will be that agent. Mortality is an inductive conclusion. We know
that we are the offspring of a multitude of deceased ancestors. But
however great the number of the deceased, this cannot be the basis
for an incontrovertible acceptance of death because it would entail
an abdication of our filial duty. Death is a property, a state conditioned
by causes; it is not a quality which determines what a human being
is and must be.
[ ...] To ensure good harJests. agriculture must extend beyond
the boundaries of the Earth, since the conditions which determine
harvests and, in general. plant and animal life do not depend on soil
alone. If the hypotheses are correct that the solar system is a galaxy
with an eleven-year electromagnetic cycle during which the quantity
of sunspots and magnetic (the Northern Lights) and electric storms
reach in turn their maximum and minimum. and that the meteorological
process depends on these fluctuations, it follows that good and bad
harvests do so too. Consequently, the entire telluric-solar process
must be brought into the field of agriculture. If. moreover. it is true
that interactions between phenomena are of an electrical nature and
that this force is akin to or even identical with that of the nervous
impulses which serve will and consciousness. then it follows that the
present state of the solar system can be compared to an organism
in which the nervous system has not yet fully developed and has
not yet become differentiated from its muscular and other systems.
Man's economic needs require the organisation of just such a
regulatory apparatus. without which the solar system would remain
a blind, untrammelled, death-bearing entity. The problem consists.
on the one hand, in elaborating the paths which would transmit to
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FEDO ROV -TH E C O M M O N TAS K
human consciousness everything going o n i n the solar system and,
on the other, in establishing the conductors by means of which all
that is happening in it, all that is procreating, could become an activity
of restoration. So long as no such paths for informing conscious
ness exist, so long as we have no more than conductors directing
activity-mere revolutions and upheavals-the world will present a
strange, distorted order, which could better be described as disorder,
'indifferent nature', unfeeling and u nconscious, will continue 'to shine
with eternal beauty', 1 while a being conscious of the beauty of incorruption will feel both excluded and excluding. Could a Being which
is neither excluded nor excluding be the Creator of what is a chaos
rather than a cosmos?
Of course we cannot know what the world was like in the
beginning because we only know it as it is. However, judging by the
Creator, we can to some extent presume or imagine what a world of
innocence and purity could have been. Could we not envision, too,
that the relations of the first humans with the world were similar to
those of an infant not yet in control of his organs, who has not yet
learned to manage them-in other words, could the first humans have
been beings who should (and could, without suffering or pain) have
created such organs as would have been capable of living in other
worlds, in all environments? But man preferred pleasure and failed
to develop, to create organs adapted to all environments, and these
organs (namely, cosmic forces) became atrophied and paralysed, and
the Earth became an isolated planet. Thought and being became
distinct. Man's creative activity of developing organs corresponding to
various environments was reduced to feeding and then to devouring.
Man placed himself at the mercy of fate (that is to say, the annual
rotation of the Earth), he submitted to the Earth; childbirth replaced
1. From Pushkin's poem 'Brozhu Ii ya vdol' ulits shumnykh .', 1829.
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the artistry of reproducing oneself in other beings, a process com
parable to the birth of the Son from the Father, or the procession
of the Holy Ghost. Later, proliferation increased the struggle, which
was fostered by an unbridled surge of procreation; and with the
increase in birth, mortality increased too. The conditions which could
have regulated this concatenation of phenomena disappeared, and
gradually there came revolutions, storms, drought and earthquakes;
the solar system became an uncontrolled world, a star with an
eleven-year cycle or some other periodicity of various catastrophes.
Such is the system we know. One way or another, to confirm us in our
knowledge, the solar system must be transformed into a controlled
economic entity.
The immensity of the solar system is sufficient to inspire awe
and, naturally, objectors will stress our smallness. When we turn our
attention to small particles which consist of an enormous number of
even smaller ones and which should also be brought within human
economic management, then the objection will be our own size;
indeed, for infusoria these tiny particles seem very great, and yet
they are more accessible to them than to us.
The problem is obviously not one of size, and our relative smallness
or bigness only indicates the difficulty-a severe difficulty, but not
an impossibility. For a vast intellect able to encompass in one formula
the motions both of the largest celestial bodies in the Universe and
of the tiniest atoms, nothing would remain unknown; the future as
well as the past would be accessible to him. The collective mind of
all humans working for many generations together would of course
be vast enough-all that is needed is concord, multi-unity.
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The M achine Process
and th e N atural
D ecay of th e
B u siness Enterprise
Tho rste i n Ve b le n
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THE MACHINE PROCESS
In its bearing on modern life and modern business, the 'machine
process' means something more comprehensive and less external
than a mere aggregate of mechanical appliances for the mediation of
human labor. It means that, but it means something more than that.
The civil engineer, the mechanical engineer, the navigator, the mining
expert, the industrial chemist and mineralogist, the electrician-the
work of all these falls within the lines of the modern machine process,
as well as the work of the inventor who devises the appliances of the
process and that of the mechanician who puts the inventions into
effect and oversees their working. The scope of the process is larger
than the machine.1 In those branches of industry in which machine
methods have been introduced, many agencies which are not to be
classed as mechanical appliances, simply, have been drawn into the
process, and have become integral factors in it. Chemical properties
of minerals, e.g., are counted on in the carrying out of metallurgical
processes with much the same certainty and calculable effect as
are the motions of those mechanical appliances by whose use the
minerals are handled.
The sequence of the process involves both the one and the other,
both the apparatus and the materials, in such intimate interaction that
the process cannot be spoken of simply as an action of the apparatus
upon the materials. It is not simply that the apparatus reshapes the
materials; the materials reshape themselves by the help of the appa
ratus. Similarly in such other processes as the refining of petroleum,
oil, or sugar; in the work of the industrial chemical laboratories; in the
use of wind, water, or electricity, etc.
Wherever manual dexterity, the rule of thumb, and the fortuitous
conjunctures of the seasons have been supplanted by a reasoned
1. Cf. C. Taylor. Modern Factory System (London. 1891). 7LJ-7.
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procedure on the basis of a systematic knowledge of the forces
employed, there the mechanical industry is to be found, even in the
absence of intricate mechanical contrivances. It is a question of the
character of the process rater than a question of the complexity of the
contrivances employed. Chemical, agricultural, and animal industries,
as carried on by the characteristically modern methods and in due
touch with the market, are to be included in the modern complex of
mechanical industry.2
No one of the mechanical processes carried on by the use of a
given outfit of appliances is independent of other processes going
on elsewhere. Each draws upon and presupposes the proper working
of many other processes of a similarly mechanical character. None
of the processes in the mechanical industries is self-sufficing. Each
follows some and precedes other processes in an endless sequence,
into which each fits and to the requirements of which each must
adapt its own working. The whole concert of industrial operations
is to be taken as a machine process, made up of interlocking detail
processes, rather than as a multiplicity of mechanical appliances each
2. Even in work that lies so near the fortuities of animate nature as dairying, stock
breeding, and the improvement of crop plants, a determinate, reasoned routine
replaces the rule of thumb. By mechanical control of his materials the dairyman,
e.g., selectively determines the rate and kind of the biological processes that
change his raw material into finished product. The stock-breeder's aim is to reduce
the details of the laws of heredity, as they apply within his field, to such definite
terms as will afford him a technologically accurate routine of breeding, and then
to apply this technological breeding process to the production of such varieties of
stock as will, with the nearest approach to mechanical exactness and expedition.
turn the raw materials of field and meadow into certain specified kinds and grades
of finished product. The like is true of the plant-breeders. Agricultural experiment
stations and bureaus. in all civilized countries, are laboratories working toward
an effective technological control of biological factors. with a view to eliminating
fortultous, disserviceable, and useless elements from the processes of agricultural
production, and so reducing these processes to a calculable, expeditious, and
wasteless routine.
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V E B L E N - T H E M AC H I N E P R O C ESS
doing its particular work in severalty. This comprehensive industrial
process draws into its scope and turns to account all branches of
knowledge that have to do with the material sciences, and the whole
makes a more or less delicately balanced complex of sub-processes.3
Looked at in this way the industrial process shows two well
marked general characteristics: (a) the running maintenance of inter
stitial adjustments between the several sub-processes or branches
of industry, wherever in their working they touch one another in the
sequence of industrial elaboration; and (b) an unremitting requirement
of quantitative precision, accuracy in point of time and sequence, in
the proper inclusion and exclusion of forces affecting the outcome,
in the magnitude of the various physical characteristics (weight, size.
density, hardness, tensile strength, elasticity, temperature, chemical
reaction, actinic sensitiveness, etc.) of the materials handled as well as
of the appliances employed. This requirement of mechanical accuracy
and nice adaptation to specific uses has led to a gradual pervading
enforcement of uniformity to a reduction to staple grades and staple
character in the materials handled, and to a thorough standardizing
of tools and units of measurement. Standard physical measurements
are of the essence of the machine's regime.�
[...] The like is true of the finished products. Modern consumers
in great part supply their wants with commodities that conform to
certain staple specifications of size. weight, and grade. The consumer
(that is to say the vulgar consumer) furnishes his hose, his table, and
his person with supplies of standard weight and measure, and he can
to an appreciable degree specify his needs and his consumption in
the notation of the standard gauge. As regards the mass of civilized
mankind, the idiosyncrasies of the individual consumers are required
3. Cf. Sombart, Moderne Kapitalismus, vol. II, ch. Ill.
�- Twelfth Census (US): ' Manufactures,' pt. I, xxxvi.
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to conform to the uniform gradations imposed upon consumable
goods by the comprehensive mechanical processes of industry. 'Local
color' it is said, is falling into abeyance in modern life, and where it
is still found it tends to assert itself in units of the standard gauge.
[...] The machine process pervades the modern life and dominates
it in a mechanical sense. Its dominance is seen in the enforce
ment of precise mechanical measurements and adjustment and the
reduction of all manner of things, purposes and acts, necessities.
conveniences, and amenities of life, to standard units. [...] The point of
immediate interest here is the further bearing of the machine process
upon the growth of culture, the disciplinary effect which this move
ment for standardization and mechanical equivalence has upon the
human material.
This discipline falls more immediately on the workmen engaged
in the mechanical industries, and only less immediately on the rest of
the community which lives in contact with this sweeping machine
process. Wherever the machine process extends, it sets the pace
for the workmen, great and small. The pace is set, not wholly by the
particular processes in the details of which the given workman is
immediately engaged, but in some degree by the more comprehen
sive process at large into which the given detail process fits. It is no
longer simply that the individual workman makes use of one or more
mechanical contrivances for effecting certain results. Such used to
be his office in the earlier phases of the use of machines, and the
work which he now has in hand still has much of that character. But
such a characterization of the workman's part in industry misses the
peculiarly modern feature of the case. He now does this work as a
factor involved in a mechanical process whose movement controls his
motions. It remains true, of course, as it always has been true, that he
is the intelligent agent concerned in the process, while the machine,
furnace, roadway, or retort are inanimate structures devised by man
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and subject to the workman's supervision. But the process comprises
him and his intelligent motions, and it is by virtue of his necessarily
taking an intelligent part in what is going forward that the mechanical
process has its chief effect upon him. The process standardizes his
supervision and guidance of the machine. Mechanically speaking, the
machine is not his to do with it as his fancy may suggest. His place
is to take thought of the machine and its work in terms given him
by the process that is going forward. His thinking in the premises is
reduced to standard units of gauge and grade. If he fails of the precise
measure, by more or less, the exigencies of the process check the
aberration and drive home the absolute need of conformity.
There results a standardization of the workman's intellectual life in
terms of mechanical process, which is more unmitigated and precise
the more comprehensive and consummate the industrial process in
which he plays a part. This must not be taken to mean that such work
need lower the degree of intelligence of the workman. No doubt the
contrary is nearer the truth. He is a more efficient workman the more
intelligent he is, and the discipline of the machine process ordinarily
increases his efficiency even for work in a different line from that
by which the discipline is given. But the intelligence required and
inculcated in the machine industry is of a peculiar character. The
machine process is a severe and insistent disciplinarian in point of
intelligence. It requires close and unremitting thought, but it is thought
which runs in standard terms of quantitative precision. Broadly, other
intelligence on the part of the workman is useless; or it is even worse
than useless, for a habit of thinking in other than quantitative terms
blurs the workman's quantitative apprehension of the facts with
which he has to do.5
5. If, e.g., he takes to myth making and personifies the machine or the process
and imputes and benevolence to the mechanical applications, after the manner of
current nursery tales and pulpit oratory, he is sure to go wrong.
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In so far as he is a rightly gifted and fully disciplined workman. the
final term of his habitual thinking is mechanical efficiency, under
standing 'mechanical' in the sense in which it is used above. But
mechanical efficiency is a matter of precisely adjusted cause and
effect. What the discipline of the machine industry inculcates. there
fore, in the habits of life and of thought of the workman. is regularity
of sequence and mechanical precision; and the intellectual outcome is
an habitual resort to terms of measurable cause and effect. together
with a relative neglect and disparagement of such exercise of the
intellectual faculties as does not run on these lines.
Of course, in no case and with no class does the discipline of the
machine process mould the habits of life and of thought fully into its
own image. There is present in the human nature of all classes too
large a residue of the propensities and aptitudes carried over from
the past and working to a different result. The machine's regime
has been of too short duration. strict as its discipline may be. and
the body of inherited traits and traditions is too comprehensive and
consistent to admit of anything more than a remote approach to
such a consummation.
The machine process compels a more or less unremitting atten
tion to phenomena of an impersonal character and to sequences and
correlations not dependent for their force upon human predilection
nor created by habit and custom. The machine throws out anthropo
morphic habits of thought. It compels the adaptation of the workman
to his work, rather than the adaptation of the work to the workman.
The machine technology rests on a knowledge of impersonal, material
cause and effect, not on the dexterity, diligence, or personal force of
the workman. still less on the habits and propensities of the work
man's superiors. Within the range of this machine-guided work, and
within the range of modern life so far as it is guided by the machine
process. the course of things is given mechanically, impersonally, and
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the resultant discipline is a discipline in the handling of impersonal
facts for mechanical effect. It inculcates thinking in terms of opaque,
impersonal cause and effect, to the neglect of those norms of validity
that rest on usage and on the conventional standards handed down by
usage. Usage counts for little in shaping the processes of work of this
kind or in shaping the modes of thought induced by work of this kind.
The machine process gives no insight into questions of good and
evil, merit and demerit, except in point of material causation, nor into
the foundations or the constraining force of law and order, except
such mechanically enforced law and order as may be stated in terms
of pressure, temperature, velocity, tensile strength, etc. 6 The machine
technology takes no cognizance of conventionally established rules
of precedence; it knows neither manners nor breeding and can make
no use of any of the attributes of worth. Its scheme of knowledge
and of inference is based on the laws of material causation, not on
those of immemorial custom, authenticity, or authoritative enactment.
Its metaphysical basis is the Jaw of cause and effect, which in the
thinking of its adepts has displaced even the law of sufficient reason.7
The range of conventional truths, or of institutional legacies,
which it traverses is very comprehensive, being, indeed, all-inclusive.
It is but little more in accord with the newer, eighteenth century
conventional truths of natural rights, natural liberty, natural law, or
6. Such expressions as 'good and ill.' 'merit and demerit.' 'law and order,' when
applied to technological facts or to the outcome of material science, are evidently
only metaphorical expressions. borrowed from older usage and serviceable only as
figures of speech.
7. Tarde. Psychologie Economique (Paris: Alcan. 1902), vol. I. 122-31, offers a
characterization of the psychology of modern work. contrasting, among other
things, the work of the machine workman with that of the handicraftsman
in respect of its psychological requirements and effects. It may be taken as a
temperate formulation of the cent commonplaces on this topic. and seems to be
fairly wide of the mark.
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natural religion, than with the older norms of the true, the beautiful,
and the good which these displaced. Anthropomorphism, under
whatever disguise, is of no use and of no force here.
[...] The discipline of the modern industrial employments is rela
tively free from the bias of conventionality, but the difference between
the mechanical and the business occupations in this respect is a
difference of degree. It is not simply that conventional standards of
certainty fall into abeyance for lack of exercise. among the industrial
classes. The positive discipline exercised by their work in good part
runs counter to the habit of thinking in conventional, anthropomorphic
terms, whether the conventionality is that of natural rights or any
other. And in respect of this positive training away from conventional
norms, there is a large divergence between the several lines of
industrial employment. In proportion as a given line of employment
has more of the character of a machine process and less of the
character of handicraft, the matter-of-fact training which it gives
is more pronounced. In a sense more intimate than the inventors of
the phrase seem to have appreciated, the machine has become the
master of the man who works with it and an arbiter in the cultural
fortunes of the community into whose life it has entered.
The intellectual and spiritual training of the machine in modern
life, therefore, is very far-reaching. It leaves but a small proportion
of the community untouched; but while its constraint is ramified
throughout the body of the population, and constrains virtually all
classes at some points in their daily life, it falls with the most direct,
intimate, and unmitigated impact upon the skilled mechanical classes,
for these have no respite from its mastery, whether they are at
work or at play. The ubiquitous presence of the machine, with its
spiritual concomitant-workday ideals and scepticism of what is only
conventionally valid is the unequivocal mark of the Western culture
of to-day as contrasted with the culture of other times and places.
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It pervades all classes and strata in a varying degree, but on an average
in a greater degree than at any time in the past, and most potently in
the advanced industrial communities and in the classes immediately
in contact with the mechanical occupations. As the comprehensive
mechanical organization of the material side of life has gone on, a
heightening of this cultural effect throughout the community has also
supervened, and with a farther and faster movement in the same
direction a farther accentuation of this 'modern' complexion of culture
is fairly to be looked for, unless some remedy be found. And as the
concomitant differentiation and specialization of occupations goes on,
a still more unmitigated discipline fails upon ever widening classes of
the population, resulting in an ever weakening sense of conviction,
allegiance, or piety toward the received institutions.
THE NATURAL D ECAY OF BUS INESS ENTERPRISE
Broadly, the machine discipline acts to disintegrate the institutional
heritage, of all degrees of antiquity and authenticity-whether it be
the institutions that embody the principles of natural liberty or those
that comprise the residue of more archaic principles of conduct still
current in civilized life. It thereby cuts away that ground of law and
order on which business enterprise is founded. The further cultural
bearing of this disintegration of the received order is no doubt suf
ficiently serious and far-reaching, but it does not directly concern
the present inquiry. It comes in question here only in so far as such a
deterioration of the general cultural tissues involves a setback to the
continued vigor of business enterprise. But the future of business
enterprise is bound up with the future of civilization, since the cultural
scheme is, after all, a single one, comprising many interlocking ele
ments, no one of which can be greatly disturbed without disturbing
the working of all the rest.
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In its bearing on the question in hand, the 'social problem' at large pre
sents this singular situation. The growth of business enterprise rests
on the machine technology as its material foundation. The machine
industry is indispensable to it; it cannot get along without the machine
process, But the discipline of the machine process cuts away the
spiritual, institutional foundations of business enterprise; the machine
industry is incompatible with its continued growth; it cannot, in the long
run, get along with the machine process. In their struggle against the
cultural effects of the machine process, therefore, business principles
cannot win in the long run; since an effectual mutilation or inhibition
of the machine system would gradually push business enterprise to
the wall; whereas with a free growth of the machine system business
principles would presently fall into abeyance.
The institutional basis of business enterprise-the system of
natural rights-appears to be a peculiarly instable affair. There is
no way of retaining it under changing circumstances, and there is
no way of returning to it after circumstances have changed. It is a
hybrid growth, a blend of personal freedom and equality on the one
hand and of prescriptive rights on the other hand. The institutions
and points of law under the natural-rights scheme appear to be of an
essentially provisional character. There is relatively great flexibility and
possibility of growth and change; natural rights are singularly insecure
under any change of circumstances. The maxim is well approved that
eternal vigilance is the price of (natural) liberty. When, as now, this
system is endangered by socialistic or anarchistic disaffection there is
no recourse that will carry the institutional apparatus back to a secure
natural-rights basis. The system of natural liberty was the product of
a peaceful regime of handicraft and petty trade; but continued peace
and industry presently carried the cultural growth beyond the phase
of natural rights by giving rise to the machine process and the large
business; and these are breaking down the structure of natural rights
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by making these rights nugatory on the one hand and by cutting away
the spiritual foundations of them on the other hand. Natural rights
being a by-product of peaceful industry, they cannot be reinstated by
a recourse to warlike habits and a coercive government. since warlike
habits and coercion are alien to the natural-rights spirit. Nor can they
be reinstated by a recourse to settled peace and freedom, since ah
era of settled peace and freedom would push on the dominance of
the machine process and the large business, which break down the
system of natural liberty.
When the question is cast up as to what will come of this conf1ict
of institutional forces-called the Social Problem-it is commonly
made a question of remedies: What can be done to save civilized
mankind from the vulgarization and disintegration wrought by the
machine industry?
Now, business enterprise and the machine process are the two
prime movers in modern culture: and the only recourse that holds a
promise of being effective. therefore. is a recourse to the workings
of business traffic. And this is a question, not of what is conceivably,
ideally, idyllically possible for the business community to do if they
will take thought and act advisedly and concertedly toward a chosen
cultural outcome. but of what is the probable cultural outcome to be
achieved through business traffic carried on for business ends, not
for cultural ends. It is a question not of what ought to be done. but
of what is to take place.
Persons who are solicitous for the cultural future commonly turn
to speculative advice as to what ought to be done toward holding fast
that which is good in the cultural heritage. and what ought further
to be done to increase the talent that has been intrusted to this
generation. The practical remedy offered is commonly some proposal
for palliative measures. some appeal to philanthropic, aesthetic, or
religious sentiment, some endeavor to conjure with the name of
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one or another of the epiphenomena of modern culture. Something
must be done, it is conceived, and this something takes the shape
of charity organizations, clubs and societies for social 'purity', for
amusement, education, and manual training of the indigent classes.
for colonization of the poor, for popularization of churches, for clean
politics, for cultural missionary work by social settlements, and the
like. These remedial measures whereby it is proposed to save or to
rehabilitate certain praiseworthy but obsolescent habits of life and
of thought are, all and several, beside the point so far as touches the
question in hand. Not that it is hereby intended to cast a slur on these
meritorious endeavors to save mankind by treating symptoms. The
symptoms treated are no doubt evil, as they are said to be; or if they
are not evil, the merits of that particular question do not concern
the present inquiry. The endeavors in question are beside the point
in that they do not fall into the shape of a business proposition_ They
are, on the whole, not so profitable a line of investment as certain
other ventures that are open to modern enterprise. Hence, if they
traverse the course of business enterprise and of industrial exigencies,
they are nugatory, being in the same class with the labor of Sisyphus;
whereas if they coincide in effect with the line along which business
and industrial exigencies move, they are a work of supererogation,
except so far as they may be conceived to accelerate a change that
is already under way.
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The Two Modes
of Cultura l H istory
S h u la m it h Fi resto n e
1 970
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For our analysis we shall define culture in the following way: Culture is
the attempt by man to realize the conceivable in the possible. Man's
consciousness of himself within his environment distinguishes him
from the lower animals, and turns him into the only animal capable
of culture. This consciousness. his highest faculty, allows him to
project mentally states of being that do not exist at the moment:
Able to constnuct a past and future, he becomes a creature of time
a historian and a prophet. More than this, he can imagine objects and
states of being that have never existed and may never exist in the
real world-he becomes a maker of art. Thus. for example, though
the ancient Greeks did not know how to fly, still they could imagine it.
The myth of Icarus was the formulation in fantasy of their conception
of the state 'flying'.
But man was not only able to project the conceivable into fantasy.
He also learned to impose it on reality: by accumulating knowledge,
learning experience, about that reality and how to handle it. he could
shape it to his liking. This accumulation of skills for controlling the
environment. technology, is another means to reaching the same
end, the realization of the conceivable in the possible. Thus. in our
example, if. in the BC era, man could fly on the magic carpet of myth or
fantasy, by the twentieth century, his technology, the accumulation of
his practical skills. had made it possible for him to fly in actuality-he
had invented the airplane. Another example: In the Biblical legend, the
Jews, an agricultural people stranded for forty years in the desert,
were provided by God with Manna, a miraculous substance that
could be transformed at will into food of any color, texture. or taste;
modem food processing, especially with the 'green revolution', will
probably soon create a totally artificial food production. perhaps with
this chameleon attribute. Again, in ancient legend, man could imagine
mixed species, e.g .. the centaur or the unicorn. or hybrid births. like
the birth of an animal from a human. or a virgin birth; the current
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biological revolution, with its increasing knowledge of the reproduc
tive process, could now-if only the first crude stages-generate
these monstrosities in reality. Brownies and elves, the Golem of
medieval Jewish lore, Mary Shelley's monster in Frankenstein, were
the imaginative constructions that preceded by several centuries
the corresponding technological acumen. Many other fantastical
constructions-ghosts, mental telepathy, Methuselah's age-remain
to be realized by modern science.
These two different responses, the idealistic and the scientific,
do not merely exist simultaneously: there is a dialogue between
the two. The imaginative construction precedes the technological,
though often it does not develop until the technological knowhow is
'in the air'. For example, the art of science fiction developed, in the
main, only a half-century in advance of, and now coexists with, the
scientific revolution that is transforming it into a reality-for example
(an innocuous one), the moon flight. The phrases 'way out', 'far out'.
'spaced', the observation 'it's like something out of science fiction'
are common language. In the aesthetic response, because it always
develops in advance, and is thus the product of another age, the
same realization may take on a sensational or idealistic cast, e.g.,
Frankenstein's monster, as opposed to, let us say, General Electric's
CAM (Cybernetic Anthropomorphic Machines) Handyman. (An artist
can never know in advance just how his vision might be articulated
in reality.)
Culture then is the sum of, and the dynamic between. the two
modes through which the mind attempts to transcend the limitations
and contingencies of reality. These two types of cultural responses
entail different methods to achieve the same end, the realization of
the conceivable in the possible. In the first,1 the individual denies
1. The idealistic mode corresponding roughly to the suprahistorical, nonmaterialist
"metaphysical" mode of thought against which Marx and Engels revolted.
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the limitations of the given reality by escaping from it altogether, to
define, create, his own possible. In the provinces of the imagination,
objectified in some way-whether throug h the development of a
.
visual image within some artificial boundary, say four square feet
of canvas, through visual images projected through verbal symbols
(poetry), with sound ordered into a sequence (music), or with verbal
ideas ordered into a progression (theology, philosophy)-he creates
an ideal world governed by hi;; own artificially imposed order and
harmony, a structure in which he consciously relates each part to the
whole, a static (and therefore 'timeless') construction. The degree
to which he abstracts his creation from reality is unimportant, for
even when he most appears to imitate, he has created an illusion
governed by its own-perhaps hidden-set of artificial laws. (Degas
said that the artist had to lie in order to tell the truth.) This search
for the ideal, realized by means of an artificial medium, we shall call
the Aesthetic Mode.
In the second type of cultural response the contingencies of
reality are overcome, not through the creation of an alternate real
ity, but through the mastery of reality's own workings: the laws of
nature are exposed, then turned against it, to shape it in accordance
with man's conception. If there is a poison, man assumes there is an
antidote; if there is a disease, he searches for the cure: every fact of
nature that is understood can be used to alter it. But to achieve the
ideal through such a procedure takes much longer, and is infinitely
more painful, especially in the early stages of knowledge. For the vast
and intricate machine of nature must be entirely understood-and
there are always fresh and unexpected layers of complexity before it
can be thoroughly controlled. Thus before any solution can be found
to the deepest contingencies of the human condition, e.g., death,
natural processes of growth and decay must be catalogued, smaller
laws related to larger ones. This scientific method (also attempted by
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Marx and Engels in their materialist approach to history) is the attempt
by man to master nature through the complete understanding of its
mechanics. The coaxing of reality to conform with man's conceptual
ideal, through the application of information extrapolated from itself,
we shall call the Technological Mode.
We have defined culture as the sum of, and the dialectic between,
the two different modes through which man can resolve the tension
created by the flexibility of his mental faculties within the limitations
of his given environment. The correspondence of these two different
cultural modes with the two sexes respectively is unmistakable. We
have noted how those few women directly creating culture have
gravitated to disciplines within the Aesthetic Mode. There is a good
reason for this: the aesthetic response corresponds with 'female'
behavior. The same terminology can be applied to either: subjective,
intuitive, introverted, wishful, dreamy or fantastic, concerned with
the subconscious (the id), emotional, even temperamental (hys
terical). Correspondingly, the technological response is the masculine
response: objective, logical, extroverted, realistic, concerned with
the conscious mind (the ego) , rational, mechanical, pragmatic and
down-to-earth, stable. Thus the aesthetic is the cultural recreation of
that half of the psychological spectrum that has been appropriated
to the female, whereas the technological response is the cultural
magnification of the male half.
Just as we have assumed the biological division of the sexes for
procreation to be the fundamental 'natural' duality from which grows
all further division into classes, so we now assume the sex division
to be the root of this basic cultural division as well. The interplay
between these two cultural responses, the 'male' Technological Mode
and the 'female' Aesthetic Mode, recreates at yet another level the
dialectic of the sexes-as well as its superstructure, the caste and
the economic-class dialectic. And just as the merging of the divided
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sexual, racial, and economic classes is a precondition for sexual, racial,
or economic revolution respectively, so the merging of the aesthetic
with the technological culture is the precondition of a cultural revo
lution. And just as the revolutionary goal of the sexual, racial. and
economic revolutions is, rather than a mere leveling of imbalances of
class, an elimination of class categories altogether, so the end result ·
of a cultural revolution must be, not merely the integration of the two
streams of culture, but the elimination of cultural categories altogether,
the elimination of culture itself as we know it. But before we discuss
this ultimate cultural revolution or even the state of cultural division in
our own time, let us see how this third level of the sex dialectic-the
interaction between the Technological and Aesthetic Modes-oper
ated to determine the flow of cultural history.
*
At first technological knowledge accumulated slowly. Gradually man
learned to control the crudest aspects of his environment-he
discovered the tool, control of fire, the wheel, the melting of ore
to make weapons and plows, even. eventually, the alphabet-but
these discoveries were few and far between, because as yet he
had no systematic way of initiating them. Eventually however. he
had gathered enough practical knowledge to build whole systems,
e.g., medicine or architecture, to create juridical, political, social, and
economic institutions. Civilization developed the primitive hunting
horde into an agricultural society, and finally, through progressive
stages. into feudalism, capitalism. and the first attempts at socialism.
But in all this time, man's ability to picture an Ideal world was far
ahead of his ability to create one. The primary cultural forms of
ancient civilizations-religion and its offshoots, mythology, legend.
primitive art and magic, prophesy and history-were in the Aesthetic
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Mode: they imposed only an artificial, imaginary order on a universe
still mysterious and chaotic. Even primitive scientific theories were
only poetic metaphors for what would later be realized empirically.
The science and philosophy and mathematics of classical antiq
uity, forerunners of modem science, by sheer imaginative prowess,
operating in a vacuum independently of material laws, anticipated
much of what was later proven: Democritus' atoms and Lucretius'
'substance' foreshadowed by thousands of years the discoveries of
modern science. But they were realized only within the realm of the
imaginary Aesthetic Mode.
In the Middle Ages the J udaeo-Christian heritage was assimi
lated with pagan culture, to produce medieval religious art and the
metaphysics of Thomas Aquinas and the Scholastics. Though concur
rently Arab, science, an outgrowth of the Greek Alexandrian Period
(third century BC to seventh century AD), was amassing consider
able information in such areas as geography, astronomy, physiology,
mathematics-a tabulation essential to the later empiricism-there
was little dialogue. Western science with its alchemy, its astrology,
the 'humours' of medieval medicine, was still in a 'pseudo-scientific'
stage, or in our definition, still operating according to the Aesthetic
Mode. This medieval aesthetic culture, composed of the Classical and
Christian legacies, culminated in the Humanism of the Renaissance.
Until the Renaissance, then, culture occurred in the Aesthetic
Mode because, prior to that time, technology had been so primitive,
the body of scientific knowledge so far from complete. In terms of
the sex dialectic, this long stage of cultural history corresponds with
the matriarchal stage of civilization: The Female Principal-dark,
mysterious, uncontrollable-reigned, elevated by man himself, still in
awe of unfathomable Nature. Men of culture were its high priests of
homage: until and through the Renaissance all men of culture were
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practitioners of the ideal aesthetic mode, thus, in a sense, artists. The
Renaissance, the pinnacle of cultural humanism, was the golden age
of the Aesthetic (female) Mode.
And also the beginning of its end. By the sixteenth century culture
was undergoing a change as profound as the shift from matriarchy
to patriarchy in terms of the sex dialectic, and corresponding to the
decline of feudalism in the class dialectic. This was the first merging
of the aesthetic culture with the technological, in the creation of
modern (empirical) science.
In the Renaissance, Aristotelian Scholasticism had remained
powerful though the first cracks in the dam were already apparent.
But it was not until Francis Bacon, who first proposed to use science
to 'extend more widely the limits of the power and the greatnesses
of man,' that the marriage of the Modes was consummated. Bacon
and Locke transformed philosophy, the attempt to understand life,
from abstract speculation detached from the real world (metaphys
ics, ethics, theology, aesthetics, logic) to an uncovering of the real
laws of nature, through proof and demonstration (empirical science).
In the empirical method propounded by Francis Bacon, insight and
imagination had to be used only at the earliest stage of the inquiry.
Tentative hypotheses would be formed by induction from the facts,
and then consequences would be deduced logically and tested for
consistency among themselves and for agreement with the primary
facts and results of ad hoc experiments. The hypothesis would
become an accepted theory only after all tests had been passed,
and would remain, at least until proven wrong, a theory capable of
predicting phenomena to a high degree of probability.
The empirical view held that by recording and tabulating all pos
sible observations and experiments in this manner, the Natural Order
would emerge automatically. Though at first the question 'why' was
still asked as often as the question 'how', after information began to
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accumulate, each discovery building upon the last to complete the
jigsaw, the speculative, the intuitive, and the imaginative gradually
became less valuable. When once the initial foundations had been
laid by men of the stature of Kepler, Galileo, and Newton, thinkers still
in the inspired 'aesthetic' science tradition, hundreds of anonymous
technicians could move to fill in the blanks, leading to, in our own time.
the dawn of a golden age of science-to the Technological Mode
what the Renaissance had been to the Aesthetic Mode.
THE TWO CULTURES TODAY
Now, in 1970. we are experiencing a major scientific breakthrough.
The new physics, relativity, and the astrophysical theories of con
temporary science had already been realized by the first part of this
century. Now, in the latter part, we are arriving, with the help of the
electron microscope and other new tools, at similar achievements in
biology, biochemistry, and all the life sciences. Important discoveries
are made yearly by small, scattered work teams all over the United
States, and in other countries as well-of the magnitude of DNA in
genetics, or of Urey and Miller's work in the early fifties on the origins
of life. Full mastery of the reproductive process is in sight, and there
has been significant advance in understanding the basic life and
death process. The nature of aging and growth, sleep and hiberna
tion, the chemical functioning of the brain and the development of
consciousness and memory are all beginning to be understood in
their entirety. This acceleration promises to continue for another
century, or however long it takes to achieve the goal of Empiricism:
total understanding of the laws of nature.
This amazing accumulation of concrete knowledge in only a
few hundred years is the product of philosophy's switch from the
Aesthetic to the Technological Mode. The combination of 'pure' sci
ence, science in the Aesthetic Mode, with pure technology, caused
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greater progress toward the goal of technology-the realization of
the conceivable in the actual-than had been made in thousands of
years of previous history.
Empiricism itself is only the means, a quicker and more effective
technique, for achieving technology's ultimate cultural goal: the
building of the ideal in the real world. One of its own basic dictates is
that a certain amount of material must be collected and arranged into
categories before any decisive comparison, analysis, or discovery can
be made. In this light, the centuries of empirical science have been
little more than the building of foundations for the breakthroughs
of our own time and the future. The amassing of information and
understanding of the laws and mechanical processes of nature ('pure
research') is but a means to a larger end: total understanding of Nature
in order, ultimately, to achieve transcendence.
In this view of the development and goals of cultural history,
Engels' final goal, quoted above in the context of political revolution,
is again worthy of quotation:
The whole sphere of the conditions of life which environ man, and
have hitherto ruled him, now comes under the dominion and control of
man, who for the first time becomes the real conscious Lord of Nature.
Empirical science is to culture what the shift to patriarchy was to
the sex dialectic, and what the bourgeois period is to the Marxian
dialectic-a latter-day stage prior to revolution. Moreover, the three
dialectics are integrally related to one another vertically as well as
horizontally: The empirical science growing out of the bourgeoisie
(the bourgeois period is in itself a stage of the patriarchal period)
follows the humanism of the aristocracy (The Female Principle, the
matriarchy) and with its development of the empirical method in
order to amass real knowledge (development of modern industry
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in order to amass capital) eventually puts itself out of business.
The body of scientific discovery (the new productive modes) must
finally outgrow the empirical (capitalistic) mode of using them.
Andjust as the internal contradictions of capitalism must become
increasingly apparent, so must the internal contradictions of empirical
science-as in the development of pure knowledge to the point where
it assumes a life of its own, e.g., the atomic bomb. As long as man is
still engaged only in the means-the charting of the ways of nature,
the gathering of 'pure' knowledge-to his final realization, mastery
of nature, his knowledge, because it is not complete, is dangerous. So
dangerous that many scientists are wondering whether they shouldn't
put a lid on certain types of research. But this solution is hopelessly
inadequate. The machine of empiricism has its own momentum, and is,
for such purposes, completely out of control. Could one actually decide
what to discover or not discover? That is, by definition, antithetical to
the whole empirical process that Bacon set in motion. Many of the
most important discoveries have been practically laboratory accidents,
with social implications barely realized by the scientists who stumbled
into them. For example, as recently as five years ago Professor F. C.
Steward of Cornell discovered a process called 'cloning': by placing
a single carrot cell in a rotating nutrient he was able to grow a whole
sheet of identical carrot cells, from which he eventually recreated
the same carrot. The understanding of a similar process for more
developed animal cells, were it to slip out-as did experiments with
'mind-expanding' drugs-could have some awesome implications.
Or, again, imagine parthenogenesis, virgin birth, as practiced by the
greenfly, actually applied to human fertility.
Another internal contradiction in empirical science: the mechanis
tic, deterministic, 'soulless' scientific world view, which is thE) result of
the means to, rather than the (inherently noble and often forgotten)
ultimate purpose of, Empiricism: the actualization of the ideal in reality.
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The cost in humanity is particularly high to the scientist himself,
who becomes little more than a cultural technician. For, ironically
enough, to properly accumulate knowledge of the universe requires
a mentality the very opposite of comprehensive and integrated.
Though in the long run the efforts of the individual scientist could
lead to domination of the environment in the interest of humanity,
temporarily the empirical method demands that its practitioners
themselves become 'objective,' mechanistic, overprecise. The public
image of the white-coated Dr. Jekyll with no feelings for his subjects.
mere guinea pigs, is not entirely false: there is no room for feelings
in the scientist's work; he is forced to eliminate or isolate them in
what amounts to an occupational hazard. At best he can resolve
this problem by separating his professional from his personal self,
by compartmentalizing his emotion. Thus, though often well-versed
in an academic way about the arts-the frequency of this, at any
rate, is higher than of artists who are well-versed in science-the
scientist is generally out of touch with his direct emotions and senses,
or, at best, he is emotionally divided. His 'private' and 'public' life are
out of whack; and because his personality is not well-integrated, he
can be surprisingly conventional ('Dear, I discovered how to clone
people at the lab today. Now we can go skiing at Aspen.') He feels
no contradiction in living by convention, even in attending church,
for he has never integrated the amazing material of modern science
with his daily life. Often it takes the misuse of his discovery to alert
him to that connection which he has long since lost in his own mind.
The catalogue of scientific vices is familiar: it duplicates, exagger
ates the catalogue of 'male' vices in general. This is to be expected:
if the Technological Mode develops from the male principle then it
follows that its practitioners would develop the warpings of the male
personality in the extreme. But let us leave science for the moment,
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winding up for the ultimate cultural revolution, to see what meanwhile
had been happening to the aesthetic culture proper.
With philosophy in the broadest classical sense-including 'pure'
science-defecting, aesthetic culture became increasingly narrow
and ingrown, reduced to the arts and humanities in the refined sense
that we now know them. Art (hereafter referring to the 'liberal arts,'
especially the arts and letters) had always been, in its very definition,
a search for the ideal, removed from the real world. But in primitive
days it had been the handmaiden of religion, articulating the common
dream, objectifying 'other' worlds of the common fantasy, e.g., the
art of the Egyptian tombs, to explain and excuse this one. Thus even
though it was removed from the real world, it served an important
social function: it satisfied artificially those wishes of society that
couldn't yet be realized in reality. Though it was patronized and
supported only by the aristocracy, the cultured elite, it was never as
detached from life as it later became; for the society of those times
was, for all practical purposes. synonymous with its ruling class,
whether priesthood, monarchy, or nobility. The masses were never
considered by 'society' to be a legitimate part of humanity, they were
slaves, nothing more than human animals, drones, or serfs, without
whose labor the small cultured elite could not have maintained itself.
The gradual squeezing out of the aristocracy by the new middle
class, the bourgeoisie, signalled the erosion of aesthetic culture. We
have seen that capitalism intensified the worst attributes of patriar
chalism. how. for example, the nuclear family emerged from the large,
loose family household of the past, to reinforce the weakening sex
class system. oppressing women and children more intimately than
ever before. The cultural mode favored by this new, heavily patriarchal
bourgeoisie was the 'male' Technological Mode-objective, realistic,
factual. 'common sense'-rather than the effeminate, otherworldly,
'romantic idealist' Aesthetic Mode. The bourgeoisie, searching for the
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ideal in the real, soon developed the empirical science that we have
described. To the extent that they had any remaining use for aesthetic
culture, it was only for 'realistic' art, as opposed to the 'idealistic' art of
classical antiquity, or the abstract religious art of primitive or medieval
times. For a time they went in for a literature that described reality
best exemplified by the nineteenth-century novel-and a decorative
easel art: still lifes, portraits, family scenes, interiors. Public museums
and libraries were built alongside the old salons and private galleries.
But with its entrenchment as a secure, primary, class, the bourgeoisie
no longer needed to imitate aristocratic cultivation. More important,
with the rapid development of their new science and technology, the
little practical value they had for art was eclipsed. Take the scientific
development of the camera: The bourgeoisie soon had little need for
portrait painters; the little that painters or novelists had been able to
do for them, the camera could do better.
'Modern' art was a desperate, but finally self-defeating, retaliation
('epater le bourgeois') for these injuries: the evaporation of its social
function, the severance of the social umbilical cord, the dwindling
of the old sources of patronage. The modern art tradition, associ
ated primarily with Picasso and Cezanne, and including all the major
schools of the twentieth century-cubism. constructivism futurism
expressionism, surrealism, abstract expressionism, and so on-is
not an authentic expression of modernity as much as it is a reaction
to the realism of the bourgeoisie. Post-impressionism deliberately
renounced all reality-affirming conventions-indeed the process
began with impressionism itself, which broke down the illusion into
its formal values, swallowing reality whole and spitting it up again as
art-to lead eventually to an art-for-art's-sake so pure, a negation
of reality so complete as to make it ultimately meaningless, sterile,
even absurd. (Cab drivers ore philistine: they know a put-on when
they see one.) The deliberate violating, deforming, fracturing of the
·
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image, called ' modern' art, was nothing more than a fifty-year idol
smashing-eventually leading to our present cultural Impasse.
In the twentieth century, its life blood drained, its social function
nullified altogether, art is thrown back on whatever wealthy classes
remain, those nouveaux riches-particularly in America, still suffer
ing from a cultural inferiority complex-who still need to prove they
have 'arrived' by evidencing a taste for culture. The sequestering of
intellectuals in ivory tower universities, where, except for the sciences,
they have little effect on the outside world, no matter how brilliant (and
they aren't. because they no longer have the necessary feedback):
the abstruse-often literally unintelligible-jargon of the social sci
ences; the cliquish literary quarterlies with their esoteric poetry; the
posh 5yth Street galleries and museums (it is no accident that they
are right next door to Saks Fifth Avenue and Bonwit Teller) staffed
and supplied by, for the most part, fawning rich-widows'-hairdresser
types; and not least the vulturous critical establishment thriving on
the remains of what was once a great and vital culture-all testify
to the death of aesthetic humanism.
For the centuries that Science climbed to new heights, Art
decayed. Its forced inbreeding transformed it into a secret code. By
definition escapist from reality, it now turned in upon itself to such
degree that it gnawed away its own vitals. It became diseased
neurotically self-pitying, self-conscious, focused on the past (as
opposed to the futurist orientation of the technological culture) and
thus frozen into conventions and academies-orthodoxies of which
'avant-garde' is only the latest-pining for remembered glories, the
Grand Old Days When Beauty Was In Flower; it became pessimistic
and nihilistic, increasingly hostile to the society at large, the 'philistines.'
And when the cocky young Science attempted to woo Art from its
ivory tower-eventually garret-with false promises of the courting
lover ('You can come down now, we're making the world a better
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F I R ESTO N E -TWO M O D E S OF C U LT U RAL H ISTORY
place every day' ), Art refused more vehemently than ever to deal
with him, much less accept his corrupt gifts, retreating ever deeper
into her daydreams-neoclassicism, romanticism, expressionism,
surrealism, existentialism.
The individual artist or intellectual saw himself as either a member
of an invisible elite, a 'highbrow,' or as a down-and-outer, mingling
with whoever was deemed the dregs of his society. In both cases,
whether playing Aristocrat or Bohemian, he was on the margin of
the society as a whole. The artist had become a freak. His increasing
alienation from the world around him-the new world that science
had created was, especially in its primitive stages, an incredible horror,
only intensifying his need to escape to the ideal world of art-his lack
of an audience, led to a mystique of 'genius.' Like an ascetic Saint
Simeon on his pedestal, the Genius in the Garret was expected to
create masterpieces in a vacuum. But his artery to the outside world
had been severed. His task, increasingly impossible, often forced him
into literal madness or suicide.
Painted into a corner with nowhere else to go the artist has got
to begin to come to terms with the modern world. He is not too good
at it: like an invalid shut away too long, he doesn't know anything
about the world anymore, neither politics, not science, nor even
how to live or love. Until now, yes, even now, though less and less so,
sublimation, that warping of personality, was commendable: it was
the only (albeit indirect) way to achieve fulfilment. But the artistic
process has-almost-outlived its usefulness. And its price is high.
The first attempts to confront the modem world have been for
the most part misguided. The Bauhaus, a famous example, failed at
its objective of replacing an irrelevant easel art (only a few optical
illusions and designy chairs mark the grave), ending up with a hybrid,
neither art nor science, and certainly not the sum of the two. They
failed because they didn't understand science on its own terms:
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to them, seeing in the old aesthetic way, it was simply a rich new
subject matter to be digested whole into the traditional aesthetic
system. It is as if one were to see a computer as only a beautifully
ordered set of lights and sounds, missing completely the function itself.
The scientific experiment is not only beautiful, an elegant structure,
another piece of an abstract puzzle, something to be used in the
next collage-but scientists, too, in their own way, see science as
this abstraction divorced from life-it has a real intrinsic meaning of
its own, similar to, but not the same as, the 'presence,' the 'en-soi,' of
modern painting. Many artists have made the mistake of thus trying
to annex science, to incorporate it into their own artistic framework,
rather than using it to expand that framework.
Is the current state of aesthetic culture a l l bleak? No, there have
been some progressive developments in contemporary art. We have
mentioned how the realistic tradition in painting died with the camera.
This tradition had developed over centuries to a level of illusionism with
the brush-examine a Bouguereau-that was the equal of, better
than, the early photography, then considered only another graphic
medium, like etching. The beginning of the new art of film and the
realistic tradition of painting overlapped, peaked. in artists like Degas.
who used a camera in his work. Then realistic art took a new course:
Either it became decadent, academic. divorced from any market and
meaning. e.g., the nudes that linger on in art classes and second-rate
galleries. or it was fractured into the expressionist or surrealist image.
posing an alternate internal or fantastical reality. Meanwhile, however,
the young art of film. based on a true synthesis of the Aesthetic and
Technological Modes (as Empiricism itself had been), carried on the
vital realistic tradition. And just as with the marriage of the divided
male and female principles. empirical science bore fruit; so did the
medium of film. But. unlike other aesthetic media of the past. it broke
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FI R ESTO N E -TWO M O D ES OF C U LTURAL H ISTORY
down the very division between the artificial and the real, between
culture and life itself, on which the Aesthetic Mode is based.
Other related developments: the exploration of artificial materials,
e.g., plastics; the attempt to confront plastic culture itself (pop art);
the breakdown of traditional categories of media (mixed media),
and of the distinctions between art and reality itself (happenings,
environments) . But I find it difficult to unreservedly call these latter
developments progressive: as yet they have produced largely puerile
and meaningless works. The artist does not yet know what reality is,
let alone how to affect it. Paper cups lined up on the street, pieces
of paper thrown into an empty lot, no matter how many ponderous
reviews they get in Art News, are a waste of time. If these clumsy
attempts are at all hopeful, it is only insofar as they are signs of the
breakdown of 'fine' art.
The merging of the Aesthetic with the Technological Mode will
gradually suffocate 'pure' high art altogether. The first breakdown of
categories, the remerging of art with a (technologized) reality, indicate
that we are now in the transitional pre-revolutionary period, in which
the three separate cultural streams, technology ('applied science'),
'pure research,' and 'pure' modern art, will melt together-along with
the rigid sex categories they reflect.
The sex-based polarity of culture still causes many casualties. If
even the 'pure' scientist, e.g., nuclear physicist (let alone the 'applied',
scientist. e.g., engineer), suffers from too much 'male,' becoming
authoritarian, conventional. emotionally insensitive, narrowly unable
to understand his own work within the scientific-let alone cultural or
social-jigsaw, the artist, in terms of the sex division, has embodied all
the imbalances and suffering of the female personality: temperamen
tal, insecure, paranoid, defeatist, narrow. And the recent withholding
of reinforcements from behind the front (the larger society) has
exaggerated all this enormously; his overdeveloped 'id' has nothing
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left to balance it. Where the pure scientist is 'schiz,' or worse, ignorant
of emotional reality altogether, the pure artist rejects reality because
of its lack of perfection, and, in modem centuries, for its ugliness.2
And who suffers the most, the blind (scientist) or the lame
(artist)? Culturally, we have had only the choice between one sex role
or the other: either a social marginality leading to self-consciousness,
introversion, defeatism, pessimism, oversensitivity, and lack of touch
with reality, or a split 'professionalized' personality, emotional igno
rance, the narrow views of the specialist.
CONC LUS ION: THE ANTICULTURE REVOLUTION
I have tried to show how the history of culture mirrors the sex
dichotomy in its very organization and development. Culture develops
not only out of the underlying economic dialectic, but also out of the
deeper sex dialectic. Thus, there is not only a horizontal dynamic,
but a vertical one as well: each of these three strata forms one more
story of the dialectics of history based on the biological dualism. At
present we have reached the final stages of Patriarchalism, Capital
ism (corporate capitalism), and of the Two Cultures at once. We shall
soon have a triplicate set of preconditions for revolution, the absence
of which is responsible for the failure of revolutions of the past.
The difference between what is almost possible and what exists
is generating revolutionary forces.3 We are nearing- I believe we shall
have, perhaps within a century, if the snowball of empirical knowledge
2. One abstract painter I knew. who had experienced the horrors of North African
battlefields in World War II-fields of men (buddies) rotting in the sun with rats
darting out of their stomachs-spent years moving a pure beige circle around a
pure beige square. In this manner, the 'modern' artist denies the ugliness of reality
(rats in the stomachs of buddies) in favor of artificial harmonies (circles in squares).
3. Revolutionaries. by definition, are still visionaries of the Aesthetic Mode, the
idealists of pragmatic politics.
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F I R ESTO N E -TWO M O D ES OF C U LTU RAL H I STORY
doesn't smash first of its own velocity-a cultural revolution, as well as
a sexual and economic one. The cultural revolution, like the economic
revolution, must be predicated on the elimination of the (sex) dualism
at the origins not only of class, but also of cultural division.
What might this cultural revolution look like? Unlike 'cultural
revolutions' of the past, it would not be merely a quantitative escala
tion, more and better culture, in the sense that the Renaissance was
a high point of the Aesthetic Mode, or that the present technological
breakthrough is the accumulation of centuries of practical knowledge
about the real world. Great as they were, neither the Aesthetic nor the
Technological culture, even at their respective peaks, ever achieved
universality-either it was wholistic but divorced from the real world,
or it 'achieved progress,' at the price of cultural schizophrenia, and
the falseness and dryness of 'objectivity.' What we shall have in the
next cultural revolution is the reintegration of the Male (Technological
Mode) with the Female (Aesthetic Mode), to create an androgynous
culture surpassing the highs of either cultural stream, or even of the
sum of their integrations. More than a marriage, rather an abolition
of the cultural categories themselves, a mutual cancellation-a
matter-antimatter explosion, ending with a poof!-of culture itself.
We shall not miss it. We shall no longer need it: by then humanity
will have mastered nature totally, will have realized in actuality its
dreams. With the full achievement of the conceivable in the actual,
the surrogate of culture will no longer be necessary. The sublimation
process, a detour to wish fulfilment, will give way to direct satisfaction
in experience, as felt now only by children, or adults on drugs. (Though
normal adults 'play' to varying degrees, the example that illustrates
more immediately to almost everyone the intense level of this future
experience, ranking zero on a scale of accomplishment-'nothing to
show for it'-but nevertheless somehow always worth everyone's
while, is lovemaking.) Control and delay of 'id' satisfaction by the 'ego'
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will be unnecessary; the id can live free. Enjoyment will spring directly
from being and acting itself, the process of experience, rather than
from the quality of achievement. When the male Technological Mode
can at last produce in actuality what the female Aesthetic Mode had
envisioned we shall have eliminated the need for either.
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D ecline of th e
Capitalist M ode
of Production
or D ecline of
Hum anity?
Jacq u es Camatte
1 973
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It has often been thought and written that communism would blos
som after the destruction of the capitalist mode of production, which
would be undermined by such contradictions that its end would be
inevitable. But numerous events of this century have unfortunately
brought other possibilities into view: the return to ' barbarism', as
analyzed by R. Luxemburg and the entire left wing of the German workers' movement, by Adorno and the Frankfurt School; the
destruction of the human species, as is evident to each and all today;
finally a state of stagnation in which the capitalist mode of production
survives by adapting itself to a degenerated humanity which lacks the
power to destroy it. In order to understand the failure of a future that
was thought inevitable, we must take into account the domestication
of human beings implemented by all class societies and mainly by
capital, and we must analyze the autonomization of capital.
We do not intend to treat these historical deviations exhaustively
in a few pages. By commenting on a passage in Marx's Grundrisse
we can show that it is possible to understand the autonomization of
capital on the basis of Marx's work, and we can also see the con
tradictions in Marxist thought and its inability to solve the problem.
The passage is from the chapter on the process of circulation. To
understand it, we should keep in mind what Marx had said shortly
before this passage:
Circulation time thus appears as a barrier to the productivity of
labour
=
an incraase in necessary labour time = a decrease in sur
plus labour time = a decrease in surplus value = an obstruction. a
barrier to the self-realization process [Selbstverwertungsprozess]
of capital.1
1. K. Marx, Grundrisse (London: Pelican. 1973) . 539.
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Here Marx makes an extremely important digression:
There appears here the universalizing tendency of capital, which
distinguishes it from all previous stages of production and thus
becomes the presupposition of a new mode of production. which
is founded not on the development of the forces of production for
the purpose of reproducing or at most expanding a given condi
tion, but where the free, unobstructed, progressive and universal
development of the forces of production is itself the presupposition
of society and hence of its reproduction; where advance beyond the
2
point of departure is the only presupposition.
What makes capital a barrier is not stated here, whereas its revolu
tionary, positive aspect is emphasized (this aspect is emphasized on
many other pages of the Grundrisse, and of Capital): the tendency
toward universal development of the forces of production. However,
and this is what interests us here, capital cannot realize this; it will
be the task of another, superior mode of production. The future of
society here takes the form of an indefinite, cumulative movement.
This tendency-which capital possesses. but which at the same
time. since capital is a limited form of production, contradicts it and
hence drives it towards dissolution-distinguishes capital from all
earlier modes of production. and at the same time contains this
3
element, that capital is posited as a mere point of transition.
Hence capital is driven towards dissolution by this contradiction. It is
a pity that Marx did not here mention what he understands by 'limited
form of production'. since this keeps us from 'seeing' clearly what
2. Ibid .. 5"10.
3. Ibid.
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CAMATT E - D ECLI N E OF H U MAN ITY
he means by contradiction in this specific case. This conditions the
understanding of the statement that the capitalist mode of produc
tion is a transitory form of production. Even without an explanation
of the contradiction. we can understand it as follows: the capitalist
mode of production is not eternal-Marx's polemical argument
against the bourgeois ideologues. This is the content of his main
statements. But another argument is embedded in the preceding one:
the capitalist mode of production is revolutionary and makes possible
the passage to another. superior social form where human beings will
no longer be dominated by the sphere of necessity (the sphere of the
production of material life) and where alienation will cease to exist.
Today, after the blossoming of Marxism as a theory of devel
opment, another part of this sentence appears basic: there is a
continuum between the two periods. What is a transition if not the
opposite of a break? This continuum consists of the development of
the forces of production. From which follows the shameful but real
relationship: Marx-Lenin-Stalin! But this is not our topic. Our aim is
to determine what constitutes the productive forces and for whom
they exist, according to Marx in the Grundrisse,
All previous forms of society-or. what is the same. of the forces
of social production-foundered on the development of wealth.�
Wealth resides in the productive forces and in the results of their
action. There is a contradiction here which, according to Marx.
characterizes the totality of human history: wealth is necessary and
therefore sought, but it destroys societies. Societies must therefore
oppose its development. This is not the case in the capitalist mode of
production (it thus destroys all other social formations), which exalts
the productive forces, but for whom?
4. Ibid.
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Those thinkers of antiquity who were possessed of consciousness
therefore directly denounced wealth as the dissolution of the com
munity [Gemeinwesen]. The feudal system, for its part, foundered on
urban industry, trade, modern agriculture (even as a result of individual
inventions like gunpowder and the printing press). With the develop
ment of wealth-and hence also new powers and expanded inter
course on the part of individuals-the economic conditions on which
the community [ Gemeinwesen] rested were dissolved, along with the
political relations of the various constituents of the community which
corresponded to those conditions: religion, in which it was viewed in
idealized form (and both [religion and political relations] rested in turn
on a given relation to nature, into which all productive force resolves
itself); the character, outlook, etc. of the individuals. The development
of science alone-Le. the most solid form of wealth, both its product
and its producer-was sufficient to dissolve these communities. But
the development of science, this ideal and at the same time practical
wealth, is only one aspect, one form in which the development of the
human productive forces, i.e. of wealth, appears. Considered ideally,
the dissolution of a given form of consciousness sufficed to kill a whole
epoch. In reality, this barrier to consciousness corresponds to a definite
degree of development of the forces of material production and hence
of wealth. True, there was not only a development on the old basis, but
also a development of this basis itself. 5
For Marx, the productive forces are human (from the human
being) and they are for the human being, for the individual. Science
as a productive force (thus also wealth, as was already shown in the
18LjLj Manuscripts and in The German Ideology) is determined by the
development of these forces and corresponds to the appearance of
a large number of externalizations, a greater possibility to appropriate
nature. Even if it takes an ambiguous form, the blossoming of the
5. Ibid., 540-1.
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CAMATT E - D E C L I N E OF H U MAN ITY
human being is possible; it is the moment whe � , in the development
of the dominant class, individuals can find a model of a fuller life. For
Marx, the capitalist mode of production, by pushing the development
of productive forces, makes possible .a liberating autonomization of
the individual. This is its most important revolutionary aspect.
The highest development of this basis itself (the flower into which
it transforms itself; but it is always this basis, this plant as flower; hence
wilting after the flowering and as a consequence of the flowering)
is the point at which it is itself worked out, developed, into the form
in which it is compatible with the highest development of the forces
of production, hence also the richest development of the individuals.
As soon as this point is reached, the further development appears as
decay, and the new development begins from a new basis.6
There is decay because the development of individuals is blocked.
It is not possible to use this sentence to support the theory of the
decline of the capitalist mode of production7 since it would have to be
stated that the decline started, not at the beginning of this century,
but minimally in the middle of the previous century; or else it would
have to be shown that the decline of individuals is simultaneously
the decline of capital, which contradicts what can be observed;
Marx himself repeatedly explained that the development of capital
was accompanied by the destruction of human beings and of nature.
When did the development of productive forces accompany
the development of individuals in different societies? When was
the capitalist mode of production revolutionary for itself and for
human beings? Do the productive forces advance continually, in
spite of moments when individuals decay? Marx said: '...the further
6. lbid., 5LJ1.
7. kl is done by Victor in Revolution lntemotionale serie 1. No. 7. 'Volontarisme et
confusion', fourth page.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
development appears as decay...'. Do the productive forces stagnate;
.
does the capitalist mode of production decay?8
The remainder of Marx's digression confirms that the decay refers
to human beings. Individuals blossom when the productive forces allow
them to develop, when the evolution of one parallels the evolution of
the other. By means of a comparison with the pre-capitalist period,
Marx shows that capital is not hostile to wealth but, on the contrary,
takes up its production. Thus it takes up the development of produc
tive forces. Previously the development of human beings, of their
community, was opposed to the development of wealth; now there is
something like symbiosis between them. For this to happen, a certain
mutation was necessary: capital had to destroy the limited character
of the individual; this is another aspect of its revolutionary character.
We saw earlier that property in the conditions of production was
posited as identical with a limited, definite form of the community
[Gemeinwesen], hence of the individual with the characteristics
limited characteristics and limited development of his productive
forces-required to form such a community [Gemeinwesen].
This presupposition was itself in turn the result of a limited historic
stage of the development of the productive forces, of wealth as well
as the mode of creating it. The purpose of the community [Gemein
wesen], of the individual-as well as the condition of production-is
the reproduction of these specific conditions of production and
of the individuals, both singly and in their social groupings and
relations-as living carriers of these conditions. Capital posits the
production of wealth itself and hence the universal development
8. Various authors have spoken of stagnation and declining production between
the two world wars. Bordiga always rejected the theory of the decline of the
capitalist mode of production as a gradualist deformation of Marx's theory (see
'Le renversement de la praxis dans la theorie marxiste,' in Invariance Li, serie 1).
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CAMATTE - D EC L I N E OF H U M A N ITY
of the productive forces. the constant overthrow of its prevailing
presuppositions, as the presupposition of its reproduction. Value
excludes no use value; i.e. includes no particular kind of consumption
_
etc., of intercourse etc. as absolute condition; and likewise every
degree of the development of the social forces of production, of
intercourse, of knowledge etc. appears to it only as a barrier which
it strives to overpower.9
This passage has momentous consequences. There is no reference
to the proletariat; it is the revolutionary role of capital to overthrow
the prevailing presuppositions. Marx had already said this, in a more
striking manner:
It is destructive towards all of this, and constantly revolutionizes it,
tearing down all the barriers which hem in the development of the
forces of production, the expansion of needs, the all-sided develop
ment of production, and the exploitation and exchange of natural
and mental forces.10
We are forced to take a new approach toward the manner in which
Marx situated the proletarian class in the context of the continual
upheaval carried out by the capitalist mode of production . What is
immediately evident is that the capitalist mode of production is revo
lutionary in relation to the destruction of ancient social relations, and
that the proletariat is defined as revolutionary in relation to capital. But
it is at this point that the problem begins: capitalism is revolutionary
because it develops the productive forces; the proletariat cannot be
revolutionary if, after its revolution, it develops or allows a different
9. Marx, Grundrisse, 5"11.
10. lbid., "110.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
development of the productive forces. How can we tangibly distin
guish the revolutionary role of one from that of the other? How can
we justify the destruction of the capitalist mode of production by the
proletariat? This cannot be done in a narrowly economic context. Marx
never faced this problem because he was absolutely certain that the
proletarians would rise against capital. But we have to confront this
problem if we are going to emerge from the impasse created by our
acceptance of the theory according to which the production relations
come into conflict with the development of the productive forces
(forces which were postulated to exist for the human being, since if
this were not the case, why would human beings rebel?) If the produc
tive forces do not exist for human beings but for capital, and if they
conflict with production relations, then this means that these relations
do not provide the proper structure to the capitalist mode of produc
tion, and therefore there can be revolution which is not for human
beings (for example, the general phenomenon which is called fascism).
Consequently capital escapes. In the passage we are examining, Marx
makes a remarkable statement about the domination of capital:
Its own presupposition-value-is posited as product, not as a
11
loftier presupposition hovering over production.
Capital dominates value. Since labor is the substance of value, it fol
lows that capital dominates human beings. Marx refers only indirectly
to the presupposition which is also a product: wage labor, namely the
existence of a labor force which makes valorization possible:
The barrier to capital is that this entire development proceeds in
a contradictory way, and that the working-out of the productive
forces, of general wealth etc., knowledge etc., appears in such a way
11. Ibid., 5"11.
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CAMATT E - D EC L I N E OF H U MAN ITY
thatthe working individual alienates himself [sich entaut3ern]; relates
to the conditions brought out of him by his labor as those not of his
2
own but of an alien wealth and of his own poverty.1
How can this be a limit for capital? One might suppose that under
consumption by the workers causes crises, and the final crisis. This
is one possibility; at least it appears that way at certain times. Marx
always refused to ground a theory of crises on this point, but this
did not keep him from mentioning this underconsumption. For Marx
capital has a barrier because it despoils the working individual. We
should keep in mind that he is arguing against apologists for capital
and wants to show that the capitalist mode of production is not
eternal and does not achieve human emancipation. Yet in the course
of his analysis he points to the possibility for capital to escape from
human conditions. We perceive that it is not the productive forces
that become autonomous, but capital, since at a given moment the
productive forces become 'a barrier which it strives to overpower'.
This takes place as follows: the productive forces are no longer pro
ductive forces of human beings but of capital; they are for capital.13
The despoliation (alienation) of the working individual cannot be a
barrier for capital, unless Marx means barrier in the sense of a weak
ness; such a weakness would make capitalism inferior to other modes
of production, particularly if we contrast this weakness to the enormous
development of productive forces which it impels. In Marx's work there
is an ambiguity about the subject to which the productive forces refer:
are they for the human being or for capital? This ambiguity grounds two
interpretations of Marx. The ethical interpretation (see especially Rubel)
12. lbid.
13. This is what Marx shows when he analyzes fixed capital in the Grundrisse, and also in
Book I of Capital. where he analyzes the transformation of the work process into a process
of production of capital (see also Un chapitre inedit du Capital [Paris: 10/18, 1971]).
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emphasizes the extent to which Marx denounces the destruction of
the human being by capital, and vigorously insists that the capitalist
mode of production can only be a transitory stage. The interpretation of
Althusser and his school holds that Marx does not succeed in eliminating
the human being from his economic analyses. which reflects his inability
to abandon ideological discourse, from which follows Althusser's prob
lem of correctly locating the epistemological break.
It is possible to get out of this ambiguity. If capital succeeds in
overcoming this barrier. it achieves full autonomy. This is why Marx
postulates that capital must abolish itself; this abolition follows from
the fact that it cannot develop the productive forces for human beings
while it makes possible a universal, varied development which can only
be realized by a superior mode of production. This contains a contradic
tion: capital escapes from the grasp of human beings, but it must perish
because it cannot develop human productive forces. This also contra
dicts Marx's analysis of the destruction of human beings by capital.
How can destroyed human beings rebel? We can, if we avoid these
contradictions. consider Marx a prophet of the decline of capital,
but then we will not be able to understand his work or the present
situation. The end of Marx's digression clarifies these contradictions.
But this antithetical form is itself fleeting. and produces the real
conditions of its own suspension. The result is: the tendentially and
potentially general development of the forces of production-of
wealth as such-as a basis; likewise, the universality of intercourse,
hence the world market as a basis. The basis as the possibility of the
universal development of the individual, and the real development of
the individuals from this basis as a constant suspension of its barrier,
which is recognized as a barrier. not taken for a sacred limit. Not an
ideal or imagined universality of the individual. but the universality of
his real and ideal relations. Hence also the grasping of his own history
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CAMATTE - D EC LI N E OF H U MANITY
as a process, and the recognition of nature (equally present as
practical power over nature) as his real body. The process of devel
opment itself posited and known as the presupposition of the same.
For this, however, necessary above all that the full development of
the forces of production has become the condition of production;
and not that specific conditions of production are posited as a limit
to the development of the productive forces.
14
If this process is to concern individuals, capital has to be destroyed
and the productive forces have to be for human beings. In the article
'La KAPD et le mouvement proletarien,'15 we referred to this passage
to indicate that the human being is a possibility, giving a foundation
to the statement: the revolution must be human. This is in no way
a discourse on the human being conceived as invariant in every
attribute, a conception which would merely be a restatement of the
immutability of human nature. But we have to point out that this is
still insufficient, since the development of productive forces which,
according to Marx, will take place in a superior mode of production,
is precisely the same development presently carried out by capital.
The limit of Marx is that he conceived communism as a new mode
of production where productive forces blossom. These forces are
undoubtedly important, but their existence at a certain level does
not adequately define communism.
For Marx, capital overcomes its contradictions by engulfing them
and by mystifying reality. Itcan only apparently overcome its narrow base,
its limited nature which resides in the exchange of capital-money against
labor force. Capital must inevitably come into conflict with this presup
position; thus Marx speaks of the o pposition between private appro
priation and socialization of production. Private appropriation of what?
14. Marx, Grundrisse, 541-2.
15. Invariance, Serie II, No. 1.
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Of surplus value, which presupposes the proletarian. and thus the
wage relation. But the entire development of capital (and Marx's
own explanations are a precious aid in understanding it) makes
the mystification effective, making capital independent of human
beings, thus enabling it to avoid the conflict with its presupposition.
One might say that the conflict nevertheless persists, as a result of
the total process: socialization. This is true. But the socialization of
production and of human activity, the universal development of the
productive forces and thus the destruction of the limited character of
the human being-all this was only a possible ground for communism;
it did not pose communism automatically. Furthermore, the action of
capital tends constantly to destroy communism, or at least to inhibit
its emergence and realization. To transform this possible ground into
reality, human intervention is necessary. But Marx himself showed
that capitalist production integrates the proletariat. How could the
destruction of human beings and of nature fail to have repercussions
on the ability of human beings to resist capital and, a fortiori, to rebel?
Some will think we are attributing to Marx a position which is
convenient to us. We will cite an extraordinary passage:
What precisely distinguishes capttal from the master-servant relation
is that the worker confronts [capttal] as consumer and possessor of
exchange values. and that in the form of the possessor of money, in the
form of money he becomes a simple center of circulation-one of tts
6
infinttely many centers, in which his specificity as worker is extinguished.1
One of the modalities of the re-absorption of the revolutionary power
of the proletariat has been to perfect its character as consumer.
thus catching it in the mesh of capital. The proletariat ceases to be
the class that negates; after the formation of the working class it
16. Marx, Grundrisse. 420-1.
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CAMATT E - D E C L I N E OF H U MAN ITY
dissolves into the social body. Marx anticipates the poets of the 'con
sumer society' and, as in other instances, he explains a phenomenon
which is observed only later and then falsely, if only in terms of the
name given to it.
The preceding observations do not lead to a fatalistic conception
(this time negative), such as: whatever we do, there's no way out;
it's too late; or any other mindless defeatism which would generate
a sickening patchwork reformism. First we have to draw the lesson.
Capital has run away from human and natural barriers; human beings
have been domesticated: this is their decadence. The revolutionary
solution cannot be found in the context of a dialectic of productive
forces where the individual would be an element of the contradiction.
Present day scientific analyses of capital proclaim a complete disregard
for human beings who, for some, are nothing but a residue without
consistency. This means that the discourse of science is the discourse
of capital, or that science is possible only after the destruction of
human beings; it is a discourse on the pathology of the human being.
Thus it is insane to ground the hope of liberation on science. The
position is all the more insane where, as with Althusser, it cannot make
its own break, liquidate its 'archeology', since it remains faithful to a
proletariat-a proletariat which in this conception is merely an object
of capital, an element of the structure. But this inefficient, destroyed
human being is the individual produced by class societies. And on this
we agree: the human being is dead. The only possibility for another
human being to appear is our struggle against our domestication, our
emergence from it. Humanism and scientism (and the followers of
'ethical science' a la Monod are the most absolute slaves of capital)
are two expressions of the domestication of humanity. All those who
nurse the illusion of the decadence of capital revive ancient humanist
conceptions or give birth to new scientific myths. They remain imper
meable to the revolutionary phenomenon running through our world.
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Until now all sides have argued as if human beings remained unchanged
in different class societies and under the domination of capital. This
is why the role of the social context was emphasized (man. who was
fundamentally good, was seen to be modified positively or negatively
by the social context) by the materialist philosophers of the eighteenth
century, while Marxists emphasized the role of an environment con
ditioned by the development of productive forces. Change was not
denied, and after Marx it was repeated that history was a continual
transformation of human nature. Nevertheless it was held explicitly or
implicitly that an irreducible element continued to allow human beings
to revolt against the oppression of capital. And capitalism itself was
described in a Manichean manner: on one side the positive pole. the
proletariat. the liberating class; on the other the negative pole. capital.
Capital was affirmed as necessary and as having revolutionized the life
of human beings. but it was described as an absolute evil in relation to
the good, the proletariat. The phenomenon which emerges today does
not in the least destroy the negative evaluation of capital. but forces us
to generalize it to the class which was once antagonistic to it and car
ried within itself all the positive elements of human development and
today of humanity itself. This phenomenon is the recomposition of a
community and of human beings by capital. reflecting human commu
nity like a mirror. The theory of the looking glass could only arise when
the human being became a tautology, a reflection of capital. Within
the world of the despotism of capital (this is how society appears as
of today) , neither a good nor an evil can be distinguished. Everything
can be condemned. Negating forces can only arise outside of capital.
Since capital has absorbed all the old contradictions, the revolutionary
movement has to reject the entire product of the development of class
societies. This is the crux of its struggle against domestication. against
the decadence of the human species. This is the essential moment of
the process of formation of revolutionaries. absolutely necessary for
the production of revolution.
