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Subject:

[CSL]: NETFUTURE #122

From:

John Armitage <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

The Cyber-Society-Live mailing list is a moderated discussion list for those interested <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 19 Sep 2001 08:13:33 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (473 lines)

From: Steve Talbott [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2001 9:33 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: NETFUTURE #122



                                 NETFUTURE
                    Technology and Human Responsibility

 =========================================================================
Issue #122     A Publication of The Nature Institute    September 18, 2001
 =========================================================================
             Editor:  Stephen L. Talbott ([log in to unmask])

                  On the Web: http://www.netfuture.org/
     You may redistribute this newsletter for noncommercial purposes.

NetFuture is a reader-supported publication.


CONTENTS:
---------

Quotes and Provocations
   Terror on Film
   Still Disconnecting

DEPARTMENTS

Correspondence
   How to Prepare for a Frenetic World (Peter Denning)
   Quit Bashing the Media Lab (Amy Bruckman)
   Reply to Amy Bruckman (Langdon Winner)
   A Book on Tripartite Society (Frank Thomas Smith)

About this newsletter

 =========================================================================

                         QUOTES AND PROVOCATIONS


Terror on Film
--------------

Brief comments about the terrorist attacks:

** "It was like watching a movie" -- this reaction has been widely noted.
Less often noted is the fact that the likeness may result from either of
two opposite movements.  Movies, with the aid of sophisticated technology,
may be becoming more life-like; but at the same time, life, under the
influence of movies, may be becoming more movie-like.  Given the current
need for us to re-imagine society in fundamentally creative ways, and
given the movie industry's and movie consumer's penchant for formulaic
presentations, overwhelming violence, and technically bolstered sensation-
mongering, one hopes it is not life that is being sucked into the cinema,
but rather the cinema that is merely reflecting life more vividly.  This,
of course, is a vain hope, since the currents of influence undeniably flow
in both directions.

** A friend of mine once remarked that he never felt so real and alive as
when he was fighting as an infantryman in Vietnam, where he witnessed many
life-and-death scenes.  We might have expected the eyewitnesses in lower
Manhattan to have had a similar experience of intensified reality.  Yet
these most compelling and painful moments were repeatedly compared to the
relatively passive, second-hand experience of watching a movie.

We spend a significant portion of our lives watching "action" on a screen.
A question often raised before still needs answering:  As habitual
spectators of a world largely hidden on the other side of a screen, are we
losing the ability to experience ourselves in any meaningful way as
genuine actors in a real world?

** Of course, for most of us the events last week seemed like watching a
movie because we *were* watching a movie -- moving images on a screen.
Why should they have seemed like anything else?  Learning to negotiate the
various sorts of distance between such images and the practical realities
of life may be one of the urgent tasks of our day.

** Actually, the "we" in the previous paragraph was rhetorical.  It
happens that I personally have not yet seen any moving images from
September 11.  Nor can I imagine what they would add to the newspaper
pictures I *have* seen.  In fact, I wonder whether heavy indulgence in
ongoing and repeated video images (with all the accompanying video drama
and verbiage) doesn't tend to substitute a rather more passive and
escapist experience ("watching a movie") for the more muscular,
imaginative coming to terms with events that can take place only within
oneself and in the immediate contexts of one's life.

** There's a lot of talk about Americans being likely to experience
traumatic stress syndrome.  But the victim of traumatic stress is driven
by his trauma to re-live the original event; most of us, on the other
hand, keep re-living the original event -- in its weakened, screen-
mediated form -- in hope of engendering within ourselves the appropriate
sense of trauma, which never quite comes because events on the screen
cannot produce it.  Have we been overwhelmed by events that were too
intense and real, or are we feeling inadequately connected to events that
were too vague and remote?

** Perhaps the most obvious reason why watching the attack on the World
Trade Center was like watching a movie is that we have in fact watched
countless cinematic scenes very much like those that recently broke
through into history.  Isn't it the case that whatever we continually
present to our collective imagination will eventually find *some* pathway
into the outer world?

** Finally, and most fundamentally, life seems to be like watching a movie
because a movie is exactly what we conceive the world of our normal
experience to be.  The Cartesian split -- which everyone claims to have
overcome and none of us has in fact overcome -- reduces us to isolated
individuals viewing a kind of cinematic display of our own subjectivity
projected against the blank screen of a reality (the "real" world of
particles, waves, quanta, or whatever) we can never quite get to.  Feeling
cut off from reality -- from whatever lies on the other side of the movie
screen, or the other side of the veil of our own subjectivity -- is the
nearly inescapable condition of modern consciousness.

