Friday, May 7, 2010

Re: [Yasmin_discussions] Narcissism and Anthropocentrism (Was: The newconcept of HumankindCulturalNarcissism from francesco monico)

Francesco,

I recently attending the Object Oriented Ontology Symposium at Georgia Tech, hoping that it could shed some light on the claim that this nascent subset of the loosely organized "speculative realist" school of thought is attempting steer a path between scientific realism and social relativism. While I appreciate the intention, I found the exclusive focus on "ontology" to be highly problematic. The presentations seemed driven more by a philosophical reaction to the "linguistic turn" in academia than a response to the large-scale challenges we currently face, as was evidenced by the complete lack of any discussion of ecology. While the assertion that "everything exists equally" might be ontologically provocative, it seemingly ignores pragmatic ecological realities.

The day's exercises were mostly grounded in attempts to imagine objects beyond human thought (with "anthropocentrism" repeatedly being used disparagingly). Of course this was exclusively through human discourse and reasoning, so all definitions of "objects" were, to use Ingold's catchy phrase, anthropocircumferentialistic. Personally, I don't believe we have a crisis of ontology but of cosmology (as Luhmann defines it), since the disconnection with nature within materialist society has much less to do with neo-Kantianism or neo-Wittgensteinism than with the lack of appreciation for the uniqueness of Earth to support embodied consciousness. It's refreshing that some strands of continental philosophy are allowing room for non-human perspectives (enough with the solipsism already), but OOO seems to be throwing the baby out with the bathwater. We absolutely need to navigate between empirical and relativistic understanding, but I have found transdisciplinary examinations of non-dual approaches to cognition to be much more useful than philosophical speculations based on linguistic games with the subject/object divide.

In short, we need to encourage *more* of a focus on and understanding of relations and processes, not less, and in ways that are more explicit and less philosophically esoteric. Which brings me back to Roger's call for how this informs art=science praxis:

When viewing Chris Jordan's photographs of albatross birds that have died by consuming bottle caps in the Pacific Trash Gyre (http://www.chrisjordan.com/current_set2.php?id=11), do you ask yourself whether the bird and the bottlecaps are equal or how human technologies might function more integrally with organic systems? Should artists strive to convince the world of the superficial equality of objects or make explicit the relationships upon which we are dependent? I agree that we cannot separate our technologies from the environment, but dissolving this semantic boundary does little to inform the ecological or evolutionary utility of the technologies we create. Of course, it is our sensing technologies (Roy Ascott's "cyberception") that have helped science to understand the proclivity for efficiency, interconnection, regeneration within the non-human world, so shouldn't insights into these ecological principles become a dominant theme in our ontologies, cosmologies, and artistic praxis?

If you're interested in further critiques of OOO and Speculative Realism, I have found the postings of Adrian Ivakhiv to be quite illuminating:

http://aivakhiv.blog.uvm.edu/2010/05/im_looking_forward_to_graham.html

best,
david

On May 7, 2010, at 3:12 AM, francesco monico wrote:

> David,
> Ingold's critical analysis of the term athropocentrism start from placing
> the human being at the hub of a 'dwelt-in world', the shift from
> anthropocentrism to anthropocircumferentialism is tantamount to the
> withdrawal of the human presence from the center to the periphery. Luhmann's
> assert that this "third person" perspective "marks the triumph of technology
> over cosmology.... technology provides the principles for human action upon
> the world". If we assume the anthropotechnic perspective proposed by Peter
> Sloterdjk we could see technology as a product of the humankind hitself, and
> as the humankind is part of the environment, therefore technology is a
> product of the environment. So there is a circular scheme of implosion
> (anthropocentrism) vs explosion (anthropocircunferentialism), both are part
> of the same movement.
>
> Ecological phenomenology could be seen in her pragmatical dimension as a
> call to enter into the sensorial
> present,<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecophenomenology#cite_note-1>a
> call for retrieving a moral sense of nature. From this ethical point
> of
> view the question is to go through a moral shift, challenge the
> human-centered assumption that only utility to industrialized society can
> justify the existence of anything on the planet.
>
> Maybe the Ian Bogost idea of OOO, in some way comprehend what we are
> attempting to experiencing: "Object-oriented ontology ("OOO" for short) puts
> *things* at the center of this study. Its proponents contend that nothing
> has special status, but that everything exists equally—plumbers, cotton,
> bonobos, DVD players, sandstone, and Harry Potter, for example. In
> contemporary thought, things are usually taken either as the aggregation of
> ever smaller bits (scientific naturalism) or as constructions of human
> behavior and society (social relativism). OOO steers a path between the two,
> drawing attention to things at all scales (from atoms to alpacas, bits to
> blinis),
> and pondering their nature and relations with one another as much with
> ourselves.
>
> fra
>
> 2010/5/5 david mcconville <id@elumenati.com>
>
>> Francesco et al,
>>
>> Perhaps this excerpt from Tim Ingold's essay "Globes and Spheres" in The
>> Perception of the Environment (2000, p. 218) can inform the choice of words
>> within this discussion:
>>
>> Since we are human, the world around us must necessarily be
>> anthropocentric: this, in itself, implies no lack of participation, nor does
>> it entail an instrumental attitude. Indeed it is decidedly odd that the term
>> 'anthropocentrism' should have been adopted to denote an attitude that, more
>> than any other, withdraws human life from active participation in the
>> environment. It is an attitude that might be more accurately described as
>> 'anthropocircumferentialism'. The term may be an impossibly cumbersome one;
>> nevertheless I believe we need it, if only to distinguish the discursive
>> construction of the environment characteristic of modern Western thought and
>> science from the many pre-modern and non-Western cosmologies that are
>> anthropocentric in the strict sense of placing the human being at the hub of
>> a dwelt-in world, a centre of embodied awareness that reaches out, through
>> the activity of the senses, into its surroundings. Thus the shift from
>> anthropocentrism to anthropocircumferentialism is tantamount to the
>> withdrawal of the human presence from the center to the periphery of the
>> lifeworld. And ecocentrism, finally, is just the other side of the coin from
>> anthropocircumferentialism. For once humanity is placed on the outside,
>> surrounding the global environment, then the environment - now surrounded
>> rather than surrounding - no longer holds any place for human beings.
>>
>> He also cites' Luhmann's assertion that this "third person" perspective
>> "marks the triumph of technology over cosmology," since "traditional
>> cosmology places the person at the centre of an ordered universe of
>> meaningful relations...Cosmology provides the guiding principles for human
>> action within the world, technology provides the principles for human action
>> upon it." This is well-covered territory within eco-phenomenology, which is
>> exploring how our human-centrism can inform our ecological interactions
>> (instead of attempting to imagine that we can avoid it, as with some of the
>> current threads of "object-oriented ontology").
>>
>> Roger - I have found that clarifying these perspectival distinctions is
>> quite important when working with scientific (particularly geospatial and
>> cosmographical) datasets within artworks, as they are so frequently used
>> uncritically from the god's eye view.
>>
>> cheers,
>> david
>> ---
>>
>> david mcconville
>> director, noospheric research division
>> http://www.elumenati.com
>>
>> On Apr 27, 2010, at 4:00 AM, francesco monico wrote:
>>
>>> Dear Natasha,
>>> I agree with you that we need an urgent meditation on human becoming
>>> multiple-selves.
>>>
>>> You said what is 'centrism', and you're right is very anthropo-centric, I
>>> would say colonialist on regard of otherness, but what is "centrism"? It
>> is
>>> a culturally driven outlook, a vanishing point through which we retrieved
>> a
>>> position in a realm without 'telos', the question is if today after the
>>> post-psychology, post-sociology, the idea of the ecology of the mind,
>>> centrism is still a valid position, or if we have to retrieve from the
>> past
>>> the polytheistic position in order to set our self in this new realm.
>>>