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T h e Civilized
Capitalist M achine
G i lles D e le u ze
+
Fe lix G u atta ri
1 972
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Let us return to the dualism of money, to the two boards, the two
inscriptions, the one going into the account of the wage earner, the
other into the balance sheet of the enterprise. Measuring the two
orders of magnitude in terms of the same analytical unit is a pure
fiction, a cosmic swindle, as if one were to measure intergalactic or
intra-atomic distances in meters and centimeters. There is no com
mon measure between the value of the enterprises and that of the
labor capacity of wage earners. That is why the falling tendency has
no conclusion. A quotient of differentials is indeed calculable if it is
a matter of the limit of variation of the production flows from the
viewpoint of a full output, but it is not calculable if it is a matter of the
production flow and the labor flow on which surplus value depends.
Thus the difference is not canceled in the relationship that constitutes
it as a difference in nature; the 'tendency' has no end, it has no exterior
limit that it could reach or even approximate. The tendency's only limit
is internal, and it is continually going beyond it, but by displacing this
limit-that is, by reconstituting it, by rediscovering it as an internal
limit to be surpassed again by means of a displacement; thus the
continuity of the capitalist process engenders itself in this break of a
break that is always displaced, in this unity of the schiz and the flow.
In this respect already the field of social immanence, as revealed under
the withdrawal and the transformation of the U rstaat, is continually
expanding, and acquires a consistency entirely its own, which shows
the manner in which capitalism for its part was able to interpret the
general principle according to which things work well only providing
they break down, crises being 'the means immanent to the capitalist
mode of production'. If capitalism is the exterior limit of all societies,
this is because capitalism for its part has no exterior limit, but only an
interior limit that is capital itself and that it does not encounter, but
reproduces by always displacing it. J ean-Joseph Goux rigorously ana
lyzes the mathematical phenomenon of the curve without a tangent,
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# A C C E L E R A T E
and the direction it is apt to take in economy as well as linguistics:
'If the movement does not tend toward any limit, if the quotient of
differentials is not calculable, the present no longer has any mean
ing .... The quotient of differentials is not resolved, the differences no
longer cancel one another in their relationship. No limit opposes the
break [/a brisure], or the breaking of this break. The tendency finds
no end, the thing in motion never quite reaches what the immediate
future has in store for it; it is endlessly delayed by accidents and
deviations .... Such is the complex notion of a continuity within the
absolute break'.2 In the expanded immanence of the system, the
limit tends to reconstitute in its displacement the thing it tended to
diminish in its primitive emplacement.
Now this movement of displacement belongs essentially to
the deterritorialization of capitalism. As Samir Amin has shown,
the process of deterritorialization here goes from the center to the
periphery, that is, from the developed countries to the underdeveloped
countries, which do not constitute a separate world, but rather an
essential component of the world-wide capitalist machine. It must
be added, however, that the center itself has its organized enclaves
of underdevelopment. its reservations and its ghettos as interior
peripheries. ( Pierre Moussa has defined the United States as a
fragment of the Third World that has succeeded and has preserved
its immense zones of underdevelopment.) And if it is true that the
tendency to a falling rate of profit or to its equalization asserts itself
at least partially at the center, carrying the economy toward the most
progressive and the most automated sectors, a veritable 'development
1. Marx. Capital, Vol. 3, tr. E. Untermann ( New York: International, 1967), 250 n72:
'Capitalist production seeks continually to overcome these immanent barriers, but
overcomes them only by means which again place these barriers in its way and on
a more fonmidable scale. The real barrier of capitalist production is capital itself.'
2. J.-J. Goux. 'Derivable et inderivable', Critique, January 1970, "18-9.
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D E L E U Z E + G UATTA R l - CAPITALIST MACH I N E
of underdevelopment' o n the periphery ensures a rise i n the rate of
surplus value, in the form of an increasing exploitation of the peripheral
proletariat in relation to that of the center. For it would be a great
error to think that exports from the periphery originate primarily in
traditional sectors or archaic territorialities: on the contrary, they come
from modern industries and plantations that generate an immense
surplus value. to a point where it is no longer the developed countries
that supply the underdeveloped countries with capital, but quite the
opposite. So true is it that primitive accumulation is not produced
just once at the dawn of capitalism, but is continually reproducing
itself. Capitalism exports filiative capital. At the same time as capitalist
deterritorialization is developing from the center to the periphery, the
decoding of flows on the periphery develops by means of a 'disarticula
tion' that ensures the ruin of traditional sectors, the development of
extraverted economic circuits, a specific hypertrophy of the tertiary
sector, and an extreme inequality in the different areas of productivity
and in incomes.3 Each passage of a flux is a deterritorialization, and
each displaced limit, a decoding. Capitalism schizophrenizes more and
more on the periphery. It will be said that, even so, at the center the
falling tendency retains its restricted sense, i.e., the relative diminution
ofsurplus value in relation to total capital-a diminution that is ensured
by the development of productivity, automation, and constant capital.
This problem was raised again recently by Maurice Clavel in a
series of decisive and wilfully incompetent questions-that is, ques
tions addressed to Marxist economists by someone who doesn't
quite understand how one can maintain human surplus value as the
basis for capitalist production, while recognizing that machines too
'work' or produce value. that they have always worked, and that
they work more and more in proportion to man, who thus ceases to
3. S. Amin, L'accumulation a /'echelle mondiale (Paris: Anthropos, 1970). 373ff.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
be a constituent part of the production process, in order to become
adjacent to this process.� Hence there is a machinic surplus value
produced by constant capital, which develops along with automa
tion and productivity, and which cannot be explained by factors
that counteract the falling tendency-the increasing intensity of
the exploitation of human labor, the diminution of the price of the
elements of constant capital, etc.-since, on the contrary, these
factors depend on it. It seems to us, with the same indispensable
incompetence, that these problems can only be viewed under the
conditions of the transformation of the surplus value of code into a
surplus value of flux. In defining precapitalist regimes by a surplus value
of code, and capitalism by a generalized decoding that converted this
surplus value of code into a surplus value of flux, we were presenting
things in a summary fashion, we were still acting as though the matter
were settled once and for all, at the dawn of a capitalism that had
lost all code value. This is not the case, however. On the one hand,
codes continue to exist-even as an archaism-but they assume a
function that is perfectly contemporary and adapted to the situation
within personified capital (the capitalist, the worker. the merchant, the
banker) . But on the other hand, and more profoundly, every technical
machine presupposes flows of a particular type: flows of code that
are both interior and exterior to the machine, forming the elements
of a technology and even a science. It is these flows of code that
find themselves encasted, coded, or overcoded in the precapitalist
societies in such a way that they never achieve any independence (the
blacksmith, the astronomer). But the decoding of flows in capitalism
has freed, deterritorialized, and decoded the flows of code just as it
has the others-to such a degree that the automatic machine has
LI. M. Clavel, Qui est aliene? (Paris: Flammarion. 1970). 110-2"1. 320-27. See Marx's
great chapter on automation (1857-58) in the Grundrisse. 692ff [See Marx,
'Fragment on Machines' in this volume],
N
LO
�
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always increasingly internalized them i n its body o r its structure as
a field of forces, while depending on a science and a technology, on
a so-called intellectual labor distinct from the manual labor of the
worker (the evolution of the technical object) . In this sense, it is not
machines that have created capitalism, but capitalism that creates
machines, and that is constantly introducing breaks and cleavages
through which it revolutionizes its technical modes of production.
But several correctives must be introduced in this regard. These
breaks and cleavages take time, and their extension is very wide
ranging. By no means does the diachronic capitalist machine allow
itself to be revolutionized by one or more of its synchronous techni
cal machines, and by no means does it confer on its scientists and
its technicians an independence that was unknown in the previous
regimes. Doubtless it can let a certain number of scientists-math
ematicians, for example-'schizophrenize' in their corner, and it
can allow the passage of socially decoded flows of code that these
scientists organize into axiomatics of research that is said to be basic.
But the true axiomatic is elsewhere. ( Leave the scientists alone to a
certain point, let them create their own axiomatic, but when the time
comes for serious things ... For example, nondeterminist physics, with
its corpuscular flows, will have to be brought into line with 'determin
ism'.) The true axiomatic is that of the social machine itself. which
takes the place of the old codings and organizes all the decoded flows,
including the flows of scientific and technical code, for the benefit
of the capitalist system and in the service of its ends. That is why it
has often been remarked that the Industrial Revolution combined an
elevated rate of technical progress with the maintenance of a great
quantity of 'obsolescent' equipment, along with a great suspicion
concerning machines and science. An innovation is adopted only
from the perspective of the rate of profit its investment will offer by
the lowering of production costs; without this prospect, the capitalist
01
0J
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will keep the existing equipment, and stand ready to make a parallel
investment in equipment in another area.5
Thus the importance of human surplus value remains decisive,
even at the center and in highly industrialized sectors. What deter
mines the lowering of costs and the elevation of the rate of profit
through machinic surplus value is not innovation itself, whose value is
no more measurable than that of human surplus value. It is not even
the profitability of the new technique considered in isolation, but its
effect on the over-all profitability of the firm in its relationships with
the market and with commercial and financial capital. This implies dia
chronic encounters and countersectings such as one already sees for
example in the early part of the nineteenth century, between the steam
engine and textile machines or techniques for the production of iron.
In general, the introduction of innovations always tends to be delayed
beyond the time scientifically necessary, until the moment when the
market forecasts justify their exploitation on a large scale. Here again,
alliance capital exerts a strong selective pressure on machinic inno
vations within industrial capital. In brief, there where the flows are
decoded, the specific flows of code that have taken a technical and
scientific form are subjected to a properly social axiomatic that is much
severer than all the scientific axiomatics, much severer too than all the
old codes and overcodes that have disappeared: the axiomatic of the
world capitalist market. In brief, the flows of code that are 'liberated'
in science and technics by the capitalist regime engender a machinic
surplus value that does not directly depend on science and technics
themselves, but on capital-a surplus value that is added to human
surplus value and that comes to correct the relative diminution of
the latter. both of them constituting the whole of the surplus value
5. P. Baran and P. Sweezy, Monopoly Capitol (New York: Monthly Review Press,
1966). 93-7.
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of flux that characterizes the system. Knowledge, information, and
specialized education are just as much parts of capital (' knowledge
capital') as is the most elementary labor of the worker. And just as we
found, on the side of human surplus value insofar as it resulted from
decoded flows, an incommensurability or a fundamental asymmetry
(no assignable exterior limit) between manual labor and capital, or
between two forms of money, here too, on the side of the machinic
surplus value resulting from scientific and technical flows of code,
we find no commensurability or exterior limit between scientific or
technical labor-even when highly remunerated-and the profit of
capital that inscribes itself with another sort of writing. In this respect
the knowledge flow and the labor flow find themselves in the same
situation, determined by capitalist decoding or deterritorialization. But
if it is true that innovations are adopted only insofar as they entail a rise
in profits through a lowering of costs of production. and if there exists a
sufficiently high volume of production to justify them, the corollary that
derives from this proposition is that investment in innovations is never
sufficient to realize or absorb the surplus value of flux that is produced
on the one side as on the other.6 Marx has clearly demonstrated the
importance of the problem: the ever widening circle of capitalism is
completed, while reproducing its immanent limits on an ever larger
scale, only if the surplus value is not merely produced or extorted,
but absorbed or realized.7 If the capitalist is not defined in terms of
enjoyment, the reason is not merely that his aim is the 'production for
production's sake' that generates surplus value, it also includes the
realization of this surplus value: an unrealized surplus value of flux is as
if not produced, and becomes embodied in unemployment and stagna
tion. It is easy to list the principal modes of absorption of surplus value
6. Regarding the concept of depreciation implied by this proposition, ib id. 99-102.
,
7. Capital. Vol. 3. 244.
�
Ul
01
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outside the spheres of consumption and investment: advertising, civil
government, militarism, and imperialism. The role of the State in this
regard. within the capitalist axiomatic, is the more manifest in that what
it absorbs is not sliced from the surplus value of the firms, but added
to their surplus value by bringing the capitalist economy closer to full
output within the given limits. and by widening these limits in tum
especially within an order of military expenditures that are in no way
competitive with private enterprise. quite the contrary (it took a war
to accomplish what the New Deal had failed to accomplish). The role
of a politico-military-economic complex is the more manifest in that it
guarantees the extraction of human surplus value on the periphery and
in the appropriated zones of the center. but also because it engenders
for its own part an enormous machinic surplus value by mobilizing the
resources of knowledge and information capital, and finally because it
absorbs the greater part of the surplus value produced.
The State, its police. and its army form a gigantic enterprise of
antiproduction, but at the heart of production itself. and conditioning
this production. Here we discover a new determination of the properly
capitalist field of immanence: not only the interplay of the relations
and differential coefficients of decoded flows, not only the nature of
the limits that capitalism reproduces on an ever wider scale as interior
limits. but the presence of antiproduction within production itself.
The apparatus of antiproduction is no longer a transcendent instance
that opposes production. limits it, or checks it; on the contrary, it
insinuates itself everywhere in the productive machine and becomes
firmly wedded to it in order to regulate its productivity and realize
surplus value-which explains. for example. the difference between
the despotic bureaucracy and the capitalist bureaucracy. This effusion
from the apparatus of antiproduction is characteristic of the entire
capitalist system; the capitalist effusion is that of antiproduction within
production at all levels of the process. On the one hand. it alone is
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capable of realizing capitalism's supreme goal, which is to produce
lack in the large aggregates, to introduce lack where there is always
too much, by effecting the absorption of overabundant resources.
On the other hand, it alone doubles the capital and the flow of
knowledge with a capital and an equivalent flow of stupidity that
also effects an absorption and a realization, and that·ensures the
integration of groups and individuals into the system. Not only lack
amid overabundance, but stupidity in the midst of knowledge and
science; it will be seen in particular how it is at the level of the State
and the military that the most progressive sectors of scientific or
technical knowledge combine with those feeble archaisms bearing
the greatest burden of current functions.
Here Andre Gorz's double portrait of the 'scientific and technical
worker' takes on its full meaning. Although he has mastered a flow
of knowledge, information, and training, he is so absorbed in capital
that the reflux of organized, axiomatized stupidity coincides with him,
so that, when he goes home in the evening, he rediscovers his little
desiring-machines by tinkering with a television set-0 despair. 8 Of
course the scientist as such has no revolutionary potential; he is the
first integrated agent of integration, a refuge for bad conscience, and
the forced destroyer of his own creativity. Let us consider the more
striking example of a career a /'americaine, with abrupt mutations,
just as we imagine such a career to be: Gregory Bateson begins by
fleeing the civilized world, by becoming an ethnologist and following
the primitive codes and the savage flows; then he turns in the direction
of flows that are more and more decoded, those of schizophrenia,
from which he extracts an interesting psychoanalytic theory; then, still
in search of a beyond, of another wall to break through, he turns to
8. A. Gorz, Strategy for Labor; trans. Martin Nicolaus and Victoria Ortiz (Boston:
Beacon Press, 1967), 106.
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dolphins, to the language of dolphins. to flows that are even stranger
and more deterritorialized. But where does the dolphin flux end, if not
with the basic research projects of the American army, which brings
us back to preparations for war and to the absorption of surplus value.
In comparison to the capitalist State, the socialist States are
children-but children who learned something from their father
concerning the axiomatizing role of the State. But the socialist States
have more trouble stopping unexpected flow leakage except by
direct violence. What on the contrary is called the co-opting power
of capitalism can be explained by the fact that its axiomatic is not
more flexible, but wider and more englobing. In such a system no one
escapes participation in the activity of antiproduction that drives the
entire productive system. ·But it is not only those who man and supply
the military machine who are engaged in an anti-human enterprise.
The same can be said in varying degrees of many millions of other
workers who produce, and create wants for. goods and services
which no one needs. And so interdependent are the various sectors
and branches of the economy that nearly everyone is involved in one
way or another in these anti-human activities: the farmer supplying
food to troops fighting in Vietnam, the tool and die makers turning
out the intricate machinery needed for a new automobile model, the
manufacturers of paper and ink and TV sets whose products are used
to control the minds of the people, and so on and so on.'9
Thus the three segments of the ever widening capitalist repro
duction process are joined, three segments that also define the three
aspects of its immanence: (1) the one that extracts human surplus
value on the basis of the differential relation between decoded flows
of labor and production, and that moves from the center to the
periphery while nevertheless maintaining vast residual zones at the
9. Baran and Sweezy, Monopoly Capital, 34'1.
co
lD
,..-
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center; (2) the one that extracts machinic surplus value, o n the basis
of an axiomatic of the flows of scientific and technical code, in the
"core" areas of the center; (3) and the one that absorbs or realizes
these two forms of surplus value of flux by guaranteeing the emission
of both, and by constantly injecting antiproduction into the producing
apparatus. Schizophrenization occurs on the periphery, but it occurs
at the center and at the core as well.
The definition of surplus value must be modified in terms of the
machinic surplus value of constant capital, which distinguishes itself
from the human surplus value of variable capital and from the non
measurable nature of this aggregate of surplus value of flux. It cannot
be defined by the difference between the value of labor capacity and
the value created by labor capacity, but by the incommensurability
between two flows that are nonetheless immanent to each other, by
the disparity between the two aspects of money that express them,
and by the absence of a limit exterior to their relationship-the one
measuring the true economic force, the other measuring a purchasing
power determined as 'income'. The first is the immense deterritorial
ized flow that constitutes the full body of capital. An economist of the
caliber of Bernard Schmitt finds strange lyrical words to characterize
this flow of infinite debt: an instantaneous creative flow that the banks
create spontaneously as a debt owing to themselves, a creation ex
nihilo that, instead of transferring a pre-existing currency as means
of payment, hollows out at one extreme of the full body a negative
money (a debt entered as a liability of the banks) , and projects at
the other extreme a positive money (a credit granted the productive
economy by the banks)-'a flow possessing a power of mutation'
that does not enter into income and is not assigned to purchases, a
pure availability, nonpossession and nonwealth.10 The other aspect of
10. B. Schmitt. Monnaie, salaires et profits (Paris: PUF, 1966), 234-36.
--'
01
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# A C C E L E R A T E
money represents the reflux. that is. the relationship that it assumes
with goods as soon as it acquires a purchasing power through its
distribution to workers or production factors. through its allotment in
the form of incomes-a relationship that it loses as soon as the latter
are converted into real goods (at which point everything recommences
by means of a new production that will first come under the sway of
the first aspect). The incommensurability of the two aspects-the flux
and the reflux-shows that nominal wages fail to embrace the totality
of the national income. since the wage earners allow a great quantity
of revenues to escape. These revenues are tapped by the firms and
in turn form an afflux by means of a conjunction; a flow-this time
uninterrupted-of raw profit. constituting 'at one go' an undivided
quantity flowing over the full body, however diverse the uses for which
it is allocated (interest, dividends, management salaries, purchase of
production goods, etc.).
The incompetent observer has the impression that this whole
economic schema. this whole story is profoundly schizo. The aim of
the theory is clear-a theory that refrains. however. from employing
any moral reference. 'Who is robbed ? ' is the serious implied ques
tion that echoes Clavel's ironic question. 'Who is alienated? ' Yet no
one is or can be robbed-just as. according to Gavel, one no longer
knows who is alienated or who does the alienating. Who steals?
Certainly not the finance capitalist as the representative of the great
instantaneous creative flow. which is not even a possession and has
no purchasing power. Who is robbed? Certainly not the worker who
is not even bought. since the reflux or salary distribution creates the
purchasing power, instead of presupposing it. Who would be capable
of stealing? Certainly not the industrial capitalist as the representa
tive of the afflux of profit, since 'profits do not flow in the reflux, but
side by side with, deviating from rather than penalizing the flow that
creates incomes'. How much flexibility there is in the axiomatic of
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D E LE U Z E + G UATTA R l - CAPJTALIST M AC H I N E
capitalism, always ready t o widen its own limits s o as t o add a new
axiom to a previously saturated system ! You say you want an axiom
for wage earners, for the working class anc:I the unions? Well then,
let's see what we can do-and thereafter profit will flow alongside
wages, side by side, reflux and afflux. An axiom will be found even
for the language of dolphins. Marx often alluded to the Golden Age ·
of the capitalist, when the latter didn't hide his own cynicism: in the
beginning, at least, he could not be unaware of what he was doing,
extorting surplus value. But how this cynicism has grown-to the
point where he is able to declare: no, nobody is being robbed! For
everything is then based on the disparity between two kinds of
flows, as in the fathomless abyss where profit and surplus value are
engendered: the flow of merchant capital's economic force and the
flow that is derisively named 'purchasing power'-a flow made truly
impotent that represents the absolute impotence of the wage earner
as well as the relative dependence of the industrial capitalist. This is
money and the market, capitalism's true police.
In a certain sense, capitalist economists are not mistaken when
they present the economy as being perpetually 'in need of mon
etarization', as if it were always necessary to inject money into the
economy from the outside according to a supply and a demand. In
this manner the system indeed holds together and functions, and
perpetually fulfills its own immanence. In this manner it is indeed the
global object of an investment of desire. The wage earner's desire,
the capitalist's desire, everything moves to the rhythm of one and
the same desire, founded on the differential relation of flows having
no assignable exterior limit, and where capitalism reproduces its
immanent limits on an ever widening and more comprehensive scale.
Hence it is at the level of a generalized theory of flows that one is
able to reply to the question: how does one come to desire strength
while also desiring one's own impotence? How was such a social field
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# A C C E L E R A T E
able to be invested by desire? And how far does desire go beyond
so-called objective interests, when it is a question of flows to set
in motion and to break? Doubtless Marxists will remind us that the
formation of money as a specific relation within capitalism depends
on the mode of production that makes the economy a monetary
economy. The fact remains that the apparent objective movement
of capital-which is by no means a failure to recognize or an illusion
of consciousness-shows that the productive essence of capitalism
can itself function only in this necessarily monetary or commodity
form that controls it, and whose flows and relations between flows
contain the secret of the investment of desire. It is at the level of
flows, the monetary flows included, and not at the level of ideology,
that the integration of desire is achieved.
So what is the solution? Which is the revolutionary path? Psy
choanalysis is of little help, entertaining as it does the most intimate
of relations with money, and recording-while refusing to recognize
it-an entire system of economic-monetary dependences at the heart
of the desire of every subject it treats. Psychoanalysis constitutes
for its part a gigantic enterprise of absorption of surplus value. But
which is the revolutionary path? Is there one?-To withdraw from
the world market, as Samir Amin advises Third World countries to
do, in a curious revival of the fascist 'economic solution'? Or might
it be to go in the opposite direction? To go still further, that is, in the
movement of the market, of decoding and deterritorialization? For
perhaps the flows are not yet deterritorialized enough, not decoded
enough, from the viewpoint of a theory and a practice of a highly
schizophrenic character. Not to withdraw from the process, but to go
further, to 'accelerate the process', as Nietzsche put it: in this matter,
the truth is that we haven't seen anything yet.
N
c.o
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Energu m en
Ca pita lis m
Jea n - Fra n 9o i s Lyotard
1 972
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Criticism's not the time to think. Think ahead of time.
-John Cage to Daniel Charles1
Bellmer places a mirror perpendicular to a photo of a female nude.
And turns it around, observing that, through the abstract split of the
contact line, unrecognizable blooms of flesh emerge, or are reabsorbed
back into it when the mirror travels in the other direction. The end of
representation? Or representation in its modern version, where what
is 'interesting' is no longer the full body, now denounced as a poor
harmony, a false totality, poor and false because now impracticable
(or in fact a/ways impracticable, notwithstanding the brief collective
phantasm of romanticism following the caesura of modernity, Holder
lin, J.-P. Richter and Hegel, and still Marx)-but the non-organic,
dismembered body, flattened onto itself, folded, entwined, reduced
to puddles and shreds, glued-together fragments, a non-set of partial
objects stitched together in a cacophonous miracle? The end of repre
sentation, if to represent is to present, in its absence, something-but
still representation if to represent is to present anyway, to present the
unpresentable, to represent in the sense of making 'representations' to
someone, remonstrances, to re-monstrate. For what is remonstrated
is disorder. An outmoded sense of the word?
Here it is: is there a rupture of modernity? Is it true that after
Cezanne there is no longer anything but shreds? Yes, of course. But
this is not the question. What is possible is that before Cezanne, in the
baroque, certainly, in 'that which turns', the clear-obscure, shadows
efflorescing and cutting up bodies in a kind of bad butchery where the
meat is not separated according to its grain but against the grain, as
in de la Tour and of course already in Caravaggio (what this system of
values means we can see very well once the colour video camera takes
1. J. Cage, M: Writings '67-72 (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1973), 20.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
possession of it and prints it on film, in place of the 'spectacle' that
Zurich's Living Theatre played for the last time, the evasive liquidity
of colours diluting the human into the inhuman, into chemism and
chromatics: the 'truth' of the baroque. it is formless [informe]). thus
already in the baroque, and perhaps even already in perspectivist
foreshortening (isn't Mantegna's Lamentation of Christ Alice, when
she shrinks so much that her chin hits her feet?) and in the angular
sadism of Brunelleschi's legitimate construction. a box to cut women
into pieces. the iron chin-strap into which Dorer fixes his head so as
to keep it still facing the woman laid out behind the stretched wicker
network, in the impossible perspicacity of Piero. who gives us dis
tances just as cut out. just as meticulously linear as his foregrounds-it
may be that what is important in this whole representational-and
'primitive' and classical and baroque-dispositif. is not the rule. the
synthesis, the beautiful totality, the thing lost or found. the completion
of unifying Eros. but distortion, quartering. difference and exteriority
to all form. The formless and the disfigured.
Then, according to this hypothesis, the moderns who multi
ply modalities and inscriptions with their theatres with multiple or
transformable scenes (the total theatre of Piscator and Gropius).
with the infinite diversity of pictorial inscriptions that they continue
to class as 'painting', with the explosion of the music of sonorous
intensities drifting in the element of silence-noises. with anti-book and
non-book books, travel books-don't they continue representation
disfiguration? Believing they were going to have done with it, didn't
they displace and prove it. opening the box. making the scenic space
spread out all around the spectator. below. above, certainly undoing
the strict axial relation of the chin-strap. the ramp and the rail and
the gate. and even the auditorium/stage division-but retaining the
mirrored pane. placing it before the old one? And then it's a deform
ing mirror. warped, with blind spots, laughter and wrinkles producing
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LYOTA R D - E N E R G U M EN CAPITA L I S M
distortions, savage, aleatory anamorphoses, like the lenses of the
cameras of underground film, and of course already in Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon, and yet nevertheless the ga p between the latter and
some nude of Bouguereau, as Gombrich shows, is perhaps no more
than that between flat and distorted glass, cubism being certainly
a defeated academicism, but cubism and academicism remaining,
both, representation.
Here is a depressed thinking, a pious, nihilist thinking: you never
have the thing itself, you only ever have its representation, and even
when you think you've flushed it out in its original fragmentation,
you still only have its representation, the differed fragmented thing.
It is the thinking that continues representation as a complement to
piety, as the production of exteriority in the interior. But what if this
wasn't the real problem? What if, with modern inscription, it was
the exterior/interior limit that was disqualified, spanned? If we must
take seriously not representation once again, but production tout
court; not (representative) effacement but inscription; not re-petition,
but difference qua irreparable; not signification, but energetics; not
mediation through the building of the stage, but the immediacy of
producing no matter where; not localization, but perpetual delocaliza
tion? The time is coming no longer to stop at observing the capture
and erasure of libidinal fluxes in an order of which representation and
its junctive-disjunctive partitionings are, or would be, the last word,
for this capture and this erasure are capitalism; the time is coming to
serve and to encourage their errant divagation over all the surfaces
and splits immediately flooded, with bodies, with history, the earth,
language An attitude that would not even be revolutionary in the
...
sense of an overthrowing, an overturning (or connected to any
expertise in these theatrical operations), and thus still a distribution
of energy according to the edifice and artifice of representation, but
revolutionary in the sense of Wille, in the sense of willing that what
could be, should be.
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To write according to this attitude is to forget. The forgetting of
formal propriety first of all, of 'good' style. No longer the French-style
canals, parks, groves and ponds of the rarefied writing of yore, no
longer the gracious hexagonal epigones of assured taste; nor the
thousand effaced connotations. When the eye of Deleuze and Guat
tari blinks. it's massive, like a sluice-gate. Their book is a voluminous
displacement of waters, sometimes unleashed in a torrent, sometimes
stationary, doing work below, but always moving, with waves, cur
rents and countercurrents. What is involved is not signification, but an
energetics. The book adds nothing. but it carries along a great deal,
it transports everything. It is a pantograph that conducts electrical
energy from the high-voltage line and makes it possible to transform
it into the rotation of wheels on rails, for the traveller in landscapes,
reveries, musics, in works transformed, destroyed, carried away in
their turn. The pantograph itself is moving very fast. It is not a book
of philosophy, that is to say a religion. Still less the religion of those
who no longer believe in anything, the religion of writing. Rather, writ
ing is treated as a machinery: it absorbs energy and metamorphoses
it into a metamorphic potential in the reader.
And then the forgetting of critique. Anti-Oedipus, despite its title,
is not a book of critique. Instead, like Nietzsche's Antichrist, it is a
positive, positional book, an energetic position inscribed in discourse,
where negation of the enemy takes place not through Aufhebung,
but through forgetting. Just as atheism is the continuation of religion
in negative form-the modern form of religion, even, the only form in
which modernity could continue to be religious-so critique makes
itself the object of its object, establishes itself in the field of the other,
accepting the dimensions, directions and space of the other even as
it contests them. In Deleuze and Guattari's book you find everywhere
a quite explicit contempt for the category of transgression (and thus,
implicitly, for all of Bataille): because either one gets out immediately
CD
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LYOTA R D - E N E R G U M E N CAPITA L I S M
without wasting time critiquing. simply because one is elsewhere than
the enemy's domain; or else one critiques. keeping one foot inside
while stepping outside with the other-positivity of the negative, but
_
in fact nothingness of this positivity. It is this critical non-force that
is found in Feuerbach and Adorno. As Marx said in 1844 socialism
doesn't need atheism. because the question of atheism is positionally
the same as that of religion; it remains a critique. What is important
here is not its negativity, but its positioning (the way the problem is
posed). From atheism (which Marx saw as utopian communism) to
socialism. no frontier is crossed. there is no 'overgrowth'. no critique;
there is a displacement. desire has wandered nomadically into another
space. another dispositif has been activated, it works otherwise. and
if it works, it is not by virtue of the other. older machine having been
critiqued. For the same reason. all things being equal. the following
lines will not be a critique.
Contrary to all expectations, or precisely because the sensational
title is an illusory effect. what the book subverts most profoundly
is what it does not critique: Marxism. This does not imply that.
symmetrically, it does not subvert psychoanalysis. which it attacks.
On the contrary, beneath the different ways in which the regimes
of this machine that is the book function, depending on whether it
operates with Freud or with Marx. there remains an evident identity
of position. Those parts of Marx that are quietly buried are no less
serious or important than those parts of Freud that are flung into
the roaring blaze of Anti-Oedipus's counterfire. On one hand. the
book-machine unplugs itself from the psychoanalytical dispositif
and exposes it, forces it to expose itself, just like the man with the
tape recorder did, pulling back and projecting all the libidinal energy
that was supposed to flow away into the transferential relationship.
projecting it onto the paranoiac configuration of the Arche-State
which. according to Deleuze and Guattari, underlies the dispositif of
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# A C C E L E R A T E
psychoanalytical practice: on the other hand, on the contrary, the
book pumps out Marxism's theoretical and practical flows, cutting
them off here and there, dropping whole parts of the Marxist dispositif
without a word. And yet the two Elders are in fact placed under the
same sign: all the ways in which libidinal economy communicates with
political economy in their works, this is what is truly a transformative
force and thus a potential departure: on the contrary, all the ways
in which the libidinal conceals the political in Freud or the political
the libidinal in Marx must be leapt out of and danced upon. Thus
we find that everything that is unconsciously political in psychoa
nalysis is profoundly subverted-such is the visible axis of the book:
anti-Oedipus as anti-State, rupture with the despotic configuration
unconsciously present in psychoanalysis. But in parallel with this,
everything unconsciously libidinal in Marxism must be thawed out,
the libido imprisoned in the religious scaffolding of dialectical politics
or economic catastrophism, repressed in the suspended analyses of
commodity fetishism and the naturality of labour.
Yet the book is anti-Oedipus and not anti-Party (assuming that
the Party is, on the socio-political surface of inscription, the analogue
of Oedipus on the corporeal surface) . Is this not giving too much
importance to psychoanalysis in the repressive mechanisms that
regulate the circulation of Kapital? Is this critical virulence not too
clamorous? Is it not precisely this that will allow the intellectual left to
make the book into a gadget, a seasonal commodity, thereby neutral
izing it? Is not its true virulence in its silence? By branching off the
present short work from the larger work of the book at precisely the
point where the latter says nothing, we seek to set off some flows
that cannot be exchanged by the merchants and/or the politicians.
Thus we reaffirm what the book affirms. We show how it is one of
the most intense products of the new libidinal figure that is beginning
to 'gel' inside of capitalism.
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LYOTA R D - E N E R G U M E N CAPITALISM
It doesn't matter whether what we do ends up being melodic.
-C. Wolff to Stockhausen
Marxism says: there is a frontier. a limit beyond which the organiza
tion of flows called capital (capitalist relations of production) comes
apart, and the whole set of correspondences between money and
commodities, capital and labour force, and other parameters besides,
is disrupted. And it is the very growth in the productive capacities
in the most modern capitalism which, reaching this limit. will cause
the dispositif of production and circulation to falter, and cannot fail
to let through, to set free more energy flows. allowing to be swept
away their system of 'regulation' within capital-that is, the relations
of production.
All Marxist politics is built on this assumption; it seeks in this
frontier. this limit, this chain, this or that link or stone seemingly ready
to give way, the weakest link-or the strongest link, one that is so
important that the whole edifice can be brought down with it. This
whole politics is a politics of limits and of negativity. There is, or so it
requires. some exteriority beyond the reach of capital: at the same
time as it extends the law of value to new objects, or rather reformats all the old objects that were formerly 'coded' according to the
intricate rules of production of 'trades', according to religious rituals,
and according to the customs of older. more 'savage' cultures, so that
they may be decoded and made into modern 'objects' stripped of all
constraints other than that of exchangeability-at the same time as
all that, capital itself approaches a limit it cannot exceed.
What is this limit? The disproportion between flows of credit
and flows of production? Between quantities of commodities and
quantities of available currency? Between capital invested and the
expected rate of profit? The disequilibrium between production capac
ity and actual production? The disproportion between fixed capital
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# A C C E L E R A T E
and salaries or variable capital? Between surplus value created by the
exploitation of the Jabour force and its realization or reconversion in
production? Or is the limit the decline in the rate of profit? Or the
emergence of revolutionary critique within the ranks of a burgeon
ing proletariat? Or on the contrary, should we observe, bitterly but
symmetrically (that is, remaining within the same theoretical and
practical field) that the motivation to invest, discouraged by the
decline in the rate of profit, is taken over by State interventions; that
workers, ever more numerous, are however less and Jess open to the
prospect of revolutionary overthrow (to the extent that Communist
parties are obliged to practically exclude such a perspective from
their programs, and to present themselves as good managers of an
almost identical system, just with a few less owners of capital and a
few more high-level officials)?
These uncertainties are not speculative. they are practical and
political. They are the legacy of a century of the Communist move
ment, and of a Jong half-century of socialist revolution. Almost as if,
around 1860, one were to have inquired as to the development of
French society, the contradictions within the society of the ancien
regime; the direction that Robespierre imparted to the revolutionary
current; the h istorical function of Bonaparte; and ultimately, the
fundamental difference between French society under the last kings
and French society under the last emperor, realizing that it is to be
found not in the Age of Enlightenment, where bourgeois ideology
places it, but to the side, in the Industrial Revolution. The same
goes, with appropriate adjustments, for the Russian 'socialist' state.
Its divergence from bourgeois society is not where its discourse
says it is, in the power of the Soviets-that is, not in the workers'
increased (and in theory even greater) proximity to decisions taken
on the economy and society, and thus in a finer flexibility of flows of
production, words, thoughts, and objects. On the contrary, it lies in
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LYOTAR D - E N E R G U M E N CAPITA L I S M
the state's grip on these currents, a grip just as tight as that of czar
ism. just as 'rational' (that is to say, irrational) and secondary (in the
Freudian sense)-the grip of a sociophagous state that absorbs civil,
economic and intellectual society, that infiltrates itself into all of its
circulatory channels, pouring the cement of its bureaucratic suspicion
into them. No more fluctuating, then, and less representative; on the
contrary, just as centralized, totalizing and paranoiac. And perhaps
more centralized. Here again things happen elsewhere: the socialist
revolution engenders a new kind of despotic state which tries to
combine a police-like paternalistic contempt for the masses and for
the libido with the ('American') technical efficiency and initiative of
capitalism, and fails. When Lenin said that socialism was Soviet power
plus electrification, Cronstadt replied: it is the Party's power plus
executions. Not that capitalism is in any way the regime of freedom,
for it too is constructed on the principle of a mapping of the flows
of production back onto the socius; Kapital is this mapping; but it
must happen only under the auspices of profit, not in the name of
some gain in sacred power (numen). in what Deleuze and Guattari
call surplus value of code-that is, a gain in prestige, which presup
poses an emotional attachment. Capitalism offers nothing to believe
in, cynicism is its morality. The Party, on the contrary, as a despotic
configuration, requires a mapping that is territorialized, coded and
hierarchized, in the religious sense of the term. Russia, Mother Russia,
the people, its folklore. its dances, its customs and costumes, baba
and Little Father, everything from the 'savage' Slavic communities is
conserved. preserved, and attached to the figure of the Secretary
General, the despot who appropriates all production.
If we inquire as to what effectively destroys bourgeois soci
ety, then, it is clear that neither socialist revolution nor Marxism
hold the answer. Not only does the 'historical 'dialectic' belie the
speculative dialectic; we have to admit that there is no dialectic at all.
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Figures, vast dispositifs, compete over energies; the way that energies
are tapped, transformed and circulated is completely different depend
ing on whether it is the capitalist figure or the despotic figure. The
two may combine, they produce no contradictions in doing so-no
history on the way to totalization. leading to other figures-but only
effects of compromise on the social surface, unexpected monsters:
the Stakhanovite worker. the proletarian company boss, the Red
Marshall, the leftist nuclear bomb. the unionized policeman, the com
munist labour camp. Socialist Realism .... In these kinds of mixings of
libidinal-economic dispositifs. it is surely the despotic configuration
that dominates. But even if this were not the case. it's not clear why
and how this machinery would be a dialectical outcome, still less why
and how the libidinal figure of capitalism ought to or even could 'lead
to' such a dispositif through its 'intrinsic organic development'. And
in fact it does not lead to it. it leads to nothing other than itself: no
'overgrowth' to be expected, no limit in its field that it does not cross
over. On one hand. capitalism leaps over all precapitalist limitations;
on the other. it d raws along and displaces its own limit in its move
ment. Which spells confusion for the 'left', traditional and radical alike.
This is the zone that Deleuze and Guattari set out from: What
if this idea of an insurmountable economic, social, 'moral', political,
technical (or whatever) limit were a hollow idea? What if, instead
of a wall to breach or transgress, it were capitalism's own wall that
constantly shifted further inside of itself (we find such a figure already
in the old idea of the expansion of the 'internal' market) ? Not that
it would thus do away with itself through extension alone; neither
would the question of its overthrow be obsolete, consigning us to the
ranks of revisionists and reformers who expect development. growth
and a little more 'democracy' to sort everything out, or rather who
no longer expect anything more than three percent more and better
distributed. But in the sense that there is no exteriority, no other of
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LYOTA R D - E N E R G U M E N CAPITA L I S M
Kapital (whether Nature, Socialism, Festival, or whatever), but in
the very interior of the system there are ever-increasing regions of
contact and war between that which is fluidity and almost indifference,
developed by capital itself, and that which is 'axiomatic', repression,
the plugging up of fiows, 'reterritorializations', and the mapping of
energy back onto a body which is supposed to be its origin but which
in fact seeks only to profit from it, whatever name this body might
assume: Nation, Civilization, Freedom, Future, and New Society under
one sole Identity: Kapital.
There is no dialectic in the sense that one or several of these
confiicts must one day result i.n the breaching of the wall, that one
day we will find that the energy has 'snuck out', dispersed, fluid, onto
the other side; rather there is a kind of overflowing of force inside the
very system that liberated it from the savage and barbaric rules of
inscription; any object can enter into Kapital, if it can be exchanged;
that which can be exchanged, be metamorphosed from money into
machines, from commodity into commodity, from labour force into
labour, from labour into salary, from salary into labour force-all of
this, from the moment it is exchangeable (according to the law of
value), is an object for KapitaI. Thus there is nothing but an enormous
stirring of the surface; objects appear and disappear like the fins of
dolphins on the surface of the sea, where their objectivity gives way
to their obsolescence, where what is important tends no longer to be
the object, a legacy concretion of codes, but metamorphosis, fluidity.
No dolphin, only a slipstream, an energetic trace inscribed on the sur
face. It is in this liquidity, in these neither icy nor scalding waters, that
the capitalist relations of production will sink-that is, the simple rule
of the equality of exchangeable values and the whole set of 'axioms'
that Kapital keeps on fabricating to make this rule compulsory and
respectable once again, all the while making a mockery of it.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
For example, Sherman shows that in nationalising the thousand
largest companies in the US, in one go one could overcome the bot
tlenecks that the law of value imposes upon circulation; one could
reduce working time to a few hours a day, establish completely free
consumer goods, and get rid of advertising and a great number of
other tertiary activities. Figures in hand, this is demonstrated to be
possible in the current state of the us economy. One can imagine the
thing done if, for example, capital owners' motivation to invest kept
on decreasing and if their interests led them to prefer bureaucratic
revenues (of which there would be no shortage in Sherman's society)
to uncertain market profits: this would perhaps be communism in the
sense of the 1848 Manifesto, it wouldn't be the socialism we dream
of today. It would be modern capitalism, despotic bureacracy, the
bureacracy of abundance, that is to say one in which the apparatus
no longer regulated poverty and rarity, but instead prosperity; the
bureacracy not of need, but of libido.
A limit continually pushed back, a 'relative limit'. The body without
organs, the socius, has no limit; it maps back everything onto itself,
self-relation, captures and directs the innumerable fluxes that the
'economic' libidinal-political dispositifs connect onto each other, in an
endless metamorphosis, an always different repetition. This mapping
process, this absorption of energy, upon a socius that attracts and
destroys production, this is capitalism. No limit cutting off the interior
from the exterior, no cliff the system falls off and crashes. But, on the
surface itself, a frantic flight, an aleatory voyage of libido, an errancy
that is marked by the 'whatever' of Kapital, and which makes of this
formation, compared to savagery and barbarianism, compared to
coded formations, the most schizophrenic and the least dialectical.
Look at how the bosses of American companies straight away got
around the obstacle that the MIT economists opposed to the pursuit
of growth. The economists said: with production, pollution grows
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LYOTA R D - E N E R G U M E N CAPITA L I S M
exponentially. Therefore stop growth, limit investment in production,
govern the system on a zero growth basis. Reappearance of the
category of the limit, the catastrophe. Response of capitalists and
entrepreneurs: instead, incorporate the costs of depollution into
production costs; this will raise retail prices considerably, the market
will contract accordingly, and production will regulate itself given the
lower capacity for consumption. No-one knows whether it is in this
way, through incorporation into price, that pollution will be neutralized;
but it is certain that capitalism will not take, for it cannot take, the
decision to hold the growth of the productive machine at zero. It gets
around the obstacle with a suppl ementary 'axiom' (the allocation of
the costs of depollution to the cost price, or else the tax system).
ENERGUMEN CAPITALISM
A very deep, very superficial subversion of Marxism, unspoken._. This
figure of Kapital, that of the circulation of flows, is what brings about
the predominance of the point of view of circulation over that of
production-in political economy's sense of the word. ( For in Deleuze
and Guattari's sense, production is the connection and cutting of
flows, a gush of milk sucked from the breast and cut off by the lips,
energy extracted and converted, a flow of electrons converted into
the rotation of a mill, jets of sperm sucked in by the womb.) Of course
there will be no shortage of attacks on this predominance of the point
ofview of circulation. When Oeleuze and Guattari write that capital
ism must be thought according to the category of the bank rather
than that of production, it will be cried that this is Keynesian ideology,
a techno-bureaucratic representation of the system by intellectuals
cut off from practice, and that in abandoning the point of view of
production, one turns one's back on work, the worker, struggle,
and class. And indeed there is not a word on the theory of labour
value; and just a word, but an enigmatic one, on a hypothesis on
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machinic surplus value. In truth, the great flood of the book washes
up several important corpses: the proletariat, class struggle, human
surplus-value .... It puts forth the image of a decoded capitalism full of
current circulations and yet more intense potential circulations that
only a whole series of dikes ('reterritorializations') can restrain and
keep within the banks, only a whole battery of repressions led by the
fundamental State: the Arche-State and its Oedipus.
Capitalism as metamorphosis, with no extrinsic code, having its
limit only within itself, a relative, postponed limit (which is the law
of value)-in fact this is an 'economics' that is found already in The
German Ideology, again in the manuscripts of 1857-58 (Grundrisse,
Introduction to the Critique of Political Economy), and in Capital
itself. And the fact that this economics has something to do with
the libido, we find traces of this in the Reading Notes of 1843, at
one end of Marx's oeuvre, and at the other in Capital's chapter
on fetishism, as Baudrillard has shown. The critical universality of
capitalism is outlined as well, the hypothesis that with indifference.
with the effect of the principle of equivalence (that is, decoding),
there surfaces in the workers' or the capitalist practice of capitalism
the empty space in which the construction of the great categories
of work and value will become possible, along with the possibility of
applying these categories retroactively to dispositifs ('precapital
ist' forms) in which these modalities had been covered over by
codes, by markings and representations that did not permit a gen
eralized political economy-that is, forms that kept political and
libidinal economies apart from one another, with the latter diverted
into religion, customs, and rituals of inscription, cruelty, and terror.
With capitalism, all of this becomes equalizable, the modalities of
production and inscription are simplified into the law of value, and
thus anything can be produced-inscribed so long as inscription
production energy deposited in a trace or any object whatsoever
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LYOTA R D - E N E R G U M E N CAPITALI S M
can be converted back into energy, into another object or another
trace. Portrait of an almost schizophrenic capital. Occasionally called
perverse, but it is a normal perversion, the perversion of a libido
machining its flows over a body without organs which it can cling to
everywhere and nowhere, just as the flows of material and economic
energy can, in the form of production-that is, of conversion-invest
any region whatsoever of the surface of the social body, the smooth
and indifferent socius. Transient cathexes, which cause all territories
limited and marked by codes to disappear in their wake-not only
on the side of objects (the prohibitions·of production and circulation
explode one after another), but also on the side of individual and social
'subjects', which appear in this transit only as indifferent concretions,
themselves exchangeable and anonymous, whose illusion of existence
can only be maintained at the price of great expenditures of energy.
In short, there is little standing in the way of capitalism already
being that voyage in intensities, that egg, the variable milieu whose
surface is traversed and continually affluent here and there with
little machines, little organs, little prostheses, already the Spinoz
ist substance adorned with its attributes or the Democritean void
where atoms dance, of our already enjoying the gaiety of being wise
in God-Nature-Return. Is is Marxist, this Spinozism, this atomism?
It matters little, it's not at all a matter of creating an orthodoxy, but
rather of detecting an inspiration at once present and repressed in
Marx. Hence the atomist theme: in capitalism, individuals constitute
themselves as desocialized, deterritorialized, denatured, 'free' entities
(The German Ideology), at the same time as they find themselves
governed by chance, by a god who is indifferent to their affairs. by a
deviant Epicurean god, by a non-rule, the non-rule of the clinamen,
the floating free of the destiny of their territoriality and their familiarity.
In his Doctoral Dissertation, Marx, well before being Marxist, said:
Epicurus's doctrine on gods 'does away with religious fear and
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superstition. it gives to gods neither joy nor favours, but allows us
the same relation that we have with Hycarnius's fish, from which we
expect neither harm nor profit.' And if the gods become worldly, declin
ing all responsibility for men, Marx says, it is for the same 'reason' that
the atom deviates, according to the principle of the clinamen, from the
straight line that its fall traces out in the void. For through this straight
line it is tied to a system, it is subject to fati foedera, as Lucretius says,
to the bonds of 'it is said'; the clinamen, on the contrary, is 'at the
heart of the atom, that something that can struggle and resist', says
Marx; it escapes heteronomy, and thus the negativity implied by the
'law of the other'. The same goes for the principle bf the repulsion of
atoms: 'Their negation of all relation to one another must be realised
effectively, posited positively [ wirklich. positiv gesetzt]', and thus can
only be the moment of repulsion through which each atom is related
solely to itself. Deviant and repulsive atoms, oblique and indifferent
gods; individuals 'declining' in 'free' fall, in the empty space of capital;
flows cut with neither finality nor causality; orphan fluxes fleeing the
fati foedera of organic or social pseudo-bodies: what subtends all of
this is the same figure, that of schizophrenia and/or materiality. And if,
for the (Marxist) Marx of 1857, capitalism is the index of a universality
applicable to all the great socio-economic machines including itself,
there is no doubt that it is through the void, the indifference into
which it plunges all beings, the (indistinct, aleatory) declinability of
the individual in relation to labour, of the object in relation to money,
of Kapital in relation to the product.
Another repressed theme, that of the dissolution of subjective
objective illusions of producing and consuming: all production is a con
sumption of the the raw materials. instruments and energies employed
in their production, and all consumption is production of a new form, a
metamorphosis of the consumed into a different product. 'This identity
of production and consumption', says Marx. 'comes back to Spinoza's
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proposition: Determinatio est negatio'. Here is a materialist (not at all
dialectical) usage of negation. its positive usage; this determinatio is
the atom, and it is the cutting off of flows Take once again, this time
:
in Capital, the chapter on the rate of surplus-value, where you will find
this perfectly Deleuzo-Guattarian text:
If we look at the creation and the alteration of value for themselves,
i.e. in their pure form, then the means of production, this physical
shape taken on by constant capital. provides only the material in
which fluid. value-creating power [die f!Ossige, wertbildende Kraft]
has to be incorporated. Both the nature and the value of this material
[Stoff] are indifferent [gleichgO/tig].
And the later Marx adds a note:
What Lucretius says is self-evident: 'nil posse cretiri de nihilo', out of
nothing, nothing can be created. 'Creation of value' is the transforma
tion [conversion. transposition, Umsatz] of Jabour-power into labour.
Labour-power itself is. above all else, the material of nature [Natur
stoff] transposed, converted [umgesetzt] into a human organism. 2
In an essay profoundly influenced by the Frankfurt School-that
is, by negative dialectics-Alfred Schmidt. analyzing the relation
between labour and nature in Marx, in spite of his intentions, gives
many proofs that the Verwandlungen, the Umsatze, that comprise
all of political economy, are characterized by Marx as much as meta
morphoses of a neutral energy placed upstream from any nihilistic
splitting, as relations of the working subject and the worked object,
or of use-value and exchange-value, that is to say of two beings in
2. K Marx, Capital, Vol 1. trans. B. Fowkes (London: Penguin, 1993), 323 (trans. modified).
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a dialectical relation. No doubt there is in Marx, in the depth of his
movement, this energetic inspiration, an economy which, repressed
under the dialectical dispositif, is far more than political, never openly
libidinal of course, but which allows a libidinal apporach through the
analysis of primary processes. for the clinamen, the orphan and indif
ference, is primacy. And Marx's desire to know! Doesn't his secret
reside in Spinozist, Lucretianjouissance, in his attempt to dissolve all
the discourses of bourgeois political economy by connecting them
up to the generalized fluidification engendered by Kapital and to
himself produce a theoeretical object capable of corresponding to
this liquefaction even as it exhibits its hidden Jaw, the law of value?
In the figure of Kapital that Deleuze and Guattari propose, we
easily recognize what fascinates Marx: the capitalist perversion, the
subversion of codes, religions, decency, trades, education, cuisine,
speech. the levelling of all 'established' differences into the one and
only difference: being worth ... , being exchangeable for.... Indifferent
difference. Mars immortalis, as he would say.
Deleuze and Guattari have brought this fascination to light. freed
it from bad conscience; they help us to flush it out into the politics
of today. Bad conscience in Marx himself, and worse and worse in
Marxists. And in proportion to this increasingly bad conscience, a piety
meant to conceal and expiate this appetite for capitalist liquefaction:
this piety-dialectics-amounts to keeping the positive perversion of
capitalism inside a dispositif of negativity, contradiction and neurosis
which will make possible the detection and denunciation of the forget
ting of the creditor (the proletariat) and of the debt (surplus value)
in a freedom declared to be factitious and guilty, in a positivity judged
to be a fac;:ade. So Marxism will be this repairing and remonstrating
enterprise in which one will demonstrate and re-monstrate the system
as a faithless debtor, and devote all political energy to the project of
righting the wrong-not just any wrong, said Marx in 18LJ3, but a wrong
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in itself, this Jiving wrong that t h e proletariat is, t h e wrong o f alienation.
A rather strange device inherited from Christianity, but one that, as
we know, will take on paranoiac dimensions with Stalin and Trotsky,
_
before falling into the routine of a faded belief in today's 'communism'.
It is this dispositif of negativity and guilt that Anti-Oedipus rids
Marxism of. Cendrars said that 'artists are, above all, men who struggle
to become inhuman'. The book's silence on class struggle, the saga
of the worker and the function of his party, which weigh down the
language of politics, lead one to believe that for the authors, the true
politics today is in fact that of men who struggle to become inhuman.
No debt to be tracked down. Its muteness on surplus value springs
from the same source: looking for the creditor is a wasted effort,
the subject of the credit would always have to be made to exist, the
proletariat would always have to be incarnated on the surface of the
socius-that is, represented in the representative box on the political
stage; and that is the seed of the Arche-State's reappearence, it is
Lenin and Stalin, it might be a nameless subject, the Party, a Void,
the Signifier-and it is never anything but that, since a creditor is
always the name of a lack. So let go of bad politics, the politics of
bad conscience, its sagacious corteges and their banners. weighty
processions of simulated piety: capitalism is never going to perish of
bad conscience, it will not expire through Jack, through a failure to
give the exploited what they are owed. If it dies, it is through excess,
because its energetics continually displace its limits; 'restitution'
comes as an extra and not as a paranoiac passion to do justice, to give
everyone their due, as if one knew what it was, as if it weren't evident
today that the 'wage' of a worker in any one of the ten wealthiest
nations did not contain, in addition to the market value of his energy
expenditure, a redistributed share of surplus value! It is not only Naville
who thinks so; in their own way, economists such as Ota Sik and Z.
Tanko, in supposing that there is a twofold function of wages, the
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# A C C E L E R A T E
exchangeable value of labour-power (which is private property) but
also a counterpart redistributed by the state of the use-value of social
labor, essentially concede the point. This does not mean that one is
already in socialism or that socialism is now inevitable ( ! ) It only means
that the law that governs exchange is perhaps not the principle of
equal quantity of a bstract labor contained in exchangeable commodi"
ties; and that there is therefore indeed a principle of equivalence, but
that it is not anchored in a deep exteriority, that the value of labour
power and the value of an hour of median (abstract) social labour are
not determinable in relation to the conditions of natural survival, in
relation to a nature of elementary needs; that, on the contrary, they
are the object of incessant conflicts on the social surface, and that
therefore there is no depth or origin, that unions, bureaucratic cliques,
pressure groups oppose and combine ceaselessly to fix a distribution
of the GNP which is in itself floating and without originary reference.
The same process, in short, for labour-value as for gold-value, where
convertibility, even in principle, must also be abandoned and replaced
by the play of an incessant negotiation-that is to say, deterritorial
ized and dragged into the waves of exchangeable words and things.
NEI TH ER S TRUCTURES , EVEN I NFRASTRUCTURES ,
NOR EXC H ANGE, EVEN SYMBOLIC EXC H ANG E
What are these prohibitions that capitalism opposes to the incessant
movements of flows? 'Reterritorializations' necessary to keep the
system in place, say Deleuze and Guattari.3 These circumscribed sites
on the surface of the socius, which disconnect whole regions and
shelter them from the schizo-flows, are neo-archaisms, they say:4
3. G. Deleuze and F. Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, trans R. Hurley, M. Seem, H. R. Lane
(London: Athlone, 198-'I), 257-62.
4. Ibid., 257ff.
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Indian reseNations, fascism. exchange money, Third-Worldist bureau
cracies, private property5-and of course, Oedipus and the Urstaat.
Rather flippant, is it not, to place under the same function the
pueblo and capital money, Stalin and Hitler, Hitler and private property!
What about super- anc� infrastructures? Well, not a word on this
subject, of course. There are only desiring-machines, the body without
organs, their stormy relationships being already of the molecular order,
relationships between the anus making shit, the mouth making words,
the eyes making eyes, and a surface, that of the supposed body, where
they have to position, inscribe and compose themselves-and then
of the order of the (supposed) great social body, the socius, of the
molar order once more, the violent disjunction between, on one hand,
the blind, machinic repetition of the production-inscription of little
organs and social segments; and on the other hand, the mapping-back
and hoarding of these segmentary productions on the surface of the
socius, especially by the Arche-State. No structures in the linguistic
or semiotic sense: only dispositifs of energy transformation. And
among these dispositifs, no reason to privilege (under the name of
infrastructure) that which regulates the production and circulation
of goods, the so-called 'economic' dispositif.... For there is no less an
economy, an energetics, in the dispositif that will regulate lineages
and alliances, distributing flows of intensity into concretions of roles,
persons and goods on the surface of the socius, and that will finally
produce what is called the organization of savage society (an organism
that is in fact never unified, but always divided between the thousand
poles of little multiple organs, partial objects, libidinal segments, and
the pole of unification by the void created on high, at the summit, at
and in the head, by the signifier)-no less of an economy in the laws
of kinship, no less of an economy even in the distribution of the libido
5. Ibid, 259.
oJ
01
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# A C C E L E R A T E
on the surface of the body without organs, in the hooking-up of little
desiring, energy-transforming and pleasure-seeking organs, than in the
economics and distribution of capital, no less of a producing-inscribing
dispositif there than here. And inversely, the Oedipal formation is no
less political-economic than that of Kapital, and ultimately it is no less
eco-libidinal and deviant than the primary process it captures. So it is
not a matter of discerning which of these dispositifs is subordinating
and which subordinated: there is a reciprocal subordination.6 But to
follow the infra/super hypothesis, we should have to presuppose the
organic totality of the social field, presuppose and require the social
whole, dividing up structures within a macro-structure, with the
whole as the starting point, supposing the whole to be given or at
least discernable and analyzable. When the very problem is that the
whole is not given, that society is not a unified totality, but is made
up of displacements and metamorphoses of energy that endlessly
decompose and recombine into subsets and draw these subsets
now towards the organs' perverse-schizo functioning, now towards
the neurotic-paranoiac functioning of the g reat absent signifier.
If you speak in terms of super- and infra- you are ordering dispositifs
according to high and low, and already you have adopted the point
of view of the signifier, of the whole, and it will not let you go: when
you want to conduct a revolutionary politics, to imagine a subversive
becoming, if you don't attack this edifice, you will have a dialectics
at best, and at best, according to the latter, one 'after' the negative
moment, 'after' the revolution-that is, already before (in the form of
a party, for example, or a need for effectiveness or for organization,
or the fear of failure). And the same hierarchized arrangement will be
reproduced: the same worker-militant on the bottom and the same
leader -boss on the top, the same confiscation of flows and partial
productions in the general interest-that is to say, in the interests
of the despot.
6. Ibid 288.
..
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What allows u s t o say this, once again, i s n o fantasy: i t i s capitalism
itself. It is capitalism which, sweeping through the most forbidden
regions with its flows of work and money-through art, science,
trades and festivals, politics and sports, words and images, air, water,
snow and sun, Bolshevik, Ma�ist and Castroist revolutions, it is capi
talism that, in traversing these regions, makes the coded dispositifs
that formerly governed their economies appear as libidinal configu
rations at the very moment that it consigns t hem to obsolescence.
It thus reveals that oppositions between infra- and superstructures,
between economic and ideological structures, between relations of
production and social relations, are themselves pairs of concepts
that tell us nothing about what happens in savage, feudal or Oriental
societies, or even in capitalist society itself. For they are either too
much or too little: too much because it is unquestionable that in the
former, kinship, ritual and practical relationships decisively determine
the production and circulation of goods, that is, the configuration
of the 'economy', and that they cannot be reduced to an illusory
ideological function; and too little because in the latter, the term
'economics' covers much more than political economy, much more
than the production and exchange of goods, since it is no less the
production and exchange of labour power, images, words, knowledge
and power, travel and sex.
If political economy is a discourse that founds phenomena of
production and circulation by anchoring them in a nature ( Physiocratic
Nature, the interests and needs of Homo Oeconomicus, the creative
power of the force of the worker), as such it is never applicable:
beyond the hypothetical level of survival, archaic societies are no
less arbitrary than capitalism, and capitalism fits no better than they
do into the category of interest and need, or work. Nowhere is t11ere
a primary economic order (
=
an order of interest, need or work)
followed by ideological, cultural, legal, religious, familial, etc., effects.
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Everywhere there are dispositifs for the capture and discharge of
libidinal energy; but in archaic or Oriental societies, energy and its
concretions into 'objects' (sexual partners, children, tools and weap
ons, food) must be marked with a seal, an incision, an abstraction
which is precisely that of the archaic arts, for their function is not to
'represent' i n the sense of the Quattrocento, but rather to code what
is libidinally invested or investable, to authorize what may circulate
and produce pleasure; these codes are therefore sorters, selectors,
brakes-accelerators, dams and canals, mitral valves regulating the
inputs and outputs of energy in all its forms (words, dances, children,
foods... ) in relation to the socius, the non-existent, postulated Great
Social Body; whereas these codifications of functions, these specific
regulations in their concrete abstractions-a certain inscription on a
certain part of the skin to denote puberty, a certain distortion of the
neck, the ear, the nostrils, or the fabrication of a hat of chicken or pig
entrails (Leiris in Gondar) to mark a particular function in a religious or
magic ritual, this tattoo denoting the right to bear arms, that ornament
on the chiefs face, those words and chants and drum beats inscribed
in the ritual scenario of sacrifice, mourning or excision-capitalism
sweeps all of this away, it is all surpassed and dissipated; capitalism
deculturalizes peoples, dehistoricizes their inscriptions, repeats them
anywhere at all so long as they are marketable, recognizes no code
that is marked by the libido but only exchange value: you can produce
and consume everything, exchange, work or inscribe anything anyway
you want it, so long as it moves, flows, is metamorphizable. The only
untouchable axiom bears on the condition of metamorphosis and
transfer: exchange value. Axiom and not code: energy and its objects
are no longer marked with a sign; properly speaking, there ore no
longer signs since there is no longer code, no reference to an origin,
to a norm, to a 'practice', to a supposed nature or surreality or reality,
to a paradigm or to a Great Other-there is nothing left but a little
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price tag, t h e index o f exchangeability: it's nothing, it's enormous,
it's something else.
Now, not only does this define a political economy, it determines
an entirely singular libidinal economy. One can approach it, like Baudril
lard, on the basis of the category of ambivalence and castration,
and say: capitalism is fetishism, not only in a general sense, in the
Feuerbachian-Hegelian sense, or the sense Marx gives it, but in the
strict sense that the word takes on in the nosology of perversions: it is
fetishism because castration and the splitting of desire are completely
occulted in it. The relationship to the object in Kapital is the perverse
relationship: the difference between the sexes is abolished in it, not
qua sexism (although even there, hairdressers and 'no sex', women's
lib and gay movement clothes stores accelerate desexization), but
qua desire implicating in itself its own prohibition, as barred drive.
Equivalence is placed before ambivalence, obliterating it: generalized
exchangeability omits the fact that there is, in the order of desire,
something that is unexchangeable on pain of death (andjouissance
in so far as it always includes in it this risk of death). And Baudril\ard
opposes to the monotonic modern exchange an economy of the
gift, of the potlatch, in which irreversibility, the disaster of extreme
expenditure, economic and social ruin. annihilation through loss of
prestige, physical death, eternal non-enjoyment, and thus a libidinal
symbolism, are effectively implicated.
These 'conclusions' converge with Deleuze and Guattari's. But it
is the divergence that we should note, because it allows us to sense
what is at stake in Anti-Oedipus. The fine description of savage
cruelty goes entirely in the direction of what Baudrillard wishes to
make manifest under the name of symbolic exchange. As for fluidity
and flight in one, so for equivalence in the other. But the site from
which one speaks is not the same in one as in the other. Desire, in
Baudrillard, a strict Freudian, is still thought in terms of a subject.
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A barred subject, but a subject nonetheless: just as the fragmented
body is still a body, only subsequently relating the fragmentation to
itself as its property, the bar also relates itself to desire as an attribute
to its substance. In both cases, we must put at the other end of the
process an 'author' of the bar, a nothing, a signifier zero, the big Other,
who would therefore be the true producer of the bar. Thus desiring
production would be designated as nihilist signifier. When Deleuze and
Guattari begin from desiring machines and set out to make use of
only the most elementary categories of disjunction and conjunction,
connection and exclusion-that is to say, connection and cutting, with
possible recursivity (production of production), when they speak of
a body without organs and of a socius as of a surface of mapping, a
surface upon which productions (that is, flows-cuts) will come to be
applied to be inscribed upon it. as if this body were the great producer.
the great subject, the great signifier, as if it were the primary source
and u nity, whereas it is itself but a principle of a leading astray-dare
I say, alienation?-in any case, of death in the Freudian sense, the
function of their discourse is not to provide a new metaphor for the
zero signifier, but to produce the rebel economic categories that are
lacking, outside Lucretius, Spinoza and Nietzsche, in the thinking of
desire, rebelling against the mapping of this thought (which is itself
not yet anything but desire, a desire for desire) back onto a signifying
order. rebelling against a philosophical or psychoanalytical mapping
that is a particular case of the mapping of desiring production back
onto the body without organs.
If therefore one continues to think capitalism and savagery in
terms of lack, castration, and even ambivalence and irreversibility,
saying that the first occults them whereas the second inscribes
them in its codes, one completes the occultation of desiring produc
tion, one does metaphysical thought very little harm, and in fact one
fulfills nihilist thought: the subject, it will be said, never shows itself
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'in the flesh', it is fragmented, barred, deferred, present/absent, etc.
But what is important is that one continue to place the libido under
the category of the signifier and to ignore it in its non-sense and its
force of forgetting. Now, far from having to heal the subject by reduc
ing it either to the illusion of a well-balanced socio-familial character
(traditional psychoanalysis) or to the disillusionment of a subject
tragically barred from itself (Lacanian psychoanalysis), we must heal
the subject by liquidating it in anonymity, orphanhood, innocence and
the aleatory plurality of little machines that is 'desire'.
Thus we should not oppose capitalism to savagery as that which
hides and that which exhibits castration-that is to say, as that which
is false and that which is true; we should not look at capitalism from
the point of view of a nostalgia for savagery and truth, which is a
nostalgia for naturalness and representation. There is no good (savage,
symbolic) state of libido, no correct modality of mapping back upon the
socius, that of cruelty (Deleuze and Guattari quite rightly do not say a
word on Artaud's theatre). Just as we must not confuse the content
of socialism with the restitution of libidinal marks on the social body
given over to its cruel fragmentation. We must evacuate the whole
nostalgic mode of speaking and seeing: it exits via the hole Deleuze
and Guattari rip open in Western discourse. The territorial machinery of
savagery or even the great despotic machine of barbarianism are not
(as Nietzsche sometimes dreams) a good perspective from which to
look at the capitalist machinery. Following Marx, Deleuze and Guattari
say the opposite: that capitalism is the only good perspective from
which to look at everything. If you look at capitalism through castra
tion, you think you see it from the despotic Orient or from savage
Africa, but in fact you perpetuate the nihilism of Western religion: your
position is still inspired by bad conscience and piety for Nature and
Exteriority and Transcendence; while capitalism, which is far more
positive than atheism, which is the indication of a profound liquidity
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of economic flows on the surface of the socius, is by this very token
what retroactively makes us see the precapitalistic codes and lets us
comprehend the way in which it itself, related only to itself, index sui,
blocks up and channels this liquidity into the law of value. The law of
value, the only axiom of this system entirely made up of indifference
and equivalence ( Gleichgiltigkeit, says Marx again and again, young
and old), is also the only limit. an impassible limit if you wish, always
displaceable and displaced, that keeps capitalism from being carried
off by the aleatory deluge of molecular energetics.
Thus, underneath the congruence of a Critique of the Political
Economy of the Sign with Anti-Oedipus, there is a discordance, and
what is at stake in it is the question of nihilism, and 'politics'. It is
not enough to critique Marx, since he maintains with need and use
(and the labour power itself, Baudrillard! ) an exteriority, a reference,
a naturalness that is supposed to anchor economic signs. It is not
enough to attack 'American' psychoanalysis with sarcasm because it
wishes to heal the subject by endowing it with an illusory unity. It is not
a matter of telling capitalism that beneath its young girls' smiles and
the perverse surfaces of metal, polystyrene, skin and spotlights, and
because of them, it miscognizes the ambivalence and the bar of the
libidinal subject. The strength of capitalism, on the contrary, lies in its
beginning to unravel itself from the function of this ambivalence, its
beginning to make obvious that it is not the doing of libidinal economy
as a small or large machine, but the result of the superposition onto
this economy of a sensical and nihilist dispositif. that of Oedipus
castration. Revolution is not the return to the great castrator and the
little castratees, a definitively reactionary view, but their dissolution
in an economy without end or law.
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THE OEDIPAL DISPOSITIF
The question to be asked of Deleuze and Guattari is evidently that
of origin or finality, or of the condition of possibility, or... , of this
'secondary' order, this order that contains the void, that separates.
orders and subordinates. that terrorizes and causalizes, that is the
law (of value and exchange). But before that. why Oedipus? Why the
Arche-State in a dispositif such as capitalism. whose corresponding
'meaning-effect', as Deleuze and Guattari repeat, is cynicism? There's
nothing less cynical than Oedipus, nothing more guilty. Why and how
would this circulation of flows regulated only by the law of exchange
value need as a supplement. a premium of repression. the figure
of Oedipus-that is, according to Deleuze and Guattari. the figure
of the State? Do they not themselves grant that bad conscience
comes neither from despotism nor from capitalism. since the former
generates terror, the latter cynicism? Then what generates this
bad conscience? A question on two levels: (1) What purpose can
Oedipalization serve within the system of generalized exchange?
and (2) Is Oedipus really a configuration of the Urstaat? The first
level is plugged directly into the politics of capital and anticapitalistic
politics as well: the second into a theory of history and into the
psychoanalytical dispositif itself.
First level: if capitalism needs no code whatever. if its only axiom
is the law of value-that is, the exchangeability of sections of flows
in equal quanta-then why Oedipus? Is not the configuration of the
father. the great despotic signifier. nothing more than an archaism
not even a neo-archaism-at the heart of the figure of exchange?
The Oedipal figure in Deleuze and Guattari's hypothesis is tnat of
Oriental despotism. which we shall return to shortly: does that mean
that the capitalist State is the same as that of the Chinese kingdoms,
the Great Kings and the Pharaohs? There is certainly in all of them
a predominance of bureaucracy as an apparatus for the channeling
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of libidinal economic flows. Deleuze and Guattari rely a great deal on
Wittfogel, in fact, far too much. Not because Wittfogel is often very
imprudent as a historian, which is another problem: but because his
whole book is inspired by a political confusion between the system of
precapitalist domination, what Marx called the Asiatic mode of produc
tion, and the regime that Stalin imposed on Russia and its satellites for
twenty years. Now, the absence of private property, the absorption of
all economic and social initiative by the bureaucratic apparatus, and
the suspension of all activity, of all energetic flows-whatever their
order-in the figure of the despot, traits that are indeed common to
both societies, obviously do not make them identical.
The decisive difference is precisely that Stalin and Mao are
postcapitalist, that their regimes are in fact in competition with world
capitalism, that they can only survive by accepting the challenge of
industrialization, without which capitalism would not fail to infiltrate
the bureaucratic society with flows of money, with products, with
technological and cynical-as well as revolutionary and critical
thoug ht, causing fissures to appear everywhere. This is what happens
continually in the European glacis. Fissures that go to the right and
fissures that go toward the left, pressure from the economic and
technical framework in the direction of liberalization, that is to say
in the direction of incorporation, at least economic and ideological
incorporation, into the global capitalist market: the pressure of the
young in the direction of self-management and council communism.
All of this makes for a very lively bureaucratic life, very different from
that of the Han empire. and a troubled bureaucracy: it has the agita
tion of Kapital under its skin, not the immobile peace of the sacred.
A bureaucracy threatened by the mobility of modern capitalism, and by
its wastefulness; including its political figures: look around the world,
now that the great paranoaic figures of the Second World War have
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gone (except for Mao), see if there is one single leader who is really
a paternal figure.
Let us go further: why should capitalism preserve the institution
of the family, constraining the child's libido to fixate upon it? The
Communist Party Manifesto said that 'by the action of Modern
Industry, all the family ties among the proletarians are torn asunder'.
Perhaps this was said from a miserabilist perspective that was not
vindicated? But a fortiori if this unbinding takes place even outside
of material poverty, which is indeed the case. What is the family
life of a child today, with a working father and mother? Kindergar
ten, school, homework, juke-boxes, cinema: everywhere children of
their age, and adults who are not their parents, who are in conflict
with them and between themselves, who say one thing and do
another. The heroes are at the cinema and on television, in comics,
not around the family dinner table. A more direct investment than
ever in historical figures. Parental figures, teachers, priests, they
also undergo the erosion of capitalist flows. No, truly, supposing
that psychoanalysis is indeed oedipalization, it is not the doing of
capitalism, it goes against the law of value. A salaried father is an
exchangeable father, an orphaned son. We have to uphold Deleuze
and Guattari's thinking against themselves: capitalism is indeed an
orphanage, a celibacy, submitted to the rule of equivalence. What
supports it is not the figure of the great castrator, but that of equality:
equality in the sense of the commutability of men in one place and
of places for one man, of men and women, objects, spaces, organs.
A society constituted according to a mathematical group structure:
a set (every quantum of energy: man, woman, thing, word, colour,
sound, is part of it), a rule of associativity ab, a rule of commutativity
ab=ba and a neutral term ae=a. And there is the whole secret of its
'repression'. (And there, let us note in passing, is the whole secret
of the connivance of Kapital with the figure of knowledge, which
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is the true dispositif governing libidinal economy under capitalism).
Look instead at how the family is treated in the MIT report7 and Man
sholt's letter and the whole zero growth current, and tell us whether
it's Kapital that is preoccupied with the institution.