This epistemological predicament may seem foreign to a newsletter on
technology, but I am convinced there can be no progress against the
technological challenges of today's world except by overcoming what you
might call the subjective imprisonment of human consciousness
characteristic of the past several hundred years of western civilization.
Furthermore, technology is rapidly fortifying the prison, locking us ever
more securely within our separate subjectivities.  As Max Frisch has
remarked, technology is the knack of so arranging the world that we don't
have to experience it.

I will have more to say about this in future issues.

Related articles:

** "The Reality of Appearances" in NF #119.
       http://www.netfuture.org/2001/Mar2701_119.html#2a



Still Disconnecting
-------------------

Responding to "Why I Have Disconnected from Email" (NF #121), one reader
wrote me to say (and this was his entire message),

   Your behavior strikes me as cowardly and hypocritical.

Another submitted this message:

   Sorry to sound caustic, but this reminds me of a quote from Samuel
   Beckett -- Man blames his shoes for the faults of his feet.

The first writer offers a slap in the face without deigning to hint at its
justification.  There is no way I can respond to an unstated argument.
The second, rather more polite writer suggests that I have blamed the
mechanisms of email when I should have looked inward for the source of my
difficulties -- this despite my saying that my problem was "a feature of
the way I manage my own life", and despite my reference to "the perfectly
acceptable medium of email", and despite my assertion that "balance is the
decisive thing", and despite my mentioning an immediate physical ailment
as a triggering cause of my decision, and despite my warning readers
against "taking me to be suggesting what *your* appropriate means of self-
recollection might be"....

The only way I know for an otherwise well-intentioned reader to manage
such a complete misrepresentation is by failing to read the message he was
responding to.  This failure (on any reasonable sense of "to read") is
probably more the norm with email than the exception, and it hardly argues
for an obligation by the rest of us to submit ourselves without reserve to
this particular medium.

I said in my essay that, after a great deal of vacillation, I was feeling
an unaccustomed combativeness on this issue.  Now I think I know why.  I
cannot vouch for these two respondents, but their remarks bring to sharper
awareness something I have really known for a long time:  many people in
our society take any rejection of common technologies as a personal
affront.  I have seen this time and again with television.  If someone
finds out you have raised a family without television, he is likely to
become angry and argumentative.  "So you're too good for your society?"
"You don't want to know what's going on in the world around you?"  "How
can you cut your children off from the culture of their peers?"  Behind
this anger is the fact, which you can observe almost everywhere, that most
people feel guilty about their habits of television viewing.

Well, I'm in a mood to meet anger with anger.  What in hell's name are
these people trying to convict me of?  Look at the culture of email.  It's
alright to slap people around via email; it's alright to send careless,
half-decipherable messages for no good reason; it's alright to contribute
wholesale and without any thoughtful hesitation to the message overload of
your fellows; it's alright to fire off responses without having read the
message you are responding to.  Use email as vacuously and irresponsibly
as you wish, and you are at least exercising one of the glorious
privileges of the digital age.  But back away from the medium itself in an
effort to find your own responsible balance, and you call down the scorn
of the technically enlightened upon yourself.

The past two months have given me wonderful confirmation that my decision
*was* -- for me and for the time being -- the right one.  If I took great
pains to warn against generalizing my purely personal decision, it was
because it would be insane to suggest that there is a rightness or
wrongness about email as such.  Yes, it's crucial to recognize the various
ways email plays into the reigning pathologies of our society -- and I did
indeed talk about this -- but almost *everything* will play into those
pathologies simply because they are the reigning pathologies.  This says
nothing about individual decisions to abandon, try to redeem, or otherwise
relate to the problematic tools of our society.

It troubles me that there is so little recognition (by both technology
advocates and critics) of the necessarily personal and contextual nature
of all human choices.  It is impossible to say, in an absolute way, "you
should use this technology" or "you should not use it".  Our society would
be in far deeper trouble than it is if some people did not opt to stay as
far away from digital technologies as possible, cultivating those skills,
habits, and capacities the larger culture is in danger of losing
altogether.  And our society would be in far deeper trouble than it is if
some people did not opt conscientiously to dive into the technological
milieu in order to discover how it might be redeemed.  Our greatest threat
comes from those who do neither, but simply drift with the technologies
that are handed to them.

So, good grief, let's cut people a little slack.  We *need* the diversity
and ingenuity of their individual responses.  Net afficionados like to say
that new, exciting realities "emerge" spontaneously from the "chaos" of
the online society.  Well, are we really so narrow-minded that we cannot
allow this creative ferment to include widely differing personal decisions
about how to relate to the various technical capabilities on offer?  If we
already knew how people should incorporate information technologies into
their lives, there wouldn't be much room for anything new to emerge.

(On a more positive note, Peter Denning's letter in this issue offers some
nice suggestions relating to the pressures of email and modern life in
general.)