>>> For that reason there is a political issue on this discussion: "In a
>> world
>>> where religious dogma and political hegemony erupt a sense of unity,
>>> connectives, and peace - a focus on Eco-centrism could be a meaningful
>>> antidote." Well we could say a necessary antidote, and it seems to me
>> that
>>> we have to start from the animal kingdom reaching the P. Singer proposal
>> to
>>> extend the debate on Human Rights not only at all humankind but to all
>>> living beings.
>>>
>>> Your human enhancement engages immersivity, simulations, experience
>> design
>>> within the field of media arts and the areas of brain-share, and
>>> consciousness expansion, and brain emulation within the fields of
>> cognitive
>>> and neuroscience and the field of artificial intelligence. This will
>> reset
>>> the narcissism but also the basic 'libido' (psychic energy) and also the
>>> concept of Love. That you define "love" a strong positive emotion and
>>> pleasure, love as "well-being". Going directly into the idea of love you
>> got
>>> the point of the installations.
>>>
>>> Facing the monotheistic, ego driven vision of the realm, is everyday more
>>> urgent to became capable to open us to a plurality of worlds in which
>>> humankind is hosted, I would quote Roy Ascott:
>>>
>>> *Every fibre, every node, every server on the Net is a part of me. **It's
>> a
>>> phase space I'm in, a sort of tele-potentiality. As I interact with the
>> Net,
>>> I reconfigure myself. My net-extent defines me, just as my body defined
>> me
>>> in the old biological culture.I am weightless and dimensionless in any
>> exact
>>> sense. I am the reach of my connectivity.*
>>>
>>> As you wrote Natasha: Toward Plurality and Plasticity! That we can change
>> in
>>> Toward polytheistic and dynamic vision of the world.
>>>
>>> Facing the enhanced realm of the Net, we need to reconfigure ourselves,
>> from
>>> one side negotiating a new position in the Nature, extending the XV
>> century
>>> debate on native indios to animal and plants, from another side extending
>> in
>>> a radical way the P. Singer proposal, developing the technoetic starting
>>> building a cyber-ethic (is a fact that today's only living philosophy is
>> the
>>> ethic one)
>>>
>>> The question is if is correct the idea of the radicalisation of the
>> Singer
>>> proposal, we have to extend the human rights to nature and to technology?
>>>
>>> francesco
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> 2010/4/26 Natasha Vita-More <natasha@natasha.cc>
>>>
>>>> I respond by placing Francesco's comments in quotes and my response
>>>> direclty
>>>> below his comments:
>>>>
>>>> "The first topic introduced by you is a question on "what ways can
>>>> narcissism and anthropocentrism be applied to a post or trans or meta
>>>> human?", the idea of the artwork that inspires this subject, *Is There
>> Love
>>>> in The Technoetic
>>>> Narcissus?* is clearly against the -centrism, not matter if is
>>>> anthropically
>>>> or animally or technologically driven, from the point of view of the
>>>> humankind we have an urgence to shift from ego-centrism to
>> *eco*-centrism.
>>>> This term is a good start."
>>>>
>>>> Agreed. It would be quite odd to have a single-self narcissism when the
>>>> future human is becoming multiple-selves. I view the issues by framing
>> it
>>>> as "social ecology", and I think that your term "eco-centrism" is in
>>>> keeping
>>>> with this sentiment. But what is "centrism"? It is a political
>>>> philosophical outlook which avoids extremism, and this is a very good
>>>> thing.
>>>> So good, in fact - that it warrants plenty of love.*
>>>>
>>>> In a world where religious dogma and political hegemony erupt a sense of
>>>> unity, connectives, and peace - a focus on eco-centrism could be a
>>>> meaningful antidote.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "The term was adopted in Italy by Wu Ming 1 a very well known writer
>> (one
>>>> of
>>>> a group named Wu Ming) in his latest book *New Italian Epic *(Einaudi
>>>> 2009).
>>>> The title is a definition to describe a body of literary works which
>> share
>>>> various stylistic characteristics, thematic constants and an underlying
>>>> allegorical nature. The last chapter is about the new definition of
>>>> eco-centrism: humans are not necessary, we are exempedable: there is an
>>>> urgence to shift from ego-centric point of view to eco-centric."
>>>>
>>>> "So the question is if a Human Enhancement is still a form of hyper
>>>> cultural
>>>> narcisism? And if yet: is the telos of our species? In this case we are
>>>> fundamentally a narcisistic specie, so it is not a neurosis but a
>>>> fundamental routine of our gender?"
>>>>
>>>> This is a timely and important question, since we are existing in the
>>>> throws
>>>> of enhancement and there is no turning back (no matter how much Bill Joy
>> or
>>>> Bill McKibben rally around anti-technological advancements. My answer
>> to
>>>> your question is that "Human Enhancement" is beyond a form of hyper
>>>> cultural
>>>> narcissism because narcissism, by its very nature, suggests that a human
>> is
>>>> the center of love and that this love is better than and more important
>>>> than
>>>> any other love. This cannot be scientifically proven and it is not
>>>> psychologically sound. In fact is psychological unsound and resides in
>>>> very
>>>> close proximity to sociopathic behavior. Thus, "Human Enhancement" must
>> be
>>>> located within a "second-order cybernetics" and must include the tenets
>> of
>>>> a
>>>> social ecology because human enhancement suggests a "connective