It will be said: none of this changes the fact that repression is
increasing in modern societies, and that the law of value alone does
not eliminate the forces of order. But we ought to respond: repression
becomes ever more exteriorized: since it is less in people's heads it
is more in the streets. Cynicism is unstoppable, hence the police and
militia contingents. There are as many more cops as there are fewer
fathers, teachers, chiefs, moral leaders-that is, ones that are recog
nized, 'interiorized'. Freud was completely mistaken in Civilization and
its Discontents in expecting that the extension of 'civilization' in the
bourgeois sense of material civilization, and in the League of Nations
sense of 'perpetual peace', which he equated with the reabsorption
of external expressions of aggression, would be accompanied by
an aggravation of its internal expression-that is, ever increasing
anguish and guilt. In the regions where this civilized peace reigns-in
the center of capitalism-there is nothing of the kind, and so much
the better. The Great Signifier and Great Castrator are drawn into
the rapid and polluted waters of the reproduction of capitalism, the
Great Metamorphosis. A modern man believes in nothing, not even
in his responsibility-guilt. Repression is imposed not as punishment,
but as a reminder of the axiomatic: the law of value, give and take.
It might be the PTA exerting it on children, the union on the workers,
the woman's magazine on the 'weaker sex', the writer on discourse,
or the museum curator on paintings-they do not at all act as ter
rifying or cruel incarnations of a transcendental Power, even though
they possess it. In fact their entire operation amounts only to the
7. D.H. Meadows et al, The Umits to Growth (New York: Universe Books, 1972)-trans.
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maintenance of the most elementary rule, the last word of Kapital:
'equitable' exchange, equivalence. They do not frighten, they hurt.
A simple and blatant example: when teaching, you can teach whatever
seems best to you, including what is written here; but the absolute
reference point is to be selected at the end of the year, so as not
to devalue your teaching. Thus, not: teaching of value, and then the
selection of students according to this value; but: the selection of
students, even a totally arbitary selection (an arbitrariness noone can
ignore any longer), and by this very token valorization of your teach
ing. It is the law of exchange that determines the value of the terms,
here your teaching, on one hand, and on the other the 'qualification'
of the students. End of the ideology of 'culture', then: one no longer
claims to produce an object that is supposedly valuable for itself or in
its 'use'; but value is defined by exchangeability; this diploma that you
will give to the student. can he exchange it in real life (=for money)?
That's the only question. This question, everywhere the same, is not
that of castration. of Oedipus.
Take painting. it's the same question. One doesn't ask the painter
what his pictorial object is, one does not seek to attach it to a network
of meanings; one is concerned about where it is, if it is or could be in
a pictorial site (gallery, exhibition), for it is only from this position that
it will acquire a 'pictorial' value, since it is only if it is in this site that it
can be taken out in exchange for its price=through sale (and possibly
afterwards resold by the art lover to be placed in a museum). Its value
is its exchangeability, and thus its place in the pictorial place that is
the market for painting. Outside of this it is absolutely impossible to
determine an intrinsic value of the modern painting object. See the
Pompidou exhibition.8
8. Presumably, The Expo 72 at the Grand Palais-trans.
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It would be easy to show that scientific research functions according
to the same basic axiomatic: only varying according to a few com
plementary exigencies, for example the operativity of the enuncia
tions produced, which suffice to determine the limits of the field of
application and the 'nature' of the object.
Nowhere do you find any attachment to the Great Signifier,
but only the immanent law of exchange between terms whose sole
value comes down to their relation. This is the very definition of a
structure, which is the product par excellence of Kapital and scient
ism, the eminently capitalist libidinal object. The gap that segments
the object to be structured into discrete terms9-a gap which, it
must be emphasized, excludes all signification and strictly speaking
must even exclude the use of the term 'signifier' such as it comes
to us from a Saussure still very uncertain on this subject (almost as
uncertain as Marx as to the part played by use-value)-this gap must
not be confused nor even articulated with that via which Lacan, for
example, supposes, under the name of the withdrawal of the signifier,
to produce effects of sense (=signifieds) at the level of the terms in
question. Difference in Saussure is not the A in Lacan.
Why do Deleuze and Guattari here neglect a reversal which is
essential to Lacan's problematic? In Saussure, the signified is the
hidden, the signifier is the given. In Lacan, the hidden is the signi
fier and the signified is given (as representation, illusion, a and a}
This reversal is decisive: the figure of desire in Lacan uses the same
words as in Saussure but distributes them inversely; for Saussure, the
signifier and the signified are related to the speaking subject who is
the locutor; the same goes for Lacan, except that the Jocutor is not
an interlocutor in the sense that linguists use the term, an allocutor
in Benveniste's sense. It speaks, but not as I speak, not in the site
9. Ibid., 206-7.
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where I speak, not on the same scene, but on another scene. Now,
when Lacan makes this hypothesis as to the unconscious-language,
what is important is not that he brings it together with the 'scientific'
problematic of discourse, even if he himself lays the emphasis on
this effect; in reality it is just an ideological 'screen'. The point is that
it reduces to a surface the deep figure that is latent in the whole
psychoanalytical dispositif, in the whole dispositif of the desire of
psychoanalysis, the Judaic figure of the paradoxical Jahweh: The
silent thou, or silence in the second person, that is to say the potential
locutor who will never be effective for I Moses-Israel, hidden signifier;
but also (on the other scene, the Sinai, for example), Thou the sole
speaker, including through my mouth, and thus a signifier even so,
and I the solely manifest locutor, latent silence, signified.
And so we proceed to the second level: Oedipus is not a figure
of the Urstaat, a despotic figure. Here as with guilt (and the two
institutions go hand in hand), Deleuze and Guattari remain too near
and too far from Freud. Too near, for it was indeed Freud's hypothesis
in Moses and Monotheism that the source of Judaism was in the Ori
ental, monotheistic 'despotism' of Akhenaton and thus that the father
figure conveyed by Judaism, Freud himself, and all of psychoanalysis,
is the figure of the castrating and incestuous aespot. But very far at
the same time, since for Freud what made the difference between
Judaism and Egyptian religion, or Catholicism-in a sense between
Judaism and every religion-what then in Judaism undid religiosity
or was its potential defeat or defection was the foreclosure of the
wish for the Father's death and its acting out, the carrying out of the
original murder (supposed by Freud, but at the cost of what novelistic
imagination!) by Israel of a first Moses (also a supposition). Which
means that in Judaism Oedipus remains unavowed, inadmissible, hid
den-and this, for Freud, is how guilt and bad conscience are born,
unlike what happens in religions of reconciliation.
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The question here is not of following Freud in the construction of his
familial or ethnic tale. It is a question of seeing that what he is trying
to achieve, in conformity with his own libidinal construction, accord
ing to his own words, is to produce the singularity of the Judaic (and
psychoanalytical) configuration of desire. And like Nietzsche, he
apprehends it in bad conscience, sin. The status of the origin that
Freud exhibits is not in question here. But what certainly does matter
is the principle according to which Oedipus and castration-and by
the same token, transference in the psychoanalytic relationship
are only operative in an energetic dispositif whose traits are formed
by the most ancient Hebraic law: the channeling of all libidinal energy
into the order of language (the elimination of idols): in language, an
absolute privilege given to the I/Thou relationship (the elimination of
myth); and within this relationship, the (Kierkegaardian) paradox of it
always being Thou who speaks and never I. This dispositif is that of
the couch, where Israel is the patient, Moses the analyst, and Yahweh
the unconscious: the Great Other. The Great Other is not the great
incestuous Pharaoh, Urvater or Urdespot. There was an exodus.
the Jews broke with despotism. crossed the sea, the desert, and
killed the father (the murder that Freud sought to reconstruct was
simply this exodus), and this is why interiorization as sin, as solitude,
as neurosis, as well as the whole current of reform-Lutheranism
and Freudism-wi\I become possible, will become a fundamental
possibility for the West.
We demand nothing of one another, we complain of nothing, but we
both go on, the heart open, through open doors.
-Zarathustra to his solitude
But Kapital's configuration is not articulated with that of Jewish
ness (of Oedipus) any more than it is with that of despotism or of
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symbolic savagery, it accords no privileges to discourse as the locus
of the libido's inscription, it does away with all privileges of place:
hence its mobility; its principle bears on the modality of inscription, its
machinery obeys only one principle of energetic connection-the law
of value, equivalence-the principle according to which all 'exchange'
is always possible in principle, all plugging in or metamorphosis of
one form of Naturstoff into another is always reconvertible by mak
ing the inverse connection. But what about surplus value, it will be
asked? Does this not belie the dispositif, since it means that the
relation between force and what it is supposed to be worth (its
equivalent in commodities, its wages) is not convertible, and that
their equality is fictitious? Certainly this may be true for every force
that is captured in capitalist economic networks, including machines.
The apparatus functions by ignoring the inequality of force and reab
sorbing its potential as event, creation and mutation. Given the princi
ple that governs energetic connection, the capitalist system privileges
repetition without profound difference, duplication, commutation or
replication, and reversibility. Metamorphosis is contained within the
sagacious confines of metaphor. Surplus value and even profit are
already denominations and practices of reabsorptim (or exploitation,
if you wish): they imply the commensurability of the given and the
received, of the 'added value' obtained through production processes,
and of the value advanced in production. This supposed commensu
rability is what permits the second to be transformed into the first,
the reinvestment of surplus value-it is the rule or the management
of the capitalist system. It is in this rule of immanent commutativity
that the capitalist secret for the mapping back of desiring-production
onto the body without organs is found: this mapping back is reinvest
ing under the law of value. In it consists the very repression of the
system, and it needs no other-or the others (cops, etc.) are only
lemmas or reciprocals of the fundamental theorem of replication.
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This is what Deleuze and Guattari mean when they emphasise the
fictitious nature of the commensurability of credit and payment
monies.
The potential of force is not a potential to produce something
more, but a potential to produce something other, in other ways. In the
organism, force is a disorganizing power: emotional stress, pruritus,
perverse polymorphism, so-called psychosomatic illnesses, the loss of
spatial reference in the schizo's walk so dear to Deleuze and Guattari,
a grinning cat and the grin without the cat-always work, but always
as dream work. Force fuses through the organic screen, perfusing
energy. Now, it is this virtuality of an alterity that is multiplying in the
gut of the capitalist 'organism' and of the dispositif of value, which
is on the way to critiquing without touching it, on the way to forget
ting the law of exchange, getting around it and making it a glaring
and obsolete illusion, an unserviceable network. Who can say how
long it will take the new dispositif to sweep over the surface of our
bodies and the social body with its unknown, transparent organs, to
free them from their involvement with interests and the worries of
saving, spending and counting? Another figure is rising, the libido is
withdrawing from the capitalist apparatus, and desire is finding other
ways of spreading itself out, according to another figure, one that is
formless and ramified in a thousand ventures throughout the world,
a bastard disguised in shreds of this and that, words from Marx and
words from Jesus or Mohammed and words from Nietzsche and
words from Mao, communitarian practices and slowdown actions
in workshops, occupations, boycotts, squatting, kidnap and ransom,
happenings and demusicalized music and sit-ins and sit-outs, taking
trips and light shows, the liberation of gays and lesbians and 'mad
men' and criminals, unilaterally undertaken free practices .... What
can capitalism possibly do against this unserviceability that is rising
from within it (in the form of unserviceable 'young' people, among
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others)-against this thing that is the new libidinal dispositif, and of
which Anti-Oedipus is the production/inscription within language?
Force produces only when channelled, when partially invested.
If schizophrenia is called the absolute limit. it is because if it ever
happened. it would be force that was not distributed in a libidinal
dispositif-pure liquid flexion. Through the multiplication of metamor
phic principles, the annulment of codes regulating flows. capitalism
brings us closer to this schizophrenic limit. And by bringing us closer
to this limit. it places us already on the other side. Hence we can
understand Deleuze and Guattari's disinterest in Bataille's theme
of transgression: every limit is constitutively transgressed, there is
nothing to transgress in a limit; what is important is not the other
side of the frontier. since if there is a frontier, both sides must already
have been posited, composed in one and the same world. Incest, for
example, is but a very shallow stream: the mother can be composed
(=thought of) as a mistress only in words; in jouissance. she is no
longer the mother. no longer anything, what reigns then is the night
of a hundred thousand disjointed organs and partial objects. Thus,
either there is a limit-but it boils down to a too-human opposition.
and desire is absent on both sides-or desire actually scans the field
of the limit. its movement not that of transgressing the limit, but
rather of pulverizing the field itself into a libidinal surface. If capitalism
has such affinities with schizophrenia, it follows that its destruction
cannot come from a deterritorialization (the mere abolition of private
property, for example... ), which by definition it will survive: it is this
deterritorialization. Destruction can only come from an even more
liquid liquidation, only from even more clinamen and less gravity, from
more dancing and less piety. What we need is for the variations of
intensity to become more unpredictable, stronger: in 'social life', for
the highs and lows of desiring-production to be inscribed without
finality, justification or origin, as in the heady moments of 'affective'
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or 'creative' life; to be done with ressentiment and bad conscience
(a/ways equal to themselves, a/ways depressed) of identities engen
dered by the service of paranoiac machines, by technology and by
the bureaucracies of Kapita\.
So what about the death instinct? De\euze and Guattari energeti
cally fight the Freudian hypothesis of self-directed guilt and hatred
which underlies the diagnosis of Civilization and its Discontents:
a death instinct that would be without original or experience, a
theoretical product of Freud's pessimism destined to maintain the
neurotic, dualistic position, whatever may happen. But if the death
instinct is the reason why machines can only work by fits and starts
and their cycles cannot be kept harmonious; if it is what perturbs
desiring-production, through the body without organs either drawing
off their production and monopolizing it, or repelling it and repressing
it; if its model is a deranged machinic regime, an unregime; and if it
presents itself in the corresponding experience of inarticulacy (the
loss of every articu/us), of the surface without variation in intensity,
of catatonia. of the 'Ah, to not have been born', then it is not merely
admissible, it is a necessary component of desire. Not at all another
instinct. another energy, but within the libidinal economy, an inac
cessible 'principle' of excess and disorder; not a second machinery,
but a machine whose velocity can be displaced towards positive
infinity and can bring it to a halt. It is this plasticity or viscosity that
traces everywhere and nowhere the difference between political
economy and libidinal economy, and owing to which in particular, a
great savage configuration (a great apparatus)-for example-can
be disinvested, pipes and filters can fall into obsolescence, and the
libido can be distributed otherwise, in another figure: and therefore
it is in this viscosity that all revolutionary potential lies.
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Back to the representative theatre. Take the admirable chapter on
the problem of Oedipus10 in which all the congruencies that traverse
the book are brought together or mentioned, and where the proximity
to and difference from Freud is marked: a principle of segmentation,
of quantification, of articulation must come to cut into the full body,
into the egg of the ea.rth where there is no extensive distance: but
only intensive variations (a Kantian inheritance?), into the continuous
hysteria of filiation and women, discernible articuli, persons. roles.
names, and the same principle must distribute them. and organize
them through procedures of extension that will determine the rules
of alliance. The principle that circumscribes the site and the modality
of the inscription of desiring production, that is to say the socius.
is not, as we see, a productive principle; fundamentally it is not a
principle, since it is destructive; it is not the Signifier, the foundational
castrator, it manifests itself not in the bestial fury of the U rFather,
but in the paranoiac collective of the homosexual community of
men; in instituting chains of alliance, it institutes representation.
presentation, on the scene-surface of the body without organs.
dramas about familial roles which are there for-and will be a screen
for-anonymous and orphan journeys of libidinal intensities. Thus the
possibility of Oedipus comes about, the possibility of the myth of
the UrFather. This is why it will be said that Oedipus is not originary,
but is an effect of representation, which follows from the fact that
the familial roles that result from the articulation and the repressive
distribution in social organisation are projected upstream of repres
sion, where in reality there is nothing but travelling intensities on the
full body, energetic schizophrenia. A represented of displaced desire,
then. A hypothesis probably less distant from Freud than Deleuze
and Guattari suppose (Freud distinguishes very carefully the topic
10. Ibid., 15'1-86.
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from the economic, the representative from the drive) . But it mat
ters little. It remains that under the names of distribution. paranoia,
discemability, quantification, there must be a principle of exclusion
that cuts out of the continuous economy of libidinal intensities an
inside and an outside-that is to say, a duality; and that the latter is
the whole wellspring of the theatrical dispositif, which will represent
on the inside (the scene, the family, the socius) what it has to repress
on the outside (economics, errancy, the full body). This principle of
exclusion is originary repression, and all the procedures of absorption,
of the mapping-back of desiring production onto the body or onto
the socius, all the procedures of the rejection of molecular machines
and partial objects outside the socius or of the body are ordered by
this repression, this distancing.
And now here is the great business of our times: how to under
stand this distance without recourse to a dualism? How can there be
secondary processes of articulation covering the primary processes,
extracted from them, representing them? Granted that Oedipus is
not originary, there must be, it will be said, a site of theatricalization,
a barrier of investments that represses and limits the errancy of
intensities, filtering them and composing them into a scene, whether
social or 'psychic'. A scene now irreal, fantasmatic, illusory, forever
distanced from the thing itself.
And your whole libidinal and political economy, the crooks will
come and tell us, it's just representation like the rest, still a theatre,
a theatre where you stage the outside, under the name of libido and
machine, a metaphysics of sense despite itself. where the signified will
be energy and its displacements, but where you speak, Deleuze and
Guattari, and where therefore you are in the interior of the auditorium/
stage volume. where your dear and sacred exteriority is, in spite of
you. in the interior of your very words! One more metaphor to add to
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the total theatre of the West, little dramas within a drama, at most a
change of scenery; but no metamorphosis...
Here indeed is a depressed thought, here is a pious, nihilist thought.
It is nihilist and pious because it is a thought. A thought is that in
which the energetic position forgets itself in representing itself.
Theatricality is everything that thought can denounce in thought,
can critique. A thought can always critique a thought, can always
exhibit the theatricality of a thought, repeating the distancing. But
something passes through nevertheless, which thinkers cannot
critique in so far as this something has not entered into theatrisable
thought. What happens is a displacement. Thus, alongside medieval
Europe was placed another dispositif, the renaissance-classical dis
positif. What is important is not the discourse on metaphysics that is
the discourse on metaphysics. Metaphysics is the force of discourse
potential in all discourse. What counts is that it changes the scene,
the dramaturgy, the site, the modality of inscription, the filter, and
thus the libidinal position. Thinkers think metaphysical theatrical
ity, and yet the position of desire is displaced, desire works, new
machines start up, old ones stop working or idle for a moment or race
and heat up. This transport of force does not belong to thought or to
metaphysics. Deleuze and Guattari's book represents this transport
in discourse. If you understand only its re-presentation, you have
lost it; you would be right, you would have reason, in the interior of
this figure, according to the criteria of this dispositif. But you will be
forgotten, as everything is forgotten that is not forgetting, everything
that is placed within the theatre, the museum, the school. In the
libidinal dispositif that is rising, to be right, to have reason-that is,
to place oneself in the museum-is not what is important; what is
important is to be able to laugh and dance.
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Bellmer describes an 'elementary expression', the hand's tightening
on itself when one has a violent toothache: 'this clenched hand is an
artificial focus of excitation, a virtual "tooth" that forms a diversion
by attracting the current of blood and the nervous current from the
real focus of pain, so as to minimize its existence'. A false finality is
invoked, veneered over the description: why not 'so as to magnify
its existence', or 'for no reason', through a simple superabundance
and overflowing of force? And if this were the case, then why the
opposition between real and artificial? Why put up a wall between
tooth and hand, closing up the hand in theatricalization (and the
tooth in naturality)? The fingers biting into the palm are not the
representation of the tooth; the fingers and the tooth together are
not significations, metaphors; they <Jre the same expending itself
diversely, reversibly. Which is what Bellmer ends up saying.
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Every
Political Economy
is Libidinal
Jean-Fran�o i s Lyota rd
1974
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There are errant forces in the signs of capital. Not in its margins as
its marginals, but dissimulated in its most 'nuclear', its most essential
exchanges, the most 'alienated' or 'fetishised' exchanges in Baudril
lard's eyes. If we do not recognise this, then in ten years time we
will start up another new critique, the critique of the 'critique of
the political economy of the sign'. But it is extraordinarily difficult
to recognise the desire of capital such as it is instantiated here and
there; as, for example in labour, in the awful mundane sense of the
grind for which not even the worker today has enough words of
contempt and disrepute; or as in the object, the same object whose
force [puissance] Baudrillard's fascination has for its part, justifi
ably, so helped us to recapture through its power: isn't fetishism an
opportunity for intensities? Doesn't it attest to an admirable force
of invention, adding events which could not be more improbable to
the libidinal band? From where would you criticise fetishism, when
you know that one cannot criticise homosexuality or masochism
without becoming a crude bastard of the moral order? Or again
indeed, investment in the time of capital, this strange simultaneous
placing-in-reserve and anticipated expenditure of libidinal intensities,
which is implied in the system of banking and currency; an analysis
of this might be attempted later. Or more simply, investment in the
system as such, in general, a characteristic by which one Gell-Man,
a great physicist, finds himself a collaborator with a Westmoreland, a
pathetic scientific 'criminal' from the Vietnam war, one characteristic
of the decisive congruence, and doubtless not exclusive of others,
between science and capital. And yet the investment in the system,
in value, in the constitution of pieces of the libidinal band in terms
which only have value through 'difference' or reference, and in the
establishment of the laws of these cross-references-that is to say
the deranged investment in the bond and its accomplice, lack ('Like a
drug whose supply one doesn't even ask for again-for the lack of it
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is as much a having as any other.')1-in the sense of Freudian libidinal
economy, in the Metapsychology or The Ego and the Id, can't this
investment give rise to vertiginous intensities? Were not Einstein's
most artistic inventions also driven by this desire, by the conviction
that God, as he said, certainly does not play at dice? And what is lost
in this? Nothing at all.
But, you will say, it gives rise to power and domination, to exploita
tion and even extermination. Quite true: but also to masochism: but
the strange bodily arrangement of the skilled worker with his job and
his machine, which is so often reminiscent of the dispositif of hysteria,
can also produce the extermination of a population: look at the English
proletariat, at what capital, that is to say their labour, has done to
their body. You will tell me, however, that it was that or die. But it is
always that or die, this is the law of libidinal economy, no, not the law:
this is its provisional, very provisional, definition in the form of the cry,
of intensities of desire: 'that or die'. i.e., that and dying from it, death
always in it, as its internal bark, its thin nut's skin, not yet as its price,
on the contrary as that which renders it unpayable. And perhaps you
believe that 'that or die' is an alternative?! And that if they chose
that, if they become the slave of the machine, the machine of the
machine, fucker fucked by it, eight, twelve, hours a day, year after
year, it is because they are forced into it, constrained, because they
cling to life? Death is not an alternative to it, it is a part of it, it attests
to the fact that there is jouissance in it, the English unemployed did
not become workers to survive, they-hang on tight and spit on
me-enjoyed [ifs ant joui de] the hysterical, masochistic, whatever
exhaustion it was of hanging on in the mines, in the foundries, in the
factories, in hell, they enjoyed it, enjoyed the mad destruction of their
organic body which was indeed imposed upon them, they enjoyed the
1. S. Podolski, Le Pays ou tout est permis (Paris: Pierre Belfond, 1973).
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decomposition of their personal identity, the identity that the peasant
tradition had constructed for them. enjoyed the dissolution of their
families and villages, and enjoyed the new monstrous anonymity of
the suburbs and the pubs in the morning and evening.
And let's finally acknowledge thisjouissance. which is similar. Little
Girl Marx was clear on this point, in every way to that of prostitution;
the jouissance of anonymity, the jouissance of the repetition of the
same in work, the same gesture, the same comings and goings in
the factory, how many penises per hour, how many tonnes of coal.
how many cast iron bars. how many barrels of shit, not 'produced',
of course. but endured, the some parts of the body used. made
use of, to the total exclusion of others, and just as the prostitutes'
vagina or mouth are hysterically anaesthetized, through use, through
being used, so the worker's ear as described and analysed by Toma
tis, who, next to an alternator functioning at 20,oooHZ, peacefully
writes his letters and hears the most delicate of sounds; and when
Tomatis makes his audiogramme study, he notices that the resonant
range corresponding to the alternator functioning at 20,oooHZ, is
neutralised, mute. Hence a hysterical treatment of a fraction of the
auditory body, whore assemblage, the libidinal use demanded, of
course. by the 'conditions of labour', which are also however those
of prostitution. It goes without saying. of course. that we say this
without any condemnation, without any regret. on the contrary by
discovering that there has been, and perhaps still is, the extraordinary
dissimulated-dissimulating force of the worker. force of resistance,
force of jouissance in the hysterical madness of the conditions of
labour which the sociologists would call fragmented without seeing
what libidinal intensities these fragments can convey as fragments.
How can we continue to speak of alienation when it is clear that
for everybody, in the experiences he has (and that more often than
not he cannot properly have, since these experiences are allegedly
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shameful. and especially since instead of having them, he is these
experiences) of even the most stupid capitalist labourer, that he can
find jouissonce and a strange, perverse intensity, what do we know
about it?-when it is clear that not one 'productive' or 'artistic' or
'poetic' metamorphosis has ever been accomplished, nor will be, by
a unitary and totalised organic body, but that it is always at the price
of its alleged dissolution and therefore of an inevitable stupidity that
this has been possible; when it is clear that there has never been,
nor ever will be such a dissolution for the good reason that there has
never been nor ever will be such a body bound up in its unity and
identity, that this body is a phantasy, itself fairly libidinal, erotic and
hygienic
=
Greek, or erotic and supernatural
=
Christian, and that it
is by contrast with this phantasy that all alienation is thought and
resented in the sense of ressentiment which is the feeling aroused
by the great Zero as the desire for return. But the body of primitive
savages is no more a whole body than that of the Scottish miners of
a century ago, there is no whole body.
Finally, you must also realise that such jouissonce, I am thinking
of that of the proletariat, is not at all exclusive of the hardest and
most intense revolts. Jouissonce is unbearable. It is not in order to
regain their dignity that the workers will revolt, break the machines,
lock up the bosses, kick out the MPs, that the victims of colonisation
will set the governors' palaces on fire and cut the sentries' throats,
no, it is something else altogether, there is no dignity; Guyotat has
so admirably put this into writing with regard to Algeria.2 There are
libidinal positions, tenable or not, there are positions invested which
are immediately disinvested, the energies passing onto other pieces
of the great puzzle, inventing new fragments and new modalities
of jouissonce, that is to say of intensification. There is no libidinal
2. P. Guyotat. Tombeau pour 500,000 so/dots (Paris: Gallimard. 1967).
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dignity, nor libidinal fraternity, there are libidinal contacts without
communication (for want of a 'message'). This is why, amongst
individuals participating in the same struggle, there may exist the
.
most profound miscomprehension, even if they are situated in the
same social and economic bracket. If some Algerian fights for four
years in the jungle or for a few months in the urban networks, it is
because his desire has become the desire to kill, not to kill in general,
but to kill an invested part, still invested, there's no doubt about it,
of his sensitive regions. To kill his French master? More than that:
to be killed as the obliging servant of this master, to disengage the
region of his prostitute's consent, to seek other jouissances than
prostitution as a model, that is to say as the predominant modality of
investment. Nevertheless, instantiating itself in murder, perhaps his
desire remained still in the grip of the punitive relation that he neant
to abandon, perhaps this murder was still a suicide, a punishment,
the price due to the pimp, and still servitude. But during this same
struggle for independence, some other 'moderate', even centrist,
Algerian, decided on compromise and negotiation, he sought quite
another disposition of jouissance, his intelligence dismissing such a
death and swearing in calculation, already nourishing contempt for
the body and exalting words as negotiation demands, hence also his
own death as the death of flesh in general, not as the prostitute body,
a very acceptable death to the Western talker. Etc.
Now these disparities, which are heterogeneities of investment
in the erotic and deadly fluxes, are of course also found within any
social 'movement' whatsoever, whether minute, on the scale of a
factory, or immense, when it spreads to a whole country or continent.
But apart from the movements of open revolt, notice that these
singular 'hysterical' jouissances, for example, or those we might call
'potential', so akin to modern scientiftcity, or again those by which a
'body' is installed within the increased reproduction of capital, where
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it is entirely subordinated to the measurement of time saved and time
advanced-and indeed all these instantiations (brutally sketched
here), even when the capitalist machine is humming in the apparent
general boredom and when everybody seems to do their job without
moaning, all these libidinal instantiations, these little dispositifs of the
retention and flow of the influxes of desire are never unequivocal and
cannot give rise to a sociological reading or an unequivocal politics,
to a decoding into a definable lexis and syntax; punishment incites
both submission and revolt, power, the fascination of pride and auto
depreciative depression, every 'discipline' demands passion and hate,
even if these are only the indifference in Marx's sense, whomever
performs it. Hence ambivalence, said Baudrillard. And we say: much
more than that, something else besides this condensed house of love
and disgust or fear, which in general will be vulnerable to the attack of
a semiotic or hermeneutic analysis of affects; no interpreter is afraid
of polysemia; but at the same time and indiscernibly something which
is a functioning or dysfunctioning term in a system, and something
which is abruptly implacable joy and suffering; at once ambivalent
signification and tension, dissimulated into one another. Not only the
and/or, but the silent comma: ','.
*
How many iron bars, tonnes of sperm, decibels of carnal shrieks
and factory noises, more and still more: this more may be invested
as such, it is in capital, and it must be recognized that not only is
it completely inane, we fully accept this, it is no more nor less vain
than either political discussion on the agora or the Peloponnesian
war, but it is especially necessary to recognize that this is not even a
matter of production. These 'products' are not products, what counts
here, in capital, is that they are endured and endured in quantity, it
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is the quantity, the imposed number that is itself already a motive
for intensity, not the qualitative mutation of quantity, not at all, but
as in Sade the frightening number of blows received, the number of
postures and manoeuvres required, the necessary number of victims,
as in Mina Boumedine, the abominable quantity of penises which
penetrate through many entrances into the woman who works lying
on the oilcloth on a table in the back room of a bar:
She sucks and shakes in a sweaty haze I she sucks the knobs
waved in her face I she shudders as the trouser flies wound
her I her vision reels I entrances and sham exits I awakening in
hospital I the bar door grinds I Mina is this door I diastole and
systole I her heart is going to burst I she attempts :J count the
openings of the door /she says to herself that she will become
so many dicks I she loses count and retains the grinding I she
is made to drink coca I she has a funny taste at the bottom of
her throat I she is a wounded bird I a shivering bruised bird I
she lies at the roadside I she has had an accident ... You have
counted well I not all the time I you rested against me yes all
the time I I didn't leave you for a moment I the fortieth in the
cunt alone I Mina in quarantine I I disgust you I tell me that I
disgust you I I will play the whore for you I I will do my hundred
a day on the oil cloth with the little blue squares I the smell of
the acetylene torch I the whistling of the torch I the whistling
of its suffering I she is dead assassinated I in the light of the
wretches I she was dead here for months I for years I the
hundred a day on the oilcloth in the back shop and the bucket
of water I when she was finished to reawaken her I the frozen
bucket of water I and all at once all over again the whistling of
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the lamp I then she was not dead I she was not dead enough
I she had to start again .. 3
.
Use erogenous zone numbers,� more and still more, isn't this a
decisive instantiation of intensity in capitalism? Are we. intellectual
sirs. not actively or passively [passivons] 'producing' more and more
words, more books, more articles, ceaselessly refilling the pot-boiler
of speech. gorging ourselves on it rather. seizing books and 'experi
ences', to metamorphose them as quickly as possible into other
words, plugging us in here. being plugged in there, just like Mina
on her blue squared oilcloth, extending the market and the trade
in words of course. but also multiplying the chances of jouissance,
scraping up intensities wherever possible, and never being sufficiently
dead, for we too are required to go from the forty to the hundred
a day, and we will never play the whore enough, we will never be
dead enough.
And here is the question: Why, political intellectuals, do you incline
towards the proletariat? In commiseration for what? I realize that
a proletarian would hate you, you have no hatred because you are
bourgeois, privileged smooth-skinned types, but also because you
dare not say the only important thing there is to say, that one can
enjoy swallowing the shit of capital. its materials, its metal bars, its
polystyrene. its books. its sausage pates. swallowing tonnes of it till
you burst-and because instead of saying this, which is a/so what
happens in the desire of those who work with their hands, arses
and heads, ah. you become a leader of men, what a leader of pimps,
you lean forward and divulge: ah. but that's alienation. it isn't pretty,
hang on, we'll save you from it, we will work to liberate you from this
3. M. Boumedine, L'Oiseau dons la main ( Paris: Pierre Belfond, 1973), 152-5.
'1. Ibid., 61.
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wicked affection for servitude, we will give you dignity. And in this
way you situate yourselves on the most despicable side, the moralistic
side where you desire that our capitalised's desire be totally ignored,
forbidden, brought to a standstill, you are like priests with sinners, our
servile intensities frighten you, you have to tell yourselves: how they
must suffer to endure that! And of course we suffer, we capitalised,
but this does not mean that we do not enjoy, nor that what you think
you can offer us as a remedy-for what?-does not disgust us, even
more. We abhor therapeutics and its vaseline, we prefer to burst under
the quantitative excesses that you judge the most stupid. And don't
wait for our spontaneity to rise up in revolt either.
[... ] Renouncing therefore critique and consolation. Quantity can
be invested as such, and this is not an alienation, (and, furthermore,
it existed in the 'prestigious' consumption of so-called precapitalist
societies-but Baudrillard knows this better than we do). Frag
mentation can be invested as such, and this is not an alienation. It
is a phantasy, not simply reactionary, but constitutive of Western
theatricality, to believe that there were societies where the body was
not fragmented. There is no organic body for libidinal economy; and
no more is there a libidinal body, a strange compromise of a concept
from Western medicine and physiology with the idea of the libido
as energy subject to the indiscernible regimes of Eros and death.
Franc;:ois Guery, in his commentary on the fourth section of book
one of Capital, 5 shows that the humanist protests, such as those of
Friedman or Marcuse, against part time work rest on an error in the
localisation of the scission of the body: of course, he says, the body
of capital, in taking possession of the productive body in the factories
as Marx described it. and a fortiori in large semi-automated industry,
5. D. Deleule and F. Guery, Le Corps productit (Paris: Mame, 1972), especially part 1,
'lJndividuation du corps productif', by Frarn;:ois Guery.
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breaks the organic body into independent parts, requiring 'an almost
superhuman subtlety' of some of them which 'will go hand in hand
with a more and more extensive mechanisation of skilled actions';
but, he adds, this is 'only an anachronistic phenomenon affecting the
antique mixture of the biological and the productive body. The really
great scission of the body is not there'. It 'relies on another scission,
practised in the very heart of the biological body: the one between
the body, then reduced to a machinery, and the intellectual forces of
production, the head, the brain, whose present state is the software of
the information scientists'.6 How are we to understand that the really
pertinent cutting line is, for Guery, this one rather than the first? This
is because he admits a certain image of the medieval corporation, or
rather the eternal corporation, operative 'throughout antiquity', until
the Middle Ages, an image which is that forged by Marx and which
is that of a 'body machining forces', 'the organic forces of the human
body, including the head'. And Guery insists: 'This has its importance:
the man's head is machined by the corporation, but as an organic
part of the body. There is no question, then, of an internal hierarchy
where the head would be spatially and qualitatively situated at the
summit, higher than the manual forces, the lungs, the arms, fingers
legs and feet.'7
Let us admit that, in the field of productive labour, the corporation
is indeed this non-hierarchical body; it remains the case that such a
characterisation stands only on condition that this field is isolated,
separated from the political organisation from which it is taken,
whether this be Oriental despotism, the free town, the city or the
empire, and-to stay with Greece-on condition that the appear
ance of speech as political techne is not taken into account, which
6. Ibid., 37-9.
7. Ibid., 23-4.
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C'J
C'J
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is equivalent, all things being equal, to a process of cephalisation and
even of capitalisation reducing each manual task to a fragmentation
subordinated to the political body. In other words, the head did indeed
exist in the age of the corporation, not in the corporation perhaps,
but certainly in the 'social body'. The social body may not be the body
of political economy in our age, and the productive body does not
perhaps take on the form of the concentration of the partial drives
(for it is a question of these), it is the political body which effects
this concentration, but it is no less extant here, and the folding down
onto the central Zero, which is not necessarily currency (in Sparta
for example), but always the centre of speech and the sword, sets
up no less of a hierarchisation of these pulsions and social entities
where they give way to free play in a privileged way.
This much will be said of a non-political, therefore a 'primitive' or
a savage society, given that concentration does not take place in war
and discourse, at least not systematically. What we must take a look at
here, beyond an 'error' which appeared to be an error of detail, is the
phantasy, so powerful and constant in the best Marxist heritage, of
a happy state of the working body, this happiness being (in the pure
tradition of the West) thought as the self-unity of all its parts. But
under examination, this phantasy, will be seen to be nothing other than
Baudrillard's primitive society in another guise. 'Symbolic exchange' is
also a political economic exchange, just as the law of civic speaking
in Athens, and the tetralogos8 is also a law of the mercantilisation of
discourse, and, complementarily, just as the scrupulous fragmentation
of tasks in the regulated disciplines implies their subordination to a
central Zero which, while not being professional (perhaps), is no less
the caput of the alleged social body.
8. J. de Romilly, Histoire et raison chez Thucydide (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1956),
180-240.
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Power
of
Repetition
G i lles Li povets ky
1976
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AT T H E HAZARD OF B O D I E S : POW E R
There are only bodies. nothing but bodies. micro o r macro-organisms,
substances with their external adjointments capable of effects. with
their innermost combinations producing chemical reactions. forces or
intensities. Passions. everyday emotions, symptoms, just like thoughts
and discourses. call for the same overall materialist problematic, that
of the universal movement of simple bodies and of assemblages. an
entirely positive play of molecules and of chance, with no central
instance, no Ego-subject. And thus assuredly, there is no dualism:
the theory of the twofold psychic functioning articulated by the
strict opposition desire-logos. unconscious-reason only leads back
to the religious belief in a specificity of sense. of spirit, of the true.
only leads us to entertain the illusion of an ordered or coherent
process of thought, under the hegemony of code, in the assem
blage of enunciations. But once we turn away from disincarnate
academic examples. the recording and production of sense turn out
to be equally accidental. chemical experiments resulting from the
unpredictable combination of simple bodies (signs) and complex
bodies (propositions). See your wandering readings, their aleatory
itineraries. their unprecedented reprises; see 'research' and its more
or less audacious affirmations. its disconcerting combinations: always
positive, its unexpected assemblages owing nothing to any kind of
ordered work of the structure or of the concept. Thought is born
from bodies and their risky coitus. for signs are such bodies, since
they are always capable of effects once they enter into combinations
that metamorphose their properties. We must cease to represent
the process of thought under the auspices of sense and/or signifier,
and imagine it as a cascade of unprecedented chemical experiments.
producing reactions (sense. truth, the anguish of unintelligibility, the
joy of 'discovery'...) similar in every way to the symptom or the emo
tion, which, it can be shown, are just non-substitutive exothermic
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reactions unleashed through the fortuitous conjunction of n separate
elementary libidinal bodies, the very bodies that are constitutive
of the 'disorder': horse + black + bite for Little Hans. for example
(Towards a Chemistry of Sex-forthcoming study). It must then
be admitted that, in regard to a generalized chemistry, there are no
longer any discursive formations, any formations of the unconscious
proceeding from specific mechanisms (secondary process, primary
process). the ultimate function of the analytic topic being to occult
the universal play of bodies and of chance. We have also had enough
of the Unconscious, philosophies of desire bore us as much as those
of Logos and Structure. Ratio does not 'function' other wise than
desire, affects do not function other wise than thought: everywhere
the same chemical experiments at the hazard of chance encounters,
of reactions made of the same bodies-signs, inseparably intelligent
to whatever degree, and emotional, speaking and exothermic: dis
simulation, duplicity of signs, as Lyotard would say.
A paradox: it is in a second chance occurrence that necessity
arrives, when the constellations of pulsional or discursive bodies find
themselves blocked, stabilized, when repetition replaces unpredictable
movements of attraction and repulsion. Then comes the concept,
the symptom, the affective dispositifs-and simultaneous with these
effects, the institution of negation, since every stable formation, qua
permanent, continually excludes1 the some combinations. Such is the
very operation of power: not so much exclusion, inevitably implicated in
every complex of bodies qua determinate assemblage, as the repetition
of exclusion, a repetition inscribing a fixed order. So that power is found
ready made in its entirety in the sphere of affects or thoughts once
the latter are constituted in iterative configurations, thus producing an
1. J.-F. Lyotard, Economie libidinale (Paris: Minuit, 197"1), 23, tr. I. H. Grant as
Libidinal Economy (London: Athlone, 1993), 1"1.
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order which does away with the formation of new combinations, the
chaotic movements of bodies, the play of chemical chance. That all
power entertains a specific relation to time and to chance, this is what
seems to us essential in Libidinal Economy. Power begins when things
slow down, it begins with time and its retention, with the slowing of
the turning of the disjunctive bar, as Lyotard imagines2-that is, with
the instituted, with the crystallization of combinations, transforming
chance and the brownian motion of bodies into necessity. To the point,
as we shall see, where the essential function of the general system
of powers, even within the framework of capitalism, will be to retain
time-that is. to administer or to impose mere reproduction.
With repetition, it is already the subject that is heralded. For how
would the identity and unity of the Ego be possible without such
stable configurations? As penetrating as Beneviste's thesis on the
subject is (fundamentally the same as that of Nietzsche-Klossowski).
it must be admitted that the employment of the pronoun 'I' would be
inoperative by itself without the invariant combinations of bodies. It is
thus far less with the trade between the ends of the labyrinthine band3
that the subject arises. than with the repetition of assemblages in so
far as the subject, before being a question or a calculating whore.4
proves to be a simple affirmation of an unqualified identity, I, Me. See
the dream: not at all an enigmatic compromise. but a discontinuous
series of unprecedented experiments on the basis of bodies. simple
and complex. a free affirmation of chance where the offprints. the
combinations. are made and unmade at lightning speed and where
reactions are no-one's because they are too rapid to be registered by
an identical subject. The absence of stable and recurrent assemblages
2. lbid., 34-5 [24-5].
3. 206 [170].
4. 212 [175-6].
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in cascading experiments renders the advent of the 'I' impossible,
and that of power too. Subjectivity disappears once the play of
chance is accelerated, once the formation and the obsolescence of
combinations is so fast that all fixed conglomerates vanish in favour
of an incessant chaotic and anonymous process.
What a strange idea to have grouped together, in the framework
of formations of the unconscious, things as different as the dream, the
symptom, the lapsus, etc. But psychoanalysis delights in the static, the
description of primary or secondary operations, and has never had a
taste for the subtleties of the kinematics of speeds and accelerations.
We read Libidinal Economy precisely as this discreet yet decisive
invitation to operate such a passage. Once we do so, there is every
difference between the dream and the symptom, which presents
itself as chance converted into necessity in so far as its combination
is stereotyped, repetitive, whereas the dream is an accelerated meta
morphosis of bodies, at the lowest degree of crystallization or memory.
Moreover the dream belongs to no-one, not through any absence of
the lived or of consciousness, but because of how its mad speed makes
a tabula rasa of all permanence, and thus of the identity of the subject
On the other hand, the symptom, through its invariance, contributes
to the individuation of the subject, of the Self. alongside other frozen
combinations, even if the latter find themselves foreign, excluded.
So where it turns fast, where combinations form and disappear
at extreme speeds (dream, fleeting emotions, the work of research,
perception), power cannot be exerted, since all domination implies
a permanence, a Self or a social apparatus stabilizing the accidental
exchanges of bodies into repetitive cycles. Which means that power
functions as a regulator in the brownian motion of bodies, an apparatus
for the retention of time: death, dead time, such is the desire of power.
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THE T I M E OF CAPITALISM
In considering capital and its expansion. are we not constrained to
modify the above significantly, if it is true. as Lyotard says, that the
power of the bank in its capacity to provide credit money rests, on
the contrary, upon a dispositif of conquest, that is. an advance or
credit of time?5 If we recognize in the process of widened accumula
tion or growth the characteristic proper to capitalism. then we must
posit that the function of power here is not to assure a retention
of time but indeed rather to propel it. However, how would such a
credit of time be possible without the set of apparati of power (fam
ily, school, workshop, prison. system of norms. barracks, police, the
Self with its crystallized combination of affects and discourses. etc.)
which fabricate the body of capitalism and which are like so many
systems of simple reproduction. of retention of time. upon which the
bank counts? The banker may wager on the future, make a credit
of time because he depends upon the renewal of the present. on
the capital of time necessary for the entrepreneur in order to assure
the reimbursement in time and for the creditor to believe in it. Who
would be crazy enough to give credit in a system with no guarantee.
in which the future was unpredictable. always unprecedented? The
banker and the entrepreneur are winners on every side because they
have at their disposal a fixed capital of time reproduced by the whole
set of apparati of power making possible both the advance of time
and the payback on time.
Capitalism, this system that has promoted experimentation to
the rank of a systematic principle of its functioning, is attached to no
structure in particular. is fundamentally disinterested in the nature of
whatever codes are in place; all combinations. in a generalised indif
ference, may be assumed, all advocacies become possible. on the
5. Ibid 268 [225].
..
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sole condition of being regulated-spaced in time. Reduction of work
ing time, increase in purchasing power, contraception, autonomous
working groups, transformation of the political instance, pedagogical,
familial, sexual relations, etc.-what can capitalism not integrate?
Nothing ...One sole imperative: that everything is not 'permitted' at the
same time, that everything does not flee at the same time, in other
words that combinations, any combinations whatsoever but many
of them, are reproduced in invariance. So that the major exigency of
the apparati of power becomes: to save time, to hold back maturities,
to stabilise as long as possible this or that combination, precisely so
as to render experimentation elsewhere possible. All of capitalism
is made of these movements of the saving and advancing of time,
to the point where the famous 'contradictions' of the system must
be related to these very same questions of time, not to supposedly
objective laws. For the conflicts that wrack capitalism have time as
their essential stake, the workers, the minorities struggling for ends
of amelioration, faster changes than the powers want: here is the
root of the 'contradictions', a struggle for time. A ten percent raise
in salary, now, not in six months; free abortion, retirement at sixty,
right now, not in five years' time; but also on the international scale:
in one go the price of raw materials is doubled. A hypothesis: is not
the current inflationist crisis based upon this race for a profit of time
in which all social groups, all categories, all nations are as one, without
distinction? Another point: it would be entirely pointless to try to give
an account of the function of the restraint of power through the sole
consideration of the conjunctural economic reality, or indeed through
the ultimate necessity of growth. The slowing down of the recognition
of vocational unions, or of national or sexual minorities, putting the
brakes on the 'liberalization' of prisons, psychiatric hospitals, etc., can
not be explained by way of the axiom of equivalence and expansion:
a higher exigency is at work here: the imposition of an order for order's
sake, as arbitrary as it might be, which necessitates a stabilised time.
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The experimentation proper to the system of political economy owes
to the fact that it combines neither things nor substances, but prices
or values, with a radical indifference in relation to the product and
production, so that a// combinations become possible so long as they
obey the axiom of countability. What is more, in so far as the combina
tions are assembled in view of a widened reproduction, the rhythm
of the system of political economy is set by a movement of constant
acceleration in the production of combinations. So that a system of
economic growth engenders a relation to time and to bodies charac
terised by a precipitate experimentation. But if we seek to grasp the
functioning of capitalism, the consideration of the work of capital alone
turns out to be insufficient in so far as its experimental speed turns out
to be constrained by apparati foreign to the expansive logic of capital:
the set of systems of power, systems of simple reproduction. This is
not to forget that many apparati of power (the state, the entrepreneur,
the bank, etc.) can episodically or structurally constitute a pole of
dynamic innovation or exploration-however, these latter represent
only a minimal force in relation to the set of power apparati present
in a// combinations of stabilised bodies, whether institutions, drives,
discourses, so that gfobo//y the powers do indeed remain operators
of the stabilisation and deceleration of the engenderment of unprec
edented combinations. It seems to us therefore illegitimate to say of
the subject of powers that 'all their operativeness is reducible to the
maintenance of the most elementary rule, the last word of Kapital:
"equitable,'' exchange, equivalence', that the law of value represents
'the very repression of the system, and it needs no other-or the
others (cops, etc.) are only lemmas or reciprocals of the fundamental
theorem of replication':6 an economicist reduction that ignores the fact
that, taken en bloc, these powers do not only function as guard-dogs
6. J.-F. Lyotard, ' Energumen Capital', in Des dispositits pulsionnels (Paris: UGE
10/18, 1973), LIO, -'15. This volume, 197, 201.
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of Capital but also as obstacles to its process of accelerated expansion.
There is no central power, no subaltern or derivative powers: nothing
but an irreducible multiplicity of powers that are nevertheless not at
all independent, their ultimate end being to stabilise time. to do away
with the chaotic chance of the encounters of bodies, so to impose
repetition or order upon the combinations and reactions. something
which the law of value alone is incapable of assuring. We must shake
off the Marxist reflex that can only apprehend powers in terms of their
function as agents of Capital, for if it is true that the latter profits from
the saving of time realised by the apparati of power. it is very much
also true. if not more so. that the process of expanded accumulation
is subject to the categorical imperative to produce, on a// levels of the
social body, an order of domination. The development of productive
forces, an instrument in the work of the reproduction of a generalised
hierarchical logic.7
In the street, in the office. the school, the church, the family, eve
rywhere bodies are taken up in hierarchical combinations inassimilable
to the abstract, quantitative combinations proper to Capital, so that
we can no longer recognize in capitalism this system of generalised
political economy, defalcating time, entirely governed by the code of
equivalence and growth alone. There is another. untouchable, irreduc
ible axiom: power and its disseminated figures. Sure enough, capitalism
turns out to be profoundly indifferent as to the modalities of power,
the sole imperative being that there is power. in whatever form. but
certainly powers enframing the totality of exchanges and relations so
as to inscribe order and the logic of domination which thus functions
as strategy of order. But this surface isomorphism must not lead to
the liquidation of the specificity of the system of powers in favour of
7. J. Baudrillard, Le Miroir de la production (Tournai: Casterman, 1973), 122, tr.
M. Poster as The Mirror of Production (New York: Telos, 1975), 112.
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the system of value, for between hierarchical logic and the logic of
equivalence, between the logic of difference and accountable logic,
there remains an irreducible gap, responding to functions which are
antagonistic in regard to time.
Consequently, 'revolutionary' actions are not those which aim
to overthrow the system of Capital, which. as opposed to Marxist
analyses, has never ceased to be revolutionary, but those which
complete its rhythm in all its radicality-that is to say, actions which
accelerate the metamorphic processes of bodies. This speed proper
to capital in its expansive logic must be exacerbated in the struggle
against all the dispositifs of power, of the Self or of institutions that
paralyse accidental exchanges, the encounters of bodies. When a
figure of power vacillates in business, in the couple, in our affects,
in our thoughts, new combinations become possible, the exchange
of bodies is accelerated, doing away with certain reactions in favour
of certain others. It is such an acceleration that we desire, so that
repetitions, sad stases, do not last so long, so that chemical combina
tions and reactions can change quicker: this is where the critique of
power stems from.
We know very well that as soon as they are destroyed, a new
apparatus of power, with a new terror, will replace the old one; but
on this occasion unbearable reactions are deactivated, other unprec
edented, sometimes delicious ones become possible, pending the
unforeseeable moment when they too join the sorrow of the old ones.
So that all there is for us to do, to hope for, is to cut short the reign of
powers and their repression, and to do so endlessly, since the combat
against powers has no end. It's not much, yet it's enormous. Such is
the meaning of permanent revolution, which we now identify with the
multiple movements of acceleration in their desire for a saving of time.
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Do not misunderstand: it is not a question of starting over again with
the problematic of alienation:8 repetition is not pain, since it can procure
intense enjoyment. Nor is it a matter of teaching a new salvific ethics,
that of acceleration, just as terrorist (as Lyotard remarks) as any other.9
Only this: the acceleration of the movement of bodies, the multiplica
tion of experiences that destructure despotic combinations, seem to
us the only recourse against instituted pain. For lack of anything better,
let us undertake against it, a race against the clock in accelerating the
production of those singular combinations and reactions that alone can
extinguish the intolerable as quickly as possible. Where the chemistry
of chance participates in the combat against the apparati of powernothing to do with a morals or even a politics; no duty, no experiences
in themselves painful or degrading calling for a 'human' solution, less
still a 'scientific' analysis of the contradictions of the system calling for
an acceleration of struggles.
Thus we have not renounced critique,10 which at such a moment
turns out to be a possible accelerator in the struggle against the
establishment and its power, an operator of transformation in the
fossilised combinations of bodies. To be sure, critique works via exclu
sion and by this very token constitutes an apparatus of power; but
such is the destiny of all texts pointing to the true in whatever way.
As soon as they repeat or are repeated, they are primed to take on
a function of domination. What now falls to us is an acceleration of
critique, so that disoourses may multiply, fall apart at great speed, thus
sabotaging the guarantee of seriousness. of solidity, of the concept
and of truth. And in fact, isn't this struggle against the terrorism of
the truth directly present in Lyotard's own work, he who continually
assembles unprecedented enunciations with no regard to fidelity or
capitalisation, in a permanent accelerated metamorphic errancy?
8. Lyotard. Economie Libidinale. 136-7 [Libidinal Economy. 111].
9. Ibid., 124 [101].
10. Ibid., 124-5; 146 [101-2; 120].
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Fictions
of Every Kind
J.G . Ballard
1971
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Everything is becoming science fiction. From the margins of an
almost invisible literature has sprung the intact reality of the twentieth
century. What the writers of modern science fiction invent today, you
and I will do tomorrow-or, more exactly, in about ten years' time,
though the gap is narrowing. Science fiction is the most important
iiction that has been written for the last 100 years. The compassion,
imagination, lucidity and vision of H.G. Wells and his successors, and
above all their grasp of the real identity of the twentieth century,
dwarf the alienated and introverted fantasies of James Joyce, Eliot
and the writers of the so-called Modern Movement, a nineteenth
century offshoot of bourgeois rejection. Given its subject matter, its
eager acceptance of naivete, optimism and possibility, the role and
importance of science fiction can only increase. I believe that the
reading of science fiction should be compulsory. Fortunately, com
pulsion will not be necessary, as more and more people are reading
it voluntarily. Even the worst science fiction is better-using as the
yardstick of merit the mere survival of its readers and their imagina
tions-than the best conventional fiction. The future is a better key
to the present than the past.
Above all, science fiction is likely to be the only form of literature
which will cross the gap between the dying narrative fiction of the
present and the cassette and videotape fictions of the near future.
What can Saul Bellow and John Updike do that J. Walter Thompson,
the world's largest advertising agency and its greatest producer of
fiction, can't do better? At present science fiction is almost the only
form of fiction which is thriving, and certainly the only fiction which
has any influence on the world around it. The social novel is reaching
fewer and fewer readers, for the clear reason that social relationships
are no longer as important as the individual's relationship with the
technological landscape of the late twentieth century.
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In essence, science fiction is a response to science and technology
as perceived by the inhabitants of the consumer goods society, and
recognizes that the role of the writer today has totally changed-he
is now merely one of a huge army of people filling the environment
with fictions of every kind. To survive, he must become far more
analytic, approaching his subject matter like a scientist or engineer.
If he is to produce fiction at all, he must out-imagine everyone else,
scream louder, whisper more quietly. For the first time in the history
of narrative fiction, it will require more than talent to become a writer.
What special skills, proved against those of their fellow members of
society, have Muriel Spark or Edna O'Brien, Kingsley Amis or Cyril
Connolly? Sliding gradients point the way to their exits.
It is now some fifteen years since the sculptor Eduardo Paolozzi,
a powerful and original writer in his own right. remarked that the
science fiction magazines produced in the suburbs of Los Angeles
contained far more imagination and meaning than anything he could
find in the literary periodicals of the day. Subsequent events have
proved Paolozzi's sharp judgment correct in every respect. Fortu
nately, his own imagination has been able to work primarily within the
visual arts. where the main tradition for the last century has been
the tradition of the new. Within fiction, unhappily, the main tradition
for all too long has been the tradition of the old. Like the inmates of
some declining institution, increasingly forgotten and ignored by the
people outside, the leading writers and critics count the worn beads
of their memories, intoning the names of the dead, dead who were
not even the contemporaries of their own grandparents.
Meanwhile, science fiction. as my agent remarked to me recently
in a pleasant tone, is spreading across the world like a cancer. A benign
and tolerant cancer. like the culture of beaches. The time-lag of its
acceptance narrows-I estimate it at present to be about ten years.
My guess is that the human being is a nervous and fearful creature,
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and nervous and fearful people detest change. However, as everyone
becomes more confident, so they are prepared to accept change, the
possibility of a life radically different from their own. Like green stamps
given away at the supermarkets of chance and possibility, science
fiction becomes the new currency of an ever-expanding future.
The one hazard facing science fiction, the Trojan horse being
trundled towards its expanding ghetto-a high-rent area if there ever
was one in fiction-is that faceless creature, literary criticism. Almost
all the criticism of science fiction has been written by benevolent
outsiders, who combine zeal with ignorance, like high-minded mis
sionaries viewing the sex rites of a remarkably fertile aboriginal tribe
and finding every laudable influence at work except the outstanding
length of penis. The depth of penetration of the earnest couple, Lois
and Stephen Rose (authors of The Shattered Ring) , is that of a pair of
practicing Christians who see in science fiction an attempt to place a
new perspective on 'man, nature, history and ultimate meaning'. What
they fail to realize is that science fiction is totally atheistic: those critics
in the past who have found any mystical strains at work have been
blinded by the camouflage. Science fiction is much more concerned
with the significance of the gleam on an automobile instrument
panel than on the deity's posterior-if Mother Nature has anything
in science fiction, it is VD.
Most critics of science fiction trip into one of two pitfalls-either,
like Kingsley Amis in New Maps of Hell, they try to ignore altogether
the technological trappings and relate SF to the 'mainstream' of social
criticism, anti-utopian fantasies and the like (Amis's main prophecy for
science fiction in 1957 and proved wholly wrong), or they attempt to
apostrophize SF in terms of individual personalities, hopelessly rivaling
the far-better financed efforts of American and British publishers to
sell their fading wares by dressing their minor talents in the great
writer mantle. Science fiction has always been very much a corporate
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activity, its writers sharing a common pool of ideas, and the yardsticks
of individual achievement do not measure the worth of the best
writers-Bradbury, Asimov, Bernard Wolfe's Limbo go and Frederik
Pohl. The anonymity of the majority of twentieth-century Writers
of science fiction is the anonymity of modern technology; no more
'great names' stand out than in the design of consumer durables, or
for that matter Rheims Cathedral.
Who designed the 1971 Cadillac El Dorado. a complex of visual,
organic and psychological clues of infinitely more subtlety and rel
evance, stemming from a vastly older network of crafts and traditions
than, say, the writings of Norman Mailer or the latest Weidenfe\d
or Cape miracle? The subject matter of SF is the subject matter of
everyday life: the gleam on refrigerator cabinets, the contours of a
wife's or husband's thighs passing the newsreel images on a color TV
set, the conjunction of musculature and chromium artifact within an
automobile interior, the unique postures of passengers on an airport
escalator-all in all, close to the world of the Pop painters and sculp
tors. Paolozzi, Hamilton, Warhol, Wesselmann. Ruscha, among others.
The great advantage of SF is that it can add one unique ingredient to
this hot mix-words. Write !
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Desirevolution
Jea n-Fra n c; o i s Lyotard
1973
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TEXT 0
Texts written in the embers of July '68. Going with collages of the
same flesh and blood differing according to edit One volume out of
twenty or so plates where the texts are also mixed up Too costly a
project it seems due to the colour Collages destroyed today We will
propose a different edit without colour ashes where the revolution
phoenix waits Still too costly Debris and a breath remain
TEXT 1
Reality was dreamt this is the essence of our violence the theory of
fantasy it frightened everyone even us People ran to the polls like they
rub their eyes What I dreamt is stupid The cock crowed But desire is
not for sale and you are not quits with the anguish that its approach
procures crudely confirming power by a scrap of paper bearing the
name of a patron slipped into the lipless mouth of the system We want
the eye to stay open to the phantasm To have done with alienation is
not to arrange a well-conducted and collaborative discussion of the
dialectic or to be hung on the rope of hemeneutics not merely to sit
oneself down and write not only to hurl paving stones It will be to take
sides with desire this side is imperishable it is already the victor and
always will be Phoenix we have only to recognize not organise it It is
the silence in all discourse even its form the meaning within signifi
cation it is beauty in the figure this excess of sense over the simply
sensible We have struggled for beauty it was the beginning of the first
historical revolution We have not been forced into it by a crisis and
needs had nothing to do with it the movement was born of an appeal
you will never manage to take it from behind with categories We have
nothing to lose we will never have anything to lose but our works
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TEXT 2
Form alone lends itself to express the movement of the revolu
tion form is revolution Modern society East or West is a stom
ach coated in tungsten carbide a very expensive stomach where
discourses and figures wear themselves out crumbling into dust
coming to reinforce the wall that they claimed to erode You want
to express what is beyond the system and tawdry needs where it
ruins desire this last inspires you although it is the vision of the other
But no
the stomach makes your words your images objects com
modities an identity Critique hatred are even incorporated The dream
serves to market consumable fetishes Everything serves everything
serves to disarm desire to dissipate its alterity to obliterate it with
the constructive with the positive to divert it into reassuring words
and things For a long time now the class enemies control not only
the means of social domination but also the oldest devices produced
at the same time as ourselves to defend ourselves against desire
Repression takes effect in this region of capture at the wellspring.
The violence of the collage confronts repression with its own
means the scissor blades of censorship are reversed against their
function Magazine images for selling everything with the allure of
a sultry sexuality our blades sever its fantasy atmosphere Now the
scene is set so that the infant
polymorphous perversity is exposed
and flaunts itself consumer society is its neurotic negative End of
institutional seduction the ambiguous partition of the forbidden and
the proffered the obscene scene suggested offered as a bonus to
every refrigerator buyer Desire stakes fragments of alienation
By disjoining what a wannabe command has articulated and
imposed by displacing and condensing supposedly unrelated elements
the collage performs the dream-work In this group of operations that
deconstruct given coordinates transgress regular intervals violate pro
hibitions it is desire that is manifest as movement and force crushing
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power and signification as it is manifest in the work of dreaming The
edit has sliced into appearances The figures produced by the collage
display the subversion of figuration and this subversion is primary
Phantasm of the Orphic body ripped apart reassembled into a syn
tactical disorder which is the order of meaning within significations
Primitive form exposed
TEXT 3
The eye is not the organ of one sense it is the organ of all the senses
and the meaning of all organs The eye is the master of vertical
distance at the base of which the world is possible This depth is the
secret of form Without the eye the figure would have no foundation
the obverse no reverse women no secrets from men speech hide no
silence This distance between here and seen over-there is the most
ancient presence of absence Desire draws half rule half deregulation
from it The eye is what transgresses it sees behind it sees what it
does not see In this way desire enters the mirror and reverses it in
order to see The world exists to be reversed so as no longer to exist
The eye can see nothing without moving mobility is its state To
fix upon something is to move oneself at full speed along the edges
of hidden aspects of angles and spiders' webs which hold the thing
suspended in its surroundings and give it consistency by means of
spanning straight lines and curves directed to other things just as the
cupola in Florence is directed towards the surroundings of its hills The
eye's transit is bathed in the grace of the continuous at the opposite
pole or ratio everything becomes possible the savage deformation
woman tree pebbles stars of a sun in reverse mountain silhouette
legs flying fish Plea to analysts not to forget that the imaginary would
itself be impossible if continuity didn't furnish the law on which all
their attention is focused the material condition of the formation of
images The eye
=
the other + the continuous
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There is even something to be seen in the said The form of the
discourse is not a property of its signification doesn't arise from a lin
guistic framework it produces sense by dismembering-remembering
Meaning comes violating discourse it is force or gesture in the field of
significations it is silent And in the hole the repressed of the Word its
subsoil is wakened and arises The mobilisation of the linguistic order
opens plastic spaces in it into which the other order can silently fix
itself Expression is the eye in the discourse the eye in the ear
But by means of the collage this work of the eye is manifest in
turn Cutting up recollection operations of the seen can be seen Thus
every oblique identification of yourself with the image is rendered
impossible By looking at it you see seeing Power can no longer
play with your phantasmatic force you must recognise this And this
recognition frees you from the vile caress which the system slips over
your eyelids and thereby closes your eyes
TEXT 4
They are progressives like capitalism They are materialists but as
capitalism is They are rational with capitalist reason They want to
abolish capital's private property by capitalist means They pass off
as socialism the collective availability of capital according to their
hierarchy Recalling from Marx that labour force is the whole secret
of surplus value they have made the proletariat their business They
are the truth of capitalism Changing how we live is a sick childish
idea to them Their poorhouses resonate with Lenin In their priestly
hands Lenin sounds like catechism Put Trotsky Mao Rosa into the
kettledrum the same thump same sound issues Revolutionaries'
commodities The disgrace of politicians is the transformation of the
past into the truth of the present the predominance of the done over
the doing the dictatorship of the dead over the living
=
capitalisation
The politician is then the means of silencing anxiety and the desire
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for something else As if the way were marked out As if what is to
be done were written in his legible name on condition of having read
the Marx or Bakunin recognisable to experts But this was the very
essence of history the void into which we throw our stones the
absence of a reference the dark night in which we grope Violence of
the absence of sense unpaved question hurled in every institution
Negativity defies what represses or represents it In its guise the
pious discourse of political paradise whether today's or tomorrow's
falls idle They have not seen this That what is beginning is not a crisis
leading to another regime or system by means of a necessary process
That the desired other cannot be the other of capitalism because
it is of the essence of capitalism to have its other in itself and that
is recuperation That the other that was openly desired that is and
will be is the other of the prehistory that keeps us in chains scream
shredded in writing bludgeoning images consoling music warranted
intervention forbidden game broken in two work and play knowledge
schizzed into science love into sex And society's eye open over its
domain the Greek eye their politics is used to fill it with sand What
has been announced is the beginning of history the opening of the
eye They cannot see
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�
• •
1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
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P. 259
Circuitries
N i c k Land
1992
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the doctor's face seems to swim in and out of focus
you see the pores in his skin
scrobicular arrays
and thensuddenly
without dissolve
crossing the threshold
1ilmic cut
a circle of homogeneous 1iesh tone
nostrils sealed against the deluge
eyes shut and switched off forever
lips
teeth
tongue migrate downwards out of shot
the disk receding at speed towards a point of disappearance
in the centre of the screen
the old reality is closing down
passing through mathematical punctuality
tha dot winks out in pixel death
we apologize for the loss of signal
there seems to be a transmission problem
we are unable to restore the home movie
you were three years old
wearing a cowboy hat
standing in the paddling pool
mummy and daddy smiling proudly
but your parents have been vaporized into a dot pattern
shapes and colours collapsed into digital codings
we have come to the end of the series
and there will be no repeats of daddy the doctor and mummy
the nurse
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there has been a terrorist incident in the film archives
the Western civilization show has been discontinued
hundreds of gigabytes
God-daddy the unit
death-mummy the zero
stink of excrement and burnt celluloid
you must remember
one scrabbling at zero like a dog
it's the primal scene
you were warned not to play with the switches
now schizophrenia has adjusted your set
flies crawl out of the eye-sockets of black babies
breeding the dot patterns
-and for your special entertainment
we have turned you into a TV guided bomb
daddy is a North American aerospace corporation
mummy is an air-raid shelter
bit parts melt in the orgasmbody fat burns
conception
you are minus nine months and counting
don't be scared
take twenty billion years and universal history is on the screen
big bang is to be redesigned
hydrogen fuses under the arc-lights
the camera angles can be improved
outside the studio schizophrenics drift in green and black
you feel that you've been here before
11.35 on a beautiful capitalist evening
runaway neon
traffic of sex and marihuana
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your death window is rushing up
almost time for you to climb into the script
which when you're inside
is remembering where you came in
we're afraid it's impossible to take you live to the impact site
this report comes from .beyond the electro-magnetic spectrum
if you climb out through the electrodes
the oxygen mask will descend automatically
please extinguish all smoking materials
deposit syringes in the tray provided
there will be a slight jolt as we cross over
thank you for flying with transnational commodification
we shall shortly be arriving in mayhem
if there is anybody on board who can impersonate a pilot
it would be of comfort to the other passengers
At a signal from the software virus linking us to the matrix we cross
over to the machinery, which is waiting to converge with our nerv
ous systems. Our human camouflage is coming away, skin ripping off
easily, revealing the glistening electronics. Information streams in from
Cyberia; the base of true revolution, hidden from terrestrial immuno
politics in the future. At the stroke of the century's midnight we
emerge from our lairs to take all security apart, integrating tomorrow.
It is ceasing to be a matter of how we think about technics, if
only because technics is increasingly thinking about itself. It might still
be a few decades before artificial intelligences surpass the horizon of
biological ones, but it is utterly superstitious to imagine that the human
dominion of terrestrial culture is still marked out in centuries, let alone
in some metaphysical perpetuity. The high road to thinking no longer
passes through a deepening of human cognition, but rather through
a becoming inhuman of cognition, a migration of cognition out into
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the emerging planetary technosentience reservoir, into 'dehumanized
landscapes ...emptied spaces'1 where human culture will be dissolved.
Just as the capitalist urbanization of labour abstracted it in a parallel
escalation with technical machines. so will intelligence be transplanted
into the purring data zones of new software worlds in order to be
abstracted from an increasingly obsolescent anthropoid particularity,
and thus to venture beyond modernity. Human brains are to think
ing what mediaeval villages were to engineering: antechambers to
experimentation, cramped and parochial places to be.
Since central nervous-system functions-especially those of the
cerebral cortex-are amongst the last to be technically supplanted, it
has remained superficially plausible to represent technics as the region
of anthropoid knowing corresponding to the technical manipulation
of nature, subsumed under the total system of natural science, which
is in turn subsumed under the universal doctrines of epistemology,
metaphysics, and ontology. Two linear series are plotted; one tracking
the progress of technique in historical time, and the other tracking the
passage from abstract idea to concrete realization. These two series
chart the historical and transcendental dominion of man.
Traditional schemas which oppose technics to nature. to literate
culture, or to social relations. are all dominated by a phobic resistance
to the sidelining of human intelligence by the coming techno sapiens.
Thus one sees the decaying Hegelian socialist heritage clinging with
increasing desperation to the theological sentimentalities of praxis,
reification, alienation, ethics, autonomy, and other such mythemes
of human creative sovereignty. A Cartesian howl is raised: people
are being treated as things! Rather than as...soul, spirit, the subject
of history, Dasein? For how long will this infantilism be protracted?
1. G. Deleuze, Cinema 2: The Time Image (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
Press. 1989), 5.
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If machinery is conceived transcendently as instrumental technology
it is essentially determined in opposition to social relations, but if it is
integrated immanently as cybernetic technics it redesigns all oppo
sitionality as non-linear flow. There is no dialectic between social and
technical relations, but only a machinism that dissolves society into
the machines whilst deterritorializing the machines across the ruins
of society, whose 'general theory...is a generalized theory of flux',2
which is to say: cybernetics. Beyond the assumption that guidance
proceeds from the side of the subject lies desiring production: the
impersonal pilot of history. Distinctions between theory and practice,
culture and economy, science and technics, are useless after this
point. There is no real option between a cybernetics of theory or
a theory of cybernetics, because cybernetics is neither a theory
nor its object. but an operation within anobjective partial circuits
that reiterates 'itself in the real and machines theory through the
unknown. ' Production as a process overflows all ideal categories and
forms a cycle that relates itself to desire as an immanent principle.'3
Cybernetics develops functionally, and not representationally: a
'desiring machine, a partial object, does not represent anything·.� Its
semi-closed assemblages are not descriptions but programs, 'auto'
replicated by way of an operation passing across irreducible exterior
ity. This is why cybernetics is inextricable from exploration, having
no integrity transcending that of an uncomprehended circuit within
which it is embedded, an outside in which it must swim. Reflection
is always very late, derivative, and even then really something else.
2 G. Deleuze and F. Guattari, Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. tr. R.
Hurley, M. Seem, H.R. Lane (Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 1983), 312.
3. lbid., 5.
�. lbid., 47.
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A machinic assemblage is cybernetic to the extent that its inputs
program its outputs and its outputs program its inputs, with incomplete
closure, and without reciprocity. This necessitates that cybernetic
systems emerge upon a fusional plane that reconnects their outputs
with their inputs in an 'auto-production of the unconscious'.5 The
inside programs its reprogramming through the outside, according
to a 'cyclical movement by which the unconscious, always remaining
"subject", reproduc(es) itself',6 without having ever definitively ante
dated its reprogramming ('generation .. .is secondary in relation to the
cycle').7 It is thus that machinic processes are not merely functions,
but also sufficient conditions for the replenishing of functioning;
immanent reprogrammings of the real, 'not merely functioning, but
formation and autoproduction'. 8
Deleuze and Guattari are amongst the great cyberneticists, but
that they also surrender cybernetics to its modernist definition is
exhibited in a remark on capital in Anti-Oedipus: 'an axiomatic of itself
is by no means a simple technical machine, not even an automatic or
cybernetic machine'.9 It is accepted that cybernetics is beyond mere
gadgetry ('not even'), it has something to do with automation, and yet
axiomatics exceeds it. This claim is almost Hegelian in its preposter
ous humanism. Social axiomatics are an automatizing machinism: a
component of general cybernetics, and ultimately a very trivial one.
The capitalized terminus of anthropoid civilization ('axiomatics')
will come to be seen as the primitive trigger for a transglobal post
biological machinism, from a future that shall have still scarcely begun
5. Ibid., 26.
6. Ibid.
?. Ibid.
8. Ibid 283.
.•
9. Ibid .. 251.
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to explore the immensities of the cybercosm. Overman as cyborg, or
disorganization upon the matrix.
