Brian Holmes on Mon, 12 Jun 2006 01:25:11 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Re: cybernetics and the Internet |
Dear Kenneth Werbin and everybody - By a simple, ironic fact of "information overload" (an overfull mailbox) I missed what is, to my mind, the most interesting post I have read on this list for years, which Mark Stahlman and Ronda Hauben then responded to, but in ways which have not, I think, exhausted the subject. The original comments went like this: "Today, we value information openings and fear closures against social noise; we fear the -isms they may produce. This is life in open social order, in cybernetic ecumenical society. And we are not here by chance. There is a legacy to this project, of which the internet is but one component. This legacy traces back to cybernetics and the mass adoption of a mathematical philosophy that is based on undertsanding both humans and machines as 'open information processing systems'. Through a variety of mapping techniques based on notions of feedback loops, cybernetics seeks to model socio-technical organizations and environments in order to subject them to simulation and experimentation with the aim of predicting movement and behavior, and ultimately controlling it. While early adoption of such mathematical philosophy was exclusively military, such notions quickly extended to questions of social order, leading to a series of initiatives spearheaded by the US government since the mid-40s to 'connect' people globally in the hopes of eliminating what an Adorno study on 'Racism in America' called the 'authoritarian personality'. "Simply put, the idea was that the more 'open' and 'connected' people are, the less inclined they will be to take extreme 'authoritarian' positions of hate. The adoption of cybernetics as a basis for a worldwide social order was cemented at the Macy conferences in Chicago in the mid 1940s, which were attended by cybernetic and psychological luminaries including Norbert Wiener, Gregory Bateson, Margaret Mead, von Neumann, von Forester and Kurt Lewin, as well as the CIA. These conferences ultimately gave rise to a series of 'open' social experiments including the LSD experiments at Harvard, Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters and also ARPANET. Contrary to many accounts of the impetus for ARPANET, the idea of an 'open social order' to encourage a world without hate was the fundamental goal behind the advent of the internet's predecessor, not fear of nuclear disaster." It seems to me that the position you are taking here is very complex, marked by a fundamental ambiguity. Based on your understanding of the Internet as a social experiment in the implementation of controlled complexity, you argue for a form of "closure" - the taking of positions, the filtering out of noise - that in your view, if I get you right, will be the only way to truly "open up" a digital culture that is being plagued by inertia ("information overload"). Now, I have a lot of reasons to be very interested in your argument, not the least of which is a paper I wrote years back, and which continues to be reprinted and translated in various languages, called "The Flexible Personality." It examines the development of the networked economy precisely as a systemic response to the spectre of the "authoritarian personality" described by Adorno et. al. You might find certain parallels to your ideas in my text, which if you're curious is in my archive at www.u-tangente.org, accessible under my name at the left, in the section "Hieroglyphs of the Future." However, the text has no particular importance; whereas I think the precise discussion that you are bringing up really does. Over the years I have only become more interested in the ways that a cybernetic approach allows for the control of complex systems, by intervening, as Foucault once said, "not on the players but on the rules of the game." It seems to me that in the era of American-led networked globalization, if we are to rediscover any autonomy - any chance for a collective "self" (autos) to establish its own "law" (nomos) - then we will have to first perform a careful analysis of the large systems in which we are caught, and which establish our intellectual and communicational horizons. However, at the time when I did my first concentrated work on this problem, and still today, I did not have the references to the decisive, early period in which cybernetic thinking began to be appropriated and developed by the US government, military establishment and associated civil society. As time has gone on, through historical studies mainly based on world-systems analysis, I have increasingly come to recognize the determinant importance of WWII and the immediate postwar period in shaping the very parameters of the history in which we continue to live. Those parameters are logistical, they involve the ability to carry out industrial operations over vast distances, as first achieved in multi-theater warfare, then developed further through the development of civilian air transportation the sea-land container; but they are also communicational, they involve the creation of complex feedback systems to guide and continually adjust those farflung logistical operations, as James Beniger shows in his impresive book, The Control Revolution. For these reasons I would appreciate it very much if you could post any writing you have done on the specific subjects you touched on in your post, and perhaps a bibliography which those of us on the list, who are interested in persuing this conversation, could use as a basis for an informed discussion. In particular I'm wondering where it might be possible to consult the 1951 edition of Wiener's "The Human Use of Human Beings." Was the entire book altered? Or only a key chapter? If so, could that chapter be scanned and distributed? Mark Stahlman refers to an alteration, but doesn't say exactly what it concerns. Not long ago in Berlin, at a seminar organized by Geert Lovink and Anna Munster, the discussion turned to the foundation of nettime and the way that the "immanent net critique" of the mid-nineties was driven by the reading of Deleuze and Guattari's Thousand Plateaus - which, you might agree, is basically a counter-cultural appropriation of cybernetic theory (the title itself being a reference to the work of Bateson and Mead in Bali in the 30s). It was said that the difficulty of launching a new immanent critique was that no such master discourse was in sight; and then, as you can imagine, came the idea that we should have to invent the very discourse of a new critique. I think the ambiguity that you point to, in the deployment of cybernetic systems for the cause of an open society, and to the effect of a controlled one, could contain the germs of a new immanent critique which would allow us a much deeper and more powerful interpetation of the ways that globalization is now proceeding. That interpretation, in its turn, would make new practical experiments possible, beyond the limits and naivetes of the old tactical media paradigms. I think we ought to work on this! Anyway, let's say it seems like Montreal nettime meeting was really not in vain. all the best, and thanks again for the brilliant post, Brian # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net