>>>> intelligence." It further requires, and I do mean "requires" brain
>>>> plasticity. One might ask "How does human enhancement suggest a
>> connective
>>>> intelligence?" And my answer is that human enhancement engages
>>>> immersivity,
>>>> simulations, experience design within the field of media arts and the
>> areas
>>>> of brain-share, and consciousness expansion, and brain emulation within
>> the
>>>> fields of cognitive and neuroscience and the field of artificial
>>>> intelligence. The transdisciplinary of these fields hedge on the
>> element
>>>> of
>>>> "love" (a strong positive emotion and pleasure) and what I consider to
>> be
>>>> love as "well-being". Well-being is quintessential love because in
>> order
>>>> to
>>>> "love" one must not be in pain or anguish and the freedom of
>> physiological
>>>> pain or psychological anger equals a sense of love. (I can explain this
>>>> further, but I don't' want to get too far off track). But to tie it in
>> to
>>>> your artworks, you will notice that with your plants are green, not
>> yellow,
>>>> which suggests they are healthy. When a blooming flower is at its most
>>>> "love" it is ripe and full of all the chemical components of well-being.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "We know the misunderstanding on evolution of species as something with
>> a
>>>> direction or a refinement, in order to really understand the work of
>> Darwin
>>>> we have to speak to differentiation by speciation (that not include any
>>>> given refinement);"
>>>>
>>>> Darwin focused on natural selection. Spencer focused on survival of the
>>>> fittest. It seems plausible that Darwin does have an affinity with
>>>> diversity and differentiation.
>>>>
>>>> "We have to consider the idea of *Chance and Necessity* (New York,
>> Alfred
>>>> A.
>>>> Knopf, 1971), a book of Jaques Monod in which the nobel prize retrieve
>> the
>>>> classic old Greek idea (Heraclitus) on the absence of an aim a *telos*."
>>>>
>>>> Even if John Cage's chance pieces of musical performance were actually
>>>> based
>>>> on chance, Cage still needed to have developed his skills in order to
>>>> perform. So, the necessity of having skill allowed for his chance to be
>>>> music and not noise. Further, Cage's chance music was preformed with
>>>> technology.
>>>>
>>>> "The Human Cultural Narcissism could seems a sort of principle that
>> recover
>>>> the Telos."
>>>>
>>>> Yes, understood.
>>>>
>>>> "So we can go directly to your (natasha) last question: *Nevertheless,
>> if
>>>> and when humans diversify further and into a distributed cognition, what
>>>> image will ego see when looking into a mirror? This reflection could
>>>> frighten us deeply or give us immeasurable psychological relief.*"
>>>>
>>>> "Indeed a frightening image if we keep our monotheistic vision of the
>>>> realm,
>>>> but not if we will be capable to open us to new vision of the world were
>>>> the
>>>> world became a plurality of worlds in which humankind is hosted"
>>>>
>>>> Yes, well said Francesco. Precisely.
>>>>
>>>> Toward Plurality and Plasticity!
>>>>
>>>> Natasha
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> 2010/4/21 Natasha Vita-More <natasha@natasha.cc>
>>>>
>>>>> Thank you Francesco for introducing this topic. There are many angles
>>>>> to look at and routes to take in setting on a trek through the
>>>>> richness of your material. I'd like to start with a first post, and
>>>>> more will follow:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> In what ways can narcissism and anthropocentrism be applied to a human
>>>>> who is unleashing biology and engaging a bio-synthetic zone of
>> existence?
>>>>> Human
>>>>> enhancement projects have a goal and that is to take biology out of
>>>>> its fixed nature and turn it into a workable palate. Design labs such
>>>>> as H+ Lab, DIYbio and DIYgenomics encourage new theory and practice
>>>>> for those who want to be at the center of their own evolving
>>>> bio-synthetic
>>>> system.
>>>>>
>>>>> Do-it-yourself human enhancement domain has a certain familiarity. For
>>>>> example, the theory and practice of second-order cybernetics placed
>>>>> its formidable authors-Norbert Wiener, Gregory Bateson and Margaret
>>>>> Mead, as a type of subjective elitism, in a claim that the observer
>>>>> must be included in the system in order for the system to exist. If
>>>>> the mind/brain is central, if not pivotal, to a cybernetic system,
>>>>> would this be the epitome of an anthropocentric, self-referential
>>>>> human-machine? Further, in that technology's tools are most often
>>>>> available to those who partake in highly-financed projects, such as
>>>>> the Biological Computer Laboratory at the University of Illinois
>>>>> (1958-1975), and the lab is referred to as the "Nerve" and its
>>>>> founder, Heinz von Foerster as its head, would that not ever so more
>>>>> characterize this milieu as narcissistic at its best?
>>>>>
>>>>> Alternatively, designating one's experience of existence at the locus
>>>>> of one's future experiences makes sense. Who would know how you think
>>>>> and feel better than you?
>>>>>
>>>>> Nevertheless, if and when humans diversify further and into a
>>>>> distributed cognition, what image will ego see when looking into a
>>>>> mirror? This reflection could frighten us deeply or give us
>>>>> immeasurable psychological relief.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Natasha Vita-More
>>>>>
>>>>>
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> nec metuas nec optas
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