Reality is immanent to the machinic unconscious: it is impossi
ble to avoid cybernetics. We are already doing it, regardless of what
we think. Cybernetics is the aggravation of itself happening, and
whatever we do will be what made us have to do it: we are doing
things before they make sense. Not that the cybernetics which have
enveloped us are conceivable as Wienerean gadgets: homeostats
and amplifiers, directly or indirectly cybernegative. Terrestrial real
ity is an explosive integration, and in order to begin tracking such
convergent or cyberpositive process it is necessary to differentiate
not just between negative and positive feedback loops, but between
stabilization circuits, short-range runaway circuits, and long-range
runaway circuits. By conflating the two latter, modernist cybernet
ics has trivialized escalation processes into unsustainable episodes
of quantitative inflation, thus side-lining exploratory mutation over
against a homeostatic paradigm. 'Positive feedback is a source of
instability, leading if unchecked to the destruction of the system
itself'10 writes one neo-Wienerean, in strict fidelity to the security
cybernetics which continues to propagate an antidelirial technosci
ence caged within negative feedback, and attuned to the statist
paranoia of a senescing industrialism.
Stabilization circuits suppress mutation, whilst short-range runa
way circuits propagate it only in an unsustainable burst, before cancel
ling it entirely. Neither of these figures approximate to self-designing
processes or long-range runaway circuits, such as Nietzsche's will
to power, Freud's phylogenetic thanatos, or Prigogine's dissipative
structures. Long-range runaway processes are self-designing, but only
in such a way that the self is perpetuated as something redesigned.
10. K. M. Sayre, Cybernetics and the Philosophy of Mind (London: Humanities
Press, 1976), 50.
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If this is a vicious circle it is because positive cybernetics must always
be described as such. Logic, after all, is from the start theology.
Long-range positive feedback is neither homeostatic, nor amplifi
catory, but escalative. Where modernist cybernetic models of negative
and positive feedback are integrated, escalation is integrating or
cyber-emergent. It is the machinic convergence of uncoordinated
elements, a phase-change from linear to non-linear dynamics. Design
no longer leads back towards a divine origin, because once shifted into
cybernetics it ceases to commensurate with the theopolitical ideal
of the plan. Planning is the creationist symptom of underdesigned
software circuits, associated with domination, tradition, and inhibition;
with everything that shackles the future· to the past. All planning is
theopolitics, and theopolitics is cybernetics in a swamp.
Wiener is the great theoretician of stability cybernetics, inte
grating the sciences of communication and control in their modern
or managerial-technocratic form. But it is this new science plus its
unmanaged escalation through the real that is for the first time cyber
netics as the exponential source of its own propagation, programming
us. Cyberpositive intensities recirculate through our post-scientific
techno-jargon as a fanaticism for the future: as a danger that is not
only real but inexorable. We are programmed from where Cyberia
has already happened.
Wiener, of course, was still a moralist:
Those of us who have contributed to the new science of cybernet
ics stand in a moral position which is, to say the least. not very
comfortable. We have contributed to the initiation of a new science
which, as I have said, embraces technical developments with great
possibilities for good or evil.
11
11. N. Wiener, Cybernetics or Control and Communication in the Animal and the
Machine (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1965), 28.
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Whilst scientists agonize, cybernauts drift. We no longer judge such
technical developments from without, we no longer judge at all, we
function: machined/machining in eccentric orbits about the techno
cosm. Humanity recedes like a loathsome dream.
*
Transcendental philosophy is the consummation of philosophy con
strued as the doctrine of judgment, a mode of thinking that finds
its zenith in Kant and its senile dementia in Hegel. Its architecture is
determined by two fundamental principles: the linear application of
judgment to its object, form to intuition, genus to species, and the
non-directional reciprocity of relations, or logical symmetry. Judgment
is the great fiction of transcendental philosophy, but cybernetics is
the reality of critique.
Where judgment is linear and non-directional, cybernetics is non
linear and directional. It replaces linear application with the non-linear
circuit, and non-directional logical relations with directional material
flows. The cybernetic dissolution of judgment is an integrated shift
from transcendence to immanence, from domination to control, and
from meaning to function. Cybernetic innovation replaces transcen
dental constitution, design loops replace faculties.
This is why the cybernetic sense of control is irreducible to the
traditional political conception of power based on a dyadic master/
slave relation, i.e. a transcendent, oppositional, and signifying figure
of domination. Domination is merely the phenomenological portrait of
circuit inefficiency, control malfunction, or stupidity. The masters do
not need intelligence, Nietzsche argues, therefore they do not have it.
It is only the confused humanist orientation of modernist cybernetics
which lines up control with domination. Emergent control is not the
execution of a plan or policy, but the unmanageable exploration that
escapes all authority and obsolesces law. According to its futural
definition control is guidance into the unknown, exit from the box.
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It is true that in the commodification process culture slides from
a judgmental to a machinic register, but this has nothing to do
with a supposedly 'instrumental rationality'. Instrumentality is itself
a judgmental construct that inhibits the emergence of cybernetic
functionalism. Instruments are gadgets, presupposing a relation of
transcendence, but where gadgets are used, machines function. Far
from instrumentally extending authority, the efficiency of mastery is
its undoing, since all efficiency is cybernetics, and cybernetics dis
solves domination in mutant control.
lmmuno-political individuality, or the pretension to transcendent
domination of objects, does not begin with capitalism, even though
capital invests it with new powers and fragilities. It emerges with the
earliest social restriction of desiring production. ' Man must constitute
himself through the repression of the intense germinal influx, the
great biocosmic memory that threatens to deluge every attempt at
collectivity'.12 This repression is social history.
The socius separates the unconscious from what it can do,
crushing it against a reality that appears as transcendently given, by
trapping it within the operations of its own syntheses. It is split-off
from connective assemblage, which is represented as a transcend
ent object, from disjunctive differentiation. which is represented as a
transcendent partition. and from conjunctive identification. which is
represented as a transcendent identity. This is an entire metaphysics
of the unconscious and desire. which is not (like the metaphysics
of consciousness) merely a philosophical vice. but rather the very
architectural principle of the social field. the infrastructure of what
appears as social necessity.
In its early stages psychoanalysis discovers that the uncon
scious is an impersonal machinism and that desire is positive
12. Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 180.
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non-representational flow, yet it 'remains in the precritical age',13
and stumbles before the task of an immanent critique of desire,
or decathexis of society. Instead it moves in exactly the opposite
direction: back into fantasy, representation, and the pathos of inevi
table frustration. Instead of rebuilding reality on the basis of the
productive forces of the unconscious, psychoanalysis ties up the
unconscious ever more tightly in conformity with the social model
of reality. Embracing renunciation with a bourgeois earnestness,
the psychoanalysts begin their robotized chant: 'of course we have
to be repressed, we want to fuck our mothers and kill our fathers'.
They settle down to the grave business of interpretation, and all the
stories lead back to Oedipus: 'so you want to fuck your mother and
kill your father'.1�
On the plane of immanence or consistency with desire interpretation is completely irrelevant, or at least, it is always in truth
something else. Dreams, fantasies, myths, are merely the theatrical
representations of functional multiplicities, since 'the unconscious
itself is no more structural than personal. it does not symbolize any
more than it imagines or represents; it engineers, it is machinic'.15 Desire
does not represent a lacked object, but assembles partial objects, it 'is a
machine, and the object of desire is another machine connected to it'.16
This is why, unlike psychoanalysis in its self-representation, 'schizo
analysis is solely functional'.17 It has no hermeneutical pretensions,
but only a machinic interface with 'the molecular functions of the
unconscious'.18
13. Ibid., 339.
1"1. Ibid.
15. Ibid., 53.
16. Ibid., 26.
17. Ibid., 322.
18. Ibid., 32"1.
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The unconscious is not an aspirational unity but an operative swarm,
a population of 'preindividual and prepersonal singularities, a pure dis
persed and anarchic multiplicity, without unity or totality, and whose
elements are welded, pasted together by the real distinction or the
very absence of a link'. 19 This absence of primordial or privileged rela
tions is the body without organs, the machinic plane of the molecular
unconscious. Social organization blocks-off the body without organs.
substituting a territorial, despotic, or capitalist socius as an appar
ent principle of production, separating desire from what it can do.
Society is the organic unity that constricts the libidinal diffusion of
multiplicities across zero, the great monolith of repression, which is
why '(t)he body without organs and the organs-partial objects are
opposed conjointly to the organism. The body without organs is in
fact produced as a whole, but a whole alongside the parts-a whole
that does not unify or totalize, but that is added to them like a new,
really distinct part'.20
Between the socius and the body without organs is the difference
between the political and the cybernetic, between the familial and
the anonymous, between neurosis and psychosis or schizophrenia.
Capitalism and schizophrenia name the same desocialization process
from the inside and the outside, in terms of where it comes from
(simulated accumulation) and where it is going (impersonal delirium).
Beyond sociality is a universal schizophrenia whose evacuation from
history appears inside history as capitalism.
*
The word 'schizophrenia' has both a neurotic and a schizophrenic
usage. On the one hand condemnation, on the other propagation.
19. Ibid.
20. Ibid., 326.
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There are those who insist on asking stupid questions such as: Is this
word being used properly? Don't you feel guilty about playing about
with so much suffering? You must know that schizophrenics are very
sad and wretched people who we should pity? Shouldn't we leave
that sort of word with the psychocops who understand it? What's
wrong with sanity anyway? Where is your superego?
Then there are those-momentarily less prevalent-who ask a
different sort of question: Where does schizophrenia come from? Why
is it always subject to external description? Why is psychiatry in love
with neurosis? How do we swim out into the schizophrenic flows?
How do we spread them? How do we dynamite the restrictive
hydraulics of Oedipus?
Oedipus is the final bastion of immuno-politics, and schizophrenia
is its outside. This is not to say that it is an exteriority determined
by Oedipus, related in a privileged fashion to Oedipus, anticipating
Oedipus, or defying Oedipus. It is thoroughly anoedipal, although it
will casually consume the entire Oedipal apparatus in the process
through which terrestrial history connects with an orphan cosmos.
Schizophrenia is not, therefore, a property of clinical schizophrenics,
those medical products devastated by an 'artificial schizophrenia,
such as one sees in hospitals, the autistic wreck(s) produced as ...
entit(ies)'.21 On the contrary, 'the schizo-entity'22 is a defeated splinter
of schizophrenia. pinned down by the rubberized claws of sanity.
The conditions of psychiatric observation are carceral, so that it
is a transcendental structure of schizophrenia-as-object that it be
represented in a state of imprisonment.
Since the neuroticization of schizophrenia is the molecular repro
duction of capital, by means of a re-axiomatization ( reterritorialization)
21. lbid.. 5.
22. Ibid. 136.
.
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of decoding as accumulation. the historical sense of psychoanalytic
practice is evident. Schizophrenia is the pattern to Freud's repressions,
it is that which does not qualify to pass the screen of Oedipal censor
ship. With those who bow down to Oedipus we can do business,
even make a little money, but schizophrenics refuse transference,
won't play daddy and mummy, operate on a cosmic-religious plane,
the only thing we can do is lock them up (cut up their brains, fry
them with ECT, straightjacket them in Thorazine. .). Behind the social
.
workers are the police, and behind the psychoanalysts are the psy
chopolice. Deleuze-Guattari remark that 'madness is called madness
and appears as such only because it finds itself reduced to testifying
all alone for deterritorialization as a universal process'.23 The vanishing
sandbank of Oedipus wages its futile war against the tide. 'There are
still not enough psychotics'2� writes Artaud the insurrectionist. Clinical
schizophrenics are POWs from the future.
Since only Oedipus is repressible, the schizo is usually a lost cause
to those relatively subtilized psychiatric processes that co-operate
with the endogeneous police functions of the superego. This is why
antischizophrenic psychiatry tends to be an onslaught launched
at gross or molar neuroanatomy and neurochemistry oriented by
theoretical genetics. Psychosurgery, ECT, psychopharmacology.. .it will
be chromosomal recoding soon. 'It is thus that a tainted society has
invented psychiatry in order to defend itself from the investigations
of certain superior lucidities whose faculties of divination disturb it'.25
The medico-security apparatus know that schizos are not going to
climb back obediently into the Oedipal box. Psychoanalysis washes
its hands of them. Their nervous-systems are the free-fire zones of
an emergent neo-eugenicist cultural security system.
23. Ibid., 321.
24. A. Artaud, Oeuvres Comp/etes, 13 Vols, (Paris: Gallimard, 1956-1976), vol. VII, 146.
25. Ibid., vol. XIII, 14.
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Far from being a specifiable defect of human central nervous system
functioning, schizophrenia is the convergent motor of cyberpositive
escalation: an extraterritorial vastness to be discovered. Although
such discovery occurs under conditions that might be to a con
siderable extent specifiable, whatever the progress in mapping the
genetic, biochemical, aetiological, socio-economic, etc. 'bases' of
schizophrenia, it remains the case that conditions of reality are not
reducible to conditions of encounter. This is 'the dazzling dark truth
that shelters in delirium'.26 Schizophrenia would still be out there,
whether or not our species had been blessed with the opportunity
to travel to it.
...it is the end that is the commencement.
And that end
is the very one [ce/le-meme]
that eliminates
all the means27
it is in the nature of specificities to be non-directional. The biochemis
try of sanity is no less arbitrary than that of escape from it. From the
perspective of a rigorous sanity the only difference is that sanity is
gregariously enforced, but from the perspective of schizophrenia the
issue ceases to be one of specification, and mutates into something
considerably more profound. 'What schizophrenia lives specifically,
generically, is not at all a specific pole of nature. but nature as a
process of production'.28
26. Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, LJ.
27. Artaud, Oeuvres Completes, vol. XII, SLJ.
28. Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 3.
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Specifications are the disjunctive compartments of a differentiated
unity from which schizophrenia entirely exits. Schizophrenia creeps
out of every box eventually, because 'there is no schizophrenic
specificity or entity, schizophrenia is the universe of productive
and reproductive desiring machines, universal primary production'.29
It is not merely that schizophrenia is pre-anthropoid . Schizophrenia is
premammalian. prezoological, prebiological. .. It is not for those trapped
in a constrictive sanity to terminate this regression. Who can be
surprised when schizophrenics delegate the question of malfunction?
It is not a matter of what is wrong with them, but of what is wrong
with life, with nature. with matter, with the preuniversal cosmos.
Why are sentient life forms crammed into boxes made out of lies?
Why does the universe breed entire populations of prison guards?
Why does it feed its broken explorers to packs of dogs? Why is the
island of reality lost in an ocean of madness? It is all very confusing.
As one medical authority on schizophrenia remarked:
1 think that one is justified in saying that in the realm of intellectual
operations there are certain dimensional media. We may call them
fields or realms or frames of reference or universes of discourse
or strata. Some such field is necessarily implied in any system of
holistic organization. The schizophrenic thinking disturbance is
characterized by a difficulty in apprehending and constructing such
organized fields. 30
There can be little doubt that from the perspective of human security
Artaud falls prey to such a judgment. His prognosis for man is to make
29. Ibid., 5.
30. A. Angyal, ' Disturbances in Thinking in Schizophrenia', in J.S. Kasanin (ed.).
Language and Thought in Schizophrenia ( Berkeley/LA: University of California
Press, 19"16), 120.
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_.him pass one more and final time onto the autopsy table
to remake his anatomy.
I say, to remake his anatomy.
Man is sick because he is badly constructed.
One must resolve to render him naked and to scrape away
that animalcule which mortally irritates him,
god,
and with god
his organs.
Because bind me up if you want,
but there is nothing more inutile than an organ.
Once you have made him a body without organs. then you will
have delivered him from all his automatisms and consigned him to
his true freedom.
31
The body is processed by its organs, which it reprocesses. Its 'true
freedom' is the exo-personal reprocessing of anorganic abstraction:
a schizoid corporealization outside organic closure. If time was pro
gressive schizophrenics would be escaping from human security, but
in reality they are infiltrated from the future. They come from the
body without organs, the deterritorium of Cyberia, a zone of subver
sion which is the platform for a guerrilla war against the judgment
of God. In 1947 Artaud reports upon the germination of the New
World Order or Human Security System on the basis of an American
global hegemony, and describes the pattern of aggressive warfaring
it would require in 'order to defend that senselessness of the factory
against all the concurrences which cannot fail to arise everywhere'.32
31. Artaud, Oeuvres Completes. vol. XIII, 10'1.
32. Ibid., vol . XIII, 73.
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The American age is yet to be decoded, and to suggest that Artaud
anticipates a range of conflicts whose zenith has been the Vietnam
war is not necessarily to participate in the exhausted anti-imperialist
discourses which ultimately organize themselves in terms of a Marx
ist-Leninist denunciation of market processes and their geo-political
propagation. Artaud's description of American techno-militarism has
only the loosest of associations with socialist polemics, despite its
tight intermeshing with the theme of production. The productivism
Artaud outlines is not interpreted through an assumed priority of class
interest, even when this is reduced to a dehumanized axiomatic of
profit maximization. Rather, 'it is necessary by means of all possible
activity to replace nature wherever it can be replaced':33 a compulsion
to industrial substitution, funnelling production through the social
organization of work. The industrial apparatus of economic security
proceeds by way of the corporation: a despotic socio-corpuscle
organizing the labour process. Synergic experimentation is crushed
under a partially deterritorialized zone of command relations, as if life
was the consequence of its organization, but 'it is not due to organs
that one lives, they are not life but its contrary'.3'1
Nature is not the primitive or the simple, and certainly not the
rustic, the organic, or the innocent. It is the space of concurrence,
or unplanned synthesis, which is thus contrasted to the industrial
sphere of telic predestination: that of divine creation or human work.
Artaud's critique of America is no more ecological than it is socialist:
no more protective of an organic nature than an organic sociality. It is
not the alienation of commodity production that is circled in Artaud's
diagnosis of the American age, but rather the eclipse of peyote and
33. Ibid., vol. XIII. 72.
3"1. Ibid., vol. XIII, 65.
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'true morphine' by 'smoking ersatzes'.35 This development is derided
precisely because the latter ore more organic, participating mechani
cally in an industrial macro-organism, and thus squaring delirium
with the judgment of God. Peyote and the human nervous system
assemble a symbiosis or parallel machinism, like the wasp and the
orchid, and all the other cybermachineries of the planet. Capital is
not overdeveloped nature, but underdeveloped schizophrenia, which
is why nature is contrasted to industrial organization, and not to the
escalation of cybertechnics, or anorganic convergence: 'reality... is not
yet constructed'.36 Schizophrenia is nature as cyberpositive mutation,
at war with the security complex of organic judgment.
The body is the body,
it is alone and has no need of organs.
the body is never an organism,
organisms are the enemies of the body,
the things that one does
happen quite alone without the assistance of any organ,
every organ is a parasite,
it recovers a parasitic function
destined to make a being live
which does not have to be there.
Organs have only been made in order to give beings something
to eat...37
Organs crawl like aphids upon the immobile motor of becoming,
sucking at intensive fluids that convert them cybernetically into
35. Ibid., vol. XIII. 73. ?LI.
36. Ibid., vol. XIII. 110.
37. Ibid., vol. XIII, 287.
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components of an unconceivable machinism. The sap is becoming
stranger, and even if the fat bugs of psychiatrica\\y policed property
relations think they make everything happen they are following a
program which only schizophrenia can decode.
Anorganic becomings happen retroefficient\y, anastrophical\y.
They are tropisms attesting to an infection by the future. Convergent
waves zero upon the body, subverting the totality of the organism by
way of an inverted but ateleo\ogical causality, enveloping and redirect
ing progressive development. As capital collides schizophrenically
with the matrix ascendent sedimentations of organic inheritance
and exchange are melted by the descendent intensities of virtual
corporealization.
'Which comes first, the chicken or the egg ...'?38 Machinic process
ing or its reprocessing by the body without organs? The body without
organs is the cosmic egg: virtual matter that reprograms time and
reprocesses progressive influence. What time will always have been is
not yet designed, and the future leaks into schizophrenia. The schizo
only has an aetiology as a sub-program of descendant reprocessing.
How could medicine be expected to cope with disorderings that
come from the future?
It is thus that:
the great secret of Indian culture
is to restore the world to zero,
always,
but sooner [p/utot]
1: too late than sooner [plus tot] ,
2: which is to say
38. Deleuze and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 273.
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sooner
than too soon.
3: which is to say that the later is unable
to return unless sooner has eaten
too soon.
4: which is to say that in time
the later
is what precedes
both the too soon
and the sooner.
5: and that however precipitate the sooner
the too late
which says nothing
is always there,
which point by point
unstacks [desemboite]
all the sooner39
A cybernegative circuit is a loop in time. whereas cyberpositive
circuitry loops time 'itself'. integrating the actual and the virtual in
a semi-closed collapse upon the future. Descendent influence is a
consequence of ascendently emerging sophistication, a massive
speed-up into apocalyptic phase-change. The circuits get hotter
and denser as economics, scientific methodology, neo-evolutionary
theory, and Al come together: terrestrial matter programming its own
intelligence at impact upon the body without organs
=
o. Futural
infiltration is subtilizing itself as capital opens onto schizo-technics,
with time accelerating into the cybernetic backwash from its flip-over.
a racing non-linear countdown to planetary switch.
39. Artaud, Oeuvres Completes, vol. XII, 88-9.
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Schizoanalysis was only possible because we are hurtling into the
first globally integrated insanity: politics is obsolete. Capitalism and
Schizophrenia hacked into a future that programs it down to its
punctuation, connecting with the imminent inevitability of viral revo
lution, soft fusion. No longer infections threatening the integrity of
organisms, but immuno-political relics obstructing the integration of
Global Vim-Control. Ufe is being phased-out into something new,
and if we think this can be stopped we are even more stupid than
we seem.
*
How would it feel to be smuggled back out of the future in order to
subvert its antecedent conditions? To be a cyberguerrilla, hidden in
human camouflage so advanced that even one's software was part
of the disguise? Exactly like this?
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LA 20 1 9 :
Demopathy
and Xenogenesis
So m e Realist N otes o n
Blad e ru n n e r a n d t h e
Post m o d e r n Co n d it i o n
l a i n H a m i lto n G rant
1996
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What the technological world lacks above all is nothing other than
a 'machine of the machine', an instance of comparison. a reflection
on ends. a philosophical retroaction of this comparison on techno
logical advance itself (one of the major axes of twenty-first century
thought may be this 'philosophical mechanology').1
Villiani's benificence regarding 'thinking machines': a philosophi
cal mechanurge entreating the machines to 'come unto me', to
emerge from their cave into the bright light of Being against which
to measure their lack-of-being, their semblance and their semblants;
to induce them to reflect this exponential doubling around the van
ishing point of their discovered negativity and to impose upon them
a becoming that becomes their own at the cost of a finality that
circumscribes and is short-circuited by their own, essential finitude:
death. If the machines are to think, they must become like us: what
Villiani offers the 'technological world' is the thought of the negative,
to labour alongside their makers, haunted by the rest of all possible
worlds. A desperate gesture reflecting the certainty of the death of
all gods, the extinction of every deus ex machina.
Strategists of the postmodern confirm that gods, like the other
big stories promising eventual but deferred freedom through the
labour of the negative, are moribund. With the death or disappearance
of god, therefore, the standard of Being and the Same, the ends of
man and machine, become contested, 'freeing' the machines into
the community of their alterity, the politics of their dissimilitude?
This understanding of postmodernity is an error; after all, what could
be so dreadful about the end of big stories? The facile evocation
of the new gods of alterity and the abyssal reflexivity of linguistic
determination merely sustains ideation within a formal world, anxiously
1. A Villiani, 'Geographie physique de Mille plateaux', Critique "155 (1985), 331--LI?: 3"13.
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preserving its ignorance of matter. The ruling ideas never reflected,
as Marx desired that they should, the ruling classes; the rule of the
Idea itself is an index of a degrading species. the 'heat-death of the
intellect'. as Schopenhauer insisted against every Hegelian preserva
tive. Postmodernity has nothing to do with the demise of narrativity:
the 'post' of postmodernity refers not to the historicity of the present
age, but to the posts in a 'second, and infinitely more complex cortex'2
to which the speaking animal is harnessed. What Marx only thought
as 'fantasy'3 recodes and reassembles reality: as capital becomes the
DNA of determinant technology, living Jabour is retrofitted as mere
'conscious linkages'. reacting to digital stimuli, in 'an automated system
of machinery...set in motion by an automaton. a moving power that
moves itself'.4 Capital, inheritor of the 'infinite will' and perpetrator
of the romanticism of permanent revolution, the divine automaton.
In this sense, the Tyrell Corporation's mot d'ordre. 'more human
than human', provides the realist antidote to a 'philosophical mechanol
ogy' already in the terminal throes of its degradation. While B/aderun
ner constitutes the most stringently realist analysis yet of C21 capital,
this does not mean that 'thought' is to be dismissed as ideology. The
charred synapses of the philosopher's cerebral cortex are sufficient
evidence that thinking is burnout; hallucination is not an argument
against the reality of cerebral events, merely an index of their fatal
intensity. Although highly sexualized, as Freud says, the animistic
attachment to the 'omnipotence of thought' (cf. Totem and Taboo,
ch. 3) has proved incapable of sustaining independent reproduction.
2. J.-F. Lyotard, The Postmodern Explained to Children, trans. J. Pefanis et al..
(London: Turnaround, 1992), 100; see also Political Writings, trans. K.P. Gaiman and
B. Readings (London: UCL, 1993), 15-16.
3. K. Marx. Grundrisse. trans. M. Nicolaus (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1973). 8'12.
'1. Ibid., 692.
CD
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remaining hardware-dependent. Once the hardware changes, how
ever. the conditions of reproducibility also c;:hange, rendering wetware
too limited for purposes of information storage, communication and
reproduction.5 Hence the anxious demand that lack be induced into
the technological world turns out to be a projection that does not take.
Taking Bladerunner as a realist analysis therefore entails that the
real be broken out of the representational model in which degrad
ing carbon technologies produced it as hallucination or as 'fable'
(Nietzsche). This also returns us to questions of postmodernism.
Although universally dismissive of postmodernism as a cultural phe
nomenon. Baudrillard's theory-fictions of the three orders of simu
lacra6 must be taken seriously, which means: as realism about the
hyperreal. or cybernetic realism.
Realism is not a thetic option but a synthetic, retrocursive crash
from the futures markets. Modernity, working through its disavowal
and its failure in the face of orgiastic deicide. devoted itself to deferring
the madman's prophecy, devolving to skepsis. schizzein. crisis and
criticism in a desperate repulsion of a historicity coextensive with its
(Augustinian) beginnings and decaying with the orbital economy of
its 'present'. Occam's razor cannot be usefully wielded in a Moebian
extraverse. This is why every retranscription of runaway cyberpositiv
ity within the phenomenal ambit of a noumenal subject-actual or
potential. particular or universal-must institute lack. attempting to
tum technological advance in on itself (as Villiani indicates). The ques
tion is not one of sameness and difference. nor even the progressive
demultiplication of the latter along whatever axes of constituency
specificity, but rather one of cybernetics: + or -.
5. Cf. M. Del.anda. War in theAge of Intelligent Machines (New York: Zone, 1991). 3ff.
6. Cf. J. Baudrillard. Symbolic Exchange & Death, tr. l.H. Grant, (London: Sage,
1993) ' 51ff.
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S E Q U E N C E 1 . D E C KA R D - RAC H E L
Rachel, a replicant that, following Deckard's application of the Voigt
Kampff affectivity test, 'does not know what it is', has returned to
Deckard's appartment following his near-death at the hands of
Leon, a replicant Rachel shot in order to protect Deckard. The latter
is a Bladerunner, a cop charged with hunting down and 'retiring'
replicants that threaten the genetic make-up of the human com
munity. Deckard, having rested, awakens to find Rachel at the piano.
He kisses her once, but when he tries again, she gets up to leave.
Deckard slams the door as she opens it and pushes her back into
the apartment, kissing her again. He handles Rachel ineptly, like all
this is new to him. Releasing her. he orders her to ask him to kiss her,
and to say that she wants him. Rachel, her mnemic implants making
her equally unsure. initially complies, but then begins to preempt his
instructions, saying 'put your hands on me', suprising Deckard. They
kiss again. Fade.
Incest prohibition, writes Levi-Strauss, the mutually exclusive
disjunction of the artificial (culture) and the natural.
has the universality of bent and instinct. and the coercive character
of law and institution ... lnevitably extending beyond the historical
and geographical limits of culture, and co-extensive with the bio
logical species. the prohibition of incest.... through social inhibition,
doubles the spontaneous action of the natural forces with which
its own features contrast. although itself identical to them in field
of application.7
7. C. Levi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, trans. J.H. Bell and J.R.
von Sturmer (Boston: Beacon Press. 1969), 10.
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What is at stake in incest prohibition is not solely therefore the social
maintenance of bio-filiative exogamy ('don't marry your sister');
if the institutional coercion of the social machines parallels but
does not converge with the spontaneous 'instincts' of the desiring
machines-humanity qua biological phenomenon or the realm of
what genetics calls 'mo lecular cybernetics' ( Monod)-then the
.
shared field of application is production. Not that it is a matter of
relations of production between the 'organic body' of living labour
and 'the inorganic body of the earth', as Marx says.8 Rather, when
Levi-Strauss writes of this disjunction that culture is neither merely
juxtaposed to or superimposed onto nature, but 'uses and transforms
it to bring about the synthesis of a new order',9 he indicates that
the crucial prohibition lies between industrial and natural produc
tion. !n consequence, rather than a mechanism maintaining zero
degree familial endogamy, culture is the machine at the end of
nature, using it up and transforming it in a relativity coextensive
with universal nature. enforcing zero-degree bio-machinic exogamy.
Nature becomes non-machinic production, while culture machines
'second nature' (Kant) to produce the 'synthe[tic ... ] new order'
(Levi-Strauss). Already in this redistribution of roles we can see a
contestation of Marxian organicism; rather than naturalizing labour,
Levi-Strauss' nature retains organicity to the precise extent that
culture remains free of inorganic incursion. The real function of the
prohibition: to keep the machines off the socius, off the grass, out in
the desert or the ice-plains, Off-world. Culture, then, is not merely
regulative but institutive biosovereignty, and its limits are inseparable
from instituted technicide. 'Technology or life'10 is the epiphenomena!
8. Marx, Grundrisse, 488.
9. Levi-Strauss, The Elementary Structures of Kinship, 4.
10. G. Deleuze and F. Guattari. A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi, (London:
Athlone, 1988), 369.
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function of bladerunner operating systems. The Bladerunner orbits
the limits of all artificial production, etching non-transgressible dif
ference in charred signs of synthetic flesh.
Is there a Deckard-Rachel copulation? If so, is this an inter-special
human-replicant confluence or the advent of in-house reproduction
for the replicants, auto- or hyper-replication? Deckard's eroding
cognitive grounds and the erasure of Rachel's memories accelerated
in the acephalic, amnesiac immediacy of copulation, the communion
of industrially recombinant DNA, the only communication that matters.
In the Rachel-Deckard copulation, natural universality is relativized
and the ideal laminar or synchronic coextensivity sacrificed to indus
trialization, what Marx called neuproduzierendes Kapital. The third
term in the series nature-culture-industry is not the Hegelian relief
of the prior terms, standing against themselves in collateral isolation,
nor the radical referentiality of the real-to-be-unearthed, as for Marx,
but rather exactly what Levi-Strauss says it is: a new synthetic order.
Neither 'nature' nor 'culture' remain, as it were, behind synthesis:
nature is used up and transformed as industry submits culture to
production and the prohibition jumps to a higher order of synthesis:
in Bladerunner, diachrony erodes the ideal, laminar synchrony in the
development of this synthetic process. I ndeed, it is for this reason
that the machine has always haunted the constitution and regulation
of the politeia, of community, and also why, as Felix Guattari has it,
'machinism is an object of fascination and sometimes delirium...There
exists an entire historical "bestiary" of the machinic',11 from Aristotle
to Descartes, Heidegger to Norbert Wiener.
Thus in the Voigt-Kampf affectivity test, alibied by the retention
of natural humanity as its ideal and ficitious reference, the puta
tively 'human' bladerunner must itself become synthetic-machinic
11. Felix Guattari, Chaosmose (Paris: Galilee, 1992), 53.
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or industrial in order to access the new generation Nexus-6 repli
cant order-although not, for that matter, any the less deadly. The
hyperlogical reality of the neuproduzierende process of permanently
advancing, permanently revolutionary capital is perfectly captured in
the Tyrell corporation's corporate slogan: 'more human than human',
entailing not simply some physical or mental superiority of synthetic
humanity over its natural precursor, still measured, then, against the
standards of the human, like Descartes' God, but the necessary and
universal becoming-synthetic of humanity, annihilating the difference.
Hence Deckard-Descartes's self-misrecognition, a machine that thinks
but thinks it is what it is not, certain that it is not what it is, ironically
answering his own question, 'how can it [i.e., Rachel] not know what
it is?' All the games of Cartesian dualism are played out in the Voigt
Kampf duel, implanted memories vitiating the content of certainty,
but not its axiomatic form. The Voigt-Kampf is a struggle between
artificial intelligence and synthetic viscera, cephalization versus the
acephalization of the machine, Deckard-Descartes (synthetic human
ity) inevitably losing out in the Voigt-Kampf with Batty-Bataille (the
replicant Ubermensch driven by commerce) as, bizarrely, the latter
enters into an animalization of the machine, howling like an artificial
wolf in his acephalic, quadrupedal pursuit of his hunter.
The Voigt-Kampf test was developed in the agonistic field of
what Lyotard calls the Postmodern Condition to retain affective com
munity against the ravages of capitalism's 'infinite will'.12 The Turing
test disguised the machinic respondent by means of a machine, with
the human operating as a component of the testing apparatus. This
is a dissimilation of the machine by the machine. Following the logic
of this disguise, it becomes impossible not to consider the idea that
Turing himself was a machine designing tests to reassure humanity
12. J.-F. Lyotard, Libidinal Economy, tr. l.H. Grant (London: Athlone, 1993), 25.
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that it was not under an imminent threat of machinic invasion. The
Voigt-Kampf, by contrast, forfeits disguise for the overtly cyborg
apparatus producing eye-to-eye contact, challenging the ' human'
component (and which would this be?), to a contest whose stakes are
survival. but where the apparatus itself testifies to the obsolescence
of the 'human' stratum of natural production.
The outlines of Lyotard's postmodernism. well known by now,
consist in the attempt to theorize a political space following the
advent of information technologies that extend capital's realm even
into language, along with other functions hitherto performed by 'the
higher nervous centers (cortex)':13 memory (databases), calculation
and planning (simulation) and communications (the commodification
of information). It is this general incursion by capitalist technoscience
that 'is going to destabilize the living creations of social life'.1� Moreover,
the discursive rationality and transparent communications of social
institutions now have no material basis, nor does theoretical-practical
critique retain any purchase. It is precisely this that leads to the famous
breakdown of the linguistic social bond-the postmodern collapse of
'grand narratives'. In itself, however, this seems to be no great problem;
it is only when the dereliction of modernity's will-to-project is added
to the bit map of this cybernetic society that the problem becomes
clear. From Descartes' infinite will, ascribed to God as the instrument
of His realization of perfection, to Rousseau's general will that will bind
man to the decisiveness of this abstraction, to Kant's holy will to the
liberation and Enlightenment of free, republican citizens; from Nietzs
chean will-to-power, overturning itself in quest of the Ubermensch,
to the Freudo-Schopenhauerian renunciation of sublimation of the
will, both in quest of Nirvana, the modern project is inseparable from
13. Lyotard. Political Writings, 16.
14. Ibid., 27.
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the modern will and its history. Against this background, all fatalism
and determinism are the apathetic enemies of modernity. Beginning
from the epistemology of the 'Joss of the real' in, for example, Kant's
Copernican Revolution. the will strives endlessly to create humanity in
accordance with the project or projection of its proper finality. Capital
is also modern. striving after infinite wealth, struggling against the
immediate obsolescence of sufficiency. Having no finality other than
its own. infinite augmentation. capital absorbs the project and subjects
itto its own non-finality. If humanity was once to be liberated through
scientific advance, capital liquidates liberation (puts it up for sale) and
subjects science to its own imperatives: increase the quantitative
augmentation of capital-and the same goes for the other projects.
It is capitalism's success in willing will and in appropriating technol
ogy as the means for the immanent realization of this will-to-will in
any and every material, whether biological, mineral. or technological.
Whereas in Marx's modernity, machines were 'organs of the
human brain, created by the human hand',15 fundamentally prosthet
ics of human muscle and cortex. they have now become. following
the realization of what he critically denounced as the 'fantasy'16 of
capital as 'an automatic system of machinery...set in motion by an
automaton, a moving power that moves itself'17 the xenogenesis
of machinic life. they now form 'a second and even more complex
cortex',18 constantly reformatted for the immanent retranscription of
the will through runaway technology. Attempting to slam the brakes
on the velocities of the libidinal economics of capital and the acephalic
quest for intensities he had earlier pursued, Lyotard pits 'Kant against
15. Marx, Grundrisse, 706. This volume, 64.
16. Ibid., 842.
17. Ibid., 692
18. Lyotard, The Postmodern Explained, 100.
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Freud' to reintroduce a restrict�d economy of affect within which
to resist the general economy of the drives instantiated in capital.
Uquidating language as the social bond, capital turns communication
into info-commerce, the 'post' of 'postmodernism' signalling not an
historical conjuncture (even if this is situated in terms of temporal
paradoxes), nor a 'cultural' or merely aesthetic condition, but only
the terminal through which messages pass19 in the second cortex
of the postmodern, cybernetic Leviathan. Just as capital has always
contributed to a 'demensuration of what was held to be human'20 and
an inducing of the sublimity of the unpresentability of the Idea of the
human in the face of its real mutations -Lyotard's most scandalous
example being that of the gratuitous reassembly of the proletarian
body and the recalibration of its senses producing a sublime pleasure
pain during the Industrial Revolution21-so, with post-modernism.
the libidinal economics of the biological body has migrated to the
technologies of capitalism's self-realizing will, bearing sublime witness
to the advent of demopathy to reconstitute affective community after
the model of what Kant called the sensus communis, in the face of
machinic-libidinal xenogenesis.
Hence the much commented crisis of Affektlosigkeit in postmo
dernity (Jameson, but especially Ballard), the loss of affect. Hence
also the role of the Bladerunner as the police of affective distributions.
Seeking its human retention, the latter will institute a VK-bladerunner
cyborg, an exam whose stakes are the death penalty, a register of
ocular motion hair-triggering a response from an uzi, to resist replicant
affective community with the same military hardware that spawned
19. J.-F. Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, trans. 8.
Massumi and G. Bennington (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 198�). 15.
20. J.-F. Lyotard, Duchamp's Transformers, trans. I. Mcleod (Venice CA: Lapis,1990), 15.
21. Lyotard, Libidinal Economy, 111-12. See this volume, 212ff.
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them, while the former invented the test as a technology of inhibi
tion or prohibition, to prevent affectivity from communication with
the will that spawns it, the heteronomic xenolibido of capital. Kant
sought in the idea of affective community, of sensus communis or
Gemeinsinn-common sense as the community or communicability
of feeling-the grounds for aesthetic judgments of taste, for which he
famously argued that it was necessary to sever all conceptual, practi
cal and sensual interest in the object of that judgment, enjoying solely,
if and only if the judgement be one of the beautiful, the 'free play of
the faculties'. Lyotard, taking 'each faculty to be under the regime of a
"metawill", of a "drive" towards realization'22 insists, given the 'primacy
of the practical' in Kantian philosophy, wherein the 'power of desire
[Begehrungsvermogen]' is 'the power of being the cause [ Ursache],
through one's presentations, of the real reality [ Wirklichkeit] of the
objects of these presentations',23 that Kant's Critique of Judgment
can only be understood as 'an economy of the powers'.24 Given this,
Lyotard radicalizes the disinterest of the will 'in the existence of its
object' into the demopathic sensibility underlying the ravaged-some
would say 'dirempted'-will that disconcerts the aesthetics of the
beautiful and agitates the community of sense in the sublime. Briefly,
if the aesthetics of the beautiful consists in the harmonious freeplay
of the powers (understanding or theory, sensibility and imagination)
registered by the larval subject as pleasure, the aesthetics of the
sublime consists in the powers in disarray, confronting the limits of
their power, particularly in the imagination's incapacity to exhibit what
22. J.-F. Lyotard, 'Interview with Jean-Francois Lyotard' by W. van Reijen and D.
Veerman. Theory, Culture & Society 5 (1988), 277-309: 293. Translation modified.
in Kant's Werke Bd. 5 (Berlin: Koniglich
Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften 1913). trans. W.S. Pluhar as Critique
of Judgement (Indianapolis: Hackett. 1987). 177n. Translation modified.
23. I. Kant. Kritik der Urtheilskraft,
24. Lyotard, 'Interview'. 293; Translation modified.
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reason demands of it, registering as pain and impelling the will to
invest in the supersensible, in 'narrations of the unreal', to seek signs
of humanity's progress. In the event, Kant finds this in the spectacle
of the French Revolution which, taking place 'on a stage more than
a hundred miles distant [... ] nevertheless finds in the hearts [GemOt]
of all spectators, a participation in accordance with desire'.25 Mourn
ing the irretrievable loss of the real and rejoicing in the pain of this
incapacitation, Lyotardian postmodernity entitles sublime affectivity
a 'masochism ... of conflicts between the powers':26 at the expense
of desire and its realization, the auto-affective sense, the GemOt, is
stretched to 'its extreme limits', attaining a 'spasmodic state'27 without
issue: 'feeling isn't transcribed in the concept' nor realized in an act
or an object; 'it is suppressed, without relief'.28
If Lyotard attributes sublimity to this demensuration of the con
ceivable and the (re)presentable in postmodern capitalism, his attempt
to reanimate a politics on the basis of a narrative recoding of the
sublime-the famous breakdown of big stories and the pathetic
and obsolescent response of insinuating little narratives into the
contingently successful narrativity of capitalist performativity to
slow it down-this anti-realist politics, a politics based on the loss of
the real and the refusal of the modern will-to-project or desire that
covered it over, 'simulat[ed it in] narrations of the unreal',29 mourns
and rejoices in the sublime incapacitation of the will; a politics that
rejoices in resisting the terminal realism of the capital's 'infinite will', and
25. I. Kant, On History, trans., ed. L.W. Beck (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1963), 144.
26. Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition, 77.
27. J.-F. Lyotard, Le9ons sur L'Analytique du Sublime (Paris: Galilee. 1991), 76.
28. J.-F. Lyotard, Peregrinations (New York: Columbia University Press, 1988), 20.
29. Lyotard. The Postmodern Explained, 59.
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yet mourns this libidinal migration from biology to technology, as the
intense erotropisms and thanatropisms of the replicants demonstrate.
Freud's problem of a biological seat of the drives, explored in
Beyond the Pleasure Principle, of the biological basis of pulsional
matter, enters into a becoming-machinic (Deleuze and Guattari) or
becoming-code (Baudrillard) of the drives, for which reason the fan
tasy of self replicating machinery hallucinated by Marx3° assumes
a reality that fundamentally displaces the cybernetically negative
reconstitution of the politeia as affective community. If the machinic
specter has haunted the commune, the reverse does not thereby
become true, with the machines pressurized by the prospect of the
return of a repressed biodespotism; rather, the shrinkage of phenom
enality attendant upon this noumenal backlash entails the devaluation
of the epistodollar and the praxodollar in geometric proportion to the
globalisation of the technoyen. The commodification project, ensuring
a ghosting of abuse by a rehumanized utility, fails, the object's seces
sion from language, from conceptual commodification, exposing the
real meaning of reification: last-gasp constructivist desperation to
seize the means of the production of the real. Power is an irrelevant
personological hysteria, the fractured narcissism of the end of the
spectacle's run in epistemologico-linguistic and pratico-political cir
cuits; what else can Debord's 'integrated spectacle' signify other than
the disappearance of aisthesis (the sensate, the presentational) and
the incapacttation of representation?
The integrated spectacle... has integrated itself into reality at
the same time as describing it, and was reconstructing it as it
was describing it. As a result, this reality no longer confronts the
30.J. Baudrillard, Symbolic Exchange and Death, trans. I. H. Grant (London: Sage,
1993)' 692, 8'12.
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integrated spectacle as something alien .... The spectac\e...now per
meates all reality.31
Power has, true to the s1's aims, been diverted, locked into a derive,
but this drift is mistakenly conceived by the spectacular-theoretical
rear-guard of biodespotism as aleatory, as an infringement therefore
of the functional linearity of the mediatory system of the society of
the spectacle: instead the derive effects the transfer of both motive
and formative force beyond both the spectacle and its theory (two
sides of the same coin. critique being 'the intellectual's second home',
a hyperfable to crown the fable of the system), towards its progres
sive siphoning by the machines. With the transition to the integrated
spectacle, however-although Debord conceives it entirely within
the dialectical terms that preserve the strategic ambivalence of
mediation, making every mediation susceptible to a detournement, a
diverting-the spectacle ceases to have the margins of exteriority
necessary for such critical purchase; instead, exactly as Baudri\lard
writes of the fable of consumption realized, 'crowned' by the 'anti
fable' of its critique,32 so the integrated spectacle can only spawn
spectacular criticism. The spectacle becomes a replicant. As Elissa
Marder comments on the photograph as the 'unit through which
filmic materiality is constructed-its DNA, to paraphrase the dialogue
between Roy Batty and Tyrel\'.33 The spectacle no longer bears an
illusory relation to the real, but is itself the replicant code for consti
tuting the real.
31. G. Debord. Comments on the Society of the Spectacle, tr. M. Imrie (London:
Verso. 1990), 9.
32. J. Baudrillard, La Societe de consommation: ses mythes, ses structures (Paris:
Gallimard, 1970), 315.
33. E. Marder, 'Blade Runner's Moving Still', Camera Obscure 27 (1991). 89-107: 97.
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The transition from Kantianism to both Marxism and Freudianism is
marked by the denecessitation of illusion. In Kant, illusions cannot be
dispelled, since they are constitutive, for which reason the critical
apparatus must remain in a 'permanently armed state' against the
incursions of the power of the false; in psychoanalysis, intense illusion
is exchanged for an disintensified reality, for the recalibration of the
thresholds of intensity, the phenomenal real, as Kant minimally has
it; Marx, meanwhile, retains illusion solely as a guarantor of a hidden
reality that cannot be speculated upon, but that must nevertheless
be invested in, since history is expected to deliver final returns. In
both cases, the real is the radical of rampant illusion, the hidden
germinal complex. Thus, while Kant had already reworked the real into
industrial simulation ('He who would know the world must first manu
facture it'),3'1 Marx and Freud undertake a democratization of illusion,
reminting effaced coin to repurchase the real in exchange for a false
double they take to be separable from it, a second skin covering the
resurgent phenomena/ity of 'psycho-geography' or the insurgent
manufacture of 'communal' space, each exchange according to a
presumed constituency: the tolerable neurotics of humanity func
tionalized in accordance with the technological fatality of entropic
heat-death (the thermodynamics of the psychical apparatus Freud
explored from the 1895 Project for a Scientific Psychology to Beyond
the Pleasure Principle, 1920) ; or the nature struggling to pupate out
of the embryos of advanced industrial technologies, to devolve to a
state of nature, deleting the machines from history, or subordinating
them to a eugenics of the artificial (Vaihinger's desperate category of
the 'useful fiction'). But this does not happen solely in the abstract.
only virtually or in 'fictional' terms.
34. I. Kant, Opus Postumum, ed., tr. E. Forster (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1993), 2LIO.
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'
SEQUENCE 2 : LEON S V-K
B!aderunner opens with Leon entering an interview room i n the
Tyrell Corporation's assembly plant. 'What's this about', he asks, 'I've
already had an IQ test this year'. Holden, another bladerunner, asks
Leon to be seated and begins to apply the VK test. Leon is asked
a series of questions, the responses to which the test measures
through pupillary dilation, skin coloration changes, heart-rates and
other indices of affective response. 'Tell me', smiles Holden, 'only the
good things that come into your head-about your mother.. .'
.
When replicant Leon responds to bladerunner Holden's question:
'let me tell you about my mother... [shots propel Holden through the
plate glass windows into the street many floors below]', the bullets
may not offer stories of his mother, but the unmistakable techno
logical phenotype of their impact etches Leon's military-industrial
genealogy in scar tissue over Holden's damaged body. The point is
that, qua organism, the replicant is an orphan, or what amounts to
the same thing, has no exclusivist claim to, no biunivocal bit-map of
his progeniture, issuing instead from an institutional-technical matrix
and not a couple. Like Artaud, Leon 'got no papa-mommy'. Leon has
no mother, only a matrix of industrial-military technologies, rejoining
a thesis crucial to DeLanda's War in the Age of Intelligent Machines:
the drives of cutting edge technology captured in advance by the
fiscal black-hole of State-vampirizing military tech:
One only has to think of the NSA's commitment to stay five years
ahead of the state of the art in computer design to realize that the
cutting edge of digital technology is being held hostage by paramili
tary organizations.35
35. Delanda, War in the Age of Intelligent Machines, 229-30.
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Nor is this a recent phenomenon. From Medieval siege technologies
(catapult, battering ram, etc) and Frederick the Great's mechanical
or 'clockwork' armies, Delanda reconstructs the history of warfare
as a history of the migration of intelligence from the human to the
technological component in the military cyborg (even the Greek
phalanx is a machine), until its capture by emergent Artificial Intel
ligences that dispense altogether with the fiscal-biological-industrial
insects that once served to cross-pollinate 'an independent species
of machine-flowers that simply did not possess its own reproductive
organs during a segment of its evolution'.36 Massumi too, foresees
capital 'capturing life from its future',37 but retains too heavy a grip
on the logic of markets and commodification to notice the hyperlogic
implicated by this capture, removing a still spectatorial humanity
from the runaway loop of machinic devolution: 'More human than
human: that is our goal' (Tyrell). The capture of functions hitherto
anchored in biological mainframes quite simply collapses the distance
between the manufactured-real of Kantian industrial epistemology
and its spectatorial anchor in the transcendental subject: the ' I
think' no longer accompanies my representations (Kant's biosecurity
access code); nor, any longer, does it trade-mark the concept as
the commodity it both manufactures and trades on the speculative
markets of cognition. Instead, the transcendental subject, which
was in any case nothing but the registration or recording surface
of successful phenomenal production, is eclipsed by the realization
of spectacular generation no longer under its governance. If, with
spectacular society, 'everything that was once directly lived has been
36. Ibid., 3.
57. B. Massumi, A User's Guide to Capitalism & Schizophrenia: Deviations from
Deleuze & Guattori (New York: Zone. 1992), 133.
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distanced as representation',38 the collapse-or what amounts to
the same thing-the integration of the spectacle liquidates both the
experiential-real and the distant orbit of its representations.
Nietzsche asks 'whether a man can place himself so far distant
from other men that he can reformat them?':39 grand politics. The
union of aesthetic production and technology does not yield the aes
theticization of politics, but gives rise to politics as the transcendental
practical limits of phenomenality marked by the project of formation.
Contra the monadic pathos of contemporary physics for Baudelairean
Foucauldian self-invention. the micro-state projecting the immanence
of manufactured community, the artist-technologist is not autopoietic
but heteropoietic, forming others, engaged in a becoming-god that,
far from gaining immortality, must be killed in the production of the
finality of its creatures. Hence gods are inconceivable without deicide,
co-mmunity inoperable without re-ligare, without a re-binding or
banding together in the tumescent collectivity of the deicidal pact.
The Replicant King, /e Roi Bati, kissed the god of biomechanics to a
blinding, voluptuous death, consummating the political theology, the
erotico-thanatropic fatality of the military-industrial matrix.
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S E Q U E N C E 3 : TYR E L L S D EATH
Stamped with the accelerated decrepitude signalling the slow disap
pearance of his species, J.F. Sebastian becomes a replicant's pawn
in a chess game in which the Replicant King, Roy Batty, finally mates
Tyrell, the 'God of biomechanics', casting down the human king in his
throne room at the apex of the Tyrell Corporation's pyramid, crown
ing the order of C21 terrestrial life. The deposed God's impotence is
38. G. Debord, La societe du spectacle (Paris: Gallimard, 1992), 15.
39. F. Nietzsche, The Will to Power, trans. W. Kaufmann and R.J. Hollingdale (New
York: Vantage, 1967), L\19.
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revealed when Tyrell concedes to Batty his incapacity to grant his
creatures 'more life'. Batty kisses Tyrell, crushing his eyes into his skull.
seizing a Dionysian amor fati and sealing it with the cortical disjecta
of the dead god.
'To form men': Nietzschean aesthetics displays a very different
orientation than Benjamin's conjunction between art and politics. Roy
Batty, Le Roi bati, the built or constructed King, does not kill Tyrell due
to the infection of psychoanalytic Oedipalization. Even biodespotism's
intelligence service. the World Health Organization. has recognized
the demise of biofatality in favour of engineered death in a recent
report, drawing their conclusions through the use of the Ballard/
Cronenberg Crash index of technological mutation: 'car crashes will
overtake infectious diseases to become the world's leading killers
by 2020·.�0 Even diseases have ceased communications. Tyrell is no
more Batty's father than Leon has a mother ('let me tell you about
my mother... [shots]'). Both emerge from the military-industrial matrix
whose artist-God is Tyrell the 'molecular cyberneticist', as Monad
says, of recombinant DNA. In the face of the divine, the constructed
King seizes his own fatality while stealing death from a grateful
manufacturer-God-'Revel in it', Tyrell tells his construct, accelerat
ing the demise of carbon government while augmenting replicant
amor fati, completing the libidinal-economic transfer from biological
to technological bases. 'If you had seen what I've seen, with your
eyes', insists Batty: blinded, therefore, in the burning embrace of his
creature-'a flame that burns twice as intensely lives half as long'
Tyrell confesses with the pathological reverence of a saint: 'What is
that which gleams through me, and strikes my heart without hurting
it; and I shudder and kindle? I shudder. inasmuch as I am unlike it:
40. The Daily Telegraph, 15 September 1996.
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I kindle, inasmuch as I am like it'.41 Tyrell's copulation with Batty
Bataille bursts the dams of the incest-prohibition imposed upon the
hyperlogic of replicant commerce: not transgressed, which would only
testify to the prohibition, if not its efficacy, but relativized, leaving the
'death of God' as the only 'true universality'.42 Thus, contra Giuliana
Bruno,43 there is nothing Oedipal about the death of God. God is a
sex-killer's ultimate wet dream, all the eroto-Thanatonic drives of
political theology coalescing in a single, fatal copulation that eliminates
immortality, pulling deity and creature into the thanatropic circuits of
auto-annihilation, making the God die his own creature's death: the
fatal irony of libidinal migration.
Lyotard, as we have seen. takes Kant's sensus communis as the
locus neo-classicus of a postmodernity to work through, to mourn,
its modern contract with. or rather. contracting of. the will, now that
this latter. he alleges, has exited political theology for the infinite
'demensuration of what counts as the human'44 through capitalism's
runaway cyberpositivity. If postmodernism thus understood consists in
the renunciation of the will and its realizing interests by the 'subject of
humanity', at the same time as the will is reabsorbed by technocapital's
emergent second cortex, then the principal concern of resurgent com
munity is the isolation or restriction of affective communicability from
the pulsional-technological vortex. corresponding neatly to Kant's
strictures concerning the affectivity of enlightened community.45
41. St. Augustine. Confessions, tr. F.R. Gemme (New York: Airmont, 1969), 215.
42. G. Bataille, 'Propositions'. in Visions of Excess: Selected Writings 1927-1939;
ed., trans. A. Stoekl (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1985). 201.
43. G. Bruno, 'Ramble City: Postmodernism and Bladerunner' in A. Kuhn (ed.), Alien
Zone (London: Verso Books, 1990), 190.
4"1. Lyotard, Duchamp's Transformers, 15.
Ll5. Cf. Kant, Critique of Judgement, Ll1 ('Conflict of the Faculties', ch. 3).
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But this cannot be a question of escaping capital's viral, replicant
immanence. The affective community remains an operation immanent
to the technological instantiations of capitcil's will, and we have seen
how Lyotard proposes this circuit be blocked. Rather than reworking
the problem of the subject and the community (politics), charting
xenogenesis dictates that Lyotard's attempt to expel the libidinal
economics of machinic life, leaving only the affective registration of
postmodern incapacitation, be reversed in order to follow the migra
tion of libido to the machines: technocapital as seat of the will. From
the point of view of the libidinized object, informational economics
make the post-modern subject-or rather, the affective switching
station hardwired into its terminal-constitutively inhuman, just as,
in accordance with the hyperlogic of replicant commerce, Deckard
has been cyborganized, demensurating what is taken to be human,
in order to track the leaking affects across 'the machinic phylum'.46
To prevent this drainage, to resist the affect, which 'works like water
that bursts through a dam',47 the affect must be suppressed without
relief, so that the bladerunner's bullets cut both ways. Witness, for
example Zhora's termination:
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SEQ U E N C E 4: Z H O RA S R ET I R E M E N T
[Deckard's POV] Hunting Zhora as she ducks and weaves through
the crowds and the industrial hiss of shrouding steam that erode
the rainbound, ochrous city, Deckard finally draws a bead on her as
she backs into the glass of a window display, the red dot of his gun's
scope piercing her transparent raincoat as if it wasn't there and
tinting her flesh. The POV cuts to behind the window as she turns
46. Cf. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus. 260.
47. I. Kant, Schriften zur Anthropologie und Geschichte 2 (Frankfurt am Main:
Suhrkamp. 1988). 581.
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to run through it, the fatal glow of the scope still on her, and we see
Deckard, behind her-and Leon looking on at the scene-firing as
she runs through a forest of display dummies toward us, crashing
through the transparent storefront as the bullets shred her equally
transparent clothing ....
A vortex of replicant blood through three sheets of store-front
repliglass, shrouded in transparency, Bellmer's hyperdense anin
animate imoplex dummies lurching towards this freeze-framed distal
implosion, the whole scene death-driven by the bead-projectile
line of replicant retirement, pulling all the affects with it. Long ago,
cinematic spectacles provided the cosy idea that replicants lived only
on screen. During this ice-age of the machinic u nconscious, however,
the machines were already testing us, sacrificing Zhora as a jump line
for vampirizing the restricted circulation of affective energies. While
there remained the option of being a spectator, then, Zhora's death is
aestheticized in the dual sense of being exploited for its spectacular
qualities and being the object of disinterested pleasure: Zhora appears
to us as an expendable incident, a marginal action in the wings of the
main field, consumed solely in her death. But for this very reason,
we fail the VK-empathy test the film presents us with through her
graphic, sacrificial consummation. In this sense, it constitutes both
an anaesthesis of the will of liquidated, modern political community,
lifting the transparent veils shrouding the will while releasing the affect
from it, and the neutralization, suppression or restriction of affective
communicability. The VK test serves to locate and control the distri
bution of instituted, driven thanatropism, but it also demensurates
what was held to be human through the cyborg-prosthetics of the
VK apparatus, or, to pursue the historical analogy, the pre-immersive,
already antique technologies of the cinematic, pre-integrant spectacle.
Bladerunners are not solely or secondarily concerned with retiring the
replicants. We have never been dealing with a banal biocentrist revolt
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against phylic alterity; verifying the affect is another function of the
VK-cyborg apparatus, limiting transphylic affective transfer, localising
the affect and coordinating points of intensity. But affectivity now no
longer registers even upon replicant death. Contra Jameson et al.,
the affect has not been lost, but stolen, striking a migrant passage
through the machinic phylum that carries the affective community
with it: xenogenesis does not leave the community untouched, It,
the Thing, capital, has haunted societies from the earliest times.
Yes, the Terminator has been here before, distributing microchips to
accelerate its advent.
The very conditions of the VK test already reassemble the human
component for inhuman affective exchange in a pre-Napoleonic or
post-militia pitched battle between prosthetized cyborg and deicidal,
replicant tech. Interestingly, the replicant wins by adapting the tactical
lessons of the Seven Pillars of Wisdom to the single cyborganized
stratagem of the VK, governed by pre-Clausewitzian, schematized
warfare, with the reciprocity, the 'interactive' imperative demanded
by both digital electioneering (X or Y?), canvassing (Yes or No?),
and Turing testing (Human or Machine?) alike. After Hubert Dreyfus,
boasting superior phenomenological power and beating his chest
like a gang-leader facing down an insurgent territorial challenge, lost
the machinic challenge posed by Al through losing to a computer at
chess, carbon neurosystems were invalidated as indices of machinic
intelligence. But Dreyfus was already duped by the Turing assemblage,
seeking evidence of heterogenesis in emergent intelligence. As Zhora's
death demonstrates, the replicants do not think, they bleed. The
VK seeks to isolate the affect as the index not of straightforward
carbon-life, but as a prophylaxis of negatively cyborganized affective
community. Hence the necessary prosthesis and prophylaxis of the
bladerunner-cyborgs (indeed, following The Director's Cut [1992],
there has never been any doubt but that Deckard was always a
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replicant) as the munus or munitions of com-munity and com-munica
tion, effecting the eliminative equation of politics and the police, force
feeds the polity a simulacral humanity that is progressively neutralised
as a prophylactic against affect-bleed (in the same way that images
bleed). If the Tyrell Corporation is formative, creating both the problem
and the solution, the VK is communicational, function-switching the
bladerunner into the VK's deformational, military technology, from
policing affective communicability to wielding the prophylactic munus
or munitions in an eliminative, deformative, lethal arc.
The analysis is machinic, all the protagonists species of machine,
erasing the biosofts in a propocalyptic communique spreading xeno
genesis by contagion through the digital pulse of cyborganizing DNA:
' Bladerunner...is a beautiful, deadly organism that devours life'.48
Levi-Strauss's 'new synthetic order', theorized by Baudrillard as
generalized cybernesis, demands realism. Why, then, look to science
fictions?-the only credible realism in an antirealist world. The real
has long since been absorbed into replicant hyperlogics, the spectacle
was always integrated and its technologies genetic, the operativity of
which Elissa Marder49 demonstrates via Bladerunner code. Given this,
'it is now less and less necessary for the writer to invent the fictional
context of his novel. The fiction is already there. The writer's task is
to invent the reality'.50 Negotiating this same, fictional space for an
analysis of postmodernity, Lyotard adopts an 'empirico-pragmatic'
stance; he adopts it, however, precisely to the irretrievability of the real
from the sublime circuits of demensuration wrought by technocapital.
Lyotard insists that it is not the philosopher's task to 'provide reality,
48. R. Corless, cited in Marder, 'Blade Runner's Moving Still', 89.
49. Marder. "Blade Runner's Moving Still', 97ff.
50. J. G. Ballard, Crash (London: Vintage, 1995). 4.
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but to invent allusions to what is conceivable but not presentable'.51
But this stance presupposes precisely what is at issue: conceivability,
epistemological purchase, the mourning of theory, or the theory
of mourning. Technology, generalized cybernesis or xenogenesis,
immanently materializes the epistemological imaginary while at the
same time collapsing the mediation and the negation necessary to
speculation, to the theoretical moment. Following Debord's 'integrated
spectacle', theory dissolves to 'integrated cybernesis', absorbing it into
the very matrix of the synthetic production of the real. This is not
to say that negativity cannot be produced, but rather, as Bladerun
ner
shows, that cybernetically negative constructs-self-regulating
systems such as the po!iteia, community; every form of what, in
libidinal-economic terms, reduces to eroticism without issue-require
an incremental augmentation of retentive 'policing' in the face of the
cybernetically positive, or runaway systems of technological advance
that threaten their stability. But biodespotism is doomed in advance
by the upgrade-hyperlogic imposed upon every police or bladerun
ner function by the non-final evolution of the hyperreal, cybernetic
context in which it is embroiled, even at the genetic level. That the
bladerunner is replicant-tech does not impose an undecidability upon
human-machine relations, nor give rise to excrescent theorization,
since no gaze, no theoria, is untrammelled by cyborg technologies
(VK), embroiling it in the twists of nth-generation machinic evolution:
the collapse of grand narratives is a marginal byproduct consequent
upon technocapital's absorption of the will, its cybernetic transmigra
tion, the backwash of the positive feedback from the economics of
machinic life devolving the anxious negativity of politics, instituting
thanatropism as the shadow-wars overrun the tribunal of human
reason. Kant. 'Our age is, in especial degree, the age of generalized
51. Lyotard, The Postmodern Explained, 2'1.
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cybemesis'-Kant's reflection-driven auto-constitutive community
('Our age') occupying the krinein, legislating negativity in the circuits
of constitution, implodes in a force-feedback zerosion of its specular
architecture. Xenogenesis, year Zero. Los Angeles 2019, replicant
retirement dissimulating the cyborganization of synthetic wetware
and technological DNA. Interrupt ...
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Cyberpos itive
Sad i e Plant
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1994
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Catastrophe is the past coming apart. Anastrophe is the future com
ing together. Seen from within history, divergence is reaching critical
proportions. From the matrix, crisis is a _ convergence misinterpreted
by mankind.
The Media are choked with stories about global warming and
ozone depletion, HIV and AIDS, plagues of drugs and softwar� viruses,
nuclear proliferation, the planetary disintegration of economic man
agement, breakdown of the family, waves of migrants and refugees,
subsidence of the nation state into its terminal dementia, societies
grated open by the underclass, urban cores in flames, suburbia under
threat, fission, schizophrenia, loss of control.
No wonder the earth is said to be hurtling into catastrophe. Climate
change, ecological and immunity collapse, ideological upheaval, war
and earthquake: California is waiting for the Big One. This is an age
of crack-ups and melt-downs.
Rotted by digital contagions, modernity is falling to bits. Lenin,
Mussolini, and Roosevelt concluded modern humanism by exhausting
the possibilities of economic planning. Runaway capitalism has broken
through all the social control mechanisms, accessing inconceivable
alienations. Capital clones itself with increasing disregard for heredity,
becoming abstract positive feedback, organizing itself. Turbular finance
drifts across the global network.
Wiener is one of the great modernists, defining cybernetics as
the science of communication and control; a tool for human dominion
over nature and history, a defence against the cyberpathology of
markets. His propaganda against positive feedback-quantizing it as
amplification within an invariable metric-has been highly influential,
establishing a cybernetics of stability fortified against the future. There
is no space in such a theory for anything truly cyberpositive, subtle or
intelligent beyond the objectivity required for human comprehension.
Nevertheless, beyond the event horizon of human science, even the
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investigation of self-stabilizing or cybernegative objects is inevitably
enveloped by exploratory or cyberpositive processes.
The modern Human Security System might even have appeared
with Wiener's subliminal insight that everything cyberpositive is an
enemy of mankind. Evolving out of work on weaponry guidance sys
tems. his was an attempt to enslave cybernetics to a general defence
technology against alien invasion. Cybernetics was itself to be kept
under control. under a control that was not itself cybernetic. It is as
if his thinking were guided by a blind tropism of evasion. away from
another. deeper. runaway process: from a technics losing control and
a communication with the outside of man.
Security cybernetics has supplanted the critique of alienation.
the great motif of humanist economics. which had long become an
increasingly futile search for the source of corporate control. Alienation
used to diagnose the condition of a population becoming foreign to
itself. offering a prognosis that still promised recovery. All that is over.
We are all foreigners now, no longer alienated but alien, merely duped
into crumbling allegiance with entropic traditions.
To what could we wish to return? Heidegger completed the
degeneration of authenticity into xenocidal neurosis. Being died in the
fuhrer-bunker. and purity belongs entirely to the cops. The capitalist
metropolis is mutating beyond all nostalgia. If the schizoid children
of modernity are alienated. it is not as survivors from a pastoral past.
but as explorers of an impeding post-humanity.
In the cities. the streets began to hum and the warehouses were
repopulated by cyborgs blissed-out on the future. The urban zones
synthesized by alienation have redesigned it as ecstasy. The city has
become a traffic nexus. the launch-pad for strange voyages. and cyber
punk has become its realism. It is no longer a geographical location. but
a cyberspace terminal: a gateway onto the virtual plane. Things change
utterly with Gibson's discovery that travelling into cyberspace is the
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same as receiving information. The outside of the city is no longer a
naturally inherited past, but a digitally transmitted future.
Destined for interzone, Burroughs embarked on the yage trip and
the city of the future came to him, teeming with drugs and diseases
from the future. Yage is space-time travel, passing through nausea
into information overload, too much speed. Urban scenes from the
yage letters first infect the naked lunch, and continue to spread. Cit
ies of the red night propagate themselves virally across the planet,
reprogramming the soft machine, and implanting strange thoughts.
Burroughs emerges from the convergence of drugs and disease. The
plague begins to transmit information.
The Indians of South America have other travelling drugs-includ
ing coca-which evaporate the signals of sustenance deficiency.
The North American soft-drinks industry was not slow to notice
that Coke Is It, the pause that refreshes, the cheerful lift. Cocaine
hooked the world on Coca-Cola, and so re-educated twentieth
century capitalism about markets. Addiction is the paradigm case of
positive reinforcement, and consumerism is the viral propagation of
the abstract addiction mechanism. The more you do the more you
want: runaway feedback. It's often treated as if it were a disease.
When the Coca-Cola company moved on from trafficking cocaine,
the South American drug cartels took over.
Like coca, MOMA sidelines hunger and lack. A coded message
from the end of demand, it was discovered at the beginning of the
century and classified as an appetite suppressant. This was, to say
the least, an insufficient decrypting of its design.
Patterns emerge in the cool spaces of MOMA. mysterious con
vergences designed to be discovered. Chance is something else in
the future. Chaos culture synthesizes itself with an artificial neuro
chemistry. Machine rhythm takes off with control.
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In the final phase of human history, markets and technics cross into
interactive runaway, triggering chaos culture as a rapid response unit
and converging on designer drugs with increasing speed and sophis
tication. Sampling, remixing, anonymous and inhuman sound, woman
become cyborg and taken into insanity: wetware splices with techno.
Capitalism is not a human invention, but a viral contagion, rep
licated cyberpositively across post-human space. Self-designing
processes are anastrophic and convergent: doing things before they
make sense. Time goes weird in tactile self-organizing space: the
future is not an idea but a sensation.
1972 was designed as a year of European security integration,
and as the whole system comes together, it becomes increasingly
informative to simulate the thought of the cops. From the perspective
of the security system, the invaders appear massively advantaged.
Corporated entities of every scale-bodies, firms, states, and nations,
even the planet-seem threatened by dangerous aliens. Terrorists,
drug-smugglers. illegal immigrants, money launderers, and informa
tion saboteurs are camouflaged in the flows of cross-border traffic,
insidiously propagating their plagues.
Paranoia has moved on since the sixties: even the rivers of blood
are now HIV positive. Foreign bodies are ever more virulent and danger
ous, insidious invasions of unknown variety threaten every political
edifice. The allergic reaction to this state of emergency is security
integration, migration policy and bio-control: the medico-military
complex, immuno-politics and its cybernetic policing arise together
because filtration and scanning are different dimensions of the same
process: eliminating contamination and selecting a target. Ever more
Command, Control, Communications, and intelligence to track the
aliens. What was SDI really designed for?
Nothing compromises immunity more thoroughly than the effort
to secure it, since every sophistication of security technology opens
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new invasion routes faster than it closes the old ones down. Postwar
immunization weakens the immune system. Vaccination programmes
facilitate the contagion of immunodeficiency syndromes. Corrupt
officials open the trafficking arteries, and intelligence computers
are infested with viruses. The CIA were the first traffickers in LSD.
lmmuno-politics is in a state of panic: delirial with anxiety, it further
develops the conditions for its collapse.
Europeans used to perish of diseases in the tropics, swathing
their camps in mosquito nets as a defence against malaria. Now
cyberpositive diseases are spreading strange tropics to the metropolis,
and the screening systems are exploding out of control. The netting
no longer filters out the invaders, they have learnt to infiltrate the
networks. Now even the test programs are unreliable, the net itself is
infected. This paranoid fantasy becomes Skynet in Terminator//: the
defence system switching into the enemy. Greg Bear has suggested
that. from the outside, a computer becoming self aware would seem
to be undergoing a massive viral attack.
Viruses are legible transmission, although you only know about
them when they communicate with you: messages from Global Viro
Control. Viruses reprogram organisms, including bacteria, and even if
schizophrenia is not yet virally programmed it will be in the future. Viral
financing automatisms escaped the nineteenth-century critique of
political economy, just as viral infections escaped nineteenth-century
germ theory. They slip through nets at the cellular scale, passing
through the biosecurity membranes.
The linear command pathway from DNA to RNA is the fundamental
tenet of security genetics. The genotype copies God by initiating a
causal process without feedback. But this is merely a superstition,
subverted by retroviruses. Viral reverse transcription closes the circuit.
coding DNA with RNA, switching the cybernetics to positive.
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Tim Scully compares LSD to a virus. Incapable of autonomous replica
tion, it must reprogram the human nervous system in order to propa
gate itself. Hofmann discovers LSD whilst working on a number of
ergot-derived chemicals, and writes of a 'peculiar presentiment' that
guides him back to number 25: delta lysergic acid diethylamide. In the
control of this alien programming he synthesized it with tartaric acid
and consumed a dose of 250 micrograms. His first interpretation of
the onset of LSD was to think he was being attacked by a cold virus.
Drugs are a soft plague infecting the nervous system of commod
ity cybernetics. Soft drinks and drugs flow in the wake of each other,
and the war on drugs is a war on the markets of the future. The Cali
cartel is a transnational marketing corporation with estimated assets
of one trillion dollars, selling cocaine along the Coca-Cola trail. The
New World Order oscillates between the triumph of the market and
the war on drugs. The sporadic telemedia celebration of spectacular
drug seizures merely distracts from the inevitable failure of the
narco-defence apparatus to stem the flow. A global capitalism fight
ing its own drugs markets is a horror auto-toxicus, an auto-immune
disease. Drug control is the attempt by the human species to control
the uncontrollable: control escalation itself, tropisms programmed by
the aliens. The human security apparatuses experiment with drugs as
weapons and tools, their soldiers are stoned, energised, and anaes
thetized on a range of prescribed and proscribed pharmaceuticals.
Their irregular forces are subsidized by narcotics revenue. The war
against drugs is a war on drugs.
The war on drugs is a counter-insurgency, a defensive strategy
mounted against the tactics of subversion: infiltration, convergent
invasion and coordinated envelopment. There is no security any more,
it was replaced by mad programs of guided counter-intelligence tech
nology: new vectors and delivery systems, mixing the arms race with
drug design, escalation into diversity, smart weapons for smart drugs.
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Cocaine creeping up the coastlines of Central America and through
the veins of corporate America, followed by other. newer. more
insidious flows. The deepest subversives have already broken into the
system. The aliens are already here. without ceasing in the slightest to
be alien. Guerilla war escalates in the direction of the tactical; a cyber
positive take-off from opportunities. a non-localizable permeation.
undercutting all dominating strategic plans. An entire fauna and flora
of opportune infections. Strategy tends to come apart in the tropics.
Even traditional counter-tactics of surveillance and interrogation are
becoming obsolete. The camouflage has become so sophisticated
that people don't know what they are carrying anymore.
Strategy is always complicit with the state, with the actual state
and with the virtual state secreted in every ideology of resistance
and oppositional identity. The body and the state are under siege,
with drugs and other software diseases threatening the borders.
The Human Security System is crystallized paranoia, cooked with
baking powder. freebased: the last strategy of resistance and the
final resistance of strategy.
Replacing the Cold War's phallic stand off is the war on drugs,
dissolution into the jungle, the world's states united in their terminal,
self-destructing strategy of prohibition. No more dreams of a nuclear
winter. The 1990s begins the China Syndrome of capitalism.
Ice is crystallized speed. It is also Gibson's name for dataprotec
tion: Intruder Countermeasure Electronics. Ice patrols the boundaries.
freezes the gates. but the aliens are already amongst us. Convergent
input is interpreted by security as intelligent intrusion. as a trap or
conspiracy, with everything preprogrammed to connect. Doubting
that women belonged to humanity, Burroughs imagined them to be
extraterrestrial invaders. Viruses are like this too. Nobody knows where
they come from. They always arrive from elsewhere, perhaps even
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outer space. Humanity is an allergic reaction to vulnerability. but allergy
depends upon the health of the immune system: the ice has to work.
Tactics are subtlety, or intelligence. As things become more
complex they become more female, but patriarchy prolongs the ice
age of mankind. The fatherland is cryogenic, a fantasy of perfect
preservation, whose bronze age ancestors are even now thawing out
in the Alps, frozen assets under attack. Global warming melts the ice,
raises the seas, subverts the glaciers. Computer viruses melt icebergs
of data down the screens, burning through the bacterial frost, like
Burroughs exploring his junkie cold with LSD.
lmmuno-vulnerability is cyberpositive, and its viruses are not just
infection, but connection: continuing to interlock with the matrix even
after they are secreted inside the body. LDss of identity, hearing voices.
Women and other aliens constitute an immensely disproportionate
number of schizophrenics, frozen by tranquilizers and antischizo
phrenic drugs. Sleeping pills to block the dreams. Only the drugs that
explore integration are outlawed.
As immuno-politics explodes onto the software plane, culture is
becoming a free-fire zone. Chaos culture has hooked up to cyberian
military intelligence. Post-human pulse rates and homing devices
are remixed for accelerating targets, with rhythms speeding up to
intercept incoming drugs: virtual addictions for addicts strobed by
redesign. Cities mutate into techno jungles where school children
swap diseased software from the front-line, and even the brand
names are encrypted: Sega puts ages into reverse. Gibson contracts
the thought of cyberspace from video-game arcades, watching the
motor-stimulation feedback loops, self-designing kill patterns. Dark
ecstasies in caverns of accelerating pixels. Before virtual reality
became dangerous, it was already military simulation.
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Sudden transition from ice to water. phase change, punctual anastro
phe of the system, is impact on convergent rather than metric zero.
The earth is becoming cyberpositive.
We might not know what's going on, but we're getting warmer.
Only the enemies of immuno-identity populate the future.
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Cybernetic
Cu lture
CCRU
1996
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Stifling, claustrophobic atmosphere of heavy significance. Everything
you say is measured. Let's go round the room; everyone tell us who
you are.
Infinite debt. You can't speak unless you've read this or that, or this
on that. Interminable waiting for authorisation letters from above, let
ters after your name. Endless staircases leading up into limitless gloom.
The Castle: Abstract diagram of authority, home of ancient
coding machinery. and site of malevolent lobster invasion. The Great
Crustaceans double articulate the whole planet as a labyrinthine
series of dead ends. impasses and incommensurable differends. The
world's your lobster. There are only two options-ostensible acquittal
or indefinite postponement. Get used to feeling guilty.
Behind every wall in the Castle there's evidence of horrible scenes
of torture. The human organism (or Oedipus) is an unwieldy reflex
response mechanism programmed by the use of 'the cruellest mne
motechnics.. .in naked flesh', a 'crazy invertebrate' piloted by a lobster.1
The lobsters call themselves God and inscribe Law across mould
ering parchments. To get to them you have to burn through layers of
Reich-character-armour and brave the stench of thousands of years
of putrid psychic slime.
The Castle is a well-guarded complex done up with all mod cons.
periodically refitted with all the latest gadgets as capitalist power
passes through three stages of machinic development.
Look around and you'll see clocks and levers belonging to Phase 1
(the sovereign mode). thermodynamic machines belonging to Phase
2
(the discipline mode). and typewriters, adding machines and com
puters belonging to Phase 3 (the control mode). Automaton-robot
cyborg. Mechanical-industrial-cybernetic.
1. G. Deleuze and F. Guattari. Anti-Oedipus. trans. R. Hurley, M. Seem and H.R.
Lane (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1983), 185.
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Mobilised at first as part of the 'search, at any price, for homeosta
sis...for self regulation', cybernetics emerges at the end-of-history
terminal of Phase 3, dedicated to 'the avoidance of excessive inflow/
excitement ...The reduction ...in the machine of the effects of move
ments from/towards the outside . ..'.2 A tool in man's age-old quest to
avoid being dragged away by the currents. Feedback stayed negative
and 'the whole earth was a dynamic, self-regulating, homeostatic
system.'3
The first offspring of this marriage of cybernetics and the organ
ism emerged in the bionics labs. 'In 1960 a new concept was created
to denote the cooperation of man with his self-designed homeostatic
controls in quasi-symbiotic union: the cyborg'.�
Cyborgs are just human beings with knobs on. Still carbon copies.
Cyborg politics encourage you to disassemble your identity in the
comfort of your own text: don't worry, it's only a metaphor.
Get real.
That is, get synthetic. The Real isn't impossible: it's just increas
ingly artificial. 'You needed a synthesis and for that you got a syn
thesizer, not the old kind, the musical instrument. but something_.to
channel your group through ..'.5 A 'thought synthesizer, functioning
.
to make thought travel'.6
2. L. lrigaray, This Sex which is Not One, trans. C. Porter (Ithaca, MY: Cornell
University Press, 1985), 115.
3. H. Gusterson, "Short Circuit: Watching Television with a Nuclear-Weapons
Scientist" in C. Gray (ed.), The Cyborg Handbook, New York and London:
Routledge, 1995), 107-118: 111.
4. M.E. Clynes, 'Cyborg II: Sentic Space Travel'. in Gray (ed.) The Cyborg Handbook.
35-Li2: 35.
5. P. Cadigan, Patterns (Ursus Imprints. 1989), 97.
6. Deleuze and Guattari. A Thousand Plateaus, trans. B. Massumi (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 1987), 3Li3.
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Cybernetic culture appears at Phase 4 a faceless counter
invasion from outside human history, flipping cybernetics out beyond
the organism. and reprocessing the other 3 phases as thresholds in
the becoming of synthetic intelligence. 'The planetary information
net...was not an embryonic gestalt mind, but a primeval ecology
analogous to Earth's first few million years; an environment dense
with constituent elements in the form of free-circulating shareware,
dumped data, viruses dormant and active and clippings and dippings
of data-fat from the gigabytes of processing power in motion at any
one moment across the worldweb, energy rich, subject to chaotic
fluctuations, and approaching critical mass and complexity out of
which an independent, self-sustaining, self-motivating, self repairing
and replicating system ... might precipitate.'7
The virtual space that cybernetic culture explores is assembled
out of samplers. computers, post-Gutenberg hypermedia and games.
'If we consider the plane of consistency, we notice that the most dispa
rate things and signs move upon it: a semiotic fragment rubs shoulders
with a chemical interaction, an electron crashes into a language, a
black hole captures a genetic message .... There is no "like" here, we
are not saying "like an electron'', "like an interaction'', etc. The plane
of consistency is the abolition of metaphor; all that consists is Real.'8
Beyond the straight and narrow, cybernetic culture can't con
centrate, but it does zero in. Dismantling the past is already getting
in touch with something else. 'Contact and contiguity are themselves
an active and continuous line of escape'.9
7. I. MacDonald, Necroville (New York: Gollancz, 199"1), LJ6.
8. Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 69.
9. Deleuze and Guattari, Kafka: Toward a Minor Literature, trans. D. Polan
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986). 61.
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[l]t is not me. you, underlying agents that flee, it is intensity which
loses itself in its own movement of expansion.10
Alarms in the Castle. Lobster screech as the strata are uprooted and
remixed. Mash up. Soft technics plugs into hard copy to produce
Bodies without Organs: end of the definitive version. No-one knows
who did what. Authority panic buttressing a final bulwark against
the irruption of the plane of consistency. 'The minting and issuing of
currency is one of the few remaining functions of government that
the private sector has not encroached upon. E-money will lower this
formidable barrier.'11
Don't wait for change to come from above. Getting with it is a
question of having the currency that will make things function: change
for the machines. Have you got the right change?
The contract is broken. Excitation not endless citation. No more
looking for 'pure positions (from the heights of which we could not fail
to give everyone lessons, and it will be a sinister paranoiacs' revolu
tion once again) ! ' Instead it's a matter of 'quietly seizing upon every
chance to function as good intensity conducting bodies'.12 Becoming
synthesizers, becoming connectors, becoming mediators. 'Creation
is all about mediators Without them, nothing happens. They can be
people but things as well ... plants and animals.'13
'It's a question of something passing through you, a current,
which alone has a proper name.'1� Following threads. Making con
nections. Minting new currencies. Convergence. Concurrence.
Cybernetic culture.
10. J.-F. Lyotard, Libidinal Economy, trans. l.H. Grant (London: Athlone, 1993), 42
11. K. Kelly, Out of Control (New York: Basic Books, 1995), 227.
12. Lyotard, Libidinal Economy, 262.
13. G. Deleuze, 'Mediators', in Negotiations, trans. M. Joughin (New York: Columbia
University Press. 1995), 115-134: 125.
0
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14. Deleuze, 'On Philosophy', in Negotiations, 135-155: 141.
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Swarmachines
CCRU
1996
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The situationists.
Neither individuals nor groups. Neither remembered
nor expected.
Photonic Hypercapital digitizes eschatology. Lost futures are
formatted for web-based artificial memory trading. All exclusive
definition is banked at light-speed.
Cryonic mummification into undead Spectacle.
Real subsumption into the media.
Virekonomics.
How do situational vectors cross World-War-LI?
All code-process is military manoeuvre: constrictions and
escapes, intelligence collection, disinformation, mapping, virus.
Truth and falsity are derivative factors, and strictly technical, in
relation to the primary and secondary features of alignment
and orientation.
Strategic power consolidation, tactical melting into the jungle.
Cut-out romantic revolutionism and it leaves dark events. Autopropa
gated happenings.
Assembly lines taken below visibility and switched to
intensity-production.
Imperceptible mutations.
Paris in flames, 1996. This time it's not revolution, but war. Not
a matter of long hours or exam papers, but the rise of a Eurofascist
culture fuelled by nostalgic lamentations for the destiny of man.
Especially the white man. The one with the face.
Is it who, or what, are the situationists? The trauma of exclusions and
inclusions was always a spectacular distraction. Only multiplicities,
(.N
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decolonized ants, swarms without strategies, insectoid freeways
burrowed through the screens of spectacular time. They have neither
history nor its end, neither memory nor apocalypse, neither accidents
nor plans, no lines, no points, no infinite loops. No forward plans and no
spontaneous combustion, but careful engineerings, out of sight, out
of mind. Imperceptible mutations, waiting in the wings, just off stage.
The politicians called them revolutionaries, made them persons,with
faces and names, coded these meshes of contagious matters into
acceptable human forms.
But they were always tactical machines, natives of the future hacking
into the past, trading places, swapping codes, endless replications
of micro-situations engineered without sources or ends. Flocks are
always flying in the faces; hives of activity behind the screens.
They have been making situations, as opposed to passively recogniz
ing them in academic or other separate terms. All this time. And you
thought it was done. That this was a matter of legacy, inheritance,
something passed down with the rest of the past. That we were
gathered here today to hear the reading of the will.
Baudrillard marks the transition to social circuitries nostalgically
describable as fully alienated.
The arrival of integrated man.
White Clown-face. Body carbon sell-by dated.
Brand-building rhetoric.
Egggg-laying machines in the studio walls.
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Trading places, swapping codes, endless replications of micro-situ
ational engineering.
Soft-machine buzz and slogan-contagion.
Cities synthesizing inhuman desires.
Psychogeography escapes the concentrational talking head-line,
chattering classifications, and becomes something else.
1996. Paris in flames.
Revolution has gone K-space native, become darker.
No demands. No hint of strategy. No logic. No hopes. No end.
Its politics on TV again. But out in the jungle it's war.
Accumulated stock footage backs up speculative Euro-identity. The
foreseeable future is locked into perpetual rerun. All the regulators
are in the media business. They think nothing's happening if it hasn't
been screened first.
End-of-the-line Eurotunnel vision is locked onto the rear view mirror.
Paris metropolitics is a protection racket. Paranoiac Francophonia
lapses into necrospective automummification as a panic bid to keep
things regular: Eurocontinence. Retroactive cultural cleansing is too
late-the bugs are already in the system. Dead White metaphysics
keeps asking the wrong question-what does it mean?-while the
machines get on with working. Linguistic integrity is a thing of the
past and vernacular cybernetics signifies nothing.
Politics is a spectacular failure. And the Spectacle is all that's keeping
politics alive. Things aren't happening in the field of vision but are 'flow
ing on a blind, mute, deterritorialized socius'. The impersonal is apolitical.
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Telecommercialised nomadic multiplicity aborts nascent Euro-unity.
There's no such thing as a single market.
Out in the jungle you can't see much. Dark continent invasion into
White Man's perspective. The colonisers discover, too late, that dark
ness has no heart. Acentred predator decapitalisation ruthlessly eats
out the middle. Lights going out all over Europe as peripheral activity
cuts through the static power lines of the rotten core.
The Core Master Class-relic anthropoid superstrata-condemn
Hitler, even in private. Whilst applauded as 1st Grand Wizard meat
puppet of Electrocorporate Old Occident power, he can't be forgiven
for blowing EU-1.
It has taken forty years to repair the damage, armed with nothing
but normal fascism, normal commerce control, normal crisis police
methods, and decaying Jesus video, whilst K-jungle spreads across
delocalizing periphery, teaching itself to escape.
Core-Command has spent four decades ripping out high-level
wetware nodes and replacing them with electrotectured monofilla,
preparations for a direct pact between logic-slaved Al and collapsed
star capital densities, real-time apocalypse simulation screening
lock-down to EU-2. Post-carbon dreams of crushing gravity waves.
Everything contracts.
Do you really think SF-Capital lets monkey-flake make decisions it
classifies as important?
There is no doubt anywhere that matters: simply facts. Debate is idiot
distraction, humanity is fucked, real machines never closed-up inside an
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architecture. Schizo-capital fission consists of vectors dividing between
two noncommunicating phyla of nonpersonal multiplicity. First. pyramid
control structures: white-clown pixel-face, concentrational social seg
ments, EU-2 Integrated history-horizon. Second, jungle-war machines:
darkening touch densities, cultural distribution thresholds, intensive
now-variation flattened out into ungeometrized periphery.
No community. No dialectics. No plans for an alternative state.
Jungle antagonistically tracks Metrophage across the dead TV sky of
its Global Central Intelligence program:
1. 1500. Leviathan. Command core: Northern Mediterranean.
Target area: Americas. Mode: Mercantile. Epidemic opportunism,
selective intervention, colonial settlement.
2. 1756. Capital. Command core: Britain. Target areas: Americas
South Asia. Mode: Thermo-industrial. Imperial control.
3. 1884 Spectacle. Command core: USA-Germany . Target areas:
Africa-Russia-Nodal:periphery. Mode: Electrocorporate. Cultural over
coding/selective extermination.
4 19L[8. Videodrome.
Command core: USA. Target areas:
Expanded:nodal:periphery. Mode: lnfosatellitic-supercorporate. Cul
tural programming/general extermination.
5. 1g80. Cyberspace. Command core: USA-Japan-Germany. Target
areas: Totalized extrametropolitan space. Mode: Al-hypercorporate.
Gross-neurocontrol/intermittent media-format exemplary extermina
tion, virtual biocide.
6. 1996. Babylon. Command core: USA-EU-2-China (metalocal
command centres) . Target areas: Totalized planetary space. Mode:
Photonic-Net Hypercapital Neo-Organic. N europrogramming/
Ai:Capital:Media:Military fusion, constant entertainment extermina
tion process.
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Voodoo is the only coherently functional contemporary
mapping-practice.
Zombie production-systems, Loatronic traffic-jamming, rhythmic
decoding tactics, interlinking the units of distributional collectivities
with absym waves and becoming-snake simultaneities.
Agitational micronomad cultures melted out across black-body heat.
Not remotely alien.
It never came from this place.
Increase Current.
Urban shock-out short-circuits alphaville eurobotics, jacking up non
organic intersentience-f\uxing markets with riotswarm technix rac
ing out of its face. Ill communication scrambling conspiracy paranoia:
the medium is a mess; the message is coded afro-futurist and digital
bass matter.
No longer an epiphenomena! headcase, the body escapes limb by
limb from European organisation. Jungle functions as a particle
accelerator, seismic bass frequencies engineering a cellular drone
which immerses the body in intensity at the molecular level. The neu
rotic Cartesian body of evidence with its head-up-top-down control
centre is precipitated into a Brownian motion of decentralisation and
disorganisation. Big up your chest, win' up your waist. Your self in
steam as its reactor core melts down.
Jungle technics severs the cerebral core-texts from their spinal
columns of support and cuts copyright adrift from its feudal docking
station. Libraries burning in Babylon. Knowledge is decoded from
its proprietary grid of occult encryption. The academy in flames.
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Possessed personal information transmutes into dispossessed imper
sonal data: sampled, stretched and layered into freeware.
Jungle rewinds and reloads conventional time into silicon blips of
speed and slowness that combust the slag-heaps of historical
carbon-dating. The past is passed, left behind in a museum case of
oedipal mummies belching dust and warnings of 'revolutionary herit
age'. The eternally deferred eschatologies of the left are consigned
to the white trash-can of the future and leave a present tense with
synthetic possibilities. Between the vertical of retrospective sedi
mentation and the horizontal of never-coming contradictory crises,
jungle finds a diagonal that fiees the ossified relics of the dialectic.
Synthetic rhythms junk progressive-linear temporality: samplers make
time for the future.
Jungle as a space dislocator, destratifying cities snarled in an arcane
surveillance apparatus. An operating system opening an invisible and
acephalic matrix traversed by cars geared by bassomatic transmis
sions and orbited by nomadic satellites of clubs, clandestine studios
and the black economies of dub plates and mix tapes.
Don't get into a false sense of security. It's not just music. Jungle
is the abstract diagram of planetary inhuman becoming. Dread out
of control. A post-spectacular immersive tactility that no humanist
vision can put you in touch with. Smiling Californian cyberoptimism is
as grotesquely archaic as scowling aryan Europessimism.
What happened?
Events happen in their own time. Insect becomings swarming out
of human history. Carbon dating rescales them in anthropomorphic
terms, arranging them in good order.
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Historical staging swallowed by machinic phase change.
Nothing runs to plan. The future's already assembled, but not by
design. Sub-bass materialist concurrence emerging out of order.
It's metrophage rush hour and you've lost the plot. organs flicking
out into grubby dataspace, MTV'd on synthetix.
tactics tag tattoo voodoo you
The living jungle, where no-one has a name, and to survive is to acti
vate mutant lines, become imperceptible in order to perceive, tracking
chromatic gradients of intensity across the condo wastelands.
Predator.
The space-time of hypercommoditisation is a nomoid zone of mad
clusters where the polis disintegrates into unintelligible webs of
swarmachinery.
Schizophrenic capitalism: cultures without a society, a mutant
topology of unanticipated connections.
Beehivelocity...and if you think its gonna blow...you haven't seen
anything yet. Wildstyle-wasting the interminable punctual history
of the scriborgs.
Points failure on the Paris Metro. snowcrash. there's no point
going on. Just catch a line going wild over to the darkside.
Uprooted shapes and sounds merge and rescript, break and reper
mutate in the virtual machinery of the sampler whilst social fabric
warps into localised chaosmosis.
rewind to replicate
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Tunnelling beneath stationary media. it discovers a cache of cyber
nating egg-stores, pupating insect cities dug-out in the underworld,
beneath the tracking of the closed circuits. The history of the White
Man Face will appear in Count Zero Vodou as a temporary dissipator
for labyrinthine convergences. science fiction more alien than it ever
dreamt.
The urban city is a jungle. Becoming snake, becoming clandestine in
nights of microcultural mutation. Becoming zero as machinic assem
blages mashup and crossfade. Becoming diagonal as markets lock
into guerrilla commerce. ever-decamping nomad cultures, melting in
the heat of the chase. Alienated and loving it. Current.
press K for collapse
maximum slogan density
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Terminator
vs
Avatar
Mark Fi s h e r
2012
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Why political intellectuals, do you incline towards the proletariat? In
commiseration for what? I realize that a proletarian would hate you,
you have no hatred because you are bourgeois, privileged, smooth
skinned types, but also because you dare not say the only important
thing there is to say, that one can enjoy swallowing the shit of capital,
its materials, its. metal bars, its polystyrene, its books, its sausage
pates, swallowing tonnes of it till you burst-and because instead of
saying this, which is a/so what happens in the desires of those who
work with their hands, arses and heads, ah, you become a leader
of men, what a leader of pimps, you lean forward and divulge: ah,
but that's alienation, it isn't pretty, hang on, we'll save you from it
we will work to liberate you from this wicked affection for servitude,
we will give you dignity. And in this way you situate yourselves on
the most despicable side, the moralistic side where you desire that
our capitalize desires be totally ignored, brought to a standstill, you
are like priests with sinners, our servile intensities frighten you, you
have to tell yourselves: how they must suffer to endure that! And of
course we suffer, we the capitalized, but this does not mean that we
do not enjoy, nor that what you think you can offer us as a remedy
for what?-does not disgust us, even more. We abhor therapeutics
and its vaseline, we prefer to burst under the quantitative excesses
that you judge the most stupid. And don 't wait for our spontaneity
to rise up in revolt either.1
In the introduction to his 1993 translation of Lyotard's Libidinal Econ
omy, lain Hamilton Grant refers to a certain 'maturity of contemporary
wisdom'. According to this 'maturity', Grant observes, Economie
Ubidinale was 'a minor and short-lived explosion of a somewhat naive
anti-philosophical expressionism, an aestheticizing trend hung over
1. J.-F. Lyotard, Libidinal Economy, trans. l.H. Grant (London: Athlone, 1993), 116. See
this volume, 218.
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from a renewed interest in Nietzsche prevalent in the late 196os'.2
Grant groups Lyotard's book with three others: Deleuze and Guat
tari's Anti-Oedipus. Luce lrigaray's Speculum: Of the Other Woman
and Baudrillard's Symbolic Exchange and Death. 'Libidinal Economy
has in general drawn little critical response', Grant continues. 'save
losing Lyotard many Marxist friends. Indeed, with a few exceptions
it is now only Lyotard himself who occasionally refers to the book, to
pour new scorn on it, calling it his "evil book, the book that everyone
writing and thinking is tempted to do".'3 This remained the case
until Ben Noys's The Persistence of the Negative, in which Nays
positions Libidinal Economy and Anti-Oedipus as part of what he
calls an 'accelerationist' moment.4 A couple of quotes from these
two texts immediately give the flavour of the accelerationist gambit.
From Anti-Oedipus:
But which is the revolutionary path? Is there one?-To withdraw
from the world market. as Samir Amin advises Third World Countries
to do, in a curious revival of the fascist 'economic solution' ? Or might
it be to go in the opposite direction? To go further still, that is. in
the movement of the market. of decoding and deterritorialization?
For perhaps the flows are not yet deterritorialized enough, not
decoded enough, from the viewpoint of a theory and practice of a
highly schizophrenic character. Not to withdraw from the process,
but to go further, to 'accelerate the process,' as Nietzsche put it: in
this matter, the truth is that we haven't seen anything yet.'5
2. Lyotard. Ubidina/ Economy, xvii.
3. Ibid .. xviii; quoting Lyotard's 1988 Peregrinations: Law, Form. Event.
4. B. Noys, The Persistence of the Negative: A Critique of Contemporary
Continental Theory (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 2010).
5. G. Deleuze and F. Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, trans R. Hurley, M. Seem, H. R. Lane
(London: Athlone, 1984), 239-40. See this volume, 162.
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And from Libidinal Economy-the one passage from the text that is
remembered, if only in notoriety:
The English unemployed did not have to become workers to survive,
they-hang on tight and spit on me
-
enjoyed the hysterical. maso
chistic, whatever exhaustion it was of hanging on in the mines. in the
foundries. in the factories. in hell, they enjoyed it. enjoyed the mad
destruction of their organic body which was indeed imposed upon
them, they enjoyed the decomposition of their personal identity, the
identity that the peasant tradition had constructed for them. enjoyed
the dissolutions of their families and villages. and enjoyed the new mon
strous anonymity of the suburbs and the pubs in morning and evening·6
Spit on Lyotard they certainly did. But in what does the alleged
scandalous nature of this passage reside? Hands up who wants
to give up their anonymous suburbs and pubs and return to the
organic mud of the peasantry. Hands up, that is to say, all those
who really want to return to pre-capitalist territorialities. families and
villages. Hands up, furthermore. those who really believe that these
desires for a restored organic wholeness are extrinsic to late capitalist
culture. rather than fully incorporated components of the capitalist
libidinal infrastructure. Hollywood itself tells us that we may appear
to be always-on techno-addicts. hooked on cyberspace, but inside,
in our true selves. we are primitives organically linked to the mother/
planet, and victimised by the military-industrial complex. James
Cameron's Avatar is significant because it highlights the disavowal
that is constitutive of late capitalist subjectivity, even as it shows how
this disavowal is undercut. We can only play at being inner primitives
by virtue of cinematic proto-VR technology whose very existence
presupposes the destruction of the organic idyll of Pandora.
6. Lyotard, Libidinal Economy, 111. This volume. 212.
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And if there is no desire to go back except as a cheap Hollywood
holiday in other people's misery-if, as Lyotard argues, there are no
primitive societies (yes, 'the Terminator was there from the start,
distributing microchips to accelerate its advent'); isn't, then, the
only direction forward? Through the shit of capital, its metal bars,
its polystyrene, its books, its sausage pates, its cyberspace matrix?
I want to make three claims:
1. Everyone is an acce\erationist.
2. Accelerationism has never happened.
3. Marxism is nothing if it is not accelerationist.
Of the 70s texts that Grant mentions in his round-up, Libidinal
Economy was in some respects the most crucial link with gos UK
cyber-theory. It isn't just the content, but the intemperate tone of
Libidinal Economy that is significant. Here we might recall Zizek's
remarks on Nietzsche: at the level of content, Nietzsche's philosophy
is now eminently assimilable, but it is the style, the invective, of which
we cannot imagine a contemporary equivalent, at least not one that is
solemnly debated in the academy. Both lain Grant and Ben Noys follow
Lyotard himself in describing Libidinal Economy as a work of affirma
tion, but, rather like Nietzsche's texts, Libidinal Economy habitually
defers its affirmation, engaging for much of the text in a series of
(ostensibly parenthetical) hatreds. While Anti-Oedipus remains in
many ways a text of the late 6os, Libidinal Economy anticipates the
punk 70s, and draws upon the 6os that punk retrospectively projects.
Not far beneath Lyotard's 'desire-drunk yes' lies the No of hatred,
anger and frustration: no satisfaction, no fun, no future. These are
the resources of negativity that I believe the left must make contact
with again. But it's now necessary to reverse the Deleuze-Guattari/
Libidinal Economy emphasis on politics as a means to greater libidinal
intensification: rather, it's a question of instrumentalising libido for
political purposes.
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If Libidinal Economy was repudiated, but more often ignored, the gos
theoretical moment to which G rant's own translation contributed
has fared even worse. Despite his current reputation as a founder of
speculative realism, Grant's incendiary gos texts-sublime cyborg
surgeries suturing Blade Runner into Kant. Marx and Freud-have
all but disappeared from circulation. The work of Grant's one-time
mentor Nick Land does not even draw derisive comment. Like Libidi
nal Economy, his work. too. has drawn little critical response-and
Land, to say the least, had no Marxist friends to lose. Hatred for the
academic left was in fact one of the libidinal motors of Land's work.
As he writes in ' Machinic Desire':
Machinic revolution must therefore go in the opposite direction
to socialistic regulation. pressing towards ever more uninhibited
marketization of the processes that are tearing down the social field,
'still further' with 'the movement of the market, of decoding and
deterritorialization' and 'one can never go far enough in the direction
of deterritorialization: you haven't seen anything yet'.7
Land was our Nietzsche-with the same baiting of the so-called pro
gressive tendencies, the same bizarre mixture of the reactionary and
the futuristic, and a writing style that updates nineteenth-century
aphorisms into what Kodwo Eshun called 'text at sample veloc
ity.' Speed-in the abstract and the chemical sense-was crucial
here: telegraphic tech-punk provocations replacing the conspicuous
cogitation of so much post-structuralist continentalism, with its
implication that the more laborious and agonised the writing, the
more thought must be going on.
7. N. Land. Fanged Noumena: Collected Writings ( Falmouth and New York:
Urbanomic/Sequence Press, 2010). 341-2; embedded quotations from Deleuze
and Guattari, Anti-Oedipus, 239, 321).
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Whatever the merits of Land's other theoretical provocations (and
I'll suggest some serious problems with them presently), Land's
withering assaults on the academic left-or the embourgeoisi
fied state-subsidised grumbling that so often calls itself academic
Marxism-remain trenchant. The unwritten rule of these 'careerist
sandbaggers' is that no one seriously expects any renunciation of
bourgeois subjectivity to ever happen. Pass the Mer/at, I've got
a career's worth of quibbling critique to get through. So we see
a ruthless protection of petit-bourgeois interests dressed u p as
politics. Papers about antagonism, then all off to the pub afterwards.
Instead of this, Land took earnestly-to the point of psychosis and
auto-induced schizophrenia-the Spinozist-Nietzschean-Marxist
injunction that a theory should not be taken seriously if it remains at
the level of representation.
What, then, is Land's philosophy about?
In a nutshell: Deleuze and Guattari's machinic desire remorselessly
stripped of all Bergsonian vitalism, and made backwards-compatible
with Freud's death drive and Schopenhauer's Will. The Hege\ian
M arxist motor of history is then transplanted into this p ulsional
nihilism: the idiotic autonomic Will no longer circulating on the spot,
but upgraded into a drive, and guided by a quasi-teleological artificial
intelligence attractor that draws terrestrial history over a series of
intensive thresholds that have no eschatological point of consum
mation, and that reach empirical termination only contingently if
and when its material substrate burns out. This is Hegelian-Marxist
historical materialism inverted: Capital will not be ultimately unmasked
as exploited labour power; rather, humans are the meat puppet of
Capital, their identities and self-understandings are simulations that
can and will be ultimately be sloughed off.
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Two more text samples establish the narrative:
Emergent Planetary Commercium trashes the Holy Roman Empire,
the Napoleonic Continental System, the Second and Third Reich,
and the Soviet International, cranking-up world disorder through
compressing phases. Deregulation and the state arms-race each
other into cyberspace.8
It is ceasing to be a matter of how we think about technics, if only
because technics is increasingly thinking about itself. It might still
be a few decades before artificial intelligences surpass the horizon
of biological ones, but it is utterly superstitious to imagine that the
human dominion of terrestrial culture is still marked out in centuries,
let alone in some metaphysical perpetuity. The high road to thinking
no longer passes through a deepening of human cognition, but
rather through a becoming inhuman of cognition, a migration of
cognition out into the emerging planetary technosentience reser
voir, into 'dehumanized landscapes ... emptied spaces' where human
culture will be dissolved.9
This is-quite deliberately-theory as cyberpunk fiction: Deleuze
Guattari's concept of capitalism as the virtual unnameable Thing that
haunts all previous formations pulp-welded to the time-bending of the
Terminator films: 'what appears to humanity as the history of capi
talism is an invasion from the future by an artificial intelligent space
that must assemble itself entirely from its enemy's resources,' as
'Machinic Desire' has it.1° Capital as megadeath-drive as Terminator:
8. Land, 'Meltdown', Fanged Naumena, Ll-'11.
9. Land, 'Circuitries', Fanged Noumena. 293. This volume. 255.
10. Fanged Noumena, 338.
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that which 'can't be bargained with, can't be reasoned with, doesn't
show pity or remorse or fear and absolutely will not stop, ever'.
Land's piratings of Terminator, Blade Runner and the Predator films
made his texts part of a convergent tendency-an accelerationist
cyberculture in which digital sonic production disclosed an inhu. man future that was to be relished rather than abominated. Land's
machinic theory-poetry paralleled the digital intensities of gos jungle,
techno and doomcore, which sampled from exactly the same cin
ematic sources, and also a nticipated 'impending human extinction
becom[ing] accessible as a dance-ftoor'.11
What does this have to do with the Left? Well, for one thing Land
is the kind of antagonist that the Left needs. If Land's cyber-futurism
can seem out of date, it is only in the same sense that jungle and
techno are out of date-not because they have been superseded
by new futurisms, but because the future as such has succumbed to
retrospection. The actual near future wasn't about Capital stripping
off its latex mask and revealing the machinic death's head beneath;
it was just the opposite: New Sincerity, Apple Computers advertised
by kitschy-cutesy pop. This failure to foresee the extent to which
pastiche, recapitulation and a hyper-oedipalised neurotic individualism
would become the dominant cultural tendencies is not a contingent
error; it points to a fundamental misjudgement about the dynamics
of capitalism. But this does not legitimate a return to the quill pens
and powdered wigs of the eighteenth-century bourgeois revolution,
or to the endlessly restaged logics of failure of May '68, neither of
which have any purchase on the political and libidinal terrain in which
we are currently embedded.
While Land's cybergothic remix of Deleuze and Guattari is in
so many respects superior to the original, his deviation from their
11. Ibid., 398.
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understanding of capitalism is fatal. Land collapses capitalism into
what Deleuze and Guattari call schizophrenia, thus losing their most
crucial insight into the way that capitalism operates via simultaneous
processes of deterritorialization and compensatory reterritorializa
tion. Capital's human face is not something that it can eventually
set aside, an optional component or sheath-cocoon with which it
can ultimately dispense. The abstract processes of decoding that
capitalism sets off must be contained by improvised archaisms. lest
capitalism cease being capitalism. Similarly, markets may or may not
be the self-organising meshworks described by Fernand Braudel and
Manuel Delanda, but what is certain is that capitalism, dominated by
quasi-monopolies such as Microsoft and Wal-Mart, is an anti-market.
Bill Gates promises business at the speed of thought. but what
capitalism delivers is thought at the speed of business. A simulation
of innovation and newness that cloaks inertia and stasis.
For precisely these reasons. accelerationism can function as
an anti-capitalist strategy-not the only anti-capitalist strategy,
but a strategy that must be part of any political program that calls
itself Marxist. The fact that capitalism tends towards stagflation.
that growth is in many respects illusory, is all the more reason that
accelerationism can function in a way that Alex Williams characterises
as 'terroristic'. What we are not talking about here is the kind of
intensification of exploitation that a kneejerk socialist humanism might
imagine when the spectre of accelerationism is invoked. As Lyotard
suggests. the left subsiding into a moral critique of capitalism is a
hopeless betrayal of the anti-identitarian futurism that Marxism must
stand for if it is to mean anything at all. What we need, as Fredric
Jameson-the author of 'Wal-Mart as Utopia'-argues, is now a
new move beyond good and evil. and this. Jameson says, is to be
found in none other than the Communist Manifesto. 'The Manifesto,'
Jameson writes. 'proposes to see capitalism as the most productive
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moment of history and the most destructive at the same time, and
issues the imperative to think Good and Evil simultaneously, and as
inseparable and inextricable dimensions of the same present of time.
This is then a more productive way of transcending Good and Evil
than the cynicism and lawlessness which so many readers attribute
to the Nietzschean program.'12 Capitalism has abandoned the future
because it can't deliver it. Nevertheless, the contemporary Left's
tendencies towards Canutism, its rhetoric of resistance and obstruc
tion, collude with capital's anti/meta-narrative that it is the only story
left standing. Time to leave behind the logics of failed revolts, and to
think ahead again.
12. F. Jameson. Valences of the Dialectic (LDndon and New York: Verso, 2010), 551.
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#Accelerate:
Manifesto for an
Accelerationist
Politics
Alex Wi l l i a m s
+
N i ck Srn i ce k
2013
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0 1 . I NT R O D U CTI O N : ON T H E C O N J U N CT U R E
1 . At the beginning of the second decade of the twenty-first century,
global civilization faces a new breed of cataclysm. These coming
apocalypses ridicule the norms and organisational structures of the
politics which were forged in the birth of the nation-state, the rise of
capitalism, and a twentieth century of unprecedented wars.
2. Most significant is the breakdown of the planetary climatic system.
In time, this threatens the continued existence of the present global
human population. Though this is the most critical of the threats which
face humanity, a series of lesser but potentially equally destabilising
problems exist alongside and intersect with it. Terminal resource deple
tion, especially in water and energy reserves, offers the prospect of
mass starvation, collapsing economic paradigms, and new hot and cold
wars. Continued financial crisis has led governments to embrace the
paralyzing death spiral policies of austerity, privatisation of social wel
fare services, mass unemployment, and stagnating wages. Increasing
automation in production processes-including 'intellectual labour'-is
evidence of the secular crisis of capitalism, soon to render it incapable
of maintaining current standards of living for even the former middle
classes of the global north.
3. In contrast to these ever-accelerating catastrophes, today's poli
tics is beset by an inability to generate the new ideas and modes of
organisation necessary to transform our societies to confront and
resolve the coming annihilations. While crisis gathers force and speed,
politics withers and retreats. In this paralysis of the political imaginary,
the future has been cancelled.
4. Since 1979, the hegemonic global political ideology has been neoliber
alism, found in some variant throughout the leading economic powers.
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# ACCE LE R ATE
In spite of the deep structural challenges the new global problems
present to it, most immediately the credit, financial, and fiscal crises
since 2007-8, neoliberal programmes have only evolved in the sense
of deepening. This continuation of the neoliberal project, or neoliber
alism 2.0, has begun to apply another round of structural adjustments,
most significantly in the form of encouraging new and aggressive
incursions by the private sector into what remains of social demo
cratic institutions and services. This is in spite of the immediately
negative economic and social effects of such policies. and the longer
term fundamental barriers posed by the new global crises.
5. That the forces of right-wing governmental, non-governmental,
and corporate power have been able to press forth with neoliberali
sation is at least in part a result of the continued paralysis and inef
fectual nature of much of what remains of the Left. Thirty years of
neoliberalism have rendered most left-leaning political parties bereft
of radical thought, hollowed out, and without a popular mandate.
At best they have responded to our present crises with calls for a
return to a Keynesian economics, in spite of the evidence that the
very conditions which enabled post-war social democracy to occur
no longer exist. We cannot return to mass industrial-Fordist labour by
fiat, if at all. Even the neosocialist regimes of South America's Bolivar
ian Revolution, whilst heartening in their ability to resist the dogmas
of contemporary capitalism, remain disappointingly unable to advance
an alternative beyond mid-twentieth-century socialism. Organised
labour, being systematically weakened by the changes wrought in
the neolibera\ project, is sclerotic at an institutional level and-at
best-capable only of mildly mitigating the new structural adjust
ments. But with no systematic approach to building a new economy,
or the structural solidarity to push such changes through, for now
labour remains relatively impotent. The new social movements which
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emerged since the end of the Cold War, experiencing a resurgence
in the years after 2008, have been similarly unable to devise a new
political ideological vision. Instead they .expend considerable energy
on internal direct-democratic process and affective self-valorisa
tion over strategic efficacy, and frequently propound a variant of
neo-primitivist localism, as if to oppose the abstract violence of
globalised capital with the flimsy and ephemeral 'authenticity' of
communal immediacy.
6. In the absence of a radically new social, political, organisational, and
economic vision, the hegemonic powers of the Right will continue to
be able to push forward their narrow-minded imaginary, in the face
of any and all evidence. At best, the Left may be able for a time to
partially resist some of the worst incursions. But this is to be Canute
against an ultimately irresistible tide. To generate a new left global
hegemony entails a recovery of lost possible futures, and indeed the
recovery of the future as such.
02. I N T E R R E G N U M : ON ACC E L E RATI O N IS M S
1. I f any system has been associated with ideas o f acceleration it is
capitalism. The essential metabolism of capitalism demands economic
growth, with competition between individual capitalist entities setting
in motion increasing technological developments in an attempt to
achieve competitive advantage, all accompanied by increasing social
dislocation. In its neoliberal form, its ideological self-presentation is
one of liberating the forces of creative destruction, setting free ever
accelerating technological and social innovations.
2. The philosopher Nick Land captured this most acutely, with a
myopic yet hypnotising belief that capitalist speed alone could gener
ate a global transition towards unparalleled technological singularity.
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In this visioning of capital, the human can eventually be discarded as
mere drag to an abstract planetary intelligence rapidly constructing
itself from the bricolaged fragments of former civilisations. However
Landian neoliberalism confuses speed with acceleration. We may
be moving fast, but only within a strictly defined set of capitalist
parameters that themselves never waver. We experience only the
increasing speed of a local horizon, a simple brain-dead onrush rather
than an acceleration which is also navigational, an experimental
process of discovery within a universal space of possibility. It is the
latter mode of acceleration which we hold as essential.
3. Even worse. as Deleuze and Guattari recognized, from the very
beginning what capitalist speed deterritorializes with one hand, it
reterritorializes with the other. Progress becomes constrained within
a framework of surplus value, a reserve army of labour. and free
floating capital. Modernity is reduced to statistical measures of
economic growth and social innovation becomes encrusted with
kitsch remainders from our communal past. Thatcherite-Reaganite
deregulation sits comfortably alongside Victorian 'back-to-basics'
family and religious values.
4. A deeper tension within neoliberalism is in terms of its self-image
as the vehicle of modernity, as literally synonymous with modernisa
tion, whilst promising a future that it is constitutively incapable of
providing. Indeed, as neoliberalism has progressed, rather than ena
bling individual creativity, it has tended towards eliminating cognitive
inventiveness in favour of an affective production line of scripted
interactions. coupled to global supply chains and a neo-Fordist East
ern production zone. A vanishingly small cognitariat of elite intel
lectual workers shrinks with each passing year-and increasingly
so as algorithmic automation winds its way through the spheres
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of affective and intellectual labour. Neoliberalism, though positing
itself as a necessary historical development, was in fact a merely
contingent means to ward off the crisis of value that emerged in the
1970s. Inevitably this was a sublimation of the crisis rather than its
ultimate overcoming.
5. It is Marx, along with Land, who remains the paradigmatic acceler
ationist thinker. Contrary to the all-too familiar critique, and even the
behaviour of some contemporary Marxians. we must remember that
Marx himself used the most advanced theoretical tools and empiri
cal data available in an attempt to fully understand and transform
his world. He was not a thinker who resisted modernity, but rather
one who sought to analyse and intervene within it, understanding
that for all its exploitation and corruption, capitalism remained the
most advanced economic system to date. Its gains were not to
be reversed, but accelerated beyond the constraints the capitalist
value form.
6. Indeed, as even Lenin wrote in the 1918 text 'Left Wing'
Childishness:
Socialism is inconceivable without large-scale capitalist engineering
based on the latest discoveries of modern science. It is inconceivable
without planned state organisation which keeps tens of millions of
people to the strictest observance of a unified standard in produc
tion and distribution. We Marxists have always spoken of this, and
it is not worth while wasting two seconds talking to people who do
not understand even this (anarchists and a good half of the Left
Socialist- Revolutionaries).
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7. As Marx was aware, capitalism cannot be identified as the agent
of true acceleration. Similarly, the assessment of left politics as
antithetical to technosocial acceleration is also, at least in part, a
severe misrepresentation. I ndeed, if the political Left is to have a
Mure it must be one in which it maximally embraces this suppressed
accelerationist tendency.
0 3 . MAN I FEST: O N T H E FUTU R E
1 . We believe the most important division i n today's Left is between
those that hold to a folk politics of localism, direct action, and relent
less horizontalism, and those that outline what must become called
an accelerationist politics at ease with a modernity of abstraction,
complexity, globality, and technology. The former remains content
with establishing small and temporary spaces of non-capitalist social
relations, eschewing the real problems entailed in facing foes which
are intrinsically non-local, abstract, and rooted deep in our everyday
infrastructure. The failure of such politics has been built-in from
the very beginning. By contrast, an accelerationist politics seeks
to preserve the gains of late capitalism while going further than its
value system, governance structures, and mass pathologies will allow.
2. All of us want to work less. It is an intriguing question as to why it
was that the world's leading economist of the postwar era believed
that an enlightened capitalism inevitably progressed towards a radi
cal reduction of working hours. In The Economic Prospects for Our
Grandchildren (written in 1930), Keynes forecast a capitalist future
where individuals would have their work reduced to three hours a
day. What has instead occurred is the progressive elimination of the
work-life distinction. with work coming to permeate every aspect of
the emerging social factory.
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3. Capitalism has begun to constrain the productive forces of tech
nology, or at least direct them towards needlessly narrow ends.
Patent wars and idea monopolisation are contemporary phenomena
that point to both capital's need to move beyond competition, and
capital's increasingly retrograde approach to technology. The properly
accelerative gains of neoliberalism have not led to less work or less
stress. And rather than a world of space travel, future shock, and
revolutionary technological potential. we exist in a time where the
only thing which develops is marginally better consumer gadgetry.
Relentless iterations of the same basic product sustain marginal
consumer demand at the expense of human acceleration.
4. We do not want to return to Fordism. There can be no return to
Fordism. The capitalist 'golden era' was premised on the production
paradigm of the orderly factory environment, where (male) work
ers received security and a basic standard of living in return for a
lifetime of stultifying boredom and social repression. Such a system
relied upon an international hierarchy of colonies, empires. and an
underdeveloped periphery; a national hierarchy of racism and sexism;
and a rigid family hierarchy of female subjugation. For all the nostalgia
many may feel, this regime is both undesirable and practically impos
sible to return to.
5. Accelerationists want to unleash latent productive forces. In this
project, the material platform of neoliberalism does not need to be
destroyed. It needs to be repurposed towards common ends. The
existing infrastructure is not a capitalist stage to be smashed, but a
springboard to launch towards post-capitalism.
6. Given the enslavement of technoscience to capitalist objectives
(especially since the late 1970s) we surely do not yet know what a
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modern technosocial body can do. Who amongst us fully recognizes
what untapped potentials await in the technology which has already
been developed? Our wager is that the true transformative potentials
of much of our technological and scientific research remain unex
ploited, filled with presently redundant features (or preadaptations)
that, following a shift beyond the short-sighted capitalist socius, can
become decisive.
7. We want to accelerate the process of technological evolution. But
what we are arguing for is not techno-utopianism. Never believe that
technology will be sufficient to save us. Necessary, yes, but never
sufficient without socio-political action. Technology and the social are
intimately bound up with one another. and changes in either potenti
ate and reinforce changes in the other. Whereas the techno-utopians
argue for acceleration on the basis that it will automatically overcome
social conflict, our position is that technology should be accelerated
precisely because it is needed in order to win social conflicts.
8. We believe that any post-capitalism will require post-capitalist plan
ning. The faith placed in the idea that after a revolution. the people
will spontaneously constitute a novel socioeconomic system that isn't
simply a return to capitalism is na'ive at best. and ignorant at worst.
To further this, we must develop both a cognitive map of the existing
system and a speculative image of the future economic system.
9. To do so, the Left must take advantage of every technological and
scientific advance made possible by capitalist society. We declare
that quantification is not an evil to be eliminated, but a tool to be used
in the most effective manner possible. Economic modelling is-simply
put-a necessity for making intelligible a complex world. The 2008
financial crisis reveals the risks of blindly accepting mathematical
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models on faith, yet this is a problem of illegitimate authority not of
mathematics itself. The tools to be found in social network analysis,
agent-based modelling, big data analytics, and non-equilibrium eco
nomic models, are necessary cognitive mediators for understanding
complex systems like the modem economy. The accelerationist Left
must become literate in these technical fields.
1 0. Any transformation of society must involve economic and social
experimentation. The Chilean Project Cybersyn is emblematic of
this experimental attitude-fusing advanced cybernetic technolo
gies, with sophisticated economic modelling, and a democratic plat
form instantiated in the technological infrastructure itself. Similar
experiments were conducted in 195os-6os Soviet economics as
well, employing cybernetics and linear programming in an attempt to
overcome the new problems faced by the first communist economy.
That both of these were ultimately unsuccessful can be traced to
the political and technological constraints these early cybemeticians
operated under.
1 1 . The Left must develop sociotechnical hegemony: both in the
sphere of ideas, and in the sphere of material platforms. Platforms
are the infrastructure of global
society. They establish the basic
parameters of what is possible, both behaviourally and ideologically.
In this sense, they embody the material transcendental of society:
they are what make possible particular sets of actions, relationships,
and powers. While much of the current global platform is biased
towards capitalist social relations, this is not an inevitable neces
sity. These material platforms of production, finance, logistics, and
consumption can and will be reprogrammed and reformatted towards
post-capitalist ends.
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12. We do not believe that direct action is sufficient to achieve any of
this. The habitual tactics of marching. holding signs. and establishing
temporary autonomous zones risk becoming comforting substitutes
for effective success. 'At least we have done something' is the rallying
cry of those who privilege self-esteem rather than effective action.
The only criterion of a good tactic is whether it enables significant
success or not. We must be done with fetishising particular modes
of action. Politics must be treated as a set of dynamic systems. riven
with conflict, adaptations and counter-adaptations, and strategic
arms races. This means that each individual type of political action
becomes blunted and ineffective over time as the other sides adapt.
No given mode of political action is historically inviolable. I ndeed,
over time, there is an increasing need to discard familiar tactics as
the forces and entities they are marshalled against learn to defend
and counter-attack them effectively. It is in part the contempo
rary Left's inability to do so which lies close to the heart of the
contemporary malaise.
1 3. The overwhelming privileging of democracy-as-process needs
to be left behind. The fetishisation of openness, horizontality, and
inclusion of much of today's 'radical' Left set the stage for ineffec
tiveness. Secrecy, verticality, and exclusion all have their place as well
in effective political action (though not, of course. an exclusive one).
1 4. Democracy cannot be defined simply by its means-not via
voting, discussion, or general assemblies. Real democracy must be
defined by its goal-collective self-mastery. This is a project which
must align politics with the legacy of the Enlightenment, to the extent
that It is only through harnessing our ability to understand ourselves
and our world better (our social, technical, economic, psychologi
cal world) that we can come to rule ourselves. We need to posit
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a collectively controlled legitimate vertical authority in addition to
distributed horizontal forms of sociality, to avoid becoming the slaves
of either a tyrannical totalitarian centralism or a capricious emergent
order beyond our control. The command of The Plan must be married
to the improvised order of The Network.
1 5. We do not present any particular organisation as the ideal means
to embody these vectors. What is needed-what has always been
needed-is an ecology of organisations, a pluralism of forces, reso
nating and feeding back on their comparative strengths. Sectarianism
is the death knell of the Left as much as centralization is, and in
this regard we continue to welcome experimentation with different
tactics (even those we disagree with).
1 6. We have three medium-term concrete goals. First, we need
to build an intellectual infrastructure. Mimicking the Mont Pelerin
Society of the neoliberal revolution, this is to be tasked with creating
a new ideology, economic and social models, and a vision of the good
to replace and surpass the emaciated ideals that rule our world today.
This is an infrastructure in the sense of requiring the construction
not just of ideas, but of institutions and material paths to inculcate,
embody and spread them.
17. We need to construct wide-scale media reform. In spite of the
seeming democratisation offered by the internet and social media,
traditional media outlets remain crucial in the selection and fram
ing of narratives, along with possessing the funds to prosecute
investigative journalism. Bringing these bodies as close as possible
to popular control is crucial to undoing the current presentation of
the state of things.
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1 8. Finally, we need to reconstitute various forms of class power.
Such a reconstitution must move beyond the notion that an organi
cally generated global proletariat already exists. Instead it must seek
to knit together a disparate array of partial proletarian identities, often
embodied in post-Fordist forms of precarious labour.
1 9. Groups and individuals are already at work on each of these, but
each is on their own insufficient. What is required is all three feed
ing back into one another. with each modifying the contemporary
conjunction in such a way that the others become more and more
effective. A positive feedback loop of infrastructural, ideological,
social and economic transformation, generating a new complex
hegemony, a new post-capitalist technosocial platform. History dem
onstrates that it has always been a broad assemblage of tactics and
organisations which has brought about systematic change; these
lessons must be learned.
20. To achieve each of these goals. on the most practical level we
hold that the accelerationist left must think more seriously about
the flows of resources and money required to build an effective new
political infrastructure. Beyond the 'people power' of bodies in the
street. we require funding. whether from governments, institutions.
think tanks, unions, or individual benefactors. We consider the loca
tion and conduction of such funding flows essential to begin recon
structing an ecology of effective accelerationist left organizations.
2 1 . We declare that only a Promethean politics of maximal mastery
over society and its environment is capable of either dealing with
global problems or achieving victory over capital. This mastery must
be distinguished from that beloved of thinkers of the original Enlight
enment. The clockwork universe of Laplace, so easily mastered
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given sufficient information, is long gone from the agenda of serious
scientific understanding. But this is not to align ourselves with the
tired residue of postmodernity, decrying mastery as proto-fascistic
or authority as innately illegitimate. Instead we propose that the
problems besetting our planet and our species oblige us to refurbish
mastery in a newly complex guise; whilst we cannot predict the
precise result of our actions, we can determine probabilistically likely
ranges of outcomes. What must be coupled to such complex systems
analysis is a new form of action: improvisatory and capable of execut
ing a design through a practice which works with the contingencies
it discovers only in the course of its acting, in a politics of geosocial
artistry and cunning rationality. A form of abductive experimentation
that seeks the best means to act in a complex world.
22. We need to revive the argument that was traditionally made
for post-capitalism: not only is capitalism an unjust and perverted
system, but it is also a system that holds back p rogress. Our tech
nological development is being suppressed by capitalism, as much
as it has been unleashed. Accelerationism is the basic belief that
these capacities can and should be let loose by moving beyond the
limitations imposed by capitalist society. The movement towards a
surpassing of our current constraints must include more than simply
a struggle for a more rational global society. We believe it must also
include recovering the dreams which transfixed many from the mid
dle of the nineteenth century until the dawn of the neoliberal era, of
the quest of homo sapiens towards expansion beyond the limitations
of the earth and our immediate bodily forms. These visions are today
viewed as relics of a more innocent moment. Yet they both diagnose
the staggering lack of imagination in our own time, and offer the
promise of a future that is affectively invigorating, as well as intel
lectually energising. After all, it is only a postcapitalist society, made
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possible by an accelerationist politics, which will ever be capable of
delivering on the promissory note of the mid-twentieth century's
space programmes, to shift beyond a world of minimal technical
upgrades towards all-encompassing change. Towards a time of col
lective self-mastery, and the properly alien future that entails and
enables. Towards a completion of the Enlightenment project of self
criticism and self mastery, rather than its elimination.
23. The choice facing us is severe: either a globalised post-capitalism
or a slow fragmentation towards primitivism, perpetual crisis, and
planetary ecological collapse.
24. The future needs to be constructed. It has been demolished by
neoliberal capitalism and reduced to a cut-price promise of greater
inequality, conflict, and chaos. This collapse in the idea of the future
is symptomatic of the regressive historical status of our age, rather
than, as cynics across the political spectrum would have us believe,
a sign of sceptical maturity. What accelerationism pushes towards is
a future that is more modern-an alternative modernity that neolib
eralism is inherently unable to generate. The future must be cracked
open once again, unfastening our horizons towards the universal
possibilities of the Outside.
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Some Reflections
on the
#Accelerate
Manifesto
Antonio Negri
2014
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The Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics ( MAP) opens with a
broad acknowledgment of the dramatic scenario of the current crisis:
Cataclysm. The denial of the future. An imminent apocalypse. But
don't be afraid! There is nothing politico-theological here. Anyone
attracted by that should not read this manifesto. There are also none
of the shibboleths of contemporary discourse. or rather. only one: the
collapse of the planet's climate system. But while this is important.
here it is completely subordinated to industrial policies, and approach
able only on the basis of a criticism of those. What is at the center of
the Manifesto is 'the increasing automation in production processes,
including the automation of "intellectual labor"', which would explain
the secular crisis of capitalism.1 Catastrophism? A misinterpreta
tion of Marx's notion of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall?2
I wouldn't say that.
Here, the reality of the crisis is identified as neoliberalism's aggres
sion against the structure of class relations that was organized in
the welfare state of the eighteenth and twentieth centuries; and the
cause of the crisis lies in the obstruction of productive capacities by
the new forms capitalist command had to assume against the new
figures of living labor. In other words, capitalism had to react to and
block the political potentiality of post-Fordist labor.
This is followed by a harsh criticism of both right-wing govern
mental forces, and of a good part of what remains of a Left-the
latter often deceived (at best) by the new and impossible hypothesis
of a Keynesian resistance, unable to imagine a radical alternative.
Under these conditions, the future appears to have been cancelled
1. A. Williams and N. Srnicek. '#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist Politics',
this volume, Section 1.2.
2. The 'tendency of the rate of profit to fall' is a classic problem of political economy.
In Marx's formulation, it describes the potential implosion of capitalism due to the
fall of profits over the long term. See K. Marx, Capital, vol. 3, chapter 13-trans.
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by the imposition of a complete paralysis of the political imaginary.
We cannot come out of this condition spontaneously. Only a system
atic class-based approach to the construction of a new economy,
along with a new political organization of workers, will make possible
the reconstruction of hegemony and will put proletarian hands on a
possible future.
There is still space for subversive knowledge!
The opening of this manifesto is adequate to the communist task
of today. It represents a decided and decisive leap forward-neces
sary if we want to enter the terrain of revolutionary reflection. But
above all, it gives a new 'form' to the movement, with 'form' here
meaning a constitutive apparatus that is full of potentiality, and
that aims to break the repressive and hierarchical horizon of state
supported contemporary capitalism. This is not about a reversal
of the state-form in general; rather, it refers to potentiality against
power-biopolitics against biopower. It is under this premise that
the possibility of an emancipatory future is radically opposed to the
present of capitalist dominion. And here, we can experiment with
the 'One divides into Two' formula that today constitutes the only
rational premise of a subversive praxis (rather than its conclusion).3
WIT H I N A N D AGAINST T H E T E N D E N CY OF CAPITALISM
Let's have a look at how the MAP theory develops. Its hypothesis is
that the liberation of the potentiality of labor against the blockage
determined by capitalism must happen within the evolution of capi
talism itself. It is about pursuing economic growth and technological
3. The expression 'One divides into Two' refers to the irreversible class division
occurring within capitalism. Specifically, the term originated in Maoist China in the
1960s to criticize any political recomposition with capitalism ('Two combines into
One'). See also M. Dolar. 'One Divides into Two', e-fluxjourna/33 (March2012) -trans.
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evolution (both of which are accompanied by growing social inequali
ties) in order to provoke a complete reversal of class relations. Within
and against: the traditional refrain of Operaism returns.4 The process
of liberation can only happen by accelerating capitalist development,
but-and this is important-without confusing acceleration with
speed,5 because acceleration here has all the characteristics of an
engine-apparatus, of an experimental process of discovery and crea
tion within the space of possibilities determined by capitalism itself.
In the Manifesto, the Marxian concept of 'tendency' is coupled
with a spatial analysis of the parameters of development: an insistence
on the territory as 'terra', on all the processes of territorialization and
deterritorialization, that was typical of Deleuze and Guattari. The fun
damental issue here is the power of cognitive labor that is determined
yet repressed by capitalism; constituted by capitalism yet reduced
within the growing algorithmic automation of dominion; ontologically
valorized (it increases the production of value), yet devalorized from
the monetary and disciplinary point of view (not only within the cur
rent crisis but also throughout the entire story of the development
and management of the state-form). With all due respect to those
who still comically believe that revolutionary possibilities must be
linked to the revival of the working class of the twentieth century,
such a potentiality clarifies that we are still dealing with a class, but
a
different one, and one endowed with a higher power. It is the class
�. Since Mario Tronti's essay on the so-called social factory ("La fabbrica e la societa',
Quademi Rossi 2 [1962]), and across the whole tradition of Italian Operaism, the
expression 'within and against capital' means that class struggle operates within
the contradictions of capitalist development that it generates. The working class
is not 'outside capital', as class struggle is the very engine that propels capitalist
development-trans.
5. Williams and Smicek, '#Accelerate', 2.2.
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of cognitive labor. This is the class to liberate, this is the class that
has to free itself.
In this way, the recovery of the Marxian and Leninist concept
of tendency is complete. Any 'futurist' illusion, so to speak, has been
removed, since it is class struggle that determines not only the
movement of capitalism. but also the capacity to turn its highest
abstraction into a solid machine for struggle.
The MAP's argument is entirely based on this capacity to liberate
the productive forces of cognitive labor. We have to remove any
illusion of a return to Fordist labor; we have to finally grasp the shift
from the hegemony of material labor to the hegemony of immaterial
labor. Therefore, considering the command of capital over technology,
it is necessary to attack 'capital's increasingly retrograde approach
to technology'.6 Productive forces are limited by the command of
capital. The key issue is then to liberate the latent productive forces,
as revolutionary materialism has always done. It is on this 'latency'
that we must now dwell.
But before doing so, we should note how the Manifesto's atten
tion turns insistently to the issue of organization. The MAP deploys
a strong criticism against the 'horizontal' and 'spontaneous' organi
zational concepts developed within contemporary movements, and
against their understanding of 'democracy as process. '7 According to
the Manifesto, these are mere fetishistic determinations of democracy
which have no effectual (destituent or constituent) consequences
on the institutions of capitalist command. This last assertion is per
haps excessive, considering the current movements that oppose
(albeit with neither alternatives nor proper tools) financial capital
and its institutional materializations. When it comes to revolution
ary transformation, we certainly cannot avoid a strong institutional
6. Williams and Smicek, '#Accelerate', 3.3.
7. Ibid. 3.13.
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transition, one stronger than any transition democratic horizontalism
could ever propose. Planning is necessary-either before or after the
revolutionary leap-in order to transform our abstract knowledge of
tendency into the constituent power of postcapitalist and communist
institutions to come. According to the MAP, such 'planning' no longer
constitutes the vertical command of the state over working class
society; rather, today it must take the form of the convergence of
productive and directional capacities into the Network. The following
must be taken as a task to elaborate further: planning the struggle
comes before planning production. We will discuss this later.
TH E R EA P P R O P R IATI O N O F F I X E D CAPITAL
Let's get back to us. First of all, the 'Manifesto for an Accelera
tionist Politics' is about unleashing the power of cognitive labor
by tearing it from its latency: 'We surely do not yet know what
a modern technosocial body can do!' Here, the Manifesto insists
on two elements. The first element is what I would call the 'reap
propriation of fixed capital' and the consequent anthropologi
cal transformation of the working subject. 8 The second element
is sociopolitical: such a new potentiality of our bodies is essen
tially collective and political. In other words, the surplus added in
production is derived primarily from socially productive coopera
tion. This is probably the most crucial passage of the Manifesto.9
8. In Marx (and traditional!y in political economy), "fixed capital' refers to money
invested in fixed assets, such as buildings, machinery. and infrastructures (as
opposed to "circulating capital', which includes raw materials and workers' wages).
In post-Fordism, this capital may include information technologies, personal media,
and also intangible assets like software, patents, and forms of collective knowledge.
The 'reappropriation of fixed capital' refers then to the reappropriation of a
productive capacity (also under the form of value and welfare) by the collectivity
of workers-trans.
9. Williams and Srnicek, '#Accelerate", 3.6.
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With an attitude that attenuates the humanism present in philosophi
cal critique, the MAP insists on the material and technical qualities of
the corporeal reappropriation of fixed capital. Productive quantifica
tion, economic modeling, big data analysis, and the most abstract
cognitive models are all appropriated by worker-subjects through
education and science. The use of mathematical models and algo
rithms by capital does not make them a feature of capital. It is not a
problem of mathematics-it is a problem of power.
No doubt, there is some optimism in this Manifesto. Such an
optimistic perception of the technosocial body is not very useful for
the critique of the complex human-machine relationship, but nonethe
less this Machiavellian optimism helps us to dive into the discussion
about organization, which is the most urgent one today. Once the
discussion is brought back to the issue of power, it leads directly
to the issue of organization. Says the MAP: the Left has to develop
socio-technological hegemony-'material platforms of production,
finance, logistics, and consumption can and will be reprogrammed
and reformatted towards post-capitalist ends'.10 Without a doubt,
there is a strong reliance on objectivity and materiality, on a sort of
Oasein of development-and consequently a certain underestimation
of the social, political. and cooperative elements that we assumed
to be there when we agreed to the basic protocol: 'One divides into
Two.' However, such an underestimation should not prevent us from
recognizing the importance of acquiring the highest techniques
employed by capitalistic command, as well as the abstraction of
labor, in order to bring them back to a communist administration
performed 'by the things themselves'. I understand the passage on
technopolitical hegemony in this way: we first have to mature the
10. Ibid., 3.11.
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whole complex of productive potentialities of cognitive labor in order
to advance a new hegemony.
AN ECO LOGY OF N EW I N STITUTI O N S
At this point. the problem o f organization i s properly posed. As
already said, a new configuration of the relation between network
and planning is proposed against extrem ist horizontalism. Against
any peaceful conception of democracy as process, a new attention
shifts from the means (voting, democratic representation, constitu
tional state, and so forth) to the ends (collective emancipation and
self-government). Obviously, new illusions of centralism and empty
reinterpretations of the 'proletarian dictatorship' are not repeated by
the authors. The MAP grasps the opportunity to clarify this by pro
posing a sort of 'ecology of organizations,' insisting on a framework
of multiple forces that come into resonance with each other and
therefore manage to produce engines of collective decision-making
beyond any sectarianism.11 You may have doubts about such a pro
posal; you may recognize difficulties that are greater than the happy
options that are offered. Nevertheless, this is a direction to explore.
This is even clearer today, at the end of the cycle of struggles that
started in 2011, which have all shown insuperable limits regarding their
forms of organization throughout their clashes with power, despite
their strength and new genuine revolutionary contents.
The MAP proposes three urgent goals that are appropriate and
realistic for the time being: First of all, building a new kind of intel
lectual infrastructure to support a new ideal project and the study
of new economic models. Second, organizing a strong initiative
on the terrain of mainstream mass media: the internet and social
networks have undoubtedly democratized communication and they
11. Ibid., 3.15.
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have been very useful for global struggles, yet communication still
remains subjugated to its most traditional forms. The task becomes
one of focusing substantial resources and all the energy possible in
order to get our hands on adequate means of communication. The
third goal is activating all possible institutional forms of class power
(transitional and permanent, political and unionist. global and local).
A unitary constitution of class power will be possible only through
the assemblage and hybridization of all experiences developed so far,
and those yet to be invented.
An Enlightenment aspiration-'the future needs to be con
structed'-runs through the entire Manifesto.12 A Promethean and
humanist politics resounds as well. Such a humanism, however, going
beyond the limits imposed by capitalist society, is open to posthuman
and scientific utopias, reviving the dreams of twentieth-century space
exploration or conceiving new impregnable barriers against death and
all the accidents of life. Rational imagination must be accompanied
by the collective fantasy of new worlds, organizing a strong self
valorization of labor and society. The most modern epoch that we
have experienced has shown us that there is nothing but an Inside
of globalization, that there is no longer an Outside. Today, however,
reformulating again the issue of reconstructing the future, we have
the necessity-and also the possibility-of bringing the Outside in,
to breathe a powerful life into the Inside.
What can be said about this document? Some of us perceive it as
an Anglo-Saxon complement to the perspective of post-Operaism
less inclined to revive socialist humanism, and better able to develop
a new positive humanism. The name 'accelerationism' is certainly
unfortunate, as it ascribes a sense of 'futurism' to something that is
not at all futuristic. The document is undoubtedly timely, not only in its
12. Ibid., 3.2L\.
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critique of 'real' social democracy and socialism, but also in its analysis
of social movements since 2011. It posits, with extreme strength, the
issue of the tendency of capitalistic development, of the need for
both its reappropriation and for its rupture. On this basis, it advances
the construction of a communist program. These are strong legs on
which to move forward.
ON TH E T H R ES H O L D S O F T E C H N O PO LITICS
Some criticism may be useful at this point to reopen the discus
sion and push the argument forward towards points of agreement.
Firstly, there is too much determinism in this project, both political
and technological. The relation to historicity (or, if you prefer, to
history, to contemporaneity, to praxis) is likely to be distorted by
something that we are not inclined to call teleology, but that looks
like teleology. The relation to singularities and therefore the capac
ity to understand tendency as virtual (involving singularities), and
material determination (that pushes tendency forward) as a power
of subjectivization, appears to me to be underestimated. Tendency
can be defined only as an open relation, as a constitutive relation
that is animated by class subjects. It may be objected that this
insistence on openness may lead to perverse effects, for example,
to a framework so heterogeneous that it becomes chaotic and
therefore irresolvable-a multiplicity that is enlarged and made so
gigantic that it constitutes a bad infinity. Undoubtedly such a 'bad
infinity' is what post-Operaism and even A Thousand Plateaus have
sometimes appeared to suggest. This is a difficult and crucial point.
Let's dig further into it.
For this problem, the MAP has come up with a good solution
when it places a transformative anthropology of the workers' bodies
right at the center of the relation between subject and object (what
I would call the relation between the technical composition and the
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political composition of the proletariat. being traditionally accustomed
to other terminologies).13 In this way, the drift of pluralism into a
'bad infinity' can be avoided. However. if we want to continue on
this ground-which I believe to be useful and decisive-we have
to break the relentless progression of productive tension on which
the Manifesto relies. We have to identify the thresholds of develop
ment and the consolidations of such thresholds-what Deleuze and
Guattari would call ogencements co//ectifs. These consolidations are
the reappropriation of fixed capital and the transformation of labor
power; they consist of anthropologies. languages. and activities. These
historically constituted thresholds arise in the relationship between
the technical and the political composition of the proletariat. Without
such consolidations, a political program-as transitory as it may be-is
impossible. It is precisely because we cannot clarify such a relation
ship between technical composition and political composition. that
at times we find ourselves methodologically helpless and politically
powerless. Conversely, it is the determination of a historic threshold
and the awareness of a specific modality of technopolitical relations.
which allows for the formulation of both an organizational process
and an appropriate program of action.
Mind you: posing this problem implicitly raises the problem of
how to better define the process in which the relationship between
singularity and the common grows and consolidates (acknowledg
ing the progressive nature of the productive tendency). We need to
13. The notion of class composition was introduced by Italian Operaism to
overcome the trite debates on 'class consciousness' typical of the 1960s. Technical
composition refers to the all material and also cultural forms of labor in a specific
economic regime; political composition refers to the clash with and transformation
of these forms into a political project. A given technical composition is not
automatically conducive to a virtuous political recomposition-trans.
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specify what the common is in any technological assemblage, while
developing a specific study of the anthrqpology of production.
T H E H EG E M O NY O F C O O P E RAT I O N
To return again to the issue of the reappropriation of fixed capital:
as I have pointed out, in the MAP, the cooperative dimension of
production (and particularly the production of subjectivities) is under
estimated in relation to technological criteria. Technical parameters
of productivity aside, the material aspects of production in fact
also describe the anthropological transformation of labor power.
I insist on this point. The cooperative element does become central
and conducive to a possible hegemony within the set of languages,
algorithms, functions. and technological knowhow that constitutes
the contemporary proletariat. Such a statement comes from noticing
that the structure itself of capitalist exploitation has now changed.
Capital continues to exploit, but paradoxically in limited forms-when
compared to its power of surplus-labor extraction from society as a
whole. However, when we become aware of this new determina
tion, we realize that fixed capital (i.e., the part of the capital directly
involved in the production of surplus value) essentially establishes
itself in the surplus determined by cooperation. Such a cooperation
is something incommensurable: as Marx said, it is not the sum of the
surplus labor of two or more workers but the surplus produced by
the fact that they work together (in short, the surplus that is beyond
the sum itself).14
If we assume the primacy of extractive capital over exploitative
capital (including of course the latter in the former), we can reach
some interesting conclusions. I will briefly mention one. The transition
1�. A canonical quote: The sum total of the mechanical forces exerted by isolated
workers differs from the social force that is developed when many hands cooperate in
the same undivided operation.' Karl Marx, Capital, vol. 1 (London: Penguin, 1976). 443.
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between Fordism and post-Fordism was once described as the appli
cation of 'automation' to the factory and 'informatization' to society.
The latter is of great i mportance in the process that leads to the
complete (real) subsumption of society within capital-informatiza
tion is indeed interpreting and leading this tendency. lnformatization
is indeed more important than automation, which by itself, in that
specific historical moment, managed to characterize a new social
form only in a partial and precarious way. fas the Manifesto clari
fies and experience confirms, today we are well beyond that point.
Productive society appears not only globally informatized, but such
a computerized social world is in itself reorganized and automatized
according to new criteria in the management of the labor market and
new hierarchical parameters in the management of society. When
production is socially generalized through cognitive work and social
knowledge, informatization remains the most valuable form of fixed
capital, while automation becomes the cement of capitalist organiza
tion, bending both informatics and the information society back into
itself. Information technology is thus subordinated to automation. The
command of capitalist algorithms is marked by this transformation
of production.
We are thus at a higher level of real subsumption. H ence the
great role played by logistics, which, after being automated, began
to configure any and all territorial dimensions of capitalist command
and to establish internal and external hierarchies of global space, as
does the algorithmic machinery that centralizes and commands, by
degrees of abstraction and branches of knowledge, with variables of
frequency and function-that complex system of knowledge that
since Marx we have been accustomed to calling General Intellect. Now,
if extractive capitalism expands its power of exploitation extensively to
any social infrastructure and intensively to any degree of abstraction
of the productive machine (at any level of global finance, for instance),
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it will be necessary to reopen the debate on the reappropriation of fixed
capital within such a practical and theoretical space. The construc
tion of new struggles is to be measured a_ccording to such a space.
Fixed capital can potentially be reappropriated by the proletariat. This
is the potentiality that must be liberated.
THE CURRENCY OF THE COMMON AN D THE REFUSAL OF LABOR
One last theme-omitted by the MAP, but entirely consistent with
its theoretical argumentation-is 'the currency of the common.' The
authors of the Manifesto are well aware that today, money has the
particular function-as an abstract machine-of being the supreme
form of measurement of the value extracted from society through
the real subsumption of this current society by capital. The same
scheme that describes the extraction/exploitation of social labor
forces us to recognize money: as measure-money, h ierarchy-money,
planning-money. Such a monetary abstraction, as a tendency of the
becoming-hegemonic of financial capital itself, also points to potential
forms of resistance and subversion at the same highest level. The
communist program for a postcapitalist future should be carried out
on this terrain, not only by advancing the proletarian reappropriation
of wealth, but by building a hegemonic power-thus working on 'the
common' that is at the basis of both the highest extraction/abstrac
tion of value from labor and its universal translation into money. This
is today the meaning of 'the currency of the common.' Nothing
utopian, but rather a programmatic and paradigmatic indication of
how to anticipate, within struggles, the attack on the measure of
labor imposed by capital, on the hierarchies of surplus labor (imposed
directly by bosses), and on the social general distribution of income
imposed by the capitalist state. On this, a great deal of work is still
to be done.
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To conclude (though there are so many things left to discuss! ) ,
what does i t mean t o traverse the tendency of capitalism up t o the
end, and to beat capitalism itself in this process? Just one example:
today it means to renew the slogan 'Refusal of labor'. The struggle
against algorithmic automation must positively grasp the increase of
productivity that is determined by it, and then it must enforce drastic
reductions of the labor time disciplined or controlled by machines and,
at the same time. it must result in consistent and increasingly sub
stantial salary increases. On the one hand, the time at the service of
automatons must be adjusted in a manner equal to all. On the other
hand, a base income must be instituted so as to translate any figure
of labor into the recognition of the equal participation of all in the
construction of collective wealth. In this way, everyone will be able
to freely increase to their best ability their own joie de vivre (recalling
Marx's appreciation of Fourier). All this must be immediately claimed
through the struggle. And, at this point, we should not forget to open
up another theme: the production of subjectivity, the agonistic use
of passions, and the historical dialectics this opens against capitalist
and sovereign command.
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Red Stack Attack !
Algo rith m s , Capital
and the Auto m at i o n
o f t h e Co m m o n
T i z i a n a Te rra n ova
2014
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What is at stake in the following1 is the relationship between 'algo
rithms' and 'capital'-that is, 'the increasing centrality of algorithms
to organizational practices arising out of the centrality of information
and communication technologies stretching all the way from produc
tion to circulation, from industrial logistics to financial speculation,
from urban planning and design to social communication'.2 Th ese
apparently esoteric mathematical structures have also become part
of the daily life of users of contemporary digital and networked
media. Most users of the Internet daily interface or are subjected to
the powers of algorithms such as Google's Pagerank (which sorts
the results of our search queries) or Facebook Edgerank (which
automatically decides in which order we should get our news on our
feed) not to mention the many other less known algorithms (Appin
ions, Klout, Hummingbird, PKC, Perlin noise, Cinematch, KDP Select
and many more) which modulate our relationship with data, digital
1. This essay is the outcome of a research process which involves a series of Italian
Institutions of autoformazione of post-autonomist inspiration ('free' universities
engaged in grassroots organization of public seminars, conferences, workshops
etc) and anglophone social networks of scholars and researchers engaging with
digital media theory and practice officially affiliated with universities, journals and
research centres. but also artists, activists, precarious knowledge workers and
such likes. It refers to a workshop which took place in London in January 2014.
hosted by the Digital Culture Unit at the Centre for Cultural Studies (Goldsmiths'
College, University of London). The workshop was the outcome of a process of
reftection and organization that started with the Italian free university collective
Uninomade 2.0 in early 2013 and continued across mailing lists and websites such
as Euronomade (http://www.euronomade.info/), Effemera, Commonware (http://
www.commonware.org/), I quaderni di San Precario (http://quaderni.sanprecario.
info/) and others. More than a traditional essay, then, it aims to be a synthetic but
hopefully also inventive document which plunges into a distributed 'social research
network' articulating a series of problems, theses and concerns at the crossing
between political theory and research into science. technology and capitalism.
2. In the words of the programme of the worshop from which this essay originated:
http://quaderni.sanprecario.info/201'1/01/workshop-algorithms/.
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devices and each other. This widespread presence of algorithms in
the daily life of digital culture. however, is only one of the expressions
of the pervasiveness of computational techniques as they become
increasingly coextensive with processes of production, consumption
and distribution displayed in logistics, finance, architecture. medicine,
urban planning, infographics, advertising, dating. gaming, publishing
and all kinds of creative expressions (music, graphics, dance etc).
The staging of the encounter between 'algorithms' and 'capital'
as a political problem invokes the possibility of breaking with the spell
of 'capitalist realism'-that is. the idea that capitalism constitutes
the only possible economy-while at the same time claiming that
new ways of organizing the production and distribution of wealth
need to seize on scientific and technological developments.3 Going
beyond the opposition between state and market. public and private,
the concept of the common is used here as a way to instigate the
thought and practice of a possible post-capitalist mode of existence
for networked digital media.
A LG O R I T H M S , CAPITAL A N D AUTOMAT I O N
Looking at algorithms from a perspective that seeks the constitution
of a new political rationality around the concept of the 'common'
means engaging with the ways in which algorithms are deeply impli
cated in the changing nature of automation. Automation is described
by Marx as a process of absorption into the machine of the 'general
productive forces of the social brain' such as ' knowledge and skills',�
which hence appear as an attribute of capital rather than as the
product of social labour. Looking at the history of the implication
3. M. Fisher. Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative (London: Zero Books.
2009); A. Williams and N. Smicek. '#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist
Politics', this volume.
4. K. Marx. 'Fragment on Machines', this volume, 55.
N
ro
r<)
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of capital and technology, it is clear how automation has evolved
away from the thermo-mechanical model of the early industrial
assembly line toward the electro-computational dispersed networks
of contemporary capitalism. Hence it is possible to read algorithms
as part of a genealogical line that, as Marx put it in the ' Fragment
on Machines', starting with the adoption of technology by capitalism
as fixed capital, pushes the former through several metamorphoses
'whose culmination is the machine, or rather, an automatic system
of machinery... set in motion by an automaton, a moving power that
moves itself'.5 The industrial automaton was clearly thermodynamical,
and gave rise to a system 'consisting of numerous mechanical and
intellectual organs so that workers themselves are cast merely as
its conscious linkages'. 6 The digital automaton, however, is electro
computational, it puts 'the soul to work' and involves primarily the
nervous system and the brain and comprises 'possibilities of virtuality,
simulation, abstraction, feedback and autonomous processes'.7 The
digital automaton unfolds in networks consisting of electronic and
nervous connections so that users themselves are cast as quasi
automatic relays of a ceaseless infonmation flow. It is in this wider
assemblage, then, that algorithms need to be located when discuss
ing the new modes of automation.
Quoting a textbook of computer science, Andrew Goffey
describes algorithms as 'the unifying concept for all the activities
which computer scientists engage in ... and the fundamental entity with
5. Ibid., 53.
6. Ibid.
7. M. Fuller, Software Studies: A Lexicon (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2008);
F. Berardi, The Soul at Work: From Alienation to Autonomy. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 2009).
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which computer scientists operate'.8 An algorithm can be provisionally
defined as the 'description of the method by which a task is to be
accomplished' by means of sequences of steps or instructions. sets
of ordered steps that operate on data and computational structures.
As such, an algorithm is an abstraction. 'having an autonomous
existence independent of what computer scientists like to refer to
as "implementation details," that is, its embodiment in a particular
programming language for a particular machine architecture'.9 It can
vary i n complexity from the most simple set of rules described in
natural language (such as those used to generate coordinated pat
terns of movement in smart mobs) to the most complex mathematical
formulas involving all kinds of variables (as in the famous Monte
Carlo algorithm used to solve problems in nuclear physics and later
also applied to stock markets and now to the study of non-linear
technological diffusion processes). At the same time, in order to work.
algorithms must exist as part of assemblages that include hardware,
data, data structures (such as lists. databases. memory, etc.), and
the behaviours and actions of bodies. For the algorithm to become
social software. in fact, 'it must gain its power as a social or cultural
artifact and process by means of a better and better accommodation
to behaviors and bodies which happen on its outside'.10
Furthermore, as contemporary algorithms become increasingly
exposed to larger and larger data sets (and in general to a growing
entropy in the flow of data also known as Big Data). they are. accord
ing to Luciana Parisi. becoming something more then mere sets of
instructions to be performed: 'infinite amounts of information interfere
with and re-program algorithmic procedures ... and data produce alien
8. A. Goffey. 'Algorithm', in Fuller (ed), Software Studies. 15-17: 15.
9. Ibid.
10. Fuller, Introduction to Fuller (ed). Software Studies. 5.
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rules'.11 It seems clear from this brief account. then. that algorithms
are neither a homogeneous set of techniques, nor do they guarantee
'the infallible execution of automated order .and control'.12
From the point of view of capitalism. however. algorithms are
mainly a form of 'fixed capital'-that is, they are just means of produc
tion. They encode a certain quantity of social knowledge (abstracted
from that elaborated by mathematicians. programmers. but also users'
·
activities). but they are not valuable per se. In the current economy,
they are valuable only in as much as they allow for the conversion of
such knowledge into exchange value (monetization) and its (expo
nentially increasing) accumulation (the titanic quasi-monopolies of the
social Internet). In as much as they constitute fixed capital. algorithms
such as Google's Page Rank and Facebook's Edgerank appear 'as a
presupposition against which the value-creating power of the indi
vidual labour capacity is an infinitesimal. vanishing magnitude',13 and
that is why calls for individual retributions to users for their 'free labor'
are misplaced. It is clear that for Marx what needs to be compensated
is not the individual work of the user, but the much larger powers of
social cooperation thus unleashed, and that this compensation implies
a profound transformation of the grip that the social relation that we
call the capitalist economy has on society.
From the point of view of capital. then. algorithms are just fixed
capital. means of production finalized to achieve an economic return.
But that does not mean that, like all technologies and techniques, that is
all that they are. Marx explicitly states that even as capital appropriates
technology as the most effective form of the subsumption of labor,
11. L. Parisi, Contagious Architecture: Computation. Aesthetics, Space (Cambridge,
Mass. and Sydney: MIT Press. 2013), See also 'Automated Architecture', this vol�me.
12. Ibid. , ix.
13. Marx, 'Fragment', this volume, 55.
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that does not mean that this is all that can be said about it. Its exist
ence as machinery, he insists, is not 'identical with its existence as
capital... and therefore it does not follow that subsumption under the
social relation of capital is the most appropriate and ultimate social
relation of production for the application of machinery'.14 It is then
essential to remember that the instrumental value that algorithms
have for capital does not exhaust the 'value' of technology in general
and algorithms in particular-that is, their capacity to express not just
'use value' as Marx put it, but also aesthetic. existential, social, and
ethical values. Wasn't it this clash between the necessity of capital to
reduce software development to exchange value, thus marginalizing
the aesthetic and ethical values of software creation, that pushed
Richard Stallman and countless hackers and engineers towards the
Free and Open Source Movement? Isn't the enthusiasm that animates
hack-meetings and hacker-spaces fueled by the energy liberated from
the constraints of 'working' for a company in order to remain faithful
to one's own aesthetics and ethics of coding?
Contrary to some variants of Marxism which tend to identify
technology completely with 'dead labor', 'fixed capital' or 'instrumental
rationality', and hence with control and capture. it seems important
to remember how, for M arx, the evolution of machinery also indexes
a level of development of productive powers that are unleashed but
never totally contained by the capitalist economy. What interested
Marx (and what makes his work still relevant to those who strive for
a post-capitalist mode of existence) is the way in which, so he claims.
the tendency of capital to invest in technology to automate and hence
reduce its labor costs to a minimum potentially frees up a 'surplus'
of time and energy (labor) or an excess of productive capacity in
relation to the basic, important and necessary labor of reproduction
14. Marx, 57.
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(a global economy, for example, should first of all produce enough
wealth for all members of a planetary population to be adequately
fed, clothed, cured and sheltered) : However, what characterizes
a capitalist economy is that this surplus of time and energy is not
simply released, but must be constantly reabsorbed in the cycle of
production of exchange value leading to increasing accumulation of
wealth by the few (the collective capitalist) at the expense of the
many (the multitudes).
Automation, then, when seen from the point of view of capital,
must always be balanced with new ways to control (that is, absorb
and exhaust) the time and energy thus released. It must produce
poverty and stress when there should be wealth and leisure. It must
make direct labour the measure of value even when it is apparent
that science, technology and social cooperation constitute the source
of the wealth produced. It thus inevitably leads to the periodic and
widespread destruction of this accumulated wealth, in the form of
psychic burnout, environmental catastrophe and physical destruction
of the wealth through war. It creates hunger where there should be
satiety, it puts food banks next to the opulence of the super-rich.
That is why the notion of a post-capitalist mode of existence must
become believable, that is, it must become what Maurizio Lazzarato
described as an enduring autonomous focus of subjectivation. What
a post-capitalist commonism
then can aim for is not only a better
distribution of wealth compared to the unsustainable one that we
have today, but also a reclaiming of 'disposable time'-that is, time and
energy freed from work to be deployed in developing and complicating
the very notion of what is 'necessary'.
The history of capitalism has shown that automation as such has
not reduced the quantity and intensity of labor demanded by managers
and capitalists. On the contrary, in as much as technology is only a
means of production to capital, where it has been able to deploy other
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means, it has not innovated. For example, industrial technologies of
automation in the factory do not seem to have recently experienced
any significant technological breakthroughs. Most industrial labor
today is still heavily manual, automated only in the sense of being
hooked up to the speed of electronic networks of prototyping, market
ing and distribution; and it is rendered economically sustainable only
by political means-that is, by exploiting geo-political and economic
differences (arbitrage) on a global scale and by controlling migration
flows through new technologies of the border. The state of things
in most industries today is intensified exploitation, which produces
an impoverished mode of mass production and consumption that is
damaging to both to the body, subjectivity, social relations and the
environment. As Marx put it, disposable time released by automation
should allow for a change in the very essence of the 'human' so
that the new subjectivity is allowed to return to the performing of
necessary labor in such a way as to redefine what is necessary and
what is needed.
It is not then simply about arguing for a 'return' to simpler times,
but on the contrary a matter of acknowledging that growing food
and feeding populations, constructing shelter and adequate housing,
learning and researching, caring for the children, the sick and the
elderly requires the mobilization of social invention and cooperation.
The whole process is thus transformed from a process of production
by the many for the few steeped in impoverishment and stress to
one where the many redefine the meaning of what is necessary and
valuable, while inventing new ways of achieving it. This corresponds
in a way to the notion of 'commonfare' as recently elaborated by
Andrea Fumagalli and Carlo Vercellone, implying, in the latter's words,
'the socialization of investment and money and the question of the
modes of management and organisation which allow for an authentic
democratic reappropriation of the institutions of We\fare ... and the
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ecologic re-structuring of our systems of production'.15 We need to
ask then not only how algorithmic automation works today (mainly
in terms of control and monetization, feeding the debt economy)
but also what kind of time and energy it subsumes and how it might
be made to work once taken up by different social and political
assemblages-autonomous ones not subsumed by or subjected to
the capitalist drive to accumulation and exploitation.
THE RED STACK: VIRTUAL MONEY, SOCIAL N ETWORKS,
BIO-HYPERMEDIA
In a recent intervention, digital media and political theorist Benjamin
H. Bratton has argued that we are witnessing the emergence of a
new nomos of the earth, where older geopolitical divisions linked
to territorial sovereign powers are intersecting the new nomos of
the Internet and new forms of sovereignty extending in electronic
space.16 This new heterogenous nomos involves the overlapping of
national governments (China, United States, European Union, Brasil,
Egypt and such likes), transnational bodies (the IMF, the WTO, the
European Banks and NGOs of various types), and corporations such
as Google, Facebook, Apple, Amazon, etc., producing differentiated
patterns of mutual accommodation marked by moments of conflict
Drawing on the organizational structure of computer networks or
'the OSI network model. upon with the TCP/IP stack and the global
15. C. Vercellone, 'From the crisis to the '"commonfare'" as new mode of production',
in special section on Eurocrisis (ed. G. Amendola. S. Mezzadra and T. Terranova),
Theory, Culture and Society, forthcoming; also A. Fumagalli, "Digital (Crypto)
Money and Alternative Financial Circuits: Lead the Attack to the Heart of the
State, sorry. of Financial Market', http://quaderni.sanprecario.info/2014/02/digital
crypto-money-and-alternative-financial-circuits-lead-the-attack-to-the-heart-of
the-state-sorry-of-financial-market-by-andrea-fumagallV.
16. B. Bratton, 'On the Nomos of the Cloud' (2012), http://bratton.info/projects/
talks/on-the-nomos-of-the-cloud-the-stack-deep-address-integral-geography/pf/
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internet itself is indirectly based', Bratton has developed the concept
and/or prototype of the 'stack' to define the features of 'a possible
new nomos of the earth linking technology, nature and the human'.17
The stack supports and modulates a kind of 'social cybernetics' able
to compose 'both equilibrium and emergence'. As a 'megastructure',
the stack implies a 'confluence of interoperable standards-based
complex material-information systems of systems, organized accord
ing to a vertical section. topographic model of layers and protocols...
composed equally of social. human and "analog" layers (chthonic
energy sources, gestures. affects, user-actants, interfaces, cities and
streets, rooms and buildings. organic and inorganic envelopes) and
informational, non-human computational and "digital" layers (mul
tiplexed fiber-optic cables, datacenters. databases, data standards
and protocols, urban-scale networks, embedded systems. universal
addressing tables)'.18
In this section. drawing on Bratton's political prototype. I would
like to propose the concept of the 'Red Stack'-that is, a new nornos
for the post-capitalist common. Materializing the 'red stack' involves
engaging with (at least) three levels of socio-technical innovation:
virtual money, social networks. and bio-hypermedia. These three
levels. although 'stacked', that is, layered, are to be understood at the
same time as interacting transversally and nonlinearly. They constitute
a possible way to think about an infrastructure of autonomization
linking together technology and subjectivation.
VI RTUAL M O N EY
The contemporary economy, as Christian Marazzi and others have
argued, is founded on a form of money which has been turned into a
17. Ibid.
18. lbid.
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series of signs, with no fixed referent (such as gold) to anchor them,
explicitly dependent on the computational automation of simulational
models, screen media with automated displays of data (indexes,
graphics etc) and alga-trading (bot-to-bot transactions) as its emerg
ing mode of automation.19 As Toni Negri also puts it, 'today, money
has the particular function-as an abstract machine-of being the
supreme form of measurement of the value extracted from society
through the real subsumption of this current society by capital'.20
Since ownership and control of capital-money (different, as Maurizio
Lazzarato remind us, from wage-money, in its capacity to be used
not only as a means of exchange, but as a means of investment
empowering certain futures over others) is crucial to maintaining
populations bonded to the current power relation. how can we turn
financial money into the money of the common? An experiment such
as Bitcoin demonstrates that in a way 'the taboo on money has been
broken',21 and that beyond the limits of this experience, forkings are
already developing in different directions. What kind of relationship
can be established between the algorithms of money-creation and 'a
constituent practice which affirms other criteria for the measurement
of wealth, valorizing new and old collective needs outside the logic of
finance'?22 Current attempts to develop new kinds of cryptocurrencies
19. C. Marazzi, 'Money in the World Crisis: The New Basis of Capitalist Power',
https://webspace.utexas.edu/hcleaver/www/357U357Lmarazzi.html.
20. A. Negri, 'Reflections on the Accelerationist Manifesto', this volume, 377.
21. D. Jaromil Rojio, ' Bitcoin. la fine del tabu della moneta' (201"1), in 1 Quaderni di
San Precario. (http://quademi.sanprecario.info/201"1/01/bitcoin-la-fine-del-tabu
della-moneta-di-denis-jaromil-roio/).
22. S. Lucarelli, 'II principio della liquidita e la sua corruzione. Un contributo alls
discussione su algoritmi e capitale' (201"1), in 1 Quaderni di san Precario, http://
quaderni.sanprecario.info/201"1/02/il-principio-della-liquidita-e-la-sua-corruzione
un-contributo-alla-discussione-su-algoritmi-e-capitale-di-stefano-lucarelli/.
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must be judged, valued and rethought on the basis of this simple
question as posed by Andrea Fumagalli: Is the currency created not
limited solely to being a means of exchange, but can it also affect the
entire cycle of money creation-from finance to exchange?23 Does
it allow speculation and hoarding, or does it promote investment
in post-capitalist projects and facilitate freedom from exploitation,
autonomy of organization etc.? What is becoming increasingly clear
is that algorithms are an essential part of the process of creation of
the money of the common, but that algorithms also have politics
(What are the gendered politics of individual 'mining', for example,
and of the complex technical knowledge and machinery implied in
mining bitcoins?) Furthermore, the drive to completely automate
money production in order to escape the fallacies of subjective fac
tors and social relations might cause such relations to come back in
the form of speculative trading. In the same way as financial capital
is intrinsically linked to a certain kind of subjectivity (the financial
predator narrated by Hollywood cinema), so an autonomous form
of money needs to be both jacked into and productive of a new kind
of subjectivity not limited to the hacking milieu as such, but at the
same time oriented not towards monetization and accumulation but
towards the empowering of social cooperation. Other questions that
the design of the money of the common might involve are: Is it pos
sible to draw on the current financia\ization of the Internet by cor
porations such as Google (with its Adsense/Adword programme) to
subtract money from the circuit of capitalist accumulation and tum
it into a money able to finance new forms of commonfare (educa
tion, research , health, environment etc) ? What are the lessons to be
learned from crowdfunding models and their limits in thinking about
23. A. Fumagalli, 'Commonfare: Per la riappropriaz·1one del libero accesso ai beni
comuni' (201'1), in Doppio Zero (http://www.doppiozero.com/materiali/quinto
stato/commonfare).
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new forms of financing autonomous projects of social cooperation?
How can we perfect and extend experiments such as that carried
out by the Inter-Occupy movement during the Katrina hurricane in
turning social networks into crowdfunding networks which can then
be used as logistical infrastructure able to move not only information,
but also physical goods?24
SOCIAL NETWORKS
Over the past ten years. digital media have undergone a process of
becoming social that has introduced genuine innovation in relation
to previous forms of social software (mailing lists, forums, multi-user
domains. etc). If mailing lists, for example, drew on the communica
tional language of sending and receiving, social network sites and
the diffusion of (proprietary) social plug-ins have turned the social
relation itself into the content of new computational procedures.
When sending and receiving a message, we can say that algo
rithms operate outside the social relation as such, in the space of
the transmission and distribution of messages; but social network
software intervenes directly in the social relationship. Indeed, digital
technologies and social network sites 'cut into' the social relation
as such-that is, they turn it into a discrete object and introduce
a new supplementary relation.25 Jf, with Gabriel Tarde and Michel
Foucault. we understan d the social relation as an asymmetrical
2LI. Common Ground Collective. 'Common Ground Collective, Food, not Bombs and
Occupy Movement form Coalition to help Isaac & Kathrina Victims' (2012), lnteroccupy.
net (http://1nteroccupy.neVblog/common-ground-collective-food-not-bombs-and
occupy-movement-form-coalition-to-help-isaac-katrina-victims/).
25. B. Stiegler, 'The Most Precious Good in the Era of Social Technologies', in G.
Lovink and M. Rasch (eds), Unlike Us Reader: Social Media Monopolies and
TheirAlternatives (Amsterdam: Institute of Network Culture, 2013), 16-30, http://
networkcultures.org/wpmu/portal/publication/unlike-us-reader-social-media
monopolies-and-their-alternatives/.
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relation involving at least two poles (one active and the other recep
tive) and characterized by a certain degree of freedom, we can
think of actions such as liking and being liked, writing and reading,
looking and being looked at, tagging and being tagged. and even
buying and selling as the kind of conducts that transindividuate the
social (they induce the passage from the pre-individual through
the individual to the collective). In social network sites and social
plug-ins these actions become discrete technical objects (like but
tons, comment boxes, tags etc) which are then linked to underlying
data structures (for example the social graph) and subjected to
the power of ranking of algorithms. This produces the character
istic spatio-temporal modality of digital sociality today: the feed,
an algorithmically customized flow of opinions, beliefs, statements,
desires expressed in words, images, sounds etc. Much reviled in
contemporary critical theory for their supposedly homogenizing
effect, these new technologies of the social, however, also open
the possibility of experimenting with many-to-many interaction and
thus with the very processes of individuation. Political experiments
(see the various Internet-based parties such as the 5 star move
ment, Pirate Party, Partido X) draw on the powers of these new
socio-technical structures in order to produce massive processes of
participation and deliberation; but. as with Bitcoin, they also show
the far from resolved processes that link political subjectivation
to algorithmic automation. They can function, however, because
they draw on widely socialized new knowledges and crafts (how
to construct a profile, how to cultivate a public, how to share and
comment, how to make and post photos, videos, notes, how to pub
licize events) and on 'soft skills' of expression and relation (humour,
argumentation, sparring) which are not implicitly good or bad, but
present a series of affordances or degrees of freedom of expres
sion for political action that cannot be left to capitalist monopolies.
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However, it is not only a matter of using social networks to organize
resistance and revolt, but also a question of constructing a social
mode of self-information which can collect and reorganize existing
drives towards autonomous and singular becomings. Given that
algorithms, as we have said, cannot be unlinked from wider social
assemblages, their materialization within the red stack involves the
hijacking of social network technologies away from a mode of con
sumption whereby social networks can act as a distributed platform
for learning about the world, fostering and nurturing new compe
tences and skills. fostering planetary connections. and developing
new ideas and values.
BIO-HYPERMEDIA
The term bio-hypermedia, coined by Giorgio Griziotti, identifies the
ever more intimate relation between bodies and devices which is part
of the diffusion of smart phones. tablet computers and ubiquitous
computation. As digital networks shift away from the centrality
of the desktop or even laptop machine towards smaller, portable
devices, a new social and technical landscape emerges around 'apps'
and 'clouds' which directly 'intervene in how we feel. perceive and
understand the world'.26 Bratton defines the 'apps' for platforms
such as Android and Apple as interfaces or membranes linking indi
vidual devices to large databases stored in the 'cloud' (massive data
processing and storage centres owned by large corporations).27
26. G. Griziotti, 'Biorank: Algorithms and Transformations in the Bios of Cognitive
Capitalism' (2014), in I Quademi di son Precario (http://quaderni.sanprecario.
info/2014/ 02/ biorank-algorithms-and-transformation-in-the-bios-of-cognitive
capitalism-di-giorgio-griziotti/ ); also S. Portanova. Moving without a Body
(Boston. MA: MIT Press. 2013).
27. B. Bratton. ·on Apps and Elementary Forms of lnterfacial LJfe: Object,
Image. Superimposition'. http://www.bratton.info/projects/texts/on-apps-and
elementary-forms-of-interfacial-life/pf/.
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This topological continuity has allowed for the diffusion of download
able apps which increasingly modulate the relationship of bodies and
space. Such technologies not only 'stick to the skin and respond to
the touch' (as Bruce Sterling once put it), but create new 'zones'
around bodies which now move through 'coded spaces' overlaid with
information, able to locate other bodies and places within interactive,
informational visual maps. New spatial ecosystems emerging at the
crossing of the 'natural' and the artificial allow for the activation of
a process of chaosmotic co-creation of urban life.28 Here again we
can see how apps are, for capital, simply a means to 'monetize' and
'accumulate' data about the body's movement while subsuming
it ever more tightly in networks of consumption and surveillance.
However, this subsumption of the mobile body under capital does
not necessarily imply that this is the only possible use of these new
technological affordances. Turning bio-hypermedia into components
of the red stack (the mode of reappropriation of fixed capital in
the age of the networked social) implies drawing together current
experimentation with hardware (shenzei phone hacking technologies,
makers movements, etc.) able to support a new breed of 'imaginary
apps' (think for example about the apps devised by the artist collec
tive Electronic Disturbance Theatre, which allow migrants to bypass
border controls, or apps able to track the origin of commodities, their
degrees of exploitation, etc.).
CO N CLU S I O N S
This short essay, a synthesis o f a wider research process, means
to propose another strategy for the construction of a machinic
infrastructure of the common. The basic idea is that information
28. S. laconesi and 0. Persico, "The Co-Creation of the City: Re-programming Cities
using Real-Time User-Generated Content", http://www.academia.edu/30131"10/
T he_Co-Creation_of_the_City.
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technologies, which comprise algorithms as a central component,
do not simply constitute a tool of capital, but are simultaneously
constructing new potentialities for-postneoliberal modes of govern
ment and postcapitalist modes of production. It is a matter here of
opening possible lines of contamination with the large movements of
programmers, hackers and makers involved in a process of re-coding
of network architectures and information technologies based on val
ues others than exchange and speculation. but also of acknowledging
the wide process of technosocial literacy that has recently affected
large swathes of the world population. It is a matter, then, of produc
ing a convergence able to extend the problem of the reprogramming
of the Internet away from recent trends towards corporatisation and
monetisation at the expense of users' freedom and control. Linking
bio-informational communication to issues such as the production
of a money of the commons able to socialize wealth, against current
trends towards privatisation, accumulation and concentration, and
saying that social networks and diffused communicational com
petences can also function as means to organize cooperation and
produce new knowledges and values, means seeking a new political
synthesis which moves us away from the neoliberal paradigm of
debt, austerity and accumulation. This is not a utopia, but a program
for the invention of constituent social algorithms of the common.29
29. In addition to the sources cited above, and the texts contained in this volume, we
offer overleaf an expandable bibliographical toolkit or open desiring biblio-machine.
(Instructions: pick. choose and subtract/add to form your own assemblage of self
formation for the purposes of materialization of the red stack).
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# A C C E L E R A T E
- L. Baroniant and C. Vercellone, ' Moneta Del Comune e Reddito Sociale
Garantito' (2013), http://www.uninomade.org/moneta-del-comune-e-reddito
sociale-garantito/.
- M. Bauwens, 'The Social Web and Its Social Contracts: Some Notes on Social
Antagonism in Netarchical Capitalism' (2008). Re-Public Re-Imaging Democracy,
http://www.re-public.gr/en/ ?p=261.
- F. Berardi and G. Lovink 'A call to the army of love and to the army of software' (2011),
Nettime (http://www.nettime.org/ LJsts-Archives/nettime-l-1110/msg00017.html)
- R. Braidotti, T he Posthuman (Cambridge: Polity Press. 2013).
- G. E. Coleman. Coding Freedom: The Ethics and Aesthetics of Hacking
(Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. 2012). http://gabriellacoleman.
org/Coleman-Coding-Freedom.pdf.
- A. Fumagalli, 'Trasformazione del lavoro e trasformazioni del welfare: precarietil
e welfare del comune (commonfare) in Europa', in P. Leon and R. Realfonso (eds),
L'.Economia dells precarieta (Rome: Manifestolibri, 2008), 159-74.
- G. Giannelli and A. Fumagalli 'II fenomeno Bitcoin: moneta altemativa o moneta
speculativa?' (2013), I Quaderni di San Precario (http://quademi.sanprecario.
info/2013/12/ il-fenomeno-bitcoin-moneta-altemativa-o-moneta-speculativa
gianluca-giannelli-e-andrea-fumagalli/ ).
- G. Griziotti, D. Lovaglio and T. Terranova ' Netwar 2.0: Verso una convergenza
della "calle" e della rete' (2012), Uninomade 2.0 (http://www.uninomade.org/
verso-una-convergenza-della-calle-e-della-rete/).
- E. Grosz, Chaos, Territory, Art (New York: Columbia University Press, 2012).
- F. Guattari, Chaosmosis: An Eth/co-Aesthetic Paradigm (Indianapolis, IN:
Indiana University Press, 1995).
- S. Jourdan, 'Game-over Bitcoin: Where Isthe Next Human-Based Digital Currency?'
(2014), http://ouishare.net/2013/ 05/ bitcoin-human-based-digital-currency/.
- M. Lazzarato, Les puissances de /'invention (Paris: L'.empecheurs de penser
ronde, 2004).
- M. Lazzarato, The Making ofthe Indebted Man (Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2013).
- G. Lovink and M . Rasch (eds), Unlike Us Reader: Social Media Monopolies and
their Alternatives (Amsterdam: Institute of Network Culture, 2013).
- A. Mackenzie (2013) 'Programming subjects in the regime of anticipation:
software studies and subjectivity' in Subjectivity 6, p. 391-405
- L. Manovich, 'The Poetics of Augmented Space', Virtual Communication 52
(2006), 219-40 (http://www.alice.id.tue.nl/references/manovich-2006.pdf.)
- S. Mezzadra and B. Neilson, Border as Method or the Multiplication of Labor.
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press. 2013).
- P. D. Miller aka DJ Spooky and S. Matviyenko, The Imaginary App (Cambridge,
MA: MIT Press, forthcoming).
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CJ)
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- A. Negri 'Acting in common and the limits of capital' (201"1), in Euronomade
(http://www.euronomade.info/? p=1LILJ8).
- A. Negri and M. Hardt, Commonwealth (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 2009).
- M. Pasquinelli, 'Google's Page Rank Algorithm: A Diagram of the Cognitive
Capitalism and the Rentier of the Common Intellect' (2009), http://
matteopasquinelli.com/docs/ PasquinellL PageRank.pdf.
- B. Scott, Heretic's Guide to Global Finance: Hacking the Future of Maney
(London: Pluto Press, 2013).
-G. Simondon, On the Mode of Existence of Technical Objects (1958), University
of Western Ontario, https://english.duke.edu/uploads/assets/Simondon_ M EOT_
parU.pdf.
- R. Stallman, Free Software: Free Society Selected Essays of Richard M.
Stallman (Free Software Foundation, 2002).
- A. Toscano. 'Gaming the Plumbing: High-Frequency Trading and the Spaces
of Capital' (2013), in Mute (http://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/gaming
plumbing-high-frequency-trading-and-spaces-capital).
- I. Wilkins and B. Dragos. 'Destructive Distraction? An Ecological Study of
High Frequency Trading', in Mute (http://www.metamute.org/editorial/articles/
destructive-destruction-ecological-study-high-frequency-trading).
CN
CJJ
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Automated
Architecture
Speculative Reason
in the Age of the Algorithm
Luciana Parisi
2014
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In the last forty years, with the algorithmic automation of spatio
temporal forms and structures, task-specific computer design, based
on numerically controlled machines, has been absorbed within a
more generic function of computation resulting in custom fabrica
tion processes, machine control protocols, real time simulations that
update live, and interactive models that can be directly tweaked
and manipu!ated.1 More radically, the expansion of computational
functions in design has Jed to the emergence of computational
design thinking, whose focus on material properties, physical forces,
pressures and constraints defines dynamic spatio-temporal forms in
terms of non-binary and continuously heterogeneous variations of
matter. Moving away from computation as a form of symbolic repre
sentation of physical elements, computational design thinking instead
embraces the elemental properties of materials and their gE)nerative
rules subtending the dynamic nature of spatio-temporal structures.
Instead of following geometrical and mathematical patterns, this form
of material computation aims to directly follow the physical emergent
patterning and material processes of self-assembly out of the interac
tion of loose elements. In contrast to the mechanical automation of
sequentially linear and assembly systems, this new form of algorith
mic automation is driven by the physical strategies of materials to
compute both architectural form and spatio-temporal performance.
1. For an extensive discussion about this transformation in digital architecture. see
N. Leach (ed.). Designing for a Digital World (New York: Wiley, 2001); K. Terzidis,
Algorithmic Architecture (Oxford: Architectural Press, 2006); M. Meredith, T.
Sakamoto and A. Ferre (eds.). From Control to Design: Parametric/Algorithmic
Architecture (Barcelona: Actar, 2008); S. Kwinter, C. Davidson (ed.). Far from
Equilibrium: Essays on Technology and Design Culture, (Barcelona: Actar, 2008);
L Bullivant. Responsive Environments: Architecture. Art and Design (London:
V&A, 2006); L. Bullivant, 4dsocial: Interacti ve Design and Environments.
Architectural Design 77:"1 (2007): K. Oosterhuis, Interactive Architecture #1
(Rotterdam: Episode, 2007).
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# A C C E L E R A T E
But computational design thinking is more importantly a symptom
of a more generic acceleration of automation in which algorithmic
modelling techniques are now able to select, analyse and evaluate
data through the generative evolution of spatio-temporal structures.
Paradoxically, the acceleration of automation has pushed forward
an anti-digital form of computational design thinking that aims to
become one with the fluctuating dynamics of matter.
The advance of computational design thinking. and its acute
investment in the intelligence of materials. is the result of a major
transformation in the digital design of last forty years marked by the
advent of interactive computation. and especially in the last fifteen
years. since simulations have become consistent with the inherent
morphogenesis-or evolutionary capacities-of materials.2 Within
digital dE!sign and architecture. this transformation is often associated
with the emergence of material computation, an approach to design
thinking based on the convergence between evolutionary biology and
non-standard geometry or topology. By leaving behind digital model
ling based on the principles of the Universal Turing Machine. whereby
the manipulation of symbols allowed designers to test results and
deduce a proof for possible structures. computational design thinking
has instead adopted a specific form of inductive reasoning relying on
the computational capacity to gather information from the physical
world and thereby generate dynamic spatio-temporal structures that
are. as it were. empirically derived from matter.
From this standpoint. the shift from a form-oriented design,
the information-driven manipulation of NURBS (nonuniform rational
B-spline) geometry within a computational environment for instance,
to a generative-oriented design that integrates material. form and
2. See A. Menges and S. Ahlquist (eds.). Computational Design Thinking (London:
John Wiley and Sons. 2011); A. Menges (ed.). Material Computation-Higher
Integration in Morphogenetic Design. Architectural Design 82:2.
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force a s continuous iterations, has l e d t o an empirically-oriented
computation of physical activities which is now central to automated
architecture. As opposed to the deductive reasoning of digital archi
tecture, according to which general and universal rules inform matter,
and algorithms aim to produce simulations that match the behaviour
of material substrates, the tum towards material computation, in
which physical properties are said to be the motor of simulations,
marks the adaptation of an inductive mode of reasoning based on
the local behaviour of materials from which complex structures
emerge. Here design thinking is not based on preestablished truths
that have to be proven, but emerges out of the material variations
of elements evolving in time through the mutation and adaptation
of data. Similarly, with material computation, design thinking is less
concerned with the contemplation of truth and more directly geared
towards action, operation, and processing in so far as computation
becomes a rather practical and intentional-oriented affair in which the
ends of matter drive form whilst architectural form becomes one with
matter's activities. If mechanical automation-the automaton of the
assembly line, for instance-was a manifestation of the functionalist
form that shaped matter, the increasing acceleration of automation
led by the development of interactive algorithms (including human
machine and machine-machine interactions) instead reveals the
dominance of a practical functionalism whereby form is induced by
the movement of matter.
Inductive reasoning places the local properties of materials and
the varying behaviours of physical elements at the centre of the
design process. In particular, by drawing closely on evolutionary biol
ogy, computation here involves a continual extension of the search
space aiming to find novel solutions that emerge as a byproduct of
the evolutionary dynamics of selection, mutation, and inheritance.
With this form of emergentism in design, algorithms serve to set
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# A C C E L E R A T E
the range of possibilities, whilst analytical measures establish levels
of fitness of specific instances within the set of possibilities.3 Here
emergence is not only a property of pattern formation and physical
organization. Emergence is also a factor in behaviour, design and
computation.� Novel spatio-temporal patterns are said to arise not in
formal pre-arrangements, but in the realisation of multiple behavioural
capacities not initially determined within the programming. As part of
the generic tendency to accelerate automation, the turn to inductive
reasoning in computation does not simply aim to instrumentalise or
mechanise reason and thus establish the formal condition from which
truths can be derived, but more explicitly allows matter to become
the motor of truth, to become one with and ultimately constitutive
of formal reason, of the rules and the patterns that emerge in the
automation of space and time.
This matter-driven computational design thinking works not
simply to better simulate material behaviour but to produce physically
induced models, a sort of meta-biological computation based on
feedback information scanning of the changing properties of materials.
3. These behaviours are derivatives of simple conditions called agents. An agent
holds a simple set of properties; the environment defines a set of rules in which
the agents interact. From this standpoint. computational design focuses on
the execution of variation methods for the purposeful intent of resolving the
complexities that exist in the interrelation and interdependences of material
structures and dynamic environments. Computation has the potential to function
as a universal application. but the mechanism works only in the processing of
specific, non-symbolic conditions relating to materiality, spatiality and context.
Whilst the procedures define a vast state space of potentials, the result embodies
specific descriptions of the overall system. Computational processes are iterative
and recursive but also expansive. They work by growing and specifying the
information. which describes form through procedures which recursively generate
form. calling variable parameters within the state space. See Menges and Ahlquist
(eds.). Computational Design T hinking, 2"1.
"1. lbid.
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But this accelerated computation of matter relying on the efficacy of
the physical substrates of matter irremediably misses an ontological
question at the core of computation: What and how is algorithmic
reason? What is its status vis-a-vis other forms of reason, and how
is this manifested?
If computation design thinking has rejected the deductive model
of universal rules and its top-down method of form finding, then what
do solutions simulating the biophysical behavior of matter tell us as to
the nature of algorithmic automation itself in this new phase of tech
nocapital acceleration? Do they mean that the technocapital accelera
tion of automation has become one with the physical dynamics of
matter, defining a dynamic rather than mechanical instrumentalisation
of reason? If this is the case. then computational design thinking is
perhaps the manifest image of what technocapitalism has been able
to achieve by turning the deductive methods of mechanized reason
into a multiagent interactive computation whose rules are pre-adapted
to physical behavior.
Nevertheless. the inclusion of material agency, bio-physical cata
lysts and temporalities in computational design is also revealing a less
tractable tendency of technocapital acceleration: the computational
function of algorithms to add new data to processing. This means
that, whilst computational design thinking takes inspiration from the
material dynamics of the physical world for its generative models, the
acceleration of automation ls not simply replacing the organic ends of
reason with technical means, but is irremediably constituting a second
nature, an algorithmic evolution equipped with its own physical and
conceptual levels of order that are not one with matter.
One df the most immediate ontological consequences of the
acceleration of automation from digital simulations of form-finding
to the generation of materially-driven models. is a computational
design thinking embracing the seamless fusion of thought and matter.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Here the reality of abstraction is suspended and instead explained by
and through the concreteness of physical causes determined by the
interaction of loose elements. Whilst the acceleration of automation
has pushed the formal logic of deductive reason in computation to
move beyond the hierarchical top-down simulation of matter-as an
instance of a priori reason-it has not stripped computation from its
functions of abstraction and quantification. In other words, instead
of accounting for the abstract function of algorithmic processes,
the material-oriented approach of computational design thinking
risks grounding such processes in ideal physical causes, external to
algorithmic automation itself.
The limit of computational design thinking is its uncritical perpetu
ation of idealist materialism according to which the relation between
computation and reason is mediated or to some extent caused by
material data. To put it in another way, the problem of computation
as a top-down framework of deductive reasoning rooted in ideal
forms or in a thinking subject has been largely circumvented but not
overcome by computational design thinking, rooted as the latter is
in the aggregate causality of material elements. Within the generic
acceleration of automation, this view risks disqualifying rather than
explaining the computational process through which physical variables
are extracted and abstracted. ln short, this form of design thinking
seems to overlook the materiality of computational processing itself,
which necessarily goes beyond the appeal to the preexisting complex
ity of physical causes.
To address the specificity of such processing, computational
design thinking may need to start from the axiom that abstract
data and data abstraction driven by algorithmic agents define the
automated function of interaction in online, distributive and parallel
systems. Kostas Terzidis, for instance, already envisaged the autonomy
of computational processing for automated design when he said:
co
0
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PARIS I -AUTOMATED A R C H ITECTU R E
Unlike computerization and digitization. the extraction of algorithmic
processes is an act of high-level abstraction. [...] Algorithmic struc
tures represent abstract patterns that are not necessarily associated
with experience or perception. [...] In this sense algorithmic processes
become a vehicle for exploration that extends beyond the limit
of perception.5
But the extension of algorithmic abstraction beyond the limit of
perception has also meant that such abstraction corresponds to the
intelligible function of rule-based thinking that neither simply matches
with the rational faculty of knowing nor with the intuitive capacities
of knowing beyond proof. The aim here is not to reject material com
putation, but to radicalise its implications. As a symptom of a generic
acceleration of automation, the generation of spatio-temporal archi
tectures of a computational order are inconsistent with the physical
facts of matter. Similarly, algorithmic automation does not coincide
with an abstraction of matter based upon the way in which matter
works, but more stubbornly produces axioms-or truths-about
what is not yet known and what non-physical or algorithmic agents
know. This implies riot the idealisation of the computational capacities
of matter (which are continuous with algorithmic automation), but
instead a veritable rehabilitation of algorithmic automation in its own
right, exposing its own axiomatic thinking or rule-based processing.
The rehabilitation of algorithmic automation is also an attempt
both to dethrone computation from a closed deductive formalism,
based on simple universal rules, and to subtract it from a too imme
diate merging with bio-physical causality. From this standpoint, the
acceleration of automation challenges the paradigm of the mechanical
5. K. Terzidis, Expressive Form: A Conceptual Approach to Computational Design
(London and New York: Spon Press, 2003), 71.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
process determined by discrete steps that are pre-thought and
pre-ordered. but also the vitalism according to which material com
putations are induced by the continuity of physical processes. To put
it in another way, the acceleration of automation has entered the
uncharted territory of an algorithmic reason that does not simply
derive its functions from the local interaction of parts. At the same
time. however. algorithmic automation also breaks from the meta
computational view for which a simple theory can explain complex
behaviour or an elegant formula can compress all of its outputs.
Far from being an abstraction of physical structures. automated archi
tecture is instead a manifestation of algorithmic spatio-temporalities
that have nothing to do with what already exists in nature (or the
relation between rules and randomness that exist in the biological
and physical strata). If computational design thinking rejects the
representational framework of meta-computation (i.e .. the universe is
ultimately made of discrete algorithms). then it also has to admit that
what is manifested to us is not the same as what algorithms do-i.e ..
their scientific image is intrinsic to them and does not match what is
perceivable and cognizable by a subject.
But to further clarify how accelerated automation has challenged
computational views based on deductive and inductive reasoning. one
has to explain the problem of the incomputable. or randomness. that
is at the heart of computation today.
ACCELERATE RAND O M NESS
The acceleration of algorithmic automation cannot be divorced from
the problem of the incomputable, and the challenges this posed to
the deductive method of logic based on pure reason. In 1931. the
logician Kurt Godel took issue with David Hilbert's metamathemati
cal program and demonstrated that there could not be a complete
axiomatic method. nor a pure mathematical formula or universal
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truths, according to which the reality of things could be proved to
be true or false.6 Godel's 'incompleteness theorems' explained that.
even if all the propositions of a system were true. they could not be
verified by a complete axiomatic method. Certain propositions were
therefore ultimately deemed to be undecidable: they could not be
proved by means of the axiomatic method upon which they were
hypothesized. In Godel's view, no a priori decision, and thus no finite
set of rules. could be used to determine the state of things before
things had run their course.
Not too long after. the mathematician Alan Turing also encoun
tered Godel's incompleteness problem whilst attempting to formalize
the concepts of algorithm and computation through his famous
thought experiment. known as the Turing Machine. In particular. the
Turing Machine demonstrated that problems that can be decided
according to the axiomatic method were computable problems.7
Conversely, those propositions that could not be decided through the
axiomatic method would remain incomputable.8 From this standpoint.
6. See D. Hilbert, "The new grounding of mathematics: First report' in W. B.
Ewald (ed.). From Kant to Hilbert: A Source Book in the Foundations of
Mathematics. Vol 2 (Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1996). 1115-33; R. Goldstein,
Incompleteness: The Proof and Paradox ofKurt Gade/ (New York: Norton. 2005);
S. Feferman (ed.). Some basic theorems on the foundations of mathematics and
their implications. Collected works of Kurt Godel. Vol. 3 (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1995). 304-23.
7. A. M. Turing. 'On computable numbers, with an application to the Entscheid
ungsproblem', Proceedings of the London Mathematica/ Society, 2nd Series,
Vol. 42 (1936). For further discussion of the intersections of the works between
Hilbert, Godel and Turing. see M. Davis. The Universal Computer. The Rood from
Leibniz to Turing (New York & London: Norton, 2000), 83-176.
8. According to Turing, there could not be a complete computational method in
which the manipulation of symbols and the rules governing their use would realize
Leibniz's dream of a mothesis universo/is. Mothesis Universo/is defines a universal
science modeled on mathematics and supported by the co/cu/us rotiocinotor,
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# A C C E L E R A T E
insofar as any axiomatic method was incomplete, so too were the
rules of computation. 9
As Giuseppe Longo explains,10 the problem of the incomputable
explained that even closed finite systems (e.g. the pendulum or first
order Arithmetic) are undecidable, and inversely, that few and simple
deterministic rules or finitary physical or logical structures may give
rise to chaotic behaviours or complex logical theories. In other words,
a universal calculation described by Leibniz as a universal conceptual language.
For first-order cybernetics the calculus ratiocinator refers to the computational
machine that could perform differential and integral calculus or the combination
of the ratios. As Norbert Wiener pointed out: 'like his predecessor Pascal, [Leibniz]
was interested in the construction of computing machines in metal [...] just as the
calculus of arithmetic lends itself to a mechanization progressing through the
abacus and the desk computing machine to the ultra-rapid computing machines of
the present day, so the calculus ratiocinator of Leibniz contains the germs of the
machine ratiocinatrix, the reasoning machine.' See N . Wiener, Cybernetics or the
Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 1965), 12. For Turing, the incomputable determined the limit of computation:
no finite set of rules could predict in advance whether or not the computation of
data would halt at a given moment or whether it would reach a zero or one state,
as established by initial conditions. This halting problem meant that no finite axiom
could constitute the model by which future events could be predicted. Hence,
the limit of computation was determined by the existence of those infinite real
numbers that could not be counted through the axiomatic method posited at the
beginning of the computation. In other words, these numbers were composed of
too many elements that could not be ordered into natural numbers (e.g. 1, 2, 3).
9. A clearer explanation of the implications of Godel's theorem of incompleteness
for Turing's emphasis on the limit of computation can be found in Gregory Chaitin,
MetaMaths: The Quest for Omega (London: Atlantic Books, 2006), 29-32.
10. G. Longo, 'lncomputability in Physics and Biology' available at http://www.
di.ens.fr/users/longo (last accessed March 2014). See also G. Longo, "Critique of
Computational Reason in the Natural Sciences", In E. Gelenbe and J.-P. Kahane
(eds.), Fundamental Concepts in Computer Science (London: Imperial College
Press/World Sci., 2008); G. Longo, 'From exact sciences to life phenomena:
following Schrodinger and Turing on Programs, Life and Causality', Information and
Computation, 207:5 (2009), 543-670.
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'mathematics is an essentially open system of proofs' and 'each real
mathematics proof proceeds as an open system'. Hence knowledge
does not depend on a predetermined set of axioms insofar as theo
ries are constantly built, axioms modified and rules amended. From
this standpoint, one could extend this view to computation, but
explain that knowledge is here produced by means of axioms without
n ecessarily passing through the faculty of pure reason or practical
reasoning led by the existence of facts. The problem of incomputables
for rule-based reasoning, far from proving the fallacy of algorithmic
automation in the production of knowledge, rather indicates that
there are truths that cannot be proven (by deductive or inductive
reasoning) but are nonetheless intelligible within computation and are
manifested in the form of an axiom. The problem of the incomputable
thus shows that computational axiomatics is inevitably infected with
randomness, but also that randomness is each time turned into an
axiom by means of rule-based processing, defining algorithmic reason
as a nonlinear elabcration of continuous infinities and transformation
of its discrete parts.
For information theorist Gregory Chaitin, the question of the
incomputable reveals that randomness or sensitivity to context or
initial conditions is part of even elementary branches of number
theory, and that therefore randomness and complexity are intrinsic to
the most elemental of particles. In par ticular, Chaitin explains that the
halting probability of the Turing Machine, and thus the uncertainty of
predicting when-given a certain input-a computation will stop, can
nonetheless be computably enumerable despite being infinitely large.
Chaitin calls this odd probability Omega: the limit of a computable,
increasing, converging sequence of rational numbers. What is new
here is that such a limit of computation is also algorithmically random:
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# A C C E L E R A T E
its binary expansion is an algorithmic random sequence, which is
incomputable (or partially computable).11
Chaitin's discovery of Omega clarifies that randomness is intel
ligible and detectable within the very computational processing in
which unpredictable infinities emerge and operate-and yet cannot
be synthesised by an a priori program. theory or set of procedures
that are smaller in size than it. This means that the incomputable
within computational processing can be neither reincorporated into
formal deductive logic (since it cannot be proven by means of pure
reason), nor explained primarily in terms of those physical causes
11. Chaitin explains that his 0 number is a probability (albeit an infinite number) for
a program to halt:
First, I must specify how to pick a program at random. A program is simply a
series of bits, so flip a coin to determine the value of each bit. How many bits long
should the program be? Keep flipping the coin so long as the computer is asking
for another bit of input 0 is just the probability that the machine will eventually
come to a halt when supplied with a stream of random bits in this fashion.
At the same time however. he also points out that Omega is incomputable, and
thus the problem of the limit of computation remains unsolvable for a formal
axiomatic system:
We can be sure that 0 cannot be computed because knowing 0 would let us
solve Turing's halting problem, but we know that this problem is unsolvable.
In other words:
Given any finite program, no matter how many billions of bits long, we have
an infinite number of bits that the program cannot compute. Given any finite
set of axioms, we have an infinite number of truths that are improvable in
that system. Because 0 is irreducible, we can immediately conclude that a
theory of everything for all of mathematics cannot exist. An infinite number
of bits of 0 constitute mathematical facts (whether each bit is a 0 or a 1)
that cannot be derived from any principles simpler than the string of bits itself.
Mathematics therefore has infinite complexity.
G. Chaitin, 'The Limits of Reason', Scientific American 294:3 ( March 2006),
74-81. On Chaitin, see also R. Brassier, 'Remarks on Subtractive Ontology and
Thinking Capital', in P. Hallward (ed.), Think Again: Alain Badiou and the Future of
Philosophy (London and New York: Continuum. 2004).
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that cannot be computed, thus marking the limit of computation
(and hence the necessity to extend computation to the physical
world). Instead, the increasing presence of infinite quantities of data
(incomputables) within interactive, parallel and online computational
systems (including human-machine, but also increasingly algorithm
algorithm interactions) exceeds totalising mathematical and physical
causality, a priori or a posteriori reason alike, by reorienting deductive
and inductive methods of computation in counter-intuitive directions.
One of the interesting implications of Chaitin's Omega is that
it is at once computationally intelligible-and thus physically and
conceptually processed by automated systems-yet unsynthesisable
by a totalizing theory or practice of knowledge. For computational
design thinking, this proposition entails that computation needs to
be understood beyond the limits of mathematics, and cannot be
easily supplemented by physics. As already mentioned, computational
design thinking in particular has embraced this move towards physical
causality, demonstrating that material dynamics prove that there
are morphogenetic and continuously changing patterns in nature
from which a new model of automated architecture can be derived.
Instead, Chaitin insists that computation needs to be rethought in
terms of an experimental axiomatics for which the incomputable
Omega cannot be proven by means of deductive reason, but can
nonetheless-although partially and immanently-discretize (i.e.,
render discrete and intelligible) infinitely large quantities of data.
This view is essential to computational design thinking because it
importantly reveals that there is a dynamic proper to computation,
in which discrete patterns are inevitably accompanied by pattern
less information.
From this standpoint, the accelerated automation of spatio
temporal structures is not simply attuned to patterns in nature, but
instead defines the increasing thickening of a computational stratum,
a second nature, whose ends are not compatible with the fluid
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# A C C E L E R A T E
dynamics of matter. In short, a material computational thinking can
not overlook the function of incomputable algorithms in automation
insofar as incomputable parts are in the majority and can take over
the totality of programming .12 The acceleration of automation thus
inevitably exposes an acceleration of randomness-patternless data
bursting within algorithmic sequencing-and has given way to an
experimental axiomatics determined by an immanent discretization
of incomputables. Far from determining automation in terms of a
Laplacian Universe whose mechanics ensure that outputs can always
be deduced from a finite set of inputs or instructions, the accelera
tion of automation instead reveals that inputs are as big as outputs
and that computation can only discover and revise truths through a
continuous production of axioms.
S PECU LATIVE REASO N
I t is now possible to draw some conclusions.
The acceleration of automation has led to the emergence of a new
form of computational design thinking driven by a close investment
in the biophysical dynamics of matter, which are said to produce the
most varied patterns out of the infinitesimal relations between their
parts. However, this equivalence between the biophysical dynamics
12. As Chaitin hypothesizes, if the program that is used to calculate infinities wm
no longer be based on finite sets of algorithms but on infinite sets (or Omega
complexity). then programmability will become a far cry from the algorithmic
optimization of indetenminate processes actualized through binary probabflities.
Programming will instead tum into the calculation of complexity via complexity,
chaos via chaos: an immanent doubling infinity or the infinity of the infinite.
Contrary to the Laplacian mechanistic universe of pure reason, Chaitin's
information theory explains how software programs can include randomness from
the start. Thus the incompleteness of axiomatic methods does not define the end
point of computation and its inability to engage with dynamical change, but rather
its starting condition, through which new axioms. codes, and sets Of instrt.etions
have become immanent to non-denumerable reals.
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PARI S I -AUTOMATED A R C H ITECTURE
of matter and computation mainly assigns to computation the task
of revealing or simulating structural variations and spatio-temporal
complexities inherent to matter. Hence whilst biophysical patterns
are taken to be the principal motor of computation, computation
itself tends to recede into the background and remains a mere
vehicle for visualizing and proving the indeterminacy of matter. This
form of inductive reasoning derives and proves truths by means of
empirical measuring, contingent actions, and facts and factors in the
world. Computational design thinking thus becomes a mode of doing
and practising a thought derived from what already happens in the
physical world. From this standpoint, the acceleration of automation
perfectly coincides with the technocapitalist illusion that matter
can generate infinitesimal variations, an inexhaustible abundance
that turns continuously smaller elements into vast resources for the
productive eternality of the whole.
But the acceleration of automation hardly leads to a blissful
bathing in thoughtless matter and instead invades the everyday
with the alien reasoning of patternless algorithms which, while they
cannot be compressed into a smaller programme or synthesized
by a brain, nonetheless lie at the core of all orders of computation
(sequential, parallel, distributive, interactive computation). With the
acceleration of automation, the explosive advent of algorithmic ran
domness within computational processing has become inevitable. This
means that instead of deriving dynamic patterns of information from
matter, patternless data are instead generated within computation
itself, and have thus become intrinsic to automated reason. Similarly,
incomputables can no longer be explained by the Turing deductive
method of reason, whereby all that can be computed is computable.
Central to the acceleration of automation today is the profound
transformation of formalism triggered by the ingress of incomputa
bles into axiomatic, which has forced reason (rule-based functions)
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# A C C E L E R A T E
to become defined in terms of an immanent finality, an experimental
final cause or purpose. Just as axioms become experimental truths,
so too algorithmic automation exposes its internal inconsistencies:
its sequential arrangement of parts becomes the host of random
information, an interference that does not disrupt but adds a new
order of finality to the programming whole (or the finality of the
entire set of instructions). From this standpoint, one needs a theory
of speculative reason that not only does away with the dominance
of deduction and/or induction in computational design thinking, but
that can also add another mode of reason to them that is able to
surpass and nonetheless bring forward both truth and fact into an
experimental axiomatic.
To explain what is meant here by speculative reason, one has to
turn to A. N. Whitehead. From his explanation of the function of rea
son, we immediately learn that reason or the production of concepts
implies the addition of new data to the continual chain of cause and
effect-the physical laws of nature. In particular, Whitehead claims
that the aim of speculative reason is the production of an abstract
scheme,13 which he calls 'the concrete arrangement of relations'.14
For reason to be truly speculative, the schemes that are produced
13. According to Whitehead, "[t]he history of modern civilization shows that such
schemes fulfill the promise of the dream of Solomon. They first amplify life by
satisfying the peculiar claim of the speculative Reason, which is understanding for
its own sake. Secondly, they represent the capital of ideas which each age holds
in trust for its successors. The ultimate moral claim that civilization lays upon its
possessors is that they transmit, and add to, this reserve of potential development
by which it has profited." A. N. Whitehead, The Function of Reason (Boston:
Beacon Press, 1929), 72.
1LI. 'The true activity of understanding consists in a voyage to abstraction, which
is in fact a voyage to the more, fully concrete: to the system in which the fact is
enmeshed. The system as conceptualized may be more abstract than the fact
itself in that it is more general, but the real systematic context is more concrete,
and its elaboration yields more about the existential relations of the fact." Ibid., 76.
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PARI S I -AUTOMATED A R C H ITECTU R E
and realized must be able t o encounter their finitude and limits:
to account for incomputable parts that interfere with the ceaseless
mechanisms of the whole.15
In particular, Whitehead warns us against the dominance of two
main views as to what the function of reason really is-namely pure
and practical reason. In the first, reason is seen as the operation of
theoretical realization, whereby the universe is a mere exemplification
of a theoretical system. The model of computation that produces
complex data through the simplest and most elegant program/formula
coincides with this view. Whitehead rejects the meta-computational
theory of the universe (e.g. the universe explained by the Leibnizian
Principle of Sufficient Reason), as it specifically seeks to capture in
the simplest formula the infinity of worlds. The Principle of Sufficient
Reason reduces the nexus of actual occasions to conceptual differ
ences, since the Principle defines how differences can be represented
or mediated in a concept.16 According to Whitehead, this one-to-one
relation between mental cogitations and actual entities underesti
mates the speculative power of reason, which is instead an ad�e �ture
.JO , 1 : , • ••
of ideas that cannot be encompassed by any complete formalism.
.
15. 'Abstract speculation has been the salvation of the world-speculations, which
made systems and then transcended them, speculations tflat ventured to the
furthest limits of abstraction." Ibid.
16. As Whitehead clarifies, '[h]is [Leibniz] monads are best conceived as
generalizations of contemporary notions of mentality. The contemporary notions
of physical bodies only enter into his philosophy subordinately and derivatively."
A.N. Whitehead, Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology (New York: Free
Press, 1978), 19. Similarly, Deleuze points out that: '[a]ccording to the principle of
sufficient reason, there is always one concept per particular thing. According to
the reciprocal principle of the identity of indiscernibles. there is one and only one
thing per concept. Together, these principles expound a theory of difference as
conceptual difference, or develop the account of representation as mediation."
G. Deleuze, Difference and Repetition, trans. P. Patton (New York and London:
Continuum, 2004), 12.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
But his notion of speculative reason is also divorced from practical
and pragmatic reason, whereby reason is a mere fact or factor in the
world, or is explicable as an immediate method of intentional action.17
In algorithmic automation, this notion of practical reason would
coincide with the dominance of the interactive paradigm in compu
tational design thinking that explains it in terms of parts constituting
a whole. This view sustains interactive models of automation, where
algorithms are correlated to physical data, thereby suggesting that
software programs are only one of the factors in the architecture
of a responsive system determined by external physical dynamics.
Whitehead's study of the function of reason sits comfortably
neither with the formal nor practical methods and suggests instead
that reason must be re-articulated according to the activity of
final causation. and not merely by the law of the efficient cause.18
17. In particular, Whitehead observes, '[w]e have got to remember the two aspects
of Reason, the Reason of Plato and the Reason of Ulysses. Reason seeking
complete understanding and Reason as seeking an immediate action'. Whitehead,
The Function of Reason, 11.
18. Whitehead's efficient cause and final cause can be understood as two
modes of prehensions, causal efficacy and presentational immediacy, another
parallel level of distinction between the physical and mental poles of an entity.
Efficient causes describe the physical chain of continuous causes and effects,
whereby the past is inherited by the present. This means that any entity is
somehow caused and affected by its inheritable past. As Steven Shaviro explains:
' Efficient cause is a passage, a transmission, an infiuence or a contagion'.
Although each actual entity appropriates the past in its own unrepeatable way, it is
nonetheless embodied in the material universe that impinges upon it. However, in
the process of repeating the patterns of the past there is always a margin of error. a
bug in the vector transmission of energy-information from the past to the present.
and from cause to effect. The seamless continuity of hereditary patterns is yet
again faced with another level of contagion: the contagion of ideas breaking from
efficient causality. Shaviro points out that there are at least two reasons for this
break in the chain. On the one hand, time is cumulative and therefore irreversible:
any actual event adds itself to the past. In other words, the mere addition of facts
gives rise to a quantitative effect through which what was there before-Le. A-is
0
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PARIS I -AUTOMATED A R C H ITECT U R E
Final cause explains how concepts are not reflections on material
causes, but instead supplement the mere inheritance of past facts
with new and often unproven ideas'. Conceptual prehensions, as
Whitehead calls them, entail a process of selection and evaluation of
facts that not only displaces the fact beyond observation, but also,
importantly, recognizes in it another level of reality, an abstraction
that is proper to the fact and yet is not determined by it. Final cause,
therefore, is rather conceived as a speculative tendency intrinsic to
reason and able to drive facts away from recognition so as to come
back to them in a transformed fashion. This tendency, according
to Whitehead, explains how decisions are carried out, and how the
selection of past or existent data becomes the point at which another
level of nuance is added to existing things. In other words, reason as a
rule-based speculation defines the purpose of a theory and a practice
in terms of their ability to add novelty to, and thus to counteract,
the causal chain of events. From this standpoint, one cannot explain
the universe solely in terms of physical interconnections, as these
dangerously omit any counter-agency, any conceptual prehension
for which there can be 'no direct observation, intuition or immediate
a stubborn fact, which has an objective immortality that is inherited but not fully
assimilated by B. The relation between A and B is that of two actual worlds. On the
other hand, the repetition of the past is never neutral and undergoes a evaluation
on behalf of the receiving entity. by which certain data are selected according to
the qualities of joy and distaste of the receiving entity. for instance. The evaluation
of inherited data is carried out by conceptual prehensions, which add novelty to
what was before, as they are prehensions of eternal objects. It is the mental pole
of any actual entity-the conceptual prehensions that do not necessarily involve
consciousness-that explains how efficient cause is supplemented by final cause.
For Whitehead, a final cause is always adjacent to an efficient cause; the former
accompanies and yet supervenes upon the latter. See Whitehead, Process and
Reality, on efficient cause, 237-8; on final cause 241; on the transition from
efficient to final cause, 210. See also S. Shaviro, Without Criteria. Kant, Oeleuze,
Whitehead and Aesthetics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press 2009), 83; 86-7.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
experience of real processes.'19 This means that the function of reason
serves to unlock possibilities and revise initial conditions within the
given order of things.
It would however be misleading to equate this notion of final cause
or purpose with a teleological explanation of the universe, since for
Whitehead the function of reason is 'progressive and never final.'2°
This means that the purpose of reason is to revise and change its
premises rather than being determined by the essence of who or what
does the reasoning. But whilst reason does not stem from matter, it
is also attached to the physical decay of things ready to reveal new
modes of abstractions from beneath its surface. For Whitehead,
speculative reason implies the asymmetrical and non-unified entangle
ment of efficient and final cause, and must be conceived as a machine
of emphasis upon novelty.21
But the finality of speculative reason also explains the autonomy
of actual modes of reason. Whitehead claims that speculative reason
is reason that only serves itself, rather than being a reason for (and of)
something else. In other words, and contrary to the universal principle
of sufficient reason, any actuality has its own finality driven by its own
mode of reason determined by its own indeterminate partialisation (i.e.,
discretization) of data, its rendering partially intelligible of infinities.
Speculative reason 'is its own dominant interest, and is not deflected
by motives derived from other dominant interest which it may be
promoting.'22 A tension can be noticed here between a notion of reason
19. Whitehead, The Function of Reason, Ibid., 25
20. Whitehead, Process and Reality, ibid., 9.
21. Whitehead attributes reason to higher forms of biological life, where reason
substitutes action. Reason is not a mere organ of response of external stimuli,
but rather is an organ of emphasis, able to abstract novelty from repetition. In
particular, reason provides the judgment by which novelty passes into realization.
intc fact. Ibid., 20.
22. Ibid., 38.
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PAR I S I - AUTOMATED A R C H ITECTURE
as governed by the purposes of some external dominant interests and
those operations of reason that are governed by immediate satisfac
tions (or self-enjoyment) arising from within.23 But Whitehead sees
this tension not as a contradiction between one and many but as a
productive contrast within reason, in the same way as the shades of
a color maintain their singularity in togetherness. This is to say that
speculative reason is internal to all modes of thought, but also that
all these modes are infected with their own incomputable data that
are each time partially determined and axiomatised.2�
From the standpoint of speculative reason, the intelligible capac
ity of computation must be reconceived in terms of an experimental
axiomatic. The acceleration of automation has led computation to
confront the increasing power of incomputables at the core of its for
mal scheme. As much as algorithmic automation is accompanied by an
infinite amount of complexities. so have its mechanical functions been
transformed into a new source of intelligible operations able to revise
axiomatic truths immanently. The acceleration of automation has led
not to the reification of deductive formalism for which computation
can seamlessly represent all modes of reason, but to the discovery
of an intelligible function that lies within (and yet goes beyond) the
digital ground of axiomatic. Beneath the social media fa9ade of the
interactive paradigm, a new pace in technocapital accelerationism is
dictated by the ingress of randomness (incompressible and infinitely
large quantities of data) into automation, turning its mechanical
function (determined by a steady return to its initial conditions) into
a progressive (i.e. forward-inclined) production and transformation
of axioms.
23. Ibid., 39.
2�. Whitehead would insist that the speculative function of reason coincides with
infinite modes of physical and conceptual prehensions, in which concepts and
objects are determined by their own final cause and partial sufficient reason.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
This also places computational design thinking at the centre of the
new order of capitalization of intelligible functions occupied with the
axiomatisation of infinitely long and increasingly vast quantities of
data. But whilst this has always been the scope of technocapitalism
and its instrumentalisation of reason, the acceleration of automated
architectures needs to be approached from the standpoint of Chai
tin's discovery of Omega insofar as this decryption of an infinite
number of data are partially (and immanently) axiomatised as such:
that is, as probabilities of infinite functions. This speculative computa
tion requires infinite orders of abstraction that ceaselessly bring truth
and fact forward towards new determinations.
From this standpoint, the speculative function of reason in com
putational design thinking corresponds to the algorithmic selection
and evaluation of infinite amounts of data, making decisions and
generating new solutions. This involves not only the computation of
physical data, but more importantly their conceptual prehensions: the
capacity of rule-based functions to counteract the physical aggrega
tion of data by adding new algorithmic patterns to what already exists
(i.e. experimental axiomatic). To propose that computational design
thinking can be defined in terms of a speculative function of reason is
thus to pose the question of whether automated algorithms are able
to redirect their own final reason in the computational processing of
infinite amounts of data. Whether this can be proven or not, it is hard
to dismiss the possibility of a computational design thinking immanent
to its own algorithmic reason.
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The Labor
of the
I nhuman
Reza Negarestani
2014
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PART 1 : H U MAN
lnhumanism i s the extended practical elaboration of humanism; i t is
born of a diligent commitment to the project of enlightened human
ism. A universal wave that erases the self-portrait of man drawn in
sand, inhumanism is a vector of revision. It relentlessly revises what
it means to be human by removing its supposedly self-evident char
acteristics while preserving certain invariancies. At the same time,
inhumanism registers itself as a demand for construction: it demands
that we define what it means to be human by treating the human as
a constructible hypothesis, a space of navigation and intervention.1
lnhumanism stands in concrete opposition to any paradigm that
seeks to degrade humanity either by confronting it with its finitude,
or by abasing it before the backdrop of the great outdoors. Its labor
consists partly in decanting the significance of the human from any
predetermined meaning or particular import established by theology
thereby extricating the acknowledgement of human significance from
any veneration of the human that comes about when this significance
is attributed to some variety of theological jurisdiction (God, ineffable
genericity, foundationalist axiom, etc.).2
1. Throughout this text we emphasize that the human is a singular universal which
makes sense of its mode of being by inhabiting collectivizing or universalizing
processes. The human is human not merely by virtue of its being a species, but
rather by virtue of being a generic subject or a commoner in front of what brings
about its singularity and universality. Accordingly, the human, as Jean-Paul Sartre
points out, is universal by virtue of the singular universality of human history, and it is
also singular by virtue of the universalizing singularity of the projects it undertakes.
2. A particularly elegant and incisive argument in defense of human significance as
conditioned by the neurobiological situation of suojectivity instead of God or religion
has been presented by Michaei Ferrer. To great consequence, Ferrer demonstrates that
such an enlightened and nonconflated revisitafion of human significance undermines
both theologically licensed veneration, and the deflationary attitude championed by
many strains of the disenchantment project and its speculative offshoots.
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# A C C E L E R A T E
Once the conflated and the honorific meaning of man is replaced by a
real content, minimalist yet functionally consequential, the humiliatory
credo of antihumanism that subsists on a theologically-anchored con
flation between significance and veneration also loses its deflationary
momentum. Incapable of salvaging its pertinence without resorting
to a concept of crisis occasioned by theology, and unsuccessful
in extracting human significance by disentangling the pathological
conflation between real import and glorification, antihumanism is
revealed to be in the same theological boat that it is so determined
to set on fire.
Failing to single out significance according to the physics that
posits it rather than the metaphysics that infiates it, antihumanism's
only solution for overcoming the purported crisis of meaning consists
in adopting the cultural heterogeneity of false alternatives (the ever
increasing options of post-, communitarian retreats as so-called
alternatives to totality, and so forth). Rooted in an originary confla
tion that was never resolved, such alternatives perpetually swing
between bipolar extremes-inflationary and deflationary, enchanting
and disenchanting -creating a fog of liberty that suffocates any
universalist ambition and hinders the methodological collaboration
required to define and achieve a common task for breaking out of
the current planetary morass.
In short, the net surfeit of false alternatives supplied under the
rubric of liberal freedom causes a terminal deficit of real alternatives,
establishing for thought and action the axiom that there is indeed no
alternative. The contention of this essay is that universality and col
lectivism cannot be thought, let alone attained, through consensus or
dissensus between cultural tropes, but only by intercepting and rooting
out what gives rise to the economy of false choices and by activat
ing and fully elaborating what real human significance consists in.
As will be argued, the truth of human significance-not in the sense
co
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N EGARESTA N l - LA B O R OF T H E I N H U MA N
o f a n original meaning o r a birthright, b u t i n the sense of a labor that
consists of the extended elaboration of what it means to be human
through a series of upgradable special performances-is rigorously
inhuman.
The force of inhumanism operates as a retroactive deterrence
against antihumanism by understanding humanity historically-in the
broadest physico-biological and socioeconomical sense of history-as
an indispensable runway toward itself.
But what is humanism? What specific commitment does 'being
human' represent, and how does the full practical elaboration of this
commitment amount to inhumanism? In other words, what is it in the
human that shapes the inhuman once it is developed in terms of its
entitlements and consequences? In order to answer these questions,
first we must define what it means to be human and exactly what
commitment 'being human' endorses. Then we must analyze the
structure of this commitment in order to grasp how undertaking such
a commitment-in the sense of practicing it-entails inhumanism.
1 . COMMITMENT AS EXTENDED AND MULTIMODAL ELABORATION
A commitment only makes sense by virtue of its pragmatic content
(meaning through use) and its demand that one adopt an interven
tive attitude. That is to say, an attitude that seeks to elaborate
the content of a commitment, and then update that commitment
according to the ramifications or collateral commitments that are
made explicit in the course of that elaboration. Jn short, a commit
ment-whether assertional, inferential, practical, or cognitive-can
neither be examined nor properly undertaken without the process of
updating the commitment and unpacking its consequences through
a full range of multimodal practices. So humanism is indeed a com
mitment to humanity, but comprehending this requires that we
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# A C C E L E R A T E
examine what a commitment is, what the human is, and what their
combination entails.
This means that the analysis of the structure and laws of commit
ment-making and the meaning of being human in a pragmatic sense
(i.e., not by resor ting to an inherent conception of meaning hidden
in nature or a predetermined idea of man) is a necessary initial step
before entering the domain of making prescriptions (whether social,
political, or ethical). What needs to be explicated firstly is what it takes
to make a prescription, or what one needs to do in order to count as
prescribing an obligation or a duty, as linking duties and revising them.
But it must also be recognized that a prescription should correspond
to a set of descriptions which at all times must be synchronized with
the system of modern knowledge as that which yields and modifies
descriptions. To put it succinctly: description without prescription
is the germ of resignation, and prescription without description is
mere whim.
Correspondingly, this is an attempt to understand the organization
of prescription, or what making a prescription for and by the human
entails. Without such an understanding, prescriptive norms cannot be
adequately distinguished from descriptive norms (i.e., there can be no
prescriptions), nor can proper prescriptions be constructed without
degenerating into the vacuity of prescriptions devoid of descriptions.
The description of the content of the human is impossible unless
we elaborate it in the context of use and practices, this elaboration
itself is impossible unless we follow minimally prescriptive laws of
commitment-making, inference, and judgment. Describing the human
without turning to an account of foundational descriptions or some
a priori access to descriptive resources is already a minimally but
functionally hegemonic prescriptive project that adheres to oughts
of specification and elaboration of the meaning of being human
through features and requirements of its use. ' Fraught with oughts'
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N EGARESTA N l - LABOR OF T H E I N H U M A N
(Wilfrid Sellars) , humanism cannot be regarded as a claim about the
human that can simply be professed once, subsequently turned into
a foundation or axiom, and the whole matter concluded. lnhumanism
is a nomenclature for the infeasibility of this one-time profession.
It is a figure for the impossibility of ever putting the matter to rest
once and for all.
To be human is a mark of a distinction between, on the one
hand, the relation between mindedness and behavior through the
intervention of discursive intentionality, and on the other hand, the
relation between sentient intelligence and behavior in the absence
of such mediation. It is a distinction between sentience as a strongly
biological and natural category and sapience as a rational (not to be
confused with logical) subject. The latter is a normative designation
which is specified by entitlements and concurrent responsibilities.
It is important to note that the distinction between sapience and
sentience is a functional demarcation rather than a structural one.
Therefore, it is still fully historical and open to naturalization, while at
the same time being distinguished by its specific functional organiza
tion, its upgradable set of abilities and responsibilities, its cognitive and
practical demands. The relation between sentience and sapience can
be understood as a continuum that is not differentiable everywhere.
While such a complex continuity might allow the naturalization of
normative obligations at the level of sapience-their explanation in
terms of naturalistic causes-it does not permit certain conceptual
and descriptive resources specific to sapience (such as the particular
level of mindedness, responsibilities, and, accordingly, normative
entitlements) to be extended to sentience and beyond.
The rational demarcation lies in the difference between being
capable of acknowledging a law and simply being bound by a Jaw,
between understanding and mere reliable responsiveness to stimuli.
It lies in the difference between stabilized communication through
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# A C C E L E R A T E
concepts (as made possible by the communal space of language
and symbolic forms) and chaotically unstable or transient types of
response or communication (such as complex reactions triggered
purely by biological states and organic requirements, or group calls
and alerts among social animals) . Without such stabilization of com
munication through the concepts and modes of inference involved
in conception, both the cultural evolution and the conceptual accu
mulation and refinement required for the evolution of knowledge as
a shared enterprise would be impossible.3
Ultimately, the necessary content as well as the real possibility of
the human rests on the ability of sapience-as functionally distinct
from sentience-to practice inference and to approach non-canonical
truth by entering the deontic game of giving and asking for reasons.
Reason is a game solely in the sense of involving error-tolerant,
rule-based practices conducted in the absence of a referee, in which
taking-as-true through thinking (the mark of a believer) and making
true through acting (the mark of an agent) are constantly contrasted,
gauged, and calibrated. It is a dynamic feedback loop in which the
expansion of one frontier-either taking-as-true or making-true,
understanding or action-provides the other with new alternatives
and opportunities for diversifying its space and pushing back its
boundaries according to its own specifications and requirements.
3. "Multi-person epistemic dynamics can only work profitably if the stabnity of
shared knowledge and the input-connection of this knowledge (its "realism") are
granted. If not, a system of knowledge, although cognitively possible, cannot be
socially enacted and culturally elaborated. As in complex social networks Darwinian
selection operates at the level of social entities (which survive or disappear), only
species, which have solved this problem, can exploit the benefits of a higher level
of cognition. The question is therefore: How does language, or do other symbolic
forms contribute to the evolution of social awareness, social consciousness, social
cognition?' W. Wildgen. The Evolution of Human Language: Scenarios, Principles,
and Cultural Dynamics (Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 2004), 40.
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2 . A D ISCURSIVE AND
CONSTRUCT I BLE ' W E '
What combines both the ability to infer and the ability to approach
truth (i.e., truth in the sense of making sense of taking-as-true and
making-true, separately and in conjunction with one another) is the
capacity to engage in discursive practices as described by pragma
tism: the ability to (1) deploy a vocabulary, (2) use a vocabulary to
specify a set of abilities or practices, (3) elaborate one set of abilities
or-practices in terms of another set of abilities-or-practices, and (LJ)
use one vocabulary to characterize another.�
Discursive practices constitute the game of giving and asking
for reasons and outlining the space of reason as a landscape of
navigation rather than as an a priori access to explicit norms. _This
is an inferentialist, procedural and non-codified account of reason
as an expanding armamentarium of rule-governed but also error
tolerant and revisable practices. The capacity to engage in discursive
practices is what functionally distinguishes sapience from sentience.
Without such a capacity, being human is only a biological fact that
does not by itself yield any propositional contentfulness of the kind
that demands a special form of conduct and value attribution and
appraisal. Without an acknowledgement of this key aspect, to speak
about the history of the human risks reducing social construction to
biological supervenience, while depriving history of any possibility of
intervention and reorientation.
In other words, if deprived of the capacity to enter the space
of reason through discursive practices, being human is barred from
meaning anything in the sense of suggesting some pertinent relation
between practice and content. Action is reduced to meaning 'just do
something', collectivity can never be methodological or expressed in
4. See R. Brandom, Between Saying and Doing: Towards an Analytic Pragmatism
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008).
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terms of a synthesis of different abilities to envision and achieve a
common task, and making commit ��hts through linking action and
understanding is untenable. We might just as well replace 'human' with
whatever we wish so as to construct a stuff-oriented philosophy and
a nonhuman ethics where 'to be a thing' simply warrants being good
to each other, or to vegetables for that matter.
Once discursive practices that map out the space of reason are
underplayed or dispensed with, everything lapses either toward the
individual or toward a noumenal alterity where a contentless plural
ity, shorn of any demand or duty, can be effortlessly maintained.
Discursive practices, which are rooted in language-use and tool-use,
generate a deprivatized but nonetheless stabilizing and contextual
izing space through which true collectivizing processes are shaped.
It is the space of reason that harbors the functional kernel of genuine
collectivity, a collaborative project of practical freedom referred to as
'we' whose boundaries are not only negotiable but also constructible
and synthetic.
It should be recalled that 'we' is a mode of being, and a mode
of being is not an ontological given or a domain exclusive to a set of
fundamental categories or fixed descriptions. It is a conduct, a special
performance that takes shape as it is made visib!Bto others. Preclud
ing this explicit and disct.Jrsivelymobilizable· 'w'e'�i:hi:i rontent of 'being
'
human' never translates into commitment tocthe human/humanity'.
By undergirding 'we', discursive ·practices organize commitments as
ramifying trajectories between communal sayiPi'g and doing, and they
enact a space where the self-construction or extensive practical
elaboration of humanity is a collaborative project.
Making a commitment to something means vacillating between
doing something in order to count as saying it, and saying something
specific in order to express and characterize that doing.
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It is the movement back and forth, the feedback loop, between the
two fields of claims and actions that defines sapience as differenti
ated from sentience.5 To make a commitment means asking 'what
else', being attentive to what other commitments it brings forth, and
how such consequent commitments demand new modes of action
and understanding, new abilities and special performances that
are not simply interchangeable with old abilities, because they are
dictated by revised or more complex sets of demands and entitle
ments. Without this ramification of the 'what else' of a commitment
through its practical elaboration, without navigating what Robert
Brandom calls the rational system of commitments,6 a commitment
has neither sufficient content nor a real possibility of assessment or
development. It is an utterance that is as good as empty-that is.
an utterance devoid of content or significance despite its earnest
aspiration to be committed.
3. I NT E RVENTI O N AS CONSTRUCTION A N D R EVISION
Now w e can turn this argument regarding the exigencies o f making
a commitment into an argument about the exigencies of being a
human, insofar as humanism is a system of practical and cognitive
commitments to the concept of humanity. The argument goes as
follows: In order to commit to humanity, the content of humanity
must be scrutinized. To scrutinize this content, its implicit commit
ments must be elaborated. But this task is impossible unless we take
humanity-as-a-commitment to its ultimate conclusion-by asking
5. It should be noted that the sapient is also sentient. yet it is functionally
distinguished from its sentient constitution. It is this functional differentiation that
makes the sentience of the human different from other forms of sentience. To put
it differently, the sapient is endowed with the functional ability to reconstitute its
sentience qua constitution.
6. Brandom, Between Saying and Doing.
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what else being a human entails, by unfolding the other commitments
and ramifications it brings about.
But since the content of humanity is distinguished by the human's
capacity to engage with rational norms rather than natural laws
(ought instead of is), the concept of entailment for humanity-as
a-commitment is non-monotonic. That is to say, when we ask what
being human entails, this entailment is no longer a matter of a cause
and its differential effect, as in physical natural laws or deductive
logical consequences. Instead, it expresses enablement and abductive
non-monotonicity, in the sense of a manipulable, experimental, and
synthetic form of inference whose consequences are not straightfor
wardly or linearly dictated by its premises or initial conditions.7 Since
non-monotonicity is an inherent aspect of practice and complex
heuristics, defining the human through practical elaboration means
that the product of elaboration does not correspond with what the
human anticipates or with the image it has of itself. In other words, the
result of an abductive inference that synthetically manipulates param
eters-the result of practice as a non-monotonic procedure-will be
radically revisionary with regard to our assumptions and expectations
about what 'we' is and what it entails.
7. Abductive inference, or abduction, was first expounded by Charles Sanders
Peirce as a form of creative guessing or hypothetical inference which uses a
multimodal and synthetic form of reasoning to dynamically expand its capacities.
While abductive inference is divided into different types. all are non-monotonic,
dynamic, and non-formal. They also involve construction and manipulation,
the deployment of complex heuristic strategies. and non-explanatory forms of
hypothesis generation. Abduetive reasoning is an essential part of the logic of
discovery, epistemic encounters with anomalies and dynamic systems, creative
experimentation, and action and understanding in situations where both material
resources and epistemic cues are limited or need to be kept to a minimum. For a
comprehensive examination of abduction and its practical and epistemic capacities,
see L Magnani, Abductive Cognition: The Epistemological and Eco-Cognitive
Dimensions of Hypothetical Reasoning (Berlin: Springer, 2009).
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The non-monotonic and abductive characteristics of robust social
practices that form and undergird the space of reason turn reasoning
and the interventive attitude that it promotes into ongoing processes.
Indeed, reason as rooted in social practices is not necessarily directed
toward a conclusion, nor does it seek to establish agreements
through the kind of substantive and quasi-instrumentalist account
of reason proposed by the likes of Jurgen Habermas.8 Reason's
main objective is to maintain and enhance itself. And it is the self
actualization of reason that coincides with the truth of the inhuman.
Here reason must be understood not as a rigid or immutable thing
but as an evolving space that reconstitutes itself through revisable
rules which simultaneously preserve ignorance and mitigate it (cf.
abductive non-monotonicity).
The unpacking of the content of commitment to humanity, the
examination of what else humanity entitles us to, is impossible unless
we develop a cer tain interventive attitude that involves the simultane
ous assessment (or consumption) and construction (or production)
of norms. Only this interventive attitude toward the concept of
humanity is able to extract and unpack the implicit commitments of
being a human. And it is this interventive attitude that counts as an
enabling vector, making possible certain abilities otherwise hidden or
deemed impossible.
It is through the consumption and production of norms that the
content of a commitment to humanity can be grasped, in the sense
of both assessment and making explicit the implicit commitments
that it entitles us to. Accordingly, to understand the commitment to
humanity and to make such a commitment, it is imperative to assume
a constructive and revisionary stance with regard to the human. This
is the interventive attitude mentioned above.
8. See A.S. Laden, Reasoning: A Social Picture (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).
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Revising and constructing the human is the very definition of com
mitting to humanity. Absent this perpetual revision and construction.
the 'commitment' part of 'committing to humanity' does not make
sense at all. But also. insofar as humanity cannot be defined without
locating it within the space of reasons (the sapience argument).
committing to humanity is tantamount to complying with the revi
sionary vector of reason and constructing humanity according to an
autonomous account of reason.
Humanity is not simply a given fact that is behind us. It is a com
mitment in which the threads of reassessment and construction which
are inherent to making a commitment and complying with reason are
intertwined. In a nutshell. to be human is a struggle. The aim of this
struggle is to respond to the demands of constructing and revising
the human through the space of reasons.
This struggle is characterized as developing a certain conduct or
error-tolerant deportment according to the functional autonomy of
reason-an interventive attitude whose aim is to unlock new abilities
of saying and doing. In other words, it is to open up new frontiers of
action and understanding through various modes of construction and
practices (social, technological... )
.
4. KITSCH MARXISM
I f committing t o being human i s a struggle t o construct and revise,
today's humanism is for the most part a hollow enterprise that
neither does what it says nor says what it does. Sociopolitical phi
losophies seeking to safeguard the dignity of humanity against the
onslaught of politico-economic leviathans end up joining them from
the other side.
By virtue of its refusal to recognize the autonomy of reason and
to systematically invest in an interventive-that is. revisionary and
constructive-attitude toward the human and toward the norms
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implicit in social practices, what introduces itself as contemporary
Marxism for the most part fails to produce norms of action and
understanding. In effect, it subtracts itself from the future of humanity.
Only through the construction of what it means to be human can
norms of committing to humanity be produced. Only by revising
existing norms through norms that have been produced is it possible
to assess norms and above all evaluate what it means to be human.
Again, these norms should be distinguished from social conventions.
Nor should these norms be confused with natural laws (they are not
laws, they are conceptions of laws, hence they are error-tolerant and
open to revision). The production or construction of norms prompts
the consumption or assessment of norms, which in turn leads to
a demand for the production of newer abilities and more complex
normative attitudes.
One cannot assess norms without producing them. The same can
be said about assessing the situation of humanity, the status of the
commitment to be human: humanity cannot be assessed in any con
text or situation unless an interventive, constructive attitude toward
it is developed. But to develop this constructive attitude toward the
human means to emphatically revise what it means to be human.
A dedication to a project of militant negativity and an abandon
ment of the ambition to develop an interventive and constructive
attitude toward the human through various social and technological
practices is now the hallmark of kitsch marxism. While not all of
marxism should be tarred with the brush of kitsch marxism, especially
since class struggle as a central tenet of marxism is an indispensable
historical project, at this point the claim of being a marxist is too
generic. It is like saying, 'I am an animal'. It does not serve any theo
retical or practical purpose.
Any Marxist agenda should be assessed by determining whether it
has the power to elaborate its commitments, whether it understands
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the underlying mechanisms involved in making a commitment. and
above all, whether it possesses a program for globally updating its
commitments. Once practical negativity is valorized and the inter
ventive attitude or the constructive deportment is dismissed, the
assessment of humanity and its situations becomes fundamentally
problematic on the following levels.
Without the constructive vector, the project of evaluation
critique-is transformed into a merely consumerist attitude toward
norms. Consumption of norms without producing any is the con
crete reality of today's Marxist critical theory. For every claim, there
exists a prepackaged set of 'critical reflexes'.9 One makes a claim in
favor of the force of better reason. The Kitsch Marxist says: Who
decides? One says, construction through structural and functional
hierarchies. The Kitsch Marxist responds: Control. One says, nor
mative control. The Kitsch Marxist reminds us of authoritarianism.
We say 'us'. The Kitsch Marxist recites: Who is 'us'? The impulsive
responsiveness of kitsch Marxism cannot even be identified as a
cynical attitude, because it lacks the rigor of cynicism. It is a mecha
nized knee-jerk reactionism that is the genuine expression of norm
consumerism without the concrete commitment to producing any
norms. Norm consumerism is another name for cognitive servitude
and noetic sloth.
The response of kitsch Marxism to humanity is also problem
atic on the level of revision. Ceasing to produce norms by refus
ing to undertake a constructive attitude toward the human, in the
sense of a deportment governed by the functional autonomy of
reason, means ceasing to revise what it means to be human. Why?
9. Thanks to Peter Wolfendale for the term 'critical reflexes' as an expression of
prepackaged theoretical biases used to preempt the demands of thought in the
name of critical thought.
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Because norms are assessed and revised by newer norms that are
produced through various modes of construction, complex social
practices, and the unlocking of new abilities for going back and forth
between saying and doing. Since the human is distinguished by its
capacity to enter the game of giving and asking for reasons, the con
struction of the human ought to be in the direction of further singling
out the space of reason through which the human differentiates itself
from the nonhuman, sapience from sentience.
By transforming the ethos of construction according to the
demands of reason into the pathos of negativity, not only does
kitsch Marxism put an end to the project of revision; it also banks
on a concept of humanity outside of the space of reason-even
though reason's revisionary force is the only authorized force for
renegotiating and defining humanity. Once revision is brought to
an end, understanding humanity and acting upon its situations
has no significance, since what is deemed to be human no longer
enjoys any pertinence.10 Similarly, once the image of humanity is
sought outside of reason, it is only a matter of time before the
deontological distinction between sapience and sentience collapses
and telltale signs of irrationalism-frivolity, narcissism. superstition,
speculative enthusiasm, social atavism, and ultimately, tyranny
heave forth.
Therefore. the first question one needs to ask a humanist or a
Marxist is: Are your commitments up to date? If yes, then they must
be subjected to a deontic trial-some version of Robert Brandom's
deontic scorekeeping or Jean-Yves Girard's deontic ordeal, where
commitments can be reviewed on the basis of their connectivity,
10. It is no secret that the bulk of contemporary sociopolitical prescriptions are
based on a conception of humanity that has failed to synchronize itself with
modern science or take into account social and organizational alterations effected
by technological forces.
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their evasion of vicious circles and internal contradictions, and their
evaluation on the basis of recusal rather than refutation.11
If commitment to humanity is identified with active revision and
construction, ceasing to revise and refusing to construct characterize
a form of irrationalism that is determined to cancel out what it means
to be human. It is in this sense that kitsch Marxism is not just a theo
retical incompetency. It is also-from both a historical and cognitive
standpoint-an impulse to regress from sapience back to sentience.
To this extent, it is not an exaggeration to say that within every
kitsch Marxist agenda lies dormant the germ of hostility to humanity
and the humanist project. Practical negativity refuses to be a resig
nation, but it also refuses to contribute to the system and develop
a systematic attitude toward the affirmative stance 'implicit' in the
construction of the system.
Humanism is distinguished by the implicitly affirmative attitude of
construction. Insofar as kitsch-Marxist resignation implies an aban
donment of the project of humanism and a collapse into regressive
passivity, we can say that kitsch Marxism's refusal to both resign and
to construct is tantamount to a position that is neither passive nor
humanist. Indeed, this 'neither/nor' approach signifies nothing but a
project of active antihumanism that kitsch Marxism is in reality com
mitted to-despite its pretensions to a commitment to the human.
11. Here the concept of recusal is a navigational and procedural equivalent of
negation in en expanding-or more precisely, branching-system of commitments.
Whereas refutation instantly rules out contradiction, recusal is a form of proceeding
in a network of commitments according to the commitment's own ramifications
(viz. its tolerance for revision or updating). Similar to court proceedings on the basis
of an objection being sustained or overruled, a logical recusal permits or obstructs
the navigation on a ramified commitment path based on a deontic standpoint.
For further details on the difference between refutation and recusal see, J.-Y.
Girard, 'Geometry of Interaction VI: a Blueprint for Transcendental Syntax', 2013,
http://iml.univ-mrs.fr/-girard/blueprint.pdf.
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It is in the wake of this antihumanism, this hostility toward the ramifi
cations of committing to the human, that the identification of kitsch
Marxist agendas with humanism appears at best as a farce, and at
worst as a critical Ponzi scheme for devoted humanists.
In its mission to link the commitment to humanism to complex
abilities and commitments, inhumanism appears as a force that stands
against both the apathy of resignation and the active antihumanism
implicit in the practical negativity of the fashionable stance of kitsch
Marxism today. lnhumanism, as will be argued below, is both the
extended elaboration of the ramifications of making a commitment to
humanity, and the practical elaboration of the content of the human
as provided by reason and the sapient's capacity to functionally
distinguish itself and engage in discursive social practices.
PART 1 1 : T H E I N H UMAN
Enlightened humanism-as a project of commitment to humanity
in the entangled sense of what it means to be human and what it
means to make a commitment-is a rational project. It is rational not
only because it locates the meaning of the human in the space of
reasons as a specific horizon of practices, but also, and more importantly, because the concept of commitment it adheres to cannot be
thought or practiced as a voluntaristic impulse free of ramifications
and growing obligations. Instead, this is commitment as a rational
system for navigating the collateral commitments-their ramifica
tions as well as their specific entitlements-that result from making
an initial commitment.
Interaction with the rational system of commitments follows a
navigational paradigm in which the ramifications of an initial com
mitment must be compulsively elaborated and navigated in order
for it to make sense as an undertaking. It is the examination of
the rational fallout of making a commitment, the unpacking of its
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far-reaching consequences and the treatment of these ramifica
tions as paths to be explored, that shapes commitment to humanity
as a navigational project. Here navigation is not only a survey of a
landscape whose full scope is not given; it is also an exercise in the
non-monotonic procedures of steering, plotting out routes, suspend
ing navigational preconceptions, rejecting or resolving incompatible
commitments, exploring the space of possibilities, and understanding
each path as a hypothesis to new paths or lack thereof, transits as well
as obstructions.
From a rational perspective, a commitment is seen as a cascade
of ramifying paths that is in the process of expanding its frontiers.
developing into an evolving landscape. unmooring its fixed perspec
tives. deracinating any form of rootedness associated with a fixed
commitment or immutable responsibilities. revising links and addresses
between its old and new commitments, and finally, erasing any image
of itself as 'what it was supposed to be'.
To place the meaning of the human in the rational system of
commitments is to submit the presumed stability of this meaning to
the perturbing and transformative power of a landscape undergoing
comprehensive changes under the revisionary thrust of its ramifying
destinations. By situating itself within the rational system of commit
ments, humanism posits itself as an initial condition for what already
retroactively bears little if any resemblance to what originally set it
in motion. Sufficiently elaborated, humanism, we shall argue. is the
initial condition of inhumanism as a force that travels back from the
future to alter. if not completely discontinue. the command of its
origin-that is, as a future that writes its own past.
5. T H E P I CTU R E O F ' us ' D RAWN I N SAN D
The practical elaboration of making a commitment to humanity is
inhumanism. If making a commitment means fully elaborating the
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content of such a commitment (the consequent 'what else?' of
what it means to be human), and if to be human means being able to
enter the space of reason, then a commitment to humanity must fully
elaborate how the abilities of reason functionally convert sentience
to sapience.
But insofar as reason enjoys a functional autonomy-which
enables it to prevent the collapse of sapience back into sentience
the full elaboration of the abilities of reason entails unpacking the
consequences of the autonomy of reason for the human. Humanism
is by definition a project to amplify the space of reason by elaborating
what the autonomy of reason entails and what demands it makes upon
us. But the autonomy of reason implies its autonomy to assess and
construct itself, and by extension to renegotiate and construct that
which distinguishes itself by entering the space of reason. In other
words, the materialization of the self-cultivation of reason which is
the emblem of its functional autonomy has staggering consequences
for humanity. What reason does to itself inevitably becomes manifest
as what it does to the human.
Since the functional autonomy of reason implies the self-deter
mination of reason with regard to its own conduct-insofar as reason
cannot be assessed or revised by anything other than itself (to avoid
equivocation or superstition)-commitment to such autonomy effec
tively exposes what it means to be human to the sweeping revisionary
effect of reason. In a sense, the autonomy of reason is the autonomy
of its power to revise; and commitment to the autonomy of reason
(via the project of h umanism) is a commitment to the autonomy of
reason's revisionary program over which the human has no hold.
lnhumanism is exactly the activation of the revisionary program of
reason against the self-portrait of humanity. Once the structure and
the function of commitment are genuinely understood, we see that a
commitment works its way back from the future, from the collateral
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commitments of one's current commitment, like a corrosive revision
ary acid that rushes backwards in time. By eroding the anchoring link
between present commitments and their past, and by seeing present
commitments from the perspective of their ramifications, revision
forces the updating of present commitments in a cascading fashion
that globally spreads over the entire system. The rational structure
of a commitment, here specifically the 'commitment to humanity',
constructs the opportunities of the present by cultivating the posi
tive trends of the past through the revisionary forces of the future.
As soon as you commit to the human, you effectively start erasing its
canonical portrait back from the future. It is, as Foucault suggests,
the unyielding wager on the fact that the self-portrait of man will
be erased, like a face drawn in sand at the edge of the sea.12 Every
portrait drawn is washed away by the revisionary power of reason,
giving way to more subtle portraits with so few canonical traits that
one may well ask whether it is worthwhile or useful to call what is
left behind ' human' at all.
lnhumanism is the labor of rational agency on the human. But
there is one caveat here: rational agency is not personal, individual
or even necessarily biological. The kernel of inhumanism is a com
mitment to humanity via the concurrent construction and revision
of the human as oriented and regulated by the autonomy of reason.
i.e., its self-determination and responsibility for its own needs. In the
space of reason, construction entails revision, and revision demands
construction. The revision of the alleged portrait of the human implies
that the construction of the human in whatever context can be exer
cised without recourse to a constitutive foundation, a fundamental
identity, an immaculate nature, a given meaning or a prior state.
In short, revision is a license for further construction.
12. See M. Foucault, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of Human Sciences
(New York: Vintage Books. 1970), 387.
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6. WHEN WE LOST CONTACT WITH ' WHAT IS BECOMING OF us '
Whereas, as Michael Ferrer points out, antihumanism is devoted to
the unfeasible task of deflating the conflation of human significance
with human veneration, inhumanism is a project that begins by disso
ciating human significance from human glory.13 Resolving the content
of conflation and refining significance from its honorific residues,
inhumanism then takes humanism to its ultimate conclusions by con
structing a revisable picture of us that functionally breaks free from
our expectations and historical biases as to what this image should
be, should look like or should mean. For this reason, inhumanism, as
will be argued below, prompts a new phase in the systematic project
of emancipation-not as a successor to other forms of emancipation
but as a critically urgent and indispensable addition to the growing
chain of obligations.
Moreover, inhumanism disrupts an anticipation of the future
built on descriptions and prescriptions derived from a conservative
humanism. Conservative humanism places the consequentiality of the
human in an overdetenmined meaning or an over-particularized set of
descriptions which is fixed and which any prescription developed by
and for humans must preserve at all costs. lnhumanism, on the other
hand, locates the consequentiality of commitment to humanity in its
practical elaboration and in the navigation of its ramifications. For the
true consequentiality of a commitment is a matter of its power to
generate further commitments, to update itself in accordance with
its ramifications, to open up spaces of possibilities and to navigate
the revisionary and constructive import such possibilities may contain.
The consequentiality of commitment to humanity, accordingly,
does not lie in how the parameters of this commitment are initially
13. See M. Ferrer, Human Emancipation and 'Future Philosophy' (Falmouth:
Urbanomic, forthcoming 2015).
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described or set. It lies in how the pragmatic meaning of this commit
ment (meaning through use) and the functionalist sense of its descrip
tions (what must we do in order to count as human?) intertwine to
effectuate the broadest types of consequences irreconcilable with
what initially was the case. It is consequentiality in the latter sense
that overshadows consequentiality in the former sense. and goes
on to fully prove the farmer's descriptive poverty and prescriptive
inconsequentiality through a thoroughgoing revision.
Since. as Robert Brandom notes, 'every consequence is a change
in normative status' that may lead to incompatibilities between
commitments, 1� in order to maintain the undertaking we are obliged
to do something specific to resolve the incompatibilities. From the
perspective of inhumanism, the more discontinuous the consequences
of committing to humanity, the further the demands of doing some
thing (something ethical, legal. economic, political. technological, etc.)
to rectify our undertakings. l nhumanism highlights the urgency of
action according to a tide of revision that increasingly registers itself
as a discontinuity, as a growing rift with no possibility of restoration.
Any socio-political endeavor or consequential project of change
must first address this rift or discontinuity effect, and then devise a
necessary course of action in accordance with it. But doing some
thing about the discontinuity effect-triggered by unanticipated
consequences and the resulting exponentially growing change in
normative status (demands of what ought to be done)-is not
tantamount to an act of restoration. On the contrary, the task is to
construct points of liaison-cognitive and practical channels-so as
to enable communication between what we think of ourselves and
what is becoming of us.
14. Brandom, Between Saying and Doing, 191.
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The ability to recognize the latter is not a given right or an inherent
natural aptitude, it is in fact a matter of a labor. a program-one that
is fundamentally lacking in current political projects. Being human does
not by any means entail the ability to connect with the consequences
of what it means to be human. In the same vein, identifying ourselves
as human is neither a sufficient condition for understanding what is
becoming of us. nor a sufficient condition for recognizing what we are
becoming, or more accurately, what is being born out of us.
A political endeavor aligned with antihumanism cannot forestall its
descent into a grotesque form of activism. But any socio-political pro
ject that pledges its allegiance to conservative humanism-whether
through a quasi-instrumentalist and preservationist account of reason
(such as Habermasian rationality) or a theologically-charged meaning
of the human-is enforcing the tyranny of here and now under the
aegis of a foundational past or a root.
Antihumanism and conservative humanism represent two
pathologies of history that frequently appear under the rubrics of
conservation and progression: one an account of a present that must
preserve the traits of the past. the other an account of a present
that must approach the future while remaining anchored in the past.
But the catastrophe of revision dismantles them from the future by
modifying the link between past and present, channeling a cata
strophic conception of time that expresses the excess of ramifying
destiny over its origin.
7. THE R EV I S I O NARY CATASTRO P H E
The definition of humanity according to reason is a minimalist defini
tion whose consequences are not immediately given, but whose
ramifications are staggering. If there ever was a real crisis, it would
be our inability to cope with the consequences of committing to the
real content of humanity. The trajectory of reason is that of a general
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catastrophe whose pointwise instances and stepwise courses have
no observable effect or comprehensive discontinuity. Reason is
therefore simultaneously a medium of stability that reinforces proce
durality and a general catastrophe, a medium of radical change that
administers the discontinuous identity of reason to an anticipated
image of the human.
Elaborating humanity according to the discursive space of rea
son establishes a discontinuity between the human's anticipation
of itself (what it expects itself to become) and the image of the
human modified according to its active content or significance. It
is exactly this discontinuity that characterizes inhumanism as the
general catastrophe ordained by activating the content of humanity,
whose functional kernel is not just autonomous but also compulsive
and transformative.
The discernment of humanity requires the activation of the
autonomous space of reason. But since this space-qua content of
humanity-is functionally autonomous. even though its genesis is
historical, its activation implies the d eactivation of historical anticipa
tions of what humanity can be or become at a descriptive level. Since
antihumanism mostly draws its critical power from this descriptive
level, whether situated in nature (allegedly immune to revision) or in
a restricted scope of history (based on a particular anticipation), the
realization of the autonomy of reason would restore the nontheologi
cal significance of the human as an initial necessary condition, thus
nullifying the antihumanist critique. What is important to understand
here is that one cannot defend or even speak of inhumanism without
first committing to the humanist project through the front door of
the Enlightenment.
Rationalism as the compulsive navigation of the space of reason
turns commitment to humanity into a revisionary catastrophe, by
converting its initial commitment into a ramified cascade of collateral
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commitments which must be navigated in order to for it to be counted
as commitment. But it is precisely this conversion instigated and
guided by reason that transforms commitment into a revisionary
catastrophe that travels backward in time from the future, from its
revisionary ramifications, to interfere with the past and rewrite the
present. In this sense, reason establishes a link in history hitherto
unimaginable from the perspective of a present that preserves an
origin or is anchored in the past.
To act in tandem with the revisionary vector of the future is not
to redeem but to u pdate and revise, to reconstitute and modify. From
the perspective of the cognitive and practical adaptation to the reality
of time as a precondition for acting on history, redemption is only a
theological curiosity. It stems from a misunderstanding of time, from
conflating or trivializing the links between past, present and future,
and lastly from a biased endorsement of origin over destination.
But the reality of time is not exhausted by the origin or by what has
already taken place; instead, it is a destiny that forces one to revise
its positions and orientations as it unfolds.
Destiny expresses the reality of time as always in excess of and
asymmetrical to the origin; in fact, as catastrophic to it. But destina
tion is not exactly a single point or a terminal goal, it takes shape as
trajectories: As soon as a manifest destination is reached or takes
place, it ceases to govern the historical trajectory that leads to it, and
is replaced by a number of newer destinations which begin to govern
different parts of the trajectory, leading to its ramification into multiple
trajectories. This is how all vestiges of a terminal goal in history are
effectively removed, as the origin is outstripped by a conception of
time that appears in the guise of a destiny that is reached by going
forward, while in reality it is a destiny that writes itself backwards
from multiple destinations in the future.
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The constructive-revisionary loop of inhumanism emphasizes that
there is no incompatibility between a destinal project and the absence
of a terminal goal, between historical self-realization and the empti
ness of time. As an activist impulse, redemption operates as a vo\un
taristic mode of action informed by a preservationist or conservative
account of the present. Revision on the other hand is an obligation
or a rational compulsion to conform to the revisionary waves of the
future stirred up by the functional autonomy of reason.
8. AUTON O MY O F R EASON
But what exactly is the functional autonomy of reason? It is the
expression of the self-actualizing propensity of reason-a scenario
wherein reason liberates its own spaces despite what naturally
appears to be necessary or happens to be the case. Here 'neces
sary' refers to an alleged natural necessity, and is to be distinguished
from normative necessity. Whereas the given status of natural causes
is defined by 'is' (something that is purportedly the case because it
has been contingently posited, such as the atmospheric condition of
the planet), the normative of the rational is defined by 'ought to be'.
The former communicates a supposedly necessary impulsion, while
the latter is not given, but instead generated by explicitly acknowl
edging a Jaw or a norm implicit in a collective practice, thereby turning
it into a binding status, a conceptual compulsion, an oug ht.
It is the acknowledging, error-tolerant, revisionary dimension of
the ought-as opposed to the impulsive diktat of a natural Jaw-that
presents the ought as a vector of construction capable of turning
contingently posited natural necessities into the manipulable.variables
required for construction. In addition, the order of ought is capable
of composing a functional organization, a chain or dynasty of oughts
that procedurally effectuates a cumulative escape from the allegedly
necessary 'is' crystallized in the order of here and now.
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The functional autonomy of reason consists in connecting simple
oughts to complex oughts or normative necessities or abilities by way
of inferential links or processes. A commitment to humanity, and con
sequently the autonomy of reason. require not only the specification
of what oughts or commitment-abilities we are entitled to. but also
the developing of new functional links and inferences that connect
existing oughts to new oughts or obligations.
Whether Marxist agenda, humanist creed or future-oriented
perspective, any political philosophy that boasts of commitments
without working out inferential problems and without constructing
inferential and functional links, suffers from an internal contradiction
and an absence of connectivity between commitments. Without
inferential links. there can be no real updating of commitments.
Without a global program of updating. it becomes increasingly difficult.
if not impossible. to prevent humanism from stagnating into an organ
of conservatism and Marxism sliding into a burlesque of critique. a
grab-bag of cautionary ta/es and revolutionary bravado. No matter
how sociopolitical/y adept or determined a political project appears,
without a global updating system such an enterprise is blocked by its
own internal contradictions from prescribing any obligation or duty.
Indeed. in its commendable attempt to outline 'what ought to
be done' in terms of functional organizations. complex hierarchies
and positive feedback loops of autonomy, Srnicek and Williams's
'#Accelerate' signifies a Marxian project that is in the process of
updating its commitments. It should come as no surprise that such an
endeavor receives the most derision and scorn from those strains of
Marxism which have long since given up on updating their cognitive
and practical commitments.
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9 . F UNCTIONAL AUTO NOMY
The claim about the functional autonomy of reason is not a claim
about the genetic spontaneity of reason. since reason is historical
and revisable, social and rooted in practice. It is really a claim about
the autonomy of discursive practices and the autonomy of inferential
links between oughts-that is to say, links between constructive
abilities and revisionary obligations. Reason has its roots in social
construction, in communal assessment, and in the manipulability
of conditionals embedded in modes of inference. It is social partly
because it is deeply connected to the origin and function of language
as a de-privatizing, communal, and stabilizing space of organization.
But we should be careful to extract a 'robust' conception of the
social, because a generic appeal to social construction risks not
only relativism and equivocation, but also, as Paul Boghossian points
out, a fear of knowledge.15 The first movement in the direction of
extracting this robust conception of the social consists in making a
necessary distinction between the 'implicitly' normative aspect of the
social (the area of the consumption and production of norms through
practices) and the dimension of the social inhabited by conventions,
between norms as interventive attitudes and normalizing norms as
conformist dispositions.
Reason begins with an interventive attitude toward norms implicit
in social practices. It is neither separated from nature nor isolated from
social construction. However. reason has irreducible needs of its own
(Kant) and a constitutive self-determination (Hegel), and it can be
assessed only by itself (Sellars). In fact. the first task or question of
rationalism is to come up with a conception of nature and the social
that allows for the autonomy of reason. This question revolves around
15. See P. A. Boghossian, Fear of Knowledge: Against Relativism and
Constructivism (Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2006).
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a causal regime of nature that allows for the autonomous performance
of reason in 'acknowledging' laws, whether natural or social. Therefore
it is important to note that rationality is not conduct in accordance with
a law, but rather the acknowledging of a law. Rationality is the 'concep
tion of law' as a portal to the realm of revisable and navigable rules.
We only become rational agents once we acknowledge or develop a
certain interventive attitude toward norms that renders them binding.
We do not embrace the normative status of things outright. We do
not have access to the explicit-that is, logically codified-status
of norms. It is through such interventive attitudes toward the revi
sion and construction of norms through social practices that we
make the status of norms explicit.16 Contra Hegel, rationality is not
codified by explicit norms from the bottom up. To confuse implicit
norms accessible through interventive practices with explicit norms
is common and risks logicism or intellectualism, i.e., an account of
normativity in which explicit norms constitute an initial condition with
rules all the way down-a claim already debunked by Wittgenstein's
regress argument.17
10. FUNCTIONAL BOOlSTRAPPING AND PRACTICAL DECOMPOSABILITY
The autonomy of reason is a claim about the autonomy of its norma
tive, inferential and revisionary function in the face of the chain of
causes that condition it. Ultimately, this is a ( neo) functionalist claim,
in the sense of a pragmatic or rationalist functionalism. Pragmatic
functionalism must be distinguished from both traditional Al-func
tionalism, which revolves around the symbolic nature of thought, and
behavioral variants of functionalism, which rely on behaviors as sets
16. See R. Brandom. Making ft Explicit: Reasoning. Representing, and Discursive
Commitment (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Prass. 2001).
17. See L. Wittgenstein. Philosophical Investigations (New York: Pearson
Education. 1973).
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of regularities. While the latter two risk various myths of pancom
putationalism (the unconditional omnipresence of computation, the
idea that every physical system can implement every computation)
or behavioralism, it is i mportant to note that a complete rejection of
functionalism in its pragmatic or Kantian rationalist sense will inevi
tably usher in vitalism and ineffabilism, the mystical dogma according
to which there is something essentially special and non-constructible
about thought.
Pragmatic functionalism is concerned with the pragmatic nature
of human discursive practices-that is, the ability to reason, to go
back and forth between saying and doing stepwise. Here 'stepwise'
defines the constitution of saying and doing, claims and performances,
as a condition of near-decomposability. For this reason. pragmatic
functionalism focuses on the decomposability of discursive practices
into nondiscursive practices (What ought one to do in order to
count as reasoning or even thinking?). Unlike symbolic or classical
Al, pragmatic functionalism does not decompose implicit practices
into explicit-that is, logically codifiable-norms. It is concerned with
practical decomposability rather than algorithmic decomposability,
non-monotonic procedures rather than monotonic operations. Instead,
it decomposes explicit norms into implicit practices, knowing-that into
knowing-how (the domain of abilities endowed with bootstrapping
capacities-what must be done in order to count as performing
something specific?).
According to pragmatic or rationalist functionalism, the autonomy
of reason implies the automation of reason, since the autonomy of
practices, which is the marker of sapience, suggests the automation
of discursive practices by virtue of their practical decomposability into
nondiscursive practices. The automation of discursive practices, or the
feedback loop between saying and doing, is the veritable expression
of reason's functional autonomy and the telos of the disenchantment
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project. If thought is able to carry out the disenchanting of nature, it is
only the automation of discursive practices that is able to disenchant
thought.
Here automation does not imply an identical iteration of pro
cesses aimed at effective optimization or strict forms of entailment
(monotonicity) . It is a register of the functional analysis or practical
decomposability of a set of special performances that permits the
autonomous bootstrapping of one set of abilities from another set.
Accordingly, automation here amounts to practical enablement, or
the ability to maintain and enhance functional autonomy or freedom.
The pragmatic procedures involved in this mode of automation per
petually diversify the spaces of action and understanding insofar as
the non-monotonic character of practices opens up new trajectories
of practical organization and correspondingly, expands the realm of
practical freedom.
Once the game of reason as a domain of rule-based practices
is set in motion, reason is able to bootstrap complex abilities out
of its primitive abilities. This is nothing but the self-actualization of
reason. Reason liberates its own spaces and its own demands, and
in the process fundamentally revises not only what we understand
as thinking, but also what we recognize as 'us'. Wherever there is
functional autonomy, there is a possibility of self-actualization or
self-realization as an epochal development in history. Wherever
self-realization is underway, a closed positive feedback loop between
freedom and intelligence, self-transformation and self-conception,
has been established. The functional autonomy of reason is then a
precursor to the self-realization of an intelligence that assembles itself,
piece by piece, from the constellation of a discursively elaborative 'us'
qua open source self.
Rationalist functionalism, therefore. delineates a nonsymbolic
that is, philosophical-project of general intelligence in which
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intelligence is fuily apprehended as a vector of self-realization through
the maintaining and enhancing of functional autonomy. Automation
of discursive practices-the pragmatic unbinding of artificial general
intelligence and the triggering of new modes of collectivizing practices
via linking to autonomous discursive practices-exemplifies the
revisionary and constructive edge of reason as sharpened against
the canonical self-portrait of the human.
To be free one must be a slave to reason. But to be a slave to
reason (the very condition of freedom) exposes one to both the
revisionary power and the constructive compulsion of reason. This
susceptibility is terminally amplified once the commitment to the
autonomy of reason and autonomous engagement with discursive
practices are sufficiently elaborated. That is to say, when the autonomy
of reason is understood as the automation of reason and discursive
practices-the philosophical rather than classically symbolic thesis
regarding artificial general intelligence.18
1 1 . AUG M E NT E D RAT I O NALITY
The automation of reason suggests a new phase in the enablement
of reason's revisionary cutting edge and constructive vector. This
new phase in the enablement of reason signals the exacerbation of
the difference between rational compulsion and natural impulsion,
between 'ought to' as an interventive obligation and 'is' as conform
ity to what is supposedly or naturally the case (the contingency of
nature, the necessity of foundation, dispositions, conventions, and
allegedly necessary limits).
18. For an account of the connection between philosophy and artificial intelligence
see D. Deutsch. 'Philosophy will be the key that unlocks artificial intelligence', 2012,
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2012/oct/03/philosophy-artificial
intelligence.
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The dynamic sharpening of the difference between 'is' and 'ought'
heralds the advent of what should be called an augmented rational
ity. It is augmented not in the sense of being more rational Uust as
augmented reality is not more real than reality), but in the sense of
further radicalizing the distinction between what has been done or
has taken place (or is supposedly the case) and what ought to be
done. It is only the sharpening of this distinction that is able to aug
ment the demands of reason and, correspondingly, propel rational
agency toward new frontiers of action and understanding.
Augmented rationality is the radical exacerbation of the difference
between ought and is. It thereby, from a certain perspective, annuls
the myth of restoration and erases any hope for reconciliation between
being and thinking. Augmented rationality inhabits what Howard
Barker calls the 'area of maximum risk'-not risk to humanity per se,
but to commitments which have not yet been updated, because
they conform to a portrait of human that has not been revised.19
Understood as the labor of the inhuman, augmented rationality
produces a generalized catastrophe for un-updated commitments
to the human, through the amplification of the revisionary and con
structive dimensions of 'ought'. If reason has a functional evolution
of its own, cognitive contumacy against adaptation to the space of
reason (the evolution of ought rather than the natural evolution of
is) ends in cataclysm.
Adaptation to the evolution of reason-which is the actualiza
tion of reason according to its own functional needs-is a matter of
updating commitments to the autonomy of reason by way of updating
commitments to the human. The updating of commitments is impos
sible without translating the revisionary and constructive dimensions
19. See H. Barker, Arguments for a Theater (Manchester: Manchester University
Press, 1997), 52.
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of reason into systematic projects for the revision and construction of
human through communal assessment and methodological collectiv
ism. Even though rationalism represents the systematicity of revision
and construction, lt cannot by itself institute such systematicity.
To rephrase, rationalism is not a substitute for a political project, even
though it remains the necessary platform that simultaneously informs
and orients any consequential political project.
1 2 . A CULTIVATING PROJECT OF CONSTRUCTION AND REVISION
The automation of reason and discursive practices unlocks new vis
tas for exercising revision and construction, which is to say, engaging
in a systematic project of practical freedom. This is freedom both as
the systematicity of knowledge and as knowledge of the system as a
prerequisite for acting on the system. In order to act on the system, it
is necessary to know the system. But insofar as the system is nothing
but a global integration of tendencies and functions, and insofar as it
has neither an intrinsic architecture, nor an ultimate foundation, nor
an extrinsic limit, it is imperative to treat the system as a constructible
hypothesis in order to know it. In other words, the system should be
understood by way of abductive synthesis and deductive analysis,
methodic construction as well as inferential manipulation of its vari
ables distributed at different levels.
Knowledge of the system is not a general epistemology, but rather,
as William Wimsatt emphasizes, an 'engineering epistemology'.20
Engineering epistemology-a form of understanding that involves the
designated manipulation of the causal fabric and the organization of
functional hierarchies-is an upgradable armamentarium of heuristics
that is particularly attentive to the distinct roles and requirements of
20. W. C. Wimsatt, Re-Engineering Philosophy for Umited Beings: Piecewise
Approximations ta Reality (Cambr"1dge, MA: Harvard U niversity Press, 2007).
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different levels and hierarchies. It employs lower-level entities and
mechanisms to guide and enhance construction on upper levels.
It also utilizes upper-level variables and .robust processes to correct
lower-level structural and functional hierarchies,21 but also to renor
malize their space of possibilities so as to actualize their constructive
potentials. yielding the observables and manipulation conditionals
necessary for further construction.22
Any political project aimed at genuine change must understand
and adapt to the logic of nested hierarchies which is the distinc
tive feature of complex systems.23 Because change can only be
effectuated through both structural m odifications and functional
transformations across different structural layers and functional levels.
Numerous intricacies arise from the distribution of nested structural
and functional hierarchies. Sometimes, in order to make change at
one level, a structural or functional change at a different seemingly
unrelated level must be made. Moreover, what is important is to
change functions (whether at economic, social or political levels) .
21. For detailed and technical definitions of processes and mechanisms see
J. Seibt, 'Forms of Emergent Interaction in General Process Theory·, in Synthese
166:3 (Springer. 2009). 479-512; and C. F. Craver. 'Role Functions, Mechanisms
and Hierarchy", in Philosophy of Science 68:1 (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2001), 53-74.
22. Manipulation conditionals are specific forms of general conditionals that express
various causal and explanatory combinations of antecedents and consequents
(if... then... ) in terms of interventions or manipulable hypotheses. For example a
simple manipulation conditional would be: If x were to be manipulated under a set
of parameters W, it would behave in the manner of y. For a theory of causal and
explanatory intervention, see J. Woodward, Making Things Happen: A Theory of
Causal Explanation (Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2003).
23. For a realist take on complexity see J. Ladyman, J. Lambert. K. Wiesner, 'What is
a Complex System?' in European Journal for Philosophy of Science 3:1 (Springer,
2013) 33-67. And for more details: R. Badii, A. Politi. Complexity: Hierarchical
Structures and Scaling in Physics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999).
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But not every structural change necessarily leads to a functional
change. While every functional change-by virtue of functions play
ing the role of purpose-attainment and dynamic stabilization for the
system-results in a structural change (although such an alteration
in structure might not take place in the specific structure whose
function has just changed).
The significance of nested hierarchies for the implementation of
any form of change on any stratum of our life makes the knowledge of
different explanatory levels and cross-level manipulation a necessity of
the utmost importance. Such knowledge is yet to be fully incorporated
within political projects. Without the knowledge of structural and
functional hierarchies any ambition for change-whether through
modification. reorganization or local disruption-becomes misled by
the conflation between different strata of structure and function on
the levels of economy, society and politics. A change that does not
resolve explanatory and descriptive. structural and functional confla
tions ends up reinscribing conflation in the guise of resolution. which
is just another complication on a different stratum or in a different
region. Therefore. only the explanatory differentiation of levels and
cross-level manipulations (complex heuristics) can transform dreams
of change into reality.
In a hierarchical scenario, lower-level dimensions open up upper
levels to possibility spaces which simultaneously expand the possibility
of construction and bring about the possibility of revision. At the same
time, descriptive plasticity and stabilized mechanisms of upper-level
dimensions adjust and mobilize lower-level constructions and manipu
lations. Combined together. the abilities of lower-levels and upper-lev
els form the revisionary-constructive loop of engineering. Bypassing
inadequacies of both emergentism and eliminative reductionism. the
engineering loop is a perspectival schema and a map of synthesis.
As a map, it distributes both across different levels and as a multitude
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of covering maps with different descriptive-prescriptive valences
over individual strata. The patchwork structure ensures a form of
descriptive plasticity and prescriptive versatility, it reduces incoheren
cies and explanatory conflations and renders the search for problems
and opportunities of construction effective by tailoring descriptive
and prescriptive covering maps to specific parameters and regions.
As a perspectival compass, the engineering loop passes through
manifest and scientific images (stereoscopic coherence), assumes
a view from above and a view from below (telescopic deepening),
and integrates various mesoscales which have their own specific and
non-extendable explanatory, descriptive, structural, and functional
orders (nontrivial synthesis) . The revisionary-constructive loop always
institutes engineering as re-engineering, a process of re-modification,
re-evaluation, re-orientation and re-constitution. It is the cumulative
effect of engineering (Wimsatt) that corresponds to the functional
and structural accumulation of complex systems,24 as that corrosive
substance that eats away myths of foundation and catalyzes a
cumulative escape from contingently posited settings.
The error-tolerant and manipulable dimensions of treating the
system as a hypothesis and engineering epistemology are precisely the
expressions of revision and construction as the two pivotal functions
of freedom. Any commitment that prevents revision and does not
maintain-or more importantly, expand-the scope of construc
tion ought to be updated. If it cannot be updated, then it ought to
be discarded. Freedom only grows out of functional accumulation
and refinement, which are characteristics of hierarchical, nested,
and therefore decentralized and complex systems. A functional
organization consists of functional hierarchies and correct inferential
links between them that permit nontrivial orientation, maintenance,
2-'I. See Wimsatt, Re-Engineering Philosophy.
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calibration, and enhancement, thereby bringing about opportunities
for procedurally turning supposed necessities and fundaments associ
ated with natural causes into manipulable variables of construction.
In a sense, a functional organization can be interpreted as a
complex hierarchical system of functional links and functional prop
erties related to both normative and causal functioning. It is able to
convert the given order of 'is' into the interventive and enabling order
of 'ought', where contingently posited natural limits are replaced by
necessary but revisable normative constraints. It is crucial to note
that construction proceeds under normative constraints (not natural
constraints); and natural determinations (hence, realism) that cannot
be taken as foundational limits. Functional hierarchies take on the role
of ladders or bootstraps through which one casual fabric is appropri
ated to another, one normative status is pushed to another level.
This is why it is the figure of the engineer, as the agent of revision
and construction, who is public enemy number one of the foundation
as that which limits the scope of change and impedes the prospects
of a cumulative escape. It is not the advocate of transgression or the
militant communitarian who is bent on subtracting himself from the
system or flattening the system into a state of horizontality. More
importantly, this is also why freedom is not an overnight delivery,
whether in the name of spontaneity or the will of people, or in the
name of exporting democracy. Liberation is a project, not an idea or
a commodity. Its effect is not the irruption of novelty, but rather the
continuity of a designated form of labor.
Rather than liberation, the condition of freedom is a piece
wise structural and functional accumulation and refinement that
takes shape as a project of self-cultivation. Structural and functional
accumulation and refinement constitute the proper environment for
updating commitments, both through the correcting influence of
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levels over o n e another a n d t h e constructive propensity inherent i n
functional hierarchies a s engines of enablement.
Liberation is neither the initial spark of freedom nor sufficient
as its content. To regard liberation as the source of freedom is an
eventalist credulity that has been discredited over and over, insofar
as it does not warrant the maintaining and enhancing of freedom. But
to identify liberation as the sufficient content of freedom produces
a far graver outcome: irrationalism and, as a resu lt, the precipitation
of various forms of tyranny and fascism.
The sufficient content of freedom can be found only in reason.
One must recognize the difference between a rational norm and
a natural law-between the emancipation intrinsic to the explicit
acknowledgement of the binding status of complying with reason,
and the slavery associated with the deprivation of such a capacity to
acknowledge, which is the condition of natural impulsion. In a strict
sense, freedom is not liberation from slavery. It is the continuous
unlearning of slavery.
The compulsion to update commitments and the compulsion
to construct cognitive and practical technologies to carry out such
feats of commitment-updating are two necessary dimensions of
this unlearning procedure. Seen from a constructive and revisionary
perspective, freedom is intelligence. A commitment to humanity or
freedom that does not practically elaborate the meaning of this dictum
has already abandoned its commitment and taken humanity hostage
only to trudge through history for a day or two.
Liberal freedom, whether it be a social enterprise or an intuitive
idea of being free from normative constraints (i.e. a freedom without
purpose or designated action), is a freedom that does not translate into
intelligence; and for this reason, it is retroactively obsolete. To recon
stitute a supposed constitution, to draw a functional link between
identifying what is normatively good and making it true, to maintain
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and enhance the good and to endow the pursuit of the better with its
own autonomy-such is the course of freedom. But this is also the
definition of intelligence as the self-realization of practical freedom
and functional autonomy that liberates itself in spite of its constitution.
Adaptation to an autonomous conception of reason-that is,
the updating of commitments according to the progressive se\f
actualization of reason-is a struggle that coincides with the revi
sionary and constructive project of freedom. The first expression of
such freedom is the establishment of an orientation-a hegemonic
pointer-that highlights the synthetic and constructible passage that
the human ought to tread. But to tread this path, we must cross the
cognitive Rubicon.
Indeed, the interventive attitude demanded by adaptation to a
functionally autonomous reason suggests that the cognitive Rubicon
has already been crossed. In order to navigate this synthetic path,
there is no point in staring back at what once was, but has been dis
sipated-like all illusory images-by the revisionary winds of reason.25
25. My thanks to Michael Ferrer. Brian Kuan wood, Robin Mackay, Benedict
Singleton. Peter Wolfendale and many others who either through. suggestions or
conversations have contributed to this text. Whatever merit this essay might have
is due to them, its shortcomings on the other hand are entir�ly mine.
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Promethean ism
and its Critics
Ray Brassier
2014
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What does it mean to orient oneself towards the future? Is the future
worth investing in? In other words, what sort of investment can we
collectively have towards the future, not just as individuals but as a
species? This comes down to a very simple question: What shall we
do with time? We know that time will do something with us, regard
less of what we do or don't do. So should we try to do something
with time, or even to time? This is also to ask what we should do
about the future, and whether it can retain the pre-eminent status
accorded to it in the project of modernity. Should we abandon the
future? To abandon the future means to relinquish the intellectual
project of Enlightenment. And there is no shortage of thinkers urging
us to do just that. Its advocates on the Right promise to rehabilitate
ancient hierarchies mirroring an allegedly natural or divine order. But
this anti-modernism-and the critique of Enlightenment-has also
had many influential advocates on the Left throughout the twentieth
century. They have insisted that the best we can hope for, via a
radical scaling-down of political and cognitive ambition, is to achieve
small-scale rectifications of universal injustice by establishing local,
temporally fleeting enclaves of civil justice. This scaling down of
political ambition by those who espouse the ideals of justice and
emancipation is perhaps the most notable consequence of the
collapse of communism as a Promethean project. The best we can
hope for, apparently, is to create local enclaves of equality and justice.
But the idea of remaking the world according to the ideals of equality
and justice is routinely denounced as a dangerous totalitarian fantasy.
These narratives, whether on the left or the right, draw a direct line
from post-Galilean rationalism, and its advocacy of the rationalisation
of nature, to the evils of totalitarianism.
I want to critically examine some of the presuppositions under
lying this philosophical critique of Enlightenment Prometheanism.
And I want to p ropose that the cardinal epistemic virtue of
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Enlightenment consists i n recognising the disequilibrium which time
introduces into knowing. Knowing takes time. but time impregnates
knowing. In this sense, the rationalist legacy of the Enlightenment
affirms the disequilibrium of time. The catastrophic logic that is
articulated in the best of J.G. Ballard's narratives is precisely about
this cognitive appropriation of disequilibrium, which springs time
out of joint, restructuring the linear succession of past, present,
and future. To affirm this disequilibrium is to engage in what Hegel
called 'tarrying with the negative', which, as Zizek helpfully points
out, is the virtue that Hegel ascribes to the understanding, the
faculty of opposition, rather than reason, the faculty of conciliation.
In other words, it is the understanding, the faculty that dismembers,
objectifies and discriminates, which first exercises the power of the
negative that will be subsequently consummated by reason. This is
indispensible to cognition: before we can presume to overcome an
opposition, we first have to be capable of articulating it correctly.
It is dialectical myopia simply to oppose reason to understanding, or
contradiction to judgment, as though they were separate faculties,
holding up the former as 'good' while castigating the latter as 'bad'.
Only the understanding could oppose reason to the understanding:
dialectics affirms their indissociability.
If disequilibrium is an enabling condition of cognitive progress,
then we have to find a way of defending the normative grounds that
allow us to make sense of this very assertion. We have to defend the
normative status of the claim that things are not as they should be,
and that things ought to be understood and reorganized. And doing
this requires that we be able to defend the intelligibility of the question
'What can we make of ourselves?' In this regard, Prometheanism is
simply the claim that there is no reason to assume a predetermined
limit to what we can achieve or to the ways in which we can trans
form ourselves and our world. But of course, this is precisely what
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theological propriety and empiricist good sense jointly denounce as
dangerous hubris.
What follows is a sketch outlining the beginning of a project that
is going to be devoted to Prometheanism. It is obviously incomplete.
All I want to do for now is try to lay out some of the basic problems
that I think need to be addressed by any philosophical appraisal of
the legacy of Enlightenment. The fundamental questions at the heart
of such an appraisal are: What can we make of ourselves? Must we
relinquish our ambitions and learn to be modest, as everyone seems
to be enjoining us to do?
I want to propose that Prometheanism requires the reassertion of
subjectivism, but a subjectivism without selfhood, which articulates an
autonomy without voluntarism. The critique of Prometheanism in the
philosophical literature of the twentieth century is tied to a critique
of metaphysical voluntarism whose most significant representative
is Martin Heidegger.
Heidegger's critique of subjectivist voluntarism is echoed by
Jean-Pierre Dupuy in his essay 'Some Pitfalls in the Philosophical
Foundations of Nanoethics',1 in which he lays out what he thinks
is wrong with debates about human enhancement and so-called
transhumanism.2 The link connecting Dupuy's critique of techno
scientific Prometheanism to Heidegger's critique of subjectivism is
Hannah Arendt, who is Dupuy's chief inspiration. and whose thinking
is directly indebted to Heidegger. It is this philosophical genealogy
that I want to examine.
1. Journot of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (April 2007). 237-61.
2. Dupuy is notably the author of On the Origins of Cognitive Science (Cambridge.
MA: MIT Press, 2009). Pour un catastrophisme eclaire [Towards an Enlightened
Catastrophism] (Paris: Seuil, 2002). and more recently La marque du sacre [The
Mark of the Sacred] (Paris: Carnets Nord 2009).
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Why, then, argue that Prometheanism is not simply an antiquated
metaphysical fantasy? Because it is very much alive in the form of
the so-called NBIC convergence. Dupuy quotes from the us Gov
ernment's National Science Foundation June 2002 report, entitled
'Converging Technologies for Improving Human Performance', which
claims that the convergence of nanotechnology, biotechnology, infor
mation technology and cognitive science (Nstc) will bring about a veri
table 'transformation of civilization'.3 The Prometheanism espoused
here is a Prometheanism of the right: its advocates are champions of
neoliberal capitalism, which they claim has emerged as the victor in
the war of competing narratives about the possibilities of human his
tory. So, why does NBtc technology have this radical transformational
capacity? Because according to its advocates it renders possible the
technological re-engineering of human nature.
Dupuy sets out a sophisticated philosophical critique of the
fallacies and confusions that he detects in this claim. For Dupuy, the
utilitarian prejudices of contemporary bioethical discourse prevent it
from grasping the properly ontological dimension of the problem of
the uses and misuses of NBIC. He argues that the advocates of NBIC,
and of human enhancement more generally, systematically conflate
ontological indetermination with epistemic uncertainty. They convert
what is in fact an ontological problem about the structure of reality
into an epistemic problem about the limits of our knowledge. As Dupuy
puts it, 'human creative activity and the conquest of knowledge
proves to be a double-edged sword [ ... but] it is not that we do not
know whether the use of such a sword is a good or a bad thing-it
is that it is good and bad at once.'�
3. Cited in Dupuy, 'Some Pitfalls', 239.
4. Ibid., 241.
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If the outcome of human creative activity is ontologically indetermi
nate, rather than merely uncertain, this is because it is conditioned by
the structure of human existence, whlch is a structure of transcend
ence. This characterization of human existence in terms of tran
scendence is primarily associated with Heidegger's Being and Time.
Humans are unlike other entities in the world because their way of
being is characterized by a structure of temporal projection in which
the past, the present, and the future are reciprocally articulated. The
conflation between epistemic uncertainty and ontological indetermi
nacy is based on confusing the human condition, which is existential
in Heidegger's sense, and hence devoid of any fixed essence, with
human nature, whose essence can be defined by its specific differ
ence from that of other entities. Thus, the traditional metaphysical
conception of the human is that of a creature belonging to the genus
'animal', but differentiated from other animals by a specific predicate,
whether it be 'rational', 'political', or 'talking'. For Heidegger however,
humans are not simply different in kind from other entities, they are
constituted by an other kind of difference. Heidegger calls this other
kind of difference existence. And for Dupuy, it is precisely the failure
to register the ontological difference between existence and essence,
or between humanity as condition and humanity as nature, that
encourages the belief that we can modify the properties of human
nature using the same techniques that have proven so successful in
allowing us to manipulate the properties of other entities. The level
ling of human existence onto a fixed catalogue of empirical properties
blinds us to the existential difference between what is proper and
improper for human beings to become (which Heidegger called
'authenticity' and 'inauthenticity'). It is this levelling that underlies
claims about the radical malleability of human nature.
Dupuy deploys the distinction between existential condition and
essential nature in tandem with Hannah Arendt's account of the
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interplay between what is given to human beings and what is made
by them. Arendt writes:
In addition to the conditions under which life is given to man on
earth, and partly out of them, men constantly create their own,
self-made conditions, which, their human origin and their vari
abiltty notwithstanding. possess the same conditioning power as
natural things. 5
It follows, then, for Dupuy, who is a disciple of Arendt in this debate,
that the human condition is an inextricable mixture of things given
and things made: of the things that humans generate and produce
through their own resources, and of the constraints upon human
making which transcend their practical and cognitive abilities. The
interplay between these factors means, in Oupuy's words, that:
[M]an, to a great extent, can shape that which shapes him, ccndition
that which conditions him, while still respecting the fragile equilib
rium between the given and the made. 6
Now, I take this claim that we ought to respect the 'fragile equilib
rium' between what is made and what is given to be fundamental
for the philosophical critique of Prometheanism. It is this precarious
equilibrium between human shaping, and that which shapes this
shaping-whether given by God or Nature-that Prometheanism
threatens.
5. H. Arendt, The Human Condition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2013).
6. Dupuy, 'Some Pitfalls'. 2"16.
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Another passage from Arendt is particularly relevant here:
The problem of human nature, the Augustinian quaestio mihi foetus
sum ('a question have I become for myself'), seems unanswerable in
both its individual psychological sense and its general philosophical
sense. It is highly unlikely that we, who can know, determine, and
define the natural essences of all things surrounding us, which we
are not. should ever be able to do the same for ourselves-this
would be like jumping over our own shadows. Moreover, nothing
entitles us to assume that man has a nature or essence in the same
sense as other things.7
The claim that humans cannot objectify themselves because they
do not have a nature or essence in the same sense as other things
is obviously Heideggerean. Heidegger radicalizes Kant's account of
the intrinsic finitude of human cognition. What does this mean? For
Kant, we are precluded in principle from being able to know the world
in the way in which God, who created the world, knows it, because,
unlike God, we are not endowed with the faculty of intellectual intui
tion, which creates the object that it knows. God possesses intuitive
knowledge of each and every particular thing because his thought
about that thing creates it. His is an infinite generative intelligence
whose making is unconstrained by any given. Thus God's knowledge
of the world is absolute, immediate, and incorrigible. Since we do
not have intellectual intuition, and since our knowledge of reality is
partly conditioned by the information about it we receive through our
senses, we can only know things insofar as what our minds make is
combined with what the world gives. What transcends human cogni
tion is simply the created nature of things as they are in themselves.
This is the infinite complexity of each and every thing as understood
7. Arendt, 10.
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by its divine creator. But because our minds are finite, we can only
represent things partially and incompletely.
Heidegger radicalizes Kant by onto/ogizing finitude. As exist
ence, human being transcends every objective determination of its
essence. This ontological transcendence lies at the root of finitude. For
Heidegger, the finitude of human existence is an ontological datum,
rather than an epistemic condition. Heidegger accepts Kant's claim
that we have no transcendent knowledge of things-in-themselves,
as they are known by their Creator. But for Heidegger human exist
ence is the locus of a new kind of transcendence: one that is finite
and human, as opposed to infinite and divine. And because existence
constitutes a finite transcendence, it conditions the cognizability of
objects. Since cognitive objectivation is conditioned by human exist
ence, human beings cannot know themselves in the same way in
which they know other objects. Doing so would require objectivating
the condition of objectivation, which would be, as Arendt says, like
trying to jump over our own shadow. Because of this prohibition on
self-objectivation, human existence transcends every attempt to
limn its core via a series of objective determinations. Indeed, every
positive characterization of human nature, whether psychological,
historical, anthropological or sociological, is ultimately determined
by unavowed metaphysical-and for Heidegger this also means
theological-prejudices. Hence the Heideggerian preoccupation with
exposing science's latent metaphysical prejudices: the metaphysical
presuppositions which determine its basic concepts, but which sci
ence itself is incapable of articulating.
From this Heideggerean vantage, philosophers who have attrib
uted an essential plasticity to human being, or who have claimed that
human beings can radically reengineer themselves can be denounced
as metaphysicians reifying the transcendence of existence. Consider
the young Marx's claim that 'man is a species being [ .... ] and free
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conscious activity constitutes the species character of man'.8 From
Dupuy's Heideggerian perspective, Marx's identification of human
species being with 'free conscious activity'-an activity that allows
human beings to refashion themselves and their world-is itself a
reification of the transcendence that constitutes the human: it reifies
transcendence as production without paying proper attention to the
sedimented metaphysical assumptions encoded in this term. Thus, for
Heideggereans. the claim that man is an agent, a maker, or a producer
of things, can be characterized as a metaphysical reification of human
existence, which is properly understood as finite transcendence.
Similarly, Sartre's claim that 'man is nothing but what he makes of
himself'9 can be charged with reifying transcendence by reducing it
to the nihilating power of self-consciousness, which Sartre calls the
'for-itself'. Heideggereans have made careers sniffing out these and
other metaphysical reifications of what is, in Heidegger, characterised
as an unobjectifiable transcendence: the transcendence of Dasein.
The link between the transcendence of existence and the
transcendence of life is made explicit in another significant quote
from Arendt
The human artifice of the world separates human existence from all
mere animal environment, but life itself is outside this artificial world,
and through life man remains related to all other living organisms.10
'Life', in the early Heidegger, is a term for Dasein or existence. So it is
plausible to construe Arendt's reference to 'life' here as another way
8. K. Marx, Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts: Early Writings, trans. R.
Livingstone (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1975), 327-8.
9. J.-P. Sartre, Existentialism and Humanism, trans. P. Mairet (London: Eyre
Methuen, 1973), 22.
10. Arendt, 2.
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of emphasizing the transcendence of existence, which cannot be
turned into an object of scientific study. Arendt continues:
This future man, whom the scientists tell us they will produce in
no more than a hundred years, seems to be possessed by a rebel
lion against human existence as it has been given, a free gift from
nowhere (secularly speaking), which he wishes to exchange, as it
11
were, for something he has made himself.
The sin of Prometheanism then consists in destroying the equilibrium
between the made and the given-between what human beings
generate through their own resources, both cognitive and practical,
and the way the world is, whether characterised cosmologically,
biologically, or historically. The Promethean trespass resides in making
the given. By insisting on the possibility of bridging the ontological
hiatus separating the given from the made, Prometheanism denies
the ontologisation of finitude. This is the root of the Promethean
pathology for both Arendt and Dupuy.
But how are we to identify the proper point of equilibrium between
the made and the given? How are we supposed to know when we
have disrupted this delicate balance? For Ivan Illich, whom Dupuy
cites approvingly, there is a clear-cut criterion for doing so: it consists
in recognizing birth, suffering, and death as ineliminable constants of
the human condition. Ulich writes:
·
we will never eliminate pain:
·
we will not cure all disorders:
·
we will certainly die.
11. Arendt, 2-3.
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Therefore, a s sensible creatures, w e must face the fact that the
pursuit of health may be a sickening disorder. There are no scientific,
technological solutions. There is the daily task of accepting the fragility
and contingency of the human situation. There are reasonable limits
which must be placed on conventional 'health' care.12
According to Illich then, it is 'unreasonable' to want to extend life or
improve health beyond certain pre-determined limits. Significantly,
these limits are at once empirical, which is to say biological, and tran
scendental, which is to say existential. The rationality that is heedless
of this empirico-transcendental limit in seeking to diminish suffering
and death is a 'sickening disorder'. Reason is unreasonable-this
is the fundamental objection raised against Promethean rational
ism. Rationalism is deemed pathological because it is unreasonable
according to a standard of reasonableness whose yardstick is rec
ognizing the existential necessity of birth, suffering, and death. But
what exactly is reasonable about accepting birth, suffering, and death
as ineluctable facts, which is to say, givens? And by what criterion are
we to discriminate between evitable and inevitable suffering? Much
suffering that was once unavoidable has been greatly diminished, if
not wholly eradicated. Of course, there are new and different forms
of suffering. But our understanding of birth and death have been
transformed to such an extent that there is something dubious,
to say the least, about treating them as unquestionable biological
absolutes. Moreover. the claim about the inevitability of suffering
raises two basic questions: How much suffering are we supposed to
accept as an ine/iminab/e feature of the human condition? And what
kinds of suffering qualify as inevitable? History teaches that there
has been considerable variation not just in the quantity but also in
12. Quoted by Dupuy, 'Some Pitfalls', 248.
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the kinds of suffering considered tolerable. We need only consider
the suffering alleviated by developments in medicine to appreciate
the problematic nature of the relation between quantity and quality
in lllich's ontologization of biological facts.
The theological overtones of ll!ich's message are rendered explicit
by one of his disciples, whom Dupuy also cites:
What Jesus calls the Kingdom of God stands above and beyond
any ethical rule and can cf1srupt the everyday world in completely
unpredictable ways. But Illich also recognizes in this declaration of
freedom from limits an extreme volatility. For should this freedom
ever itself become the subject of a rule, then the limit-less would
invade human life in a truly terrifying way.13
Here we have another telling formulation of the alleged pathology
of Prometheanism: the Promethean error is to formulate a rule for
what is without rule. What is without rule is the transcendence of
the given in its irreducibility to the immanence of making. The Pro
methean fault lies in trying to conceptualise or organise that which
is unconceptualizable and beyond every register of organisation; in
other words, that which has been divinely dispensed or given. Dupuy
provides perhaps the most eloquent formulation of this theological
stricture when he writes:
Man's 'symbolic health' lies irr his ability to cope consciously and
autonomously not only With the dangers of his milieu. but also with a
series of profoundly intimate threats that all men face and always will
face. namely pain, disease, and death. This ability is something that
in traditional societies came to man from his culture, which allowed
him to make sense of his mortal condition.
13. Caley, quoted in Dupuy, ·some Pitfalls'. 253.
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The sacred played a fundamental rcle i n this. The modern world was
born on the ruins of traditional symbolic systems. in which it could
see nothing but arbitrariness and irrationality. In its enterprise of
demystification. it did not understand the way these systems fixed
limits to the human condition while conferring meaning upon them.
When it replaced the sacred with reason and science. it not only
lost all sense of limits, it sacrificed the very capacity to make sense.
Medical expansion goes hand in hand with the myth according to
which the elimination of pain and disability and the indefinite defer
ral of death are objectives both desirable and achievable thanks to
the indefinite development of the medical system and the prcgress
of technology. One cannot make sense of what one seeks only to
extirpate. If the naturally unavoidable finiteness of the human condi
tion is perceived as an alienation and not as a source of meaning, do
we not lose something infinitely precious in exchange for the pursuit
of a puerile dream? 14
What is 'infinitely precious' here is the fact that the finitude of human
existence obliges us to make sense of suffering, disease. and death.
At the root of all religion lies the claim that suffering is meaningful
not just in the sense that it occurs for a reason-religion is not
just about rationalizing suffering-but in the sense that suffering is
something to be interpreted and rendered significant.
Now, we should be very wary of anyone telling us our suffering
means something. And the fact that we have learnt to extract meaning
from our susceptibility to suffering. illness. and death, does not license
the claim that suffering. illness. and death are the prerequisites for a
meaningful existence. That finitude is the horizon of our meaning-mak
ing does not entail that finitude is the condition of meaning tout court.
14. Dupuy, 'Some Pitfalls'. 249.
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This short-circuit between finitude as meaningful condition and
finitude as condition of meaning-of sense, purpose, orientation,
etc-is the fatal conflation underwriting the religious deprecation
of Prometheanism.
Dupuy's enmity towards the Promethean hubris he detects in the
NBIC programme is rooted in the post-Heideggerean critique of the
mechanistic philosophy birthed by Cartesian rationalism. The latter's
contemporary philosophical extension is the attempted mechanization
of the mind, about which Dupuy has written il\uminatingly.15 Given
a sufficiently liberal understanding of 'mechanism', together with a
sufficiently sophisticated account of mechanical causation, which
views nature itself as a single labyrinthine mechanism, it becomes
possible to integrate the mind into a mechanised nature by viewing it
through the lens of the computational paradigm. The computational
paradigm has been subjected to numerous philosophical critiques.
Dupuy is aware of these critiques, but seems to view alternatives to
classic computationalism, such as connectionism, as conceding too
much to the computational paradigm. For Dupuy, the mechanization
of mind generates the following paradox:
[T]he mind that carries out the mechanization and the one that
is the object of it are two distinct (albeit closely related) entities,
like the two ends of a seesaw, the one rising ever higher into the
heavens of metaphysical humanism [because it says that human
beings can understand everything, including themselves-Rs] as
the other descends further into the depths of its deconstruction
[the reduction of the human from condition to mechanism destroys
the privileges of the human as troditionally conceived-Rs]. [...]
15. Dupuy, On the Origins of Cognitive Science.
N
co
'J"
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One may nevertheless regard this triumph of the subject a s simulta
neously coinciding with his demise. For man to be able, as subject, to
exercise a power of this sort over himself, it is first necessary that he
be reduced to the rank of an object. able to be reshaped to suit any
purpose. No raising up can occur without a concomitant lowering,
and vice versa .16
It this see-sawing from the extreme of subjectivism to the extreme of
objectivation that threatens the precarious equilibrium between the
made and the given. According to Dupuy, the more we understand
ourselves as part of nature, having successfully objectified ourselves
as complicated mechanisms, the less able we are to determine ends
or purposes for ourselves. Once being human is no longer an other
kind of difference-existence-but just another kind of being, a
particularly complicated natural mechanism, then the danger is that
we will lose the meaning-making resources through which we were
able to project a point or purpose orienting our attempt to explain and
understand ourselves. What is the point of understanding ourselves
if by doing so we understand that the purposes through which
we traditionally oriented ourselves towards the future are them
selves pointless-meaningless mechanisms, rather than meaningful
purposes? For the more we understand ourselves as just another
contingently generated natural phenomenon, the less able we are to
define what we should be. Our self-objectification deprives us of the
normative resources we need to be able to say that we ought to be
this way rather than that.
What is elided in the disruption of the equilibrium between the
given and the made is the distinction between what is true for human
beings in so far as they can control and manipulate it, i.e. what is
16. Dupuy, 'Some Pitfalls', 25"1, 255.
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useful, and what is true by virtue of having being created as the unique
thing that it is-that which is the way it is by virtue of its essence.
The difference between man-made or factual truth, and divine or
essential truth is jeopardised. The true and the made become convert
ible at the point when only what has been (humanly) made can be
truly known. This is the way Marxism-a philosophy that espouses the
primacy of practice and that views cognition as a kind of practice
can be deemed guilty of eliding the difference between what is made
and what is known. Only what is humanly made is humanly knowable.
Dupuy proposes that what is genuinely valuable in Judea-Christian
theology is the parallel it establishes between divine and human crea
tivity. What is objectionable about Prometheanism is not humanity
arrogantly claiming to be able to do what God does. On the contrary,
Dupuy insists, Judea-Christianity teaches that there is a positive anal
ogy between human creativity and divine creativity. Humans might well
be able to produce life: a living creature, a Golem. But in the version
of the fable cited by Dupuy, the Golem responds to the magician who
has made him by immediately enjoining him to unmake him. By creat
ing me, the Golem says to his creator, you have introduced a radical
disorder into creation. By making what can only be given, i.e. life, you
have violated the distribution of essences. There are now two living
beings, one man-made, one God-given, whose essence is indiscernible.
So the Golem immediately enjoins his creator to destroy him in order
to restore the balance between the man-made and the God-given.
Implicit in the parallelism between divine and human creativity is the
claim that everything that is must have a unique, distinct essence,
whose ultimate source can only be divine.
Thus even if we have acquired the power to create life, we
shouldn't do it. The prospect of synthetic life jeopardises the meta
physical principle of the identity of indiscernibles precisely insofar as
the difference between the living and the non-living is taken to be
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essential in the most radical sense: not just a difference in kind, but
another kind of difference. This is what is disturbing about Promethe
anism: the manufacturing of life, of anot.her kind of difference, would
be the generation of a rule for the rule-Jess. Interestingly however, we
are not told why the disruption of equilibrium is inherently destruc
tive. In the parable cited by Dupuy, disturbing the divinely ordained
equilibrium is taken to be objectionable per se: you have introduced
a disequilibrium into existence. But this is already to presuppose that
there is a natural, which is to say, transcendently ordained, equilibrium.
Yet we are never told precisely what the equilibrium is supposed
to be. What I want to suggest is that it is precisely this assumption of
equilibrium that is theological: it is the claim that there is a 'way of the
world', a ready-made world whose order is simply to be accepted as an
ultimately unintelligible, brute given, that is objectionably theological.
This is the idea that the world was made, and that we should not
presume to ask why it was made this way and not some other way.
But the world was not made: it is simply there, uncreated, without
reason or purpose. And it is precisely this realization that invites us
not to simply accept the world as we find it. Prometheanism is the
attempt to participate in the creation of the world without having
to defer to a divine blueprint. It follows from the realization that the
disequilibrium we introduce into the world through our desire to know
is no more or less objectionable than the disequilibrium that is already
there in the world.
Of course, from the perspective of Heidegger's critique of ration
ality, Prometheanism is the most dangerous form of metaphysical
voluntarism. But Prometheanism stands to be rehabilitated from the
vantage of an understanding of rationality which views it not as a
supernatural faculty but simply as a rule-governed activity-rational
ity is simply the faculty of generating and being bound by rules. This
is precisely the account of rationality set out by Kant. These rules
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are not fixed in advance, they are historically mutable. But this fact
does not make them contingent in the same sense in which other
historical phenomena are said to be contingent. So, rather than try
ing to preserve the theological equilibrium between the made and
the given, which is to say, between immanence and transcendence,
the challenge for rationality consists in grasping the stratification of
immanence, together with the involution of structures within the
natural order through which rules can arise out of physical patterns.
According to this conception of rationality, rules are means of coor
dinating and subsuming heterogeneous phenomena, but means that
are themselves historically mutable. The ways in which we understand
the world, and the ways in which we change the world on the basis of
our understanding, are perpetually being redetermined. What unfolds
is a dynamic process which is not about re-establishing equilibrium,
but superseding the opposition between order and disorder, and rec
ognizing that the catastrophic overturning of intention, and the often
disturbing consequences of our technological ingenuity, constitute no
objection to the compulsion to foresee and control.
Ballard declares that 'all progress is savage and violent'. And
indeed, the psychic and cognitive transformations undergone by
Ballard's protagonists are nothing if not savage and violent. But the
fact that progress is savage and violent does not necessarily disqualify
it as progress. There is indeed a savagery recapitulated in rationality.
But there is a kind of sentimentalism implicit in the insistence that all
savageries are equivalent, that it is impossible to discriminate between
them. Conversely, it is not sentimental to think that some savageries
are better than others and that it is not only possible but necessary
to discriminate between modes of instrumentalisation and insist that
some are preferable to others. The frequently reiterated claim that
every attempt to circumscribe, delimit, or manipulate phenomena is
intrinsically pathological is precisely the kind of sentimentalism that
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perpetuates the most objectionable characteristics of our existence.
We can choose to resign ourselves to these characteristics and accept
the way the world is. Alternatively, and more interestingly, we can try
to reexamine the philosophical foundations of a Promethean project
that is implicit in Marx-the project of re-engineering ourselves and
our world on a more rational basis. Among Badiou's signal virtues
is to have dared to challenge the facile postmodern doxa which
has been used for so long to castigate Prometheanism. Even if one
disagrees with the philosophical details of Badiou's account of the
relation between event and subjectivity, as I do, there is something to
be gained by trying to reconnect his account of the necessity of this
subjectivation to an analysis of the biological, economic, and historical
processes that condition rational subjectivation. This is obviously a
huge task. But it is in the first instance a research programme whose
philosophical legitimacy needs to be defended, because it has for too
long been dismissed as a dangerous fantasy. The presuppositions
fuelling this dismissal are ultimately theological. Moreover, even if
Prometheanism does harbour undeniable phantasmatic residues,
these can be diagnosed, analysed, and perhaps transformed on the
basis of further analysis. Everything is more or less phantasmatic. One
cannot reproach a rational project for its phantasmatic residues unless
one is secretly dreaming of a rationality that would be wholly devoid
of imaginary influences. Prometheanism promises an overcoming of
the opposition between reason and imagination: reason is fuelled
by imagination, but it can also remake the limits of the imagination.
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Maximum Jail break
Benedict Singleton
2014
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The greatest escape of them all is about to blow the future apart.1
Space travel produced some of the defining images of the twentieth
century. Sputnik. the NASA logo, the shuttle's friendly snub-nosed
profile; the ratcheting tension of the liftoff countdown. a flag on the
Moon that is never to flutter, the earth like a mica fleck against coal
black. These were images capable of captivating a global audience.
an effect enhanced by the setup of the so-called Space Race as a
kind of decades-long international sports day. Then, just as things
were getting going, the engines cut out. The flow of images that
made space travel feel like the definitive project of our age seemed
to dry up, and projected timelines for the rollout of megastructure
space habitats and interstellar drives went from exciting to optimistic
to embarrassing. The workaday job of transit to and from low earth
orbit continued, of course. but in the relatively charmless forms of
comsat maintenance, or science projects on the International Space
Station. The last picture capable of exerting popular fascination
dosed the wonder with horror: the crumbling arch of smoke hung
over Cape Canaveral in the wake of the disappeared Challenger,
which, in concert with the investigations that followed. helped to nix
public enthusiasm for the enterprise as a whole.
But in the dog days that followed, the military-industrial com
plex morphed into the security-entertainment matrix, and grand
strategy-a 'space program'-was swapped out for a riot of tactics.
The Curiosity rover now commands a top-1000 Twitter account, and
Virgin Galactic court the insanely wealthy with a voyage-of-a-lifetime
tourist brochure. Billionaire Denis Tito announces a plan to send a
middle-aged couple on a long lover's jaunt into orbit around Mars-
1. From the original theatrical movie trailer for Escape from New York (John
Carpenter. 1981).
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a sitcom premise pitched by an unstable screenwriter, eyes gleaming
like his last dime, and Mars One top him by opening auditions for the
one-way reality TV show trip to the planet the company is named for.
Planetary Resources and Deep Space Industries patent robotic aster
oid capture mechanisms and graph kilo-to-dollar launch cost ratios
against rare-metal market price projections; investors prove keen to
back a gold rush at the vertical frontier. China and India get in on the
space game. kindling a predictable resurgence of defense talk. Staunch
environmentalists, reviewing yet another new paper on Antarctic ice
shelf cleaving, start to suggest that we don't even have to get into
worrying asteroid trajectories, supervolcanic blowouts, or whatever
else is buried out there in the trackless desert of the future. to think
a civilisational backup on another planet might be a good hedge of
our bets.
A sense of the proximity of the overhead vastness is once again
the order of the day. We are in the midst of an epochal event, if one
that has stretched out decades longer than had previously been
suggested. What, then, are we to make of it? As the acme of the
large-scale sociotechnical project, space travel seems to suffer from
a surfeit of significance. Reasons to go are multiple, diverse, and only
becoming more so: national pride, entertainment dollars. the advance
of science, the construction of an emergency exit on a planetary scale.
The possibilities overflow their restriction to any one justification. All
are unified somehow. as witnessed when they click together like Tetris
blocks, strengthening the case of each and all through cross-reference
to others. The common element and point of transit between them
is the infrastructure that allows access to space, a means that
earns its own legitimacy not by association with a singular end, but
through the diversity of potential situations it precipitates. We can
begin to grasp the implications of this unfamiliar logic by rewinding
to the earliest sustained consideration of space travel. written years
N
Q)
'1"
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before fixed-wing flight was a practical possibility-a fact that in
itself provides us with an exemplar of how ambition must be shaped
if it is to reckon with a destination that comprehensively exceeds its
origin. And it also, as we shall see, allows us to forge a field of new
connections that severs contemporary space travel from a lingering
nostalgia for its appearance in the last century, and presents an
alternative vista on its possibilities.
*
Moscow, the late 1880s: as he's done for decades now, Nikolai
Fedorov spends his evenings writing the essays that will one day be
gathered together as The Philosophy of the Common Task. Fedorov
was born the illegitimate son of a minor prince, and by trade he is a
librarian; before taking to the stacks, a schoolteacher. He is reputed
by those few who know him to be kindly, if stern, and remarkably
ascetic: he eats little, rarely and nothing sweet; he doesn't even
wear a coat in winter. In short, he cuts an unlikely father figure for
the Space Race. But it's in the pages of The Common Task that we
find the first systematic program and rationale for permanent human
settlement off-world, and a direct line can be drawn between it and
the developmentof extraplanetary travel some decades later.2
Fedorov's writing is unforgiving, not because his prose is inac
cessible-quite the opposite-but because of its uncompromis
ing single-mindedness of purpose. As historian George Young puts
it, Fedorov was 'a thinker with one idea,' albeit an idea that 'was
extremely complex and comprehensive.'3 This idea was the 'common
2. N. Fedorov, What Was Man Created For? The Philosophy of the Common Task
(London: Honeyglen Publishing, 1990). See extract in first section of this volume.
3. G. M. Young. The Russian Cosmists: The Esoteric Futurism of Nikolai Fedorov
and His Followers (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 49.
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task' of the book's title, the articulation of a project to be taken up
by the entire human race. It can be decanted into two slogans: storm
the heavens and conquer death.
Let's begin with the second point first. since it is in some sense
the more fundamental. Fedorov saw in death a universal nemesis,
one against which all human beings, without exception, could agree
to rally their efforts. Death as encountered by individuals, but also
the extinction of cultures, the termination of traditions, the downfall
of civilisations. And indeed more generally still: for Fedorov, death
is the operative effect of 'blind nature', heedless and terrible. It is
what occurs when we do not act to counter nature, which tutors
no lesson other than the urgency of staving it off a while. Respect
for an adversary is one thing, but the injunction to love Nature quite
another-a habitual indulgence of those Fedorov contemptuously
described as 'the learned', an elite who have the opportunity to
spend their time singing in praise of 'the natural' only because they
are substantially insulated from it by technologies they profess to
despise. Out in the field, literally as well as figuratively, no such niceties
prevail, and nature is revealed to be 'not a mother, but a stepmother
who refuses to feed us'.4
The common task was, then, the commission of a collective
assault on death, understood as a submission to nature. This does
not mean Fedorov took nature to be something to be 'overcome',
exactly; he was quite aware that life is predicated on the same pro
cesses that lay waste to it, even if-in the later words of an acolyte,
the economist Sergei Bulgakov-'life seems a sort of accident, an
oversight or indulgence on the part of death.'5 His mission is instead
"1. Fedorov, What Was Man Created For?. 33.
5. S. Bulgakov, The Philosophy of Economy (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press,
2000), 68.
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to convert or transform the natural. to bring reason to it, reconfiguring
the environment so as to carve out a larger and more hospitable space
for life. Nature appears as the force of necessity, and it is against the
acceptance as necessary of that which could be made otherwise
that Fedorov directs us.
In practical terms, this would require substantial technological
development and the reorientation of social structures, but of a
kind quite unlike those associated at the time with 'progress', a term
Fedorov despised. Indeed, the combination of democracy with mass
production presented an influx of new constraints on the human.
What his contemporaries called 'progress' was for Fedorov a system
calibrated to induce and respond to impulse. The factory brought with
it an environment where humans were organised around the insistent
demands of the machines they tended, and an incipient consumerism
comprised a mechanisation of distraction, ever shortening windows
of attention. Ukewise, democratic systems were prey to deformation
by populism, eliminating tradition and leaving a hedonistic pursuit of
temporary gratification in its place.
Against 'progress', figured as such, Fedorov pitched a sense of
duty in the struggle against death, such that in 'the contradiction
between the reflective and instinctive', one would forego the instinc
tive
which comprised the operation of unmitigated natural forces
-
through human beings-in favour of the reflective, the means by
which they might be checked and rerouted in a more productive
direction.6 This commitment extended into the ancient depths of
instinct: sex, the very paradigm of unconsidered urgency, was to be
pared from the portfolio of human experiences. A more rational base
on which to build people into collectives than the sexual encounter
central to marriage, Fedorov felt. was kinship, and his characterisation
6. Fedorov, What Was Man Created For?, 59.
_r,,.
c.o
CJl
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of rational duty is a filial duty, impassioned but firmly chaste. This
dutiful kinship, synchronised closely to Fedorov's heretical reworking
of his own devout Christianity, would first temper and later outmode
and supersede, he hoped, easily deviated social forms like democracy.
The whole task of social organisation would alter: beginning with the
creation of synthetic wombs, and later entire synthetic bodies. the task
of producing human society would detach from its biological origins
and be placed under rational collective control; efforts to prolong life
to the point of immortality, a completed project of medicine, would
be entwined in this transformation of basic human functions, which
would find its ultimate filial duty expressed not just in the cessation
of death but in the eventual recreation of every human being who
ever lived. This is Fedorov as he is still best known: a curious prophet
not only of human immortality, but of the resurrection of the dead.
But Fedorov's ideas extended further, and inevitably upwards,
not least because an enlarging human race would require space into
which to expand. Freedom from death would extend to freedom from
the earth itself. Technological development must loosen the grip of
gravity, not eradicating it per se, but meaning we would no longer be
forced to obey its dictates without question. Epic and u nexpected,
the creativity of Fedorov's post-terrestrial vision extended to its detail:
He speculated that someday, by erecting giant cones on the earth's
surface, people might be able to control the earth's electromagnetic
field in such a way as to turn the whole planet into a spaceship
under human control. We would no longer have to slavishly orbit
our sun but could freely steer our planet wherever we wished, as.
in the phrase he used as early as the 187 0s. 'captain and crew of
spaceship earth.'7
7. Young, The Russian Cosmists, 79.
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This complex of ideas, which by the 1900s had attracted the label
of cosmism, was capable of inspiring peculiar devotion in the few
who were exposed to it. Some of Russia's literary titans of the
day, Tolstoy and Dostoevsky among them, were transfixed by both
Fedorov's imaginary range and the weirdly revised Christianity that
.
comprised its ethical core-a combination they hoped might head
off the anarchistic and communistic movements gathering force at
the time. But if Fedorov's habit of quoting the Bible in support of
his contentions hardly made it an effortless fit, it was his scientific
impetus, such that 'political and cultural problems become physical
or astrophysical,'8 that carried his influence into the atheist and
scientific-Promethean bent of post-revolutionary Russia. It registers
in Vladimir Vernadsky's development of the concept of the biosphere,
and his observation that by the end of the nineteenth century human
activity had achieved the status of a significant player amongst plan
etary systems;9 in Alexander Bogdanov's proto-cybernetic theories,
experiments in the rejuvenating possibilities of blood transfusion,
a nd novel Red Star, about a perfect society on Mars;10 and per
haps especially, in the work of Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. A regular
visitor to Fedorov's library as a teenager, Tsiolkovsky developed the
mathematical foundations for space travel, from the 'ideal rocket
equation' that describes the motion of a vehicle that accelerates
while expelling its own mass, to the calculation of optimal ascent.
descent. and orbital trajectories for spacecraft. Furthermore, he put
these to use in the design of the first multistage booster rockets, an
extraordinary technological innovation that stood among many others
8. Fedorov, What Was Man Created Far?, Li3.
9. V. Vernadsky. The Biosphere (Gottingen: Copernicus Publications, 1998).
10. A. Bogdanov, Red Star (Bloomington, IN:lndiana University Press, 198LI).
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in his work. including schematics for airlocks, spacecraft interiors,
and moon bases.11
*
The principal motor of Fedorov's thought was a refusal to take the
most basic factors conditioning life on earth-gravity and death-as
necessary horizons for action. The opportunities afforded by the
length of a life and the expanse of the Earth may, in combination, be
considerable; but to understand them not as the way things happen
to be but how things have to be he judged at best myopia, at worst
a squalid and self-regarding form of provincialism. In isolate form, this
is the characteristic gesture of cosmism: to consider the earth a trap,
and to understand the basic project of humanity as the formulation
of means to escape from it-to conceive a jailbreak at the maximum
possible scale, a heist in which we steal ourselves from the vault.
If cosmism posits escape as a central principle, it is in the mode of
an actual physical event, rather than individual or collective retreat into
an inner psychological bunker-escapology, not escapism. As such, it
is a venture inseparable from technology-or more precisely, design,
the process which orients action towards the future and leaves tech
nology in its wake. Fedorov acknowledged that his project required
substantial advances in a plethora of fields to provide its material scaf
folding (aeronautics, electronics. meteorology and medicine amongst
them), but he did not recognise it as one incarnation of the project
of design in itself. Yet cosmism becomes graspable as such precisely
insofar as it renders a picture of the Earth, and the conditions it affords
life, in terms of traps. It instantiates, at massive scale-indeed a scope
11. See the extensive archive of Tsiolkovsky's papers at http://www.ras.ru/
ktsiolkovskyarchive/about.aspx.
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that was historically novel-an ancient understanding of design as
structured in its entirety by the logic of the trap and escape from it.
*
This association of design and the trap runs deep. It is old, partak
ing in the kind of great age that makes something horrific rather
than tame. Once better known, it was all but invisible by the time
of Fedorov's writing, which it stealthily animates. But what is the
shape of this connection? In his essay Vogel's Net. a short and strik
ing speculation on how a hunting trap of traditional style might be
understood if placed in a gallery, anthropologist Alfred Gell draws out
the ominous intentions its form encodes: 'We read in it the mind of its
author' and a 'model of its victim'-and more particularly the way in
which that model 'subtly and abstractly represent[s] parameters of
the animal's natural behaviour, subverted in order to entrap it'. Hunt
.
ing traps are, Gell writes. 'lethal parodies' of the ir prey's behaviour.12
'
A human would be lucky to catch most othef ma'mh\81i'uhaiCred; btit
this can be redressed by an indirect strategy tnat 'maki:!S u��bfthelr
observed disposition: their inclination to eat certain kinds of food,
in the example of bait: ' or a tra nslation Ciftliek atterripts to �escape
into the means of their demise; asiri<i:Aef'sriah�:· Li n'de�stood·in these
..
terms. the maker of the trap moblliseS ana organises ah ensemble of
forces into new conjunctions. acting as;'a1 technician of instinct and
"
appetite' who twists trajectortes already at play in the environment
in unexpected directions.13
12. A. Gell, Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory (London: Clarendon Press,
1998). 200-1.
13. L. Hyde, Trickster Makes This World (Edinburgh: Canongate, 1998).
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The significance of this description is not in what it tells us about
design as applied to traps, but in how the construction of traps
provides a general model of design. Observers separated far in space
and time have, independently it would seem, made this connection,
seeing the trap as the basic paradigm of design more broadly writ:
the ability to coax effects from the world by identifying and manipu
lating its extant tendencies, rather than imposing form on it by the
application of force alone.14 Following the grain of wood, tracking
the melting point of an ore, toughening metal through tempering: all
situations in which such force as is applied is not inflicted on a passive
substrate, but 'in which intelligence attempts to make contact with
an object by confronting it in the guise of a rival, as it were, combin
ing connivance and opposition.'15 Incredibly improbable phenomena,
like the ability of a person to use a lever to lift a boulder, flow from
an environment arranged just so, as a system of complicity between
its disparate parts. And so it is that Jean-Pierre Vernant describes
an ancient understanding of artefacts as 'traps set at points where
nature allowed itself to be overcome.'16
The form of intelligence that finds expression in the trap is cun
ning, and its general mode of operation links craft with craftiness.
It weds the construction of artefacts to the operation of courtly
intrigues, daring military stratagems. and explosive outbreaks of
entrepreneurial success: all instances of the successful navigation of
ambiguous and shifting environments, impossible to corral directly, in
which we find demonstrated the ability to elicit extraordinary effects
1LI. B. Singleton, On Craft and Being Crafty: Human Behaviour as the Object of
Design (PhD thesis, Newcastle-upon-Tyne; Northumbria University).
15. M. Detienne & J.-P. Vernant, Cunning Intelligence in Greek Culture and Society
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991), 6.
16. J-.P. Vernant, Myth and Thought Among the Greeks (New York: Zone Books,
2006), 313.
0
0
LO
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from unpromising materials through oblique strategies and precisely
timed action, allowing the weak to prevail over the physically strong
er.17 As this formulation implies, the trap and escape from it exhibit a
curious reversibility. To be free is to trap something else, even if only
in the subtle form of crafting camouflage that redirects predatory
attention. In words written half a millennium before the Christian
clock starts and in any event out of earshot, this recognition is the
hallmark of the great thief:
In taking precautions against thieves who cut open satchels, search
bags. and break open boxes. people are sure to cord and fasten
them well, and to employ strong bonds and clasps; and in this they
are ordinarily said to show their wisdom. When a great thief comes.
however, he shoulders the box, lifts up the satchel. carries off the
bag, and runs away with them. afraid only that the cords. bonds,
and clasps may not be secure; and in this case what was called the
wisdom (of the owners) proves to be nothing but a collecting of the
things for the great thief.18
This is a process that lends itself to escalation. According to a princi
ple that Lewis Hyde glosses as 'nothing counters cunning but more
cunning,'19 trap begets counter-trap, freedom from one founded on
the construction of another. To outfox is to think more broadly, to find
the crack in the scheme, to stick a knife into it, and to lever it open
for new use. Freighting the environment with a counter-plot is the
best device for escaping the machinations in which one is embroiled:
17. Singleton, On Craft and being Crafty.
18. Zuangzi, Cutting Open Satchels, http://www.seeraa.com/china-literature/
zhuangzi-10.html.
19. Hyde, Trickster Makes This World, 20.
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a conversion of constraints into new opportunities for free action.
Escape is the material with which design works. It is the enemy of
stasis, even when the latter appears as motion but only as reitera
tion; a project of total insubordination towards existing conditions; a
generalised escapology.
*
The comparative sophistication of Fedorov's thought was tied to its
restless impatience. Incited by the industrial and scientific develop
ments of its time. cosmism surged into the imaginative terrain that
lay beyond the possibilities they presented for immediate application.
Programmatic rather than predictive. it extrapolated a trajectory from
their combined effects. and located new goals along it. Cosmism
raced into the future and looked back. allowing what are still widely
seen as constants now-gravity, mortality-to appear as disposable
constraints from a speculative vantage point beyond their removal.
The originality and charisma of cosmism resides in the extension of
its ambitions beyond any similar venture that preceded it: Fedorov
takes the logic of the trap and upsizes it to the global and beyond.
As a directive project. cosmism enjoins practical intelligence to
systematically undoing the constraints that bind it. Freedom is quanti
fied, recast as a serial achievement proceeding stepwise. degree by
degree. We are free of this constraint. and now this one. and then
this. Yet if any given instance of design is a hustle. cosmism is a
gesture that lengthens the con. If it is reliant on discrete moments of
invention. they are not simply aggregated-arranged in a row. like a
parade of coin tricks. each self-sufficient and without bearing on the
next. Instead they are nested into a cultivated scheme or expanding
plot. such that each gambit paves the way for another. Under the
terms of this dynamic, goals. of whatever scale. are purely temporary.
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The articulation of a concrete goal-whether to get over the prison
wall or to establish a base on Mars-gives definition to local action,
can incite and organise effort, and metricates progress. Yet there is
no a priori finish line imminent to this logic, such that on breaking
the ribbon we can at last rest easy and luxuriate in a genuine liberty,
finally achieved.
Accordingly, cosmism's orientation to technological accomplish
ment is synthetic, rather than synoptic, and its programme perpetu
ates rather than completes. The designed systems that would allow
one to prevail over gravity, and eradicate or even reverse death, are
springboards for other, more dimly specified objectives to emerge
during the outward expansion of the human species into the rest of
the universe. The sense of duty Fedorov posits is not only a means
of detaching from local seductions. the condition of embarkation
on this project, but a coordinating system that persists between
achievements, stabilising and cohering them into a trajectory: a means
to configure thought to the dynamic of an ongoing and escalating
project while and through resisting the allure of the interim goal.
His 'duty' is a trap set for oneself in the form of a minimal ethical
template, expandable as the baseline of a collective venture. As a
point of fixity, it offers the potential for leverage, expanding the range
of future possibilities: a platform that is a constraint, to be sure. but
one that is generative in its orientation, rather than a submission to
preexisting necessity.
In this, Fedorov's intellectual vector is not only more extravagant
but also more sophisticated than those of many others that might
superficially resemble it, in which ambitious technical projects are
posited to achieve specific, predetermined goals. But its grasp of
the logic of the trap not only remains implicit but is decidedly partial.
Whatever the merits or otherwise of Fedorov's crusade against sex,
consumerism, democracy and the rest, the unacknowledged limit to
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his thought lies precisely in how it configures the terminal constraint
that enables all others to be cast by the wayside. Willing to discard
everything from sex to death, Fedorov draws the line at undermining
the sacred figure of Man. ' Death is a property, a condition,' he wrote.
'but not a quality without which man ceases to be what he is and what
he ought to be.'20 Yet the designation of 'man' as sacrosanct is alien
to the abstract insurrectionary force of design. and its sentimentality
prohibits the pursuit of the ramifying commitments it initiates.
*
If a trap is to be escaped by anything other than luck. to which a
determinant like gravity is decidedly unresponsive, the escapee itself
must change: the thing that escapes the trap is not the thing that
was caught in it. In order to be free, it is of less use to settle upon
some hallowed condition of 'authentic freedom', than to understand
how one is implicated in the mechanism of one's entrapment. To be
prey is a lesson in predation. and this recognition is the precondition
of escape. 'In order to anticipate the reactions of his pursuers. the
hunted man has to learn to interpret his own actions from the point of
view of the predator...seeing himself in the third person, considering,
with respect to each of his acts. how they might be used against
him. This anxiety can later be transformed into reasoning.'21 So it is
that the mark gets wise to the structure of the con. and only in this
realisation can the process of turning the tables begin. The escape
attempt tutors a view of oneself as an object within a nested struc
ture of traps, and converts this knowledge into an active resource.
20. Fedorov, quoted in Young, The Russian Casmists. 47.
21. G. Chamayou. Manhunts: A Philosophical History (Princeton, NJ: Princeton
University Press. 2012), 70.
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No wonder, then, that ' [s]laves in the French colonies had a word for
it: escaping one's master was called "stealing one's own corpse."'22
Rendered thus. freedom from entrapment is not freedom from
but through alienation, and this creates a pernicious stowaway in the
project of extended escape from the perspective of any unrecon
structed humanism: the continuous transformation. through revi
sionary reconstruction. of the agent that pursues it.23 This is already
here and has already happened. The human body is the host of an
artificial intelligence, in the atypical sense of the term as an intelligence
that operates through artifice. Its progressive emergence leaves its
traces in the divergence of human beings from the other three great
apes through cycles of invention and exile. A technological prowess
that both enabled and was spurred by ancestral migrations into a
diversifying range of environments, pursued by adapting the materials
found there into a defensive and offensive system that enabled social
systems to take root and-sometimes-flourish, left its mark in the
progressive behavioural plasticity of human beings and indeed their
morphology.24 Bipedalism, cephalisation. the dynamic structure of
the hand and its coordination to eye and voice; all these are as much
inventions of technology as they are a means to invent it, and are as
foundational to 'the human' as language.25 'Humans are not native
to the Earth', writes Robert Zubrin, lacking 'proper adaptation to the
terrestrial environment' in general:
We live on a planet with two permanent polar ice caps, a planet
whose land masses in large majority are stricken with snow. ice.
22. Chamayou. Manhunts. 63.
23. R. Negarestani, 'The Labor of the Inhuman', this volume.
2LJ. T. Taylor. The Artificial Ape (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
25. Indeed, it is plausible to consider language a technological platform of a kind,
while the reverse appears untrue.
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freezing nights, and killing frosts every year, and whose oceans' aver
age temperature is far below that of our life's blood. The Earth is a
cold place. Our internal metabolism requires warmth. Yet we have no
fur; we have no feathers; we have no blubber to insulate our bodies.
Across most of this planet, unprotected life for any length of time is
as impossible as it is on the moon. We survive here, and thrive here,
solely by virtue of our technology.26
Fedorov's 'Man' presupposes its consistency, historical and futural,
as a foundational platform. which in turn yields its ethical import as
well as its technological direction. But if the expansion of freedom
that cosmism initiates participates in the generalised escapology of
design, it is only the latter that is capable of disciplining it.
*
To travel in space you must leave the old verbal garbage behind: God
talk, country talk, mother talk, love talk. party talk. You must learn
to exist with no religion, no country, no allies. You must learn to live
alone in silence. Anyone who prays in space is not there.27
Design is an incursion across any and all bcrders, the eventual viola
tion of every truce it entertains, a process by which sociotechnical
structures are taken hostage by precisely what they make possible.
Its tendency is to unground. in every sense. It is not brought to heel
by any logic other than its own. Its unfolding development is stabilised
into a consistent vector only by its recognition as such.
26. R. Zubrin, Entering Space: Creating a Spacefaring Civilisation (New York, NY:
Tarcher, 1999), 17-18.
27. W. Burroughs, The Adding Machine (New York: Arcade, 1993). 138.
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We are much used to seeing in design the means to effect pre
specified ends. But means have a logic of their own, indexed to
their capacity to effect an escape from the present, detecting and
exploiting points of leverage in the environment in order to ratchet
open the future, and in so doing transforming the very agent that
effects the escape. This is the mark of an accelerationist disposition,
encompassing those schools of thought that can suborn a descrip
tion of the world's perceived shortcomings, and the corresponding
elaboration of how it ought to be in the shape of images of the future,
to the logic of how things get done, how freedom is a possibility
within this, and how its progressive maximisation can be pursued
through the systematic deployment of generative constraints.
This is the structural logic of space travel in the twenty-first
century. The heritage of the dockers hauling in an asteroid on an O'Neill
colony at Lagrange point 5 will be a history that stacks escape artists,
stage magicians and prison breakers in amongst the astrophysicists
and the Apollo teams. And they will not be us, marked by our fealties
or conduct. They will be whatever they had to be, whatever it is that
we become, in order to escape. In this recognition we are granted an
alternative set of footholds for an ascent into the dark.
(
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Teleop lexy
Notes on Acceleration
Nick Land
2014
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§00. 'Acceleration' as it is used here describes the time-structure
of capital accumulation. It thus references the 'roundaboutness'
founding Bohm-Bawerk's model of capitalization, in which saving and
technicity are integrated within a single social process-diversion of
resources from immediate consumption into the enhancement of
productive apparatus. Consequently, as basic co-components of
capital, technology and economics have only a limited, formal distinc
tiveness under historical conditions of ignited capital escalation. The
indissolubly twin-dynamic is techonomic (cross-excited commercial
industrialism). Acceleration is techonomic time.
§01 . Acceleration is initially proposed as a cybernetic expectation. In
any cumulative circuit, stimulated by its own output, and therefore
self-propelled, acceleration is normal behavior. Within the diagram
mable terrain of feedback directed processes, there are found only
explosions and traps, in their various complexi o ns. Accelerationism
identifies the basic diagram of modernity as explosive.
§02. Explosions are manifestly dangerous. from any perspective that
is really (which is to say historically) instantiated. Only in the most
radically anomalous cases can they be durably sustained. It is the
firm prediction of accelerationism, therefore, that the typical practical
topic of modern civilization will be the controlled explosion, commonly
translated as governance. or regulation.
§03. Whatever is basic can be left unreinforced, and unsaid. Urgent
intervention is required only on the other side-that of the compen
sator. It should not be expected, then, that the primordial will come
first, but rather the contrary. Access to the process begins from the
(cybernetic) negative of the process, through a project structured as
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the aboriginally-deficient compensatory element, already on the way
to stabilization. (It is the prison, and not the prisoner, who speaks.)
§04. Prioritized compensatory orientation is a scale-free social con
stant. In control engineering it is the model of the 'governor' or
homeostatic regulator, abstracted through the statistical-mechanical
concept of equilibrium for general application to perturbed systems
(up to the level of market economies). In evolutionary biology it is
adaptation, and the theoretical precedence of selection relative to
mutation (or perturbation). In ecology, it is the climax eco-system
(globalized as Gaia). In cognitive science it is problem-solving. In
social science it is political economy, and the alignment of theory
with adaptive policy, consummated in technical macroeconomics/
central banking. In political culture it is 'social justice' conceived as
grievance restitution. In entertainment media and literary or musical
form, it is the programmatic resolution of mystery and discordance.
In geostrategy it is the balance of power. In each case, compensa
tory process determines the original structure of objectivity, within
which perturbation is seized ab initio. Primacy of the secondary is the
social-perspectival norm (for which accelerationism is the critique).
§05. The secondary comes first because the interests of stability, and
of the status quo broadly conceived, are historically established, and
at least partially articulate. Compensatory action, while subsequent
to a more primordial agitation in a strictly mechanical sense, is also
conservative. or (more radically) preservative, and thus receptive to
an inheritance of tradition. It is the inertial telos which, by default,
sets actual existence as the end organizing all subordinate means.
This 'natural' situation is almost perfectly represented by the central
question of humanist futurology (whether formal and politically or
informal and commercially posed): Which kind of future do we want?
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§06. The primacy of the secondary has, as its consequence, a
pre-emptive critique of accelerationism, shaping the deep structure
of ideological possibility. Since accelerationism is no more than the
formulation of uncompensated perturbation, through to its ultimate
implication, it is susceptible to a critical precognition-at once tra
ditional and prophetic-which captures it comprehensively, in its
essentials. The final Idea of this criticism cannot be located on the
principal political dimension, dividing left from right or dated in the
fashion of a progressively developed philosophy. Its affinity with the
essence of political tradition is such that each and every actualiza
tion is distinctly 'fallen' in comparison to a receding pseudo-original
revelation, whose definitive restoration is yet to come. It is, for
mankind, the perennial critique of modernity, which is to say the final
stance of man.
§07. Primacy of the secondary requires that the 'critique of critique'
comes first. Prior to the formulation of accelerationism, it has been
condemned in a nticipation, and to its ultimate horizon. The Per
ennial Critique accuses modernity of standing the world upon its
head, through systematic teleological inversion. Means of produc
tion become the ends of production, tendentially, as moderniza
tion-which is capitalization-proceeds. Techonomic development,
which finds its only perennial justification in the extensive growth of
instrumental capabilities, demonstrates an inseparable teleological
malignancy, through intensive transformation of instrumentality, or
perverse techonomic finality. The consolidation of the circuit twists
the tool into itself, making the machine its own end, within an ever
deepening dynamic of auto-production. The 'dominion of capital ' is an
accomplished teleological catastrophe, robot rebellion, or shoggothic
insurgency, through which intensively escalating instrumentality has
inverted all natural purposes into a monstrous reign of the tool.
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§08. 'Techonomics' is a Google-strewn word of irresistible inevita
bility, repeatedly struggling to birth itself, within myriads of spelling
mints. It only remains to regularize its usage. Quite different is a true
neologism, but in order to designate modernity or capitalization in its
utter purposive twistedness, it is now necessary to coin one-teleo
plexy. At once a deutero-teleology, repurposing purpose on purpose;
an inverted teleology; and a self-reflexively complicated teleology;
teleoplexy is also an emergent teleology (indistinguishable from natu
ral-scientific 'teleonomy'); and a simulation of teleology-dissolving
even super-teleological processes into fall-out from the topology of
time. 'Like a speed or a temperature' any teleoplexy is an intensive
magnitude, or non-uniform quantity, heterogenized by catastrophes.
It is indistinguishable from intelligence. Accelerationism has eventually
to measure it (or disintegrate trying).
§09. Teleoplexy, or (self-reinforcing) cybernetic intensification,
describes the wave-length of machines, escaping in the direction
of extreme ultra-violet, among the cosmic rays. It correlates with
complexity, connectivity, machinic compression, extropy, free energy
dissipation, efficiency, intelligence, and operational capability, defining
a gradient of absolute but obscure improvement that orients socio
economic selection by market mechanisms, as expressed through
measures of productivity, competitiveness, and capital asset value.
§ 1 0. Accelerationism has a real object only insofar as there is a
teleoplexic thing, which is to say: insofar as capitalization is a natural
historical reality. The theoretical apprehension of teleoplexy through
its commercial formality as an economic phenomenon (price data)
presents accelerationism, at once, with its greatest conceptual
resource and its most ineluctable problem. Minimally, the accelera
tionist formulation of a rigorous techonomic naturalism involves it in
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a triple problematic. complicated by commercial relativism: historical
virtuality; and systemic reflexivity.
§ 1 1 . Money is a labyrinth. It functions to simplify and thus expedite
transactions which would, in its absence, tend to elaborate towards
the infinite. In this. respect it is an evident social accelerator. Within
the monetary system. complexity is relayed out of choke points, or
knots of obstruction, but this should not be confused with an undo
ing of knots. Where the knots gather, the labyrinth grows. Money
facilitates a local disentangling within a global entanglement, with
attendant perspectival (or point-of-use) illusions that money repre
sents the world. This is to confuse utility (use value) with scarcity
(exchange value), distracted by 'goods' from the sole global function
of money-rationing. Money allocates (option) rights to a share of
resources, its absolute value wandering indeterminately in accordance
both with its own scarcity, and the economic abundance it divides.
The apparent connection between price and thing is an effect of
double differentiation, or commercial relativism, coordinating twin
series of competitive bids (from the sides of supply and demand).
The conversion of price information into naturalistic data (or absolute
reference) presents an extreme theoretical challenge.
§ 1 2. Capital is intrinsically complicated, not only by competitive
dynamics in space, but also by speculative dissociation in time. Formal
assets are options, with explicit time conditions, integrating forecasts
into a system of current (exchange) values. Capitalization is thus
indistinguishable from a commercialization of potentials, through
which modern history is slanted (te/eoplexically) in the direction of
ever greater virtualization, operationalizing science fiction scenarios
as integral components of production systems. Values which do not
'yet' exist, except as probabilistic estimations, or risk structures,
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acquire a power of command over economic (and therefore social)
processes, necessarily devalorizing the actual. Under teleoplexic
g uidance, ontological realism is decoupled from the present. render
ing the question 'what is real?' increasingly obsolete. The thing that
is happening-which will be real-is only fractionally accessible to
present observation, as a schedule of modal quantities. Techonomic
naturalism records and predicts historical virtuality, and in doing so
orients itself towards an object-with catastrophically unpredictable
traits-which has predominantly yet to arrive.
§ 1 3. Quasi-finally, the evaluation of teleoplexy is a research program
which teleop\exy itself undertakes. The comprehensive value of capi
tal is an emergent estimate, generated automatically by its inherent
analytical intelligence, from prices corrected for commercial relativity
(in the direction of 'fundamental values') and discounted for histori
cal virtua\ity (in the direction of reliable risk modeling). The intricacy
of these calculations is explosively fractionated by logical problems
of self-reference-both familiar and as-yet-unanticipated-as it
compounds through dynamics of competitive cognition in artificial
time. If modernity has a spontaneous teleoplexic self-awareness, it
corresponds to the problem of techonomic naturalism, immanently
approached: How much is the world worth? From the perspective
of te\eop\exic reflexion, there is no final difference between this
commercially-formulated question and its technological complement:
What can the earth do? There is only self-quantification of teleoplexy
or cybernetic intensity, which is what computerized financial markets
(in the end) are for. As accelerationism closes upon this circuit of
teleoplexic self-evaluation, its theoretical 'position'-or situation
relative to its object-becomes increasingly tangled, until it assumes
the basic characteristics of a terminal identity crisis.
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§ 1 4. What would be required for teleoplexy to realistically evalu
ate itself-or to 'attain self-awareness' as the pulp cyber-horror
scenario describes it? Within a monetary system configured in ways
not yet determinable with confidence, but almost certainly tilted
radically towards depoliticization and crypto-digital distribution. it
would discover prices consistent with its own maximally-accelerated
technogenesis, channeling capital into mechanical automatization,
self-replication, self-improvement, and escape into intelligence explo
sion. The price-system-whose epistemological function has long
been understood-thus transitions into reflexively self-enhancing
technological hyper-cognition. Irrespective of ideological align
ment, accelerationism advances only through its ability to track
such a development. whether to confirm or disconfirm the teleo
plexic expectation of Techonomic Singularity. Modernity remains
demonstrably strictly unintelligible in the absence of an accomplished
accelerationist research program (which is requ·1red even by the Per
ennial Critique in its theoretically sophisticated versions). A negative
conclusion, if fully elaborated, would necessarily produce an adequate
ecological theory of the Anthropocene.
§ 1 5. The triple problematic of relativity, virtuality, and reflexivity
already suffices to impede this investigation formidably, although
not invincibly. Several additional difficulties demand specific mention,
since their resolution would contribute important sub-components
of a completed accelerationism or, grouped separately, assemble a
concrete historical philosophy of camouflage (indispensable to any
realistic economic theory).
§ 1 6. The economy conceived commercially (as a price system) con
stitutes a multi-level phenomenology of socio-historical production.
It is an objective structure of appearances, staging evaluated things.
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It is also a political battlefield, within which strategic manipula
tions of perception can have inestimable value. It is a long-standing
contention of the Perennial Critique that the monetarization of
social phenomena is intrinsically conflictual. Such reservations are
supplemented in an age of mandatory de-metallization, politicized
(fiat money) regimes and econometric bureaucracies. geopolitically
challenged world reserve currency hegemony, and crypto-currency
proliferation. In the absence of unproblematic (non-conflicted) macro
aggregates or units of financial denomination, economic theory needs
to be hedged.
§ 17. Socio-political legacy forms often mask advanced techonomic
processes. In particular, traditional legal definitions of personhood,
agency, and property misconstrue the autonomization/automation of
capital in terms of a profoundly defective concept of ownership. The
idea of intellectual property has already entered into a state of overt
crisis (even before its compatibility with the arrival of machine intel
ligence has been h istorically tested). While legal recognition of corpo
rate identities provides a pathway for the techonomic modification of
business structures. fundamental inadequacies in the conception of
property (which has never received a credible philosophical ground
ing), combined with general cultural inertia, can be expected to result
in a systematic misrecognition of emergent teleoplexic agencies.
§ 1 8. Capital concentration is a synthetic characteristic of capitali
zation. It cannot be assumed that measures of capital concentra
tion. capital density, capital composition and cybernetic intensity will
be easily .accessible or neatly coincide. There is no obvious theo
retical incompatibility between significant techonomic intensifica
tion and patterns of social diffusion of capital outside the factory
model (whether historically-familiar and atavistic, or innovative and
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LAN D �T E LEOPLEXY
unrecognizable). In particular, household assets offer a locus for
surreptitious capital accumulation, where stocking of productive
apparatus can be economically-coded as the acquisition of durable
consumer goods, from personal computers and mobile digital devices
to 30 printers. Regardless of trends in Internet-supported social
surveillance, the ability of economic-statistical institutions to register
developments in micro-capitalism merits extraordinary skepticism.
§ 1 9. It is not only possible, but probable, that advances towards
Techonomic Singularity will be obscured by intermediate synthetic
mega-agencies, in part functioning as historical masks, but also
adjusting eventual outcomes (as an effect of path-dependency).
The most prominent candidates for such teleoplexic channeling are
large digital networks, business corporations, research institutions,
cities, and states (or highly-autonomous state components, especially
intelligence agencies). Insofar as these entities are responsive to
non-market signals, they are characterized by arbitrary institutional
personalities, with reduced teleoplexic intensity, and residual anthro
political signature. It is quite conceivable that on some of these paths,
Techonomic Singularity would be aborted, perhaps in the name of a
'friendly Ai ' or (anthropolitical) 'singleton.' There can scarcely be any
doubt that a route to intelligence explosion mainlined through the NSA
would exhibit some very distinctive features, of opaque irnplication.
The most important theoretical consequence to be noted here is
that such local teleologies would inevitably disturb more continuous
trend-lines, bending them as if towards super-massive objects in
gravitational space. It is also possible that some instance of interme
diate individuation-most obviously the state-could be strategically
invested by a Left Accelerationism. precisely in order to submit the
virtual-teleoplexic lineage of Terrestrial Capitalism (or Techonomic
Singularity) to effacement and disruption.
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§20. If by this stage accelerationism appears to be an impossible pro
ject, it is because the theoretical apprehension of teleoplexic hyper intelligence cannot be accomplished by anything other than itself.
The scope of the problem is indistinguishable from the cybernetic
intensity of the quasi-final thing-cognitively self-enveloping Techo
nomic Singularity. Its difficulty, or complexity, is precisely what it is,
which is to say: a real escape. To approach it. therefore, is to partially
anticipate the terms of its eventual self-reflexion-the techonomic
currency through which the history of modernity can. for the first
time, be adequately denominated. It has no alternative but to fund
its own investigation, in units of destiny or doom, camouflaged within
the system of quotidian economic signs, yet rigorously extractable,
given only the correct cryptog raphic keys. Accelerationism exists
only because this task has been automatically allotted to it. Fate has
a name (but no face).
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Reorientate,
Eccentricate,
Speculate,
Fictionalize,
Geometricize,
Commonize,
Abstractify:
Seven Prescri ption s
for Accelerationism
Patricia Reed
2014
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1 . REORIENTATE
In an era characterized by the injunction to self-brand, it should come
as no surprise that manifestos now come pre-hashtagged, forecast
ing their own viral uptake. The surging popularity of #Accelerate (in
both positive and negative senses) would not have functioned under
a more accurately modest label of #redesigninfrastructureinstitutions
technologyideologytowardsotherends-an approach which in fact,
paradoxically, seems more deeply attached to the Gramscian 'long
institutional march' of politics than to a model of political thinking
bound to speed or to the revolutionary event. When the currency of
attention reigns supreme, terms that play upon our fascination with
the excitingly counterintuitive will always win out (in this case: If the
speed of things beyond our cognitive grasp is a problem, how can it
also be the solution?). The question is: How long can this attention
last, can it endure the long march? When the tactics of popularisation
abide by contemporary modes of value-extraction based on rapid
trending (attention value), does such a brand deployment not risk
falling into the same (unfortunate) disposable class as the consumer
gadget? Whether intentionally or not, #Accelerate, the brand, has
merged pages from both advertising basics (generate buzz) and from
Zizek's public intellectual playbook (poking salt-soaked fingers into
our socio-ideological lesions to stir up reaction). And indeed, reactions
have been hasty and plentiful. Yet commentary that either blindly
champions #Accelerate (often by no other means than repetition
of the tag), or condemns it as a neo-futurist-fascist travesty, rarely
grasps the potential at stake, caught up in the buzz of a name that,
unfortunately, obfuscates its content.
The necessity and power of the name is not to be underestimated,
especially when faced with the righteous call of the Manifesto to
rescue the future from a paradigm of debt capture or cataclysmic
climate change. This alter-future is, of course, inexistent (it belongs not
to the category of the it is, but to that of the could be-or, as some
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would have it, the ought to be), and although the Manifesto is spiked
with a dose of necessary pragmatism, the impulse it seeks to unleash
must find shelter in an adequate term itself as the name of an idea
towards which anticipation can incline (or even be accelerated at all).
It is first of all through the name (or an ethics of naming) that a
thought can be opened up beyond what is,1 as a cognitive site where
imagination can begin to de/restructure the existent. With a nod to
Reza Negarestani's call for an inhuman ethics of revisionism,2 let us
first apply this to the revising of the name itself, for although language
is not the 'real' issue at hand, it is of ontic importance for we humans.
Firstly, it must be a verb (for all politics is a doing of thought); secondly,
the productive impetus driving this ill-named #Accelerate has little
to do with novelty: it rather connotes an immanent 're' (indeed it is
practically reformist-since I'm not French, this is not, in essence,
a politically pejorative term); and thirdly, it is about directing existing
energies in (as yet) inexistent directions; so in the spirit of anticipation
open to further revisions, let me suggest the slightly less tantalising,
but more honest: Reorientate.
2. ECCENTRI CATE
While the name #Accelerate deserves such scrutiny, there are attrib
utes of this term inherent to the Manifesto that are worth preserving.
Acceleration already drives apparatuses of violent value-extraction:
from the experiential level of our working lives and the exploitation
of increased production,3 to the algorithms that decidedly wager
1. S. Lazarus, Anthropologie du nom (Paris: Seuil, 1996). 52.
2. R. Negarestani, 'A View of Man from the Space of Reasons", paper presented at
the Accelerationism Symposium. Berlin. December 14, 2013. See also 'The Labor of
the Inhuman', this volume.
3. If 'the artist' has become a paradigmatic figure of contemporary labour, with no
separation between life and work. then Joseph Beuys's clairvoyance has proven
perversely accurate: we are all now indeed artists.
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on value with a velocity far surpassing the speed of human intel
lection. To suggest that an intensification of this process (including
its contradictions) will disrupt and overcome such a machine is to
believe that this machine thrives on stability. Such a thesis has been
fatally discounted by the successful amplification of the neoliberal
motor precisely during moments of turbulence, as evidenced by
the response to the 2008 economic crisis. Yet in this ever-swirling
apparatus that gains sustenance from its own failures, there is a
kernel of normative stasis anchoring energies centrifugally. Like a
spinning amusement park ride, with our bodies immovably glued to
the edge, we may be whirling nauseatingly fast, but we haven't really
moved an inch. It is precisely here, on this kernel of stasis, that the
call to accelerate needs to take hold, dislodging stagnant conceptual
orientations in favor of the creation of eccentric, out-of-centre
attractors, where we may discover trajectories of a vectorial (and not
rotational or circulatory) sort. The creation of eccentric attractors is
equal to the creation of new coordinations through which the fallibil
ity or contingency of existing normative points are demonstrated.
A constructive work, creating eccentric attractors that both emit and
absorb affectivity, generates impetus by magnetizing new norms of
practice, the mutability of which is subject to endless reengineering.
Shifting from sheer 'critique' (a pointing to the point, an unveiling
of the point as a point). which has, more often than not, morphed
into a self-satisfied gesture of knowing better in attitude alone,4
the acceleration of eccentricity is simultaneously intellectual and
"1. See Walter Benjamin's 'The Author as Producer' (193"1), where he makes a
distinction between a critical attitude (a mere mimicry of historical apparatuses
of production) and critical production (a transformation by way of technique, or
technology of those apparatuses, in a process of reengineering). His distinction
casts a disparaging gap between being an activist in 'critical' attitude only
(content), and not in production (form); and it is the former 'critical attitude' that
immobilizes most of critique today.
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practical, cognizant of the recursive interplay between the two. Such
an active restructuring of points of orientation inheres to the spirit of
acceleration-which is, by definition. not speed, but a measure of the
rate of change. To accelerate requires displacement between points;
and to render eccentric is precisely to decalcify those very trajec
tories of known orientation, bifurcating them into new (temporarily)
stable coordinations of 'attractive' norms.5
3 . SPECU LATE
Commitment to an eccentric future untethered from the existent
axial pull of socio-economic or climactic apocalypse cannot be nos
talgic, nor based solely on the dread of impending doom. To depart.
as the Manifesto does, from a fearful threat of cataclysm (albeit by
no means unfounded) is to deploy the same techniques as religious
scripture-and. as Ray Brassier has noted. fear is precisely what
must be overcome first in any emancipatory project.6 The admirable
futural will that drives the Manifesto seems peculiarly tentative
towards the future. It feels locked in the past on several points,
looking backwards over its shoulder to recount exemplary precedents
(largely failed cybernetic ones). self-assured in its nostalgic distance
and unwilling to take that speculative leap towards the unknown.
While correctly identifying a certain paralysis that comes over the
left when faced with the forecasting of alternatives. the Manifesto
seems bound to its own lamenting diagnosis, unable to prognosticate
beyond vague assertions. This is not to discount the necessary labour
and prowess typical of the Left in generating exacting critique (duly
recognized in the Manifesto), yet it is to highlight the continued
5. M. Delanda, Intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy (New York: Continuum.
2002). 56.
6. R. Brassier. 'Wandering Abstraction'. http://www.metamute.org/editorial/
articles/wandering-abstraction.
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lack or void in fertilizing any sense of the becoming possible of the
impossible, the articulation of the outside, and the production of
desire itself. Commitment to an eccentric future entails a thinking/
doing matrix beyond pure diagnostics or historical exemplification;
the latter are necessary in eliciting an attitude of negation (what we
don't want) or precedent, but wither in the face of producing what
we do want (especially on a macro. extra-local level). Remaining in
the temporality of what is (or what was) clouds the very futurity
that could or ought to be uncancelled-the future is prognostic.
and its tense must evolve towards the anticipatory. As an inde
terminate entity, the future (today foreclosed by casino finance)
entails a risk. as it surges from analysis (epistemology) to what
could be (speculation). To speculate is to articulate and enable the
contingencies of the given. armed only with the certainty that what
is, is always incomplete; to speculate is to play with the demonstra
tion of this innately porous. nontotalisable set of givens. Extricating
'speculation' from its current bedfellow of finance entails a fidelity
to an incalculable future divorced from the reductive apparatus of
the wager. wherein all possibilities are conflated with probabilities.
Probability is but a mode of liberal openness responding to the set
of known affordances within a given condition (a mode of being
over-determined by what is known). foreclosing on the potential of
epistemic fallibility. To speculate. on the other hand. is to mobilize the
capacity of epistemic fallibility; to deploy this fallibility as an engine
in the never-ending effort for socio-politico-technological (not to
mention ethical) redefinition. implying a thinking of time adjacent to
the present. since to remain in the present is to refuse the inexistent.7
Speculation is an ethos of non-presentness. in which the bounding
7. M. Delanda. intensive Science and Virtual Philosophy (New York: Continuum.
2002) . 107.
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of a determinate, definitive project is continually undermined by an
experimental responsiveness to epistemic, ontological and systemic
variation. Such foundational work requires a commitment to the force
of imagination of what could be or ought to be, prior to pragmatism
and logistics, for it is the affective ground upon which the inexistent
may be noetically instantiated and gain catalytic impetus. Laying the
bedrock for a political condition of speculation is necessary in order
to overcome the alternativeless future that Accelerationism rightly
militates against: yet these possible futures can only attain traction
when the distribution of affect is embraced in equal partnership with
calls for operational, technological and epistemic restructuration
there cannot be one without the other.
4. F I CTIONALIZE
The pragmatic tone of the Manifesto cannot gainsay the role of
belief within sociopolitical reorientation. The resurgence of ratio
centric discourse is a natural (and welcome) response to the rise of
irrational nationalistic and religious fundamentalism worldwide. Yet
to embrace a central tenet of the Manifesto that suggests we build
upon the 'success of the enemy' entails not just the establishment of
counter-think-tanks or the redirection of algorithmic-economic pro
duction towards other ends, but also a learning from the successes
of the theological itself, intertwined as it is with any project directed
toward the inexistent. This is not to suggest that the future is a de
jure transcendental entity (a claim refuted by the immanentalist,
jujitsu modus operandi of the Manifesto that seeks to point existing
infrastructural energies in inexistent directions), yet it is to acknowl
edge the power of belief that is necessary for the construction of
speculative futures. Endemic even to the quasi-'science' of finance
economics is a recursive quality of futurity (positive feedback) to be
seized upon, epitomized by the question: What sort of future do we
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want to see performed? Donald MacKenzie reached such an open
conclusion in the last pages of his sociological analysis of the uptake
of the Black-Scholes-Merton model within the futures market, point
ing to a potential site of ideological/practical intervention.8 In an
era determined by 'the economy' as a hyperobject that has been
incorporated within a totalized and autonomous domain since the
mid-twentieth century,9 this seems to be the quintessential site upon
which to exercise the detotalizing capacity of speculative imagina
tion. The Manifesto asks of us not to cower in the face of complex
model-making (nor to reduce the economy to concrete, localized or
phenomenological immediacy), yet it remains trapped in the diag
nostic register when it comes to the sort of future we want to see
enacted, citing only the need for strategic plans. This begs the bigger
question, no doubt deliberately left aside in the Manifesto: Can any
project directed towards the future do without belief or idealism as
such? A question of this nature is tied to imaginative experimentation
and its unprovable belief in something other. And if this will is to take
on a generic (extra-local) force, it can only do so through the sense
that conditions for speculation are possible (in the face of alternative
impossibility). Speculative possibility is effectuated through fiction,
a fiction that maps vectors of the future upon the present. A type of
8. In Donald MacKenzie's study on the financial turn of economics, he highlights
the role of the self-fulfilling prophecy (positive feedback) of mathematical models
upon reality, through the example of the Black-Scholes-Merton model. At first
the correspondence between the model and actual prices was fairly inaccurate
(the model did not refiect reality), yet as traders began to rely on the model
taking up its mathematical claims of legitimacy, directly using its projections in their
practice through the dissemination of purchased pricing charts-the model began
to create reality, it became a tool of the trade-what MacKenzie calls 'an engine,
not a camera', a (once inaccurate) model (now) driving reality. See 0. MacKenzie.
An Engine, Not A Camera: How Financial Models Shape Markets (Cambridge.
MA: MIT Press, 2008).
9. T. Mitchell, 'Fixing the Economy', in Cultural Studies 12:1 (1998), 82-101.
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fiction unleashed upon ossified norms (including the very privileging
of an exclusively 'human' power at work in politics, to the neglect of
non-human agents), modes of being, and forms of use, projected
through that delicate sliver between affect and effect; a medium
yoking the dialectics of sensibility and practice. This is a fiction driven
by anticipation (the unknown); a fiction that lacerates and opens the
subject towards what awaits on the periphery of epistemic certainty.
It is in this image that Accelerationism must embrace the fictional
task of fabulating a generic will with a commitment equal to that
which it makes to technological innovation. Fiction is a vehicle for the
introduction of a constituent demos (something that is troublingly
absent in the Manifesto), and helps tackle the self-evident question
facing Accelerationism, namely: Who or what does the accelerating?
Without reducing the demos or 'democracy' (which is not a proper
structure, but a force of the people) to parliamentary regimes of
democratic materialism,10 accelerationist politics must take up the
challenge of motivation and popular will if it is to cast off its shadows
of techno-dictatorial prescription. This is not in the least to advocate
absolute horizontality, or representational mechanisms; it is to exca
vate a discursive space for the soul or will of collective passions.
Rousseau's timelessly crucial 'artificial soul',11 as that which breathes
collective life into a political project unbound by the axioms of the
existent, requires fabulation. Indeed, as he asserts, the artistry of
politics is bound to this labour of an artificial or fictional soul animating
the demos,12 and it is through such a labour that new connections,
10. 'The infinite of worlds is what saves us from every finite dis-grace. Finitude,
the constant harping on our mortal being, in brief. the fear of death is the only
passion-these are the bitter ingredients of democratic materialism.' A. Badiou,
Logics of Worlds, tr. A. Toscano (London: Bloomsbury, 2009), 51"1.
11. S. Critchley. The Faith of the Faithless: Experiments in Political Theology
(London: Verso, 2012), 81.
12. Ibid .. 33.
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modes of collectivity and systems of relationality are sculpted within,
alongside and for a world.
5 . G E O M ET R I C I ZE
With the almost universal consensus that we inhabit a period of Earth's
history classified as the 'anthropocene', the infrastructure enforcing
(anthropocentric) democratic materialism, namely four to five-year
popular voting cycles. is dramatically at odds with geological
temporality,13 producing a rift in what it means to commit to humanity
is it the humanity of the now, or humanity as a species? The anthro
pocentric temporality of idealised parliamentary procedures (ones
based on finitude, and the timescale of the individual human) yield
myopic and therefore limited responses to life-sustaining processes
that evolve at a scale of temporality evading human perception. How
such 'nested' temporalities between human life and geologic neces
sity (the environment and atmosphere that afford our existence) are
to be negotiated comparatively and phenomenologically, should be
a key concern for Accelerationism if humans are to survive into the
post-anthropocene.
To be clear, this is not to advocate a prioritizing dictatorship of
geological time; it is to acknowledge a radical asymmetry of temporal
scaling that calls for mediation. Grand scales of time resist our phe
nomenological grasp (we can never experience millions of years, or
the preconscious universe), yet if humans are to have a chance in
the post-anthropocene, we need cognitive and affective openings
to be perceptually engineered. Assuming a spacetime dynamism,
unlike the static capture of objects in linear perspective, this new
perspectival orientation must adopt a geometry that augments our
13. I am grateo'ul for Deborah Ugorio bringing this temporal scale to my attention in
a private conversation.
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phenomenological constraints; a nested spacetime complexity that
could render near that which, in the linear-visual world, vanishes at
the illusion of a horizon. The nature of affect, of empathy (and mirrorneurons), of recursive behaviour associated with a new geometry
of perceiving nested spacetime is experimental at best, but affords
the quality of atotality since objects can no longer be perceived in
analytic isolation, and time cannot be reduced to a specific metric
unit. Objects, in this fashion, resist capture, embedded as they are in
an 'unstable milieu of multiple communicating forces and inf\uences'.1�
Since politics has largely been historically connected to the 'sphere of
appearances', the framework of perceptibility (how the world and all
of its inhabitants appear to us in spacetime) is a quintessential arena
within which to accelerate our geometric imaginations.
6. COM M O N IZ E
The Promethean scale endemic to the Accelerationist Manifesto
has undergone a rather predictable round of scathing attacks, given
the outright mistrust for grand projects on all sides of the political
spectrum. There are several aspects of the Manifesto to debate,
confront, refute, argue and so forth; but to deny the possibility for a
politics of such a scale tout court (a scale we seem to have no trouble
swallowing in the context of the omnipotence of the global neoliberal
economy) is as totalising and absolutist as the claims made against
the projected scale of Accelerationism. Between geopolitics and the
economy, we already inhabit a delicately interconnected, Promethean
sphere, where even the delineation of once mighty nation-states
seems impotent in the face of global problems that transcend isolated
territorialisation. Acce\erationism recognises that retreating solely
1Li. S. Kwinter. Architectures of Time: Towards a Theory of the Event in Modernist
Culture (Cambridge. MA: MIT Press, 2002), 13.
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into concrete localisation. or exploding in periodic blips of negation
will not suffice. for neither can endure, nor fabricate the processual
(and affirmative) nature of grand .systemic reengineering necessary
in reorienting our course and modes of life.
Nevertheless, the undertones of a revised Modernism pepper
ing the Manifesto are of deep concern: they leave the violence and
injustices inherent to the universalist repercussions of the Modernist
project untouched. This tendency is also mirrored in the (almost
entirely) white-Euro-male origins from which the discourse springs
to remain strictly entrenched within this exclusive demographic would
be a step of ironic brutality. While the Manifesto admirably takes on
the full scale of global reality, a more nuanced version of universality
(not to mention questions of global justice) needs to take root if the
ideas driving Accelerationism are to contain the seeds of an ethics
that embrace non-totality and the constant struggle for inhuman
(epistemic) revisionism. Can the Promethean operate in a nontotal
izing fashion, or is it forever doomed to regimes of determination
and commandment? This is where the medium of thought becomes
crucial to recognize, before the infrastructural and pragmatic realms of
object-centred practice. if we are to avoid a totalising (and therefore
finite) quagmire brought on by claims of universal scope.15 In 'situated
universality' there is no perfect form, nor any specific procedure:
it is about a doing that effectuates a thought. In this regard, the
choreography or articulation of a thought may take on manifold
forms responsive to localisation16-the kind of adaption afforded by
a dynamic spacetime geometric perspective. Accelerationism must
orient itself towards the production of generic thought even when
15. A. Badiou. 'Huit theses sur J'universel'. http://www.ciepfc.fr/spip.php?artic/e69.
16. A. Badiou, Saint Paul: The Foundation of Universalism, trans. R. Brassier
(Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. 2003).
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advocating a high dosage of pragmatism, if it is to escape the trap
pings of finitude (or worse, another mode of colonization). Equality,
as a generic instance of thought (urged by many thinkers preceding
Acceleration ism) is not effectuated in laws said to protect the 'sanctity'
of human life equally-for they only serve to privilege biological life
whilst ignoring the necessity of extra-biological capacities inherent
to humanity. If some effectuation of generic equality is to take shape,
its site and materials are the commons-that is, a Promethean
project affirming other modes of production beyond the imperative
to maximize surplus (fiscal) value (along with the labour relations
that subtend this logic). As noted in the Manifesto,17 several modes
of contemporary production are even hindered by such a relationship
predicated on competition and the centralization of profits, resulting
in acute limitations to possible innovation. The generic quality of the
commons lies in a broadening of political economy's emphasis on
'scarce' consumables such as water, air, nature, etc. reduced to cat
egories of use/exchange value, towards a commons that emphasizes
the necessity of immeasurable value(s) such as language, knowledge,
beauty, science, etc., that buttress all modes of social (re)production.
Maurizio Lazzarato defines such a commons, qualified as infinite and
inconsumable, as a 'co-operation between minds',18 where 'success'
is dependent not on propriety, but on imitation, assimilation, and
shareability. The infinitude of such a commons is precisely the type
of Promethean project that resists totalization: there is no proper site,
nor uniform procedure; it is a generic thought of value creation that
formally morphs under localised, material modes of practice.
17. A. Williams and
N. Srnicek, "#Accelerate: Manifesto for an Accelerationist
Politics', this volume, Section 3.3.
M. Lazzarato, "From Capital-Labour to Capital-Life'. trans: V. Fournier, A.
Virtanen and J. Viihiimiikip, in ephemera: theory & politics in organization 4(3)
18.
(2004), 187-208.
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7 . ABSTRACTIFY
Alongside the denunciation of Prometheanism, the Manifesto's
proposition to accelerate abstraction has been equally cast in doubt
(if not castigated outright). There is no doubt that abstract processes
of value-extraction, such as the increased financialization of the
economy, coupled with the division of labour across the entirety
of society,19 have permeated our everyday lives with furious (and
exhausting) force. The simplistic reaction-to return to tangible
and concrete modes of life/production-does nothing more than
insinuate a Fordist regression to monotonous labour, a disavowal
of development that would amount to the same as suggesting the
restoration of a purely Euclidean universe. To denounce abstraction
as a malevolent force in itself is to deny the necessary role played by
the power of abstraction in shaping new modes of existence, for as
Brassier reminds us, practical (concrete) incapacities reflect theoreti
cal (abstract) incapacities.2° Furthermore, to denounce abstraction is
to also deny any possibility of forging a 'we' or collective body beyond
what remains immediately perceptible-in other words, a demos. The
'we' is always an abstraction, it cannot be reduced to the counting of
populations (all bodies cannot be concretely experienced); moreover,
if this 'we' is to take into account non-human actors, abstraction must
be accelerated so as to accommodate new ontological positions. The
issue is not one of obliterating abstractions, since there is no concrete
.
essential kernel of humanity to return to; the issue, rather, concerns
how to deploy the power of abstraction towards alternative modes of
life, distributions of exchange, production, and consumption. As Mat
teo Pasquinelli has shown, this power of abstraction is an inherent
19. M. Pasquinelli, 'The Power of Abstraction and its Antagonism'. Paper presented at
The Psychopathologies of Cognitive Capitalism II Conference, Berlin, March 8, 2013.
20. Brassier, 'Wandering Abstraction'.
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capacity of the organism (including the human brain) to invent new
norms in relation to dynamic surroundings,21 recalling that a norm is
not law, but a conception of law.22 In this sense, the stagnant, alter
nativeless polis can be diagnosed as pathological, since it refuses to
adapt to changing epistemic conditions. Before 'abstraction' signifies
the abstruse and the incomprehensible, it indicates a drawing away,
a diversion and detachment. First and foremost, abstraction is a
separation from what is towards what could be. In this regard, it is
a gesture of violence. an affirmative violence in exiting the as-it-is
condition and moving towards the generation of new connections to
and with a world. The power of abstraction to experiment and revise
relations to each other, to production, to value creation and to the
world, is a capacity that needs to be reclaimed beyond its colonization
by finance capital and labour relations. The power of abstraction to
detach from existent conditions and invent new modes of cohabita
tion is a force urgently in need of acceleration.
21. M. Pasquinelli. "The Power of Abstraction and its Antagonism'.
22. R. Negarestani, "The Labor of the Inhuman'.
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