SLT

 =========================================================================

                              CORRESPONDENCE


How to Prepare for a Frenetic World
-----------------------------------

Response to:  "Why I Have Disconnected from Email" (NF-121)
From:  Peter Denning <[log in to unmask]>

Steve,

I am sorry to hear that your burden of email has grown so large and time
consuming that you see disconnection as the only route to sanity.

May I offer a modest suggestion?  Follow the lead of other overburdened
netizens.  Create a second account for yourself that will be known only to
you and people you select.  Activate the filter in your email program so
that only emails from the people you designate will actually reach your
mailbox.  All other mail, including spam, will not pass your filter.
Anyone else who wants to talk to you by email sends to your old address,
which is processed by someone else on your behalf.  The interesting pieces
are forwarded to you for your consideration.

I fully understand Langdon Winner's frustrations.  He didn't really offer
a solution other than to attempt to resist the further de-coherence.  In
the past few years I have encountered all those frustrations myself.  The
sources are widespread and cutting myself off from email, or any other
technology, would not be a solution for me.  So I changed myself.  I
declared that the problem was not email overload, but total commitment
overload.  I therefore started with a spreadsheet to inventory all my
commitments in life.  Against each I entered the customer of that
commitment and the number of hours per week required to honor that
commitment to my own (and my customer's) satisfaction.  I also entered the
number of hours I actually spent on that commitment.  I found that the
number of hours actually spent on commitments was eating into sleep,
relationship, and other biological time, and the number of hours required
was well over 100.  I reduced my commitments to the ones that are truly
important and to which I can devote the time required for my own and my
customer's satisfaction.  All else gets a "no" from me.  The new practice
of managing commitments to within my capacity has changed my mood.  I
don't need to screen myself from people; I just say "no" when the
requested commitment does not feel right (and, on email, "hell no delete"
to spam).  Over time I have transformed my mood from one of overwhelm to
one of general satisfaction.  I'm creating a program to help my students
with the same problem; they have to confront a long life in the frenetic
world I'm already used to.


Quit Bashing the Media Lab
--------------------------

Response to:  "Whatever Happened to the Electronic Cottage?"  (NF-121)
From:  Amy Bruckman <[log in to unmask]>

To the editor:

I share some of Langdon Winner's concerns about the growing trend for
everyone to be connected all the time.  My own essay on this topic,
"Christmas Unplugged," was written on Christmas day 1992 with a pencil,
reflecting on the reasons why I chose not to bring my laptop on my trip to
visit my family.  I sent a copy to a few publishers in 1993, but no one
was interested in printing it.  A year later I sent it out again, and
suddenly it got immediate interest.  The importance of the issue was
becoming clearer.  (The article appeared in Technology Review in January
1995, http://www.cc.gatech.edu/~asb/papers/christmas-unplugged.html).

While I share Winner's concerns, I would like to ask him to please stop
indiscriminately bashing the MIT Media Lab, and also to reconsider his
strategy for constructively influencing the direction of future
technologies.  For example, I note that in his article "Whatever happened
to the electronic cottage?", Winner criticizes the lab's electronic
"thinking tags" calling them "an operational definition of self
indulgence."  I wonder if Dr. Winner is aware that one of the applications
of this technology is in teaching high-school students about the spread of
communicable diseases like AIDs with a delayed-onset of symptoms.  Each
student is given a tag, and a light shows whether they are symptomatic.
The disease is spread by IR communication between badges.  Even if no
student ever interacts with someone who is symptomatic, the simulated
disease rapidly spreads among the population.  In conversations following
this activity, students develop an understanding of the disease process
which is not only scientifically correct but also powerfully felt.  (More
information about work on this project by Vanessa Colella, Rick Borovoy,
and Mitchel Resnick is at:
http://www.media.mit.edu/~vanessa/colella.jls.htm) This is what you call
"self indulgent"?

Clearly the critique of that particular project was made in ignorance.
But it's not just a matter of one simple mistake.  I believe that Dr.
Winner's critiques of the role of technology in shaping our lives and our
society are of paramount importance.  But bashing a particular lab (where
by the way lots of socially constructive work is taking place) or a
particular project (whether self indulgent or not in reality) will
accomplish little.  A more effective strategy for change is to identify
positive examples of technology design in the service of social values,
and to encourage others to follow that constructive example.

Technology design and innovation will not stop, nor should they.  There is
a large and growing population of engineers, designers, scientists, and
funders who do care about social values.  Our challenge is to nurture that
growing group, and to help them with the details: if I care, what do I do?
What does it mean to be a socially responsible technology designer?  The
answers are quite complicated.  And we can't even start the conversation
til we shift our focus from lambasting negative examples to lauding
positive ones.

Amy Bruckman
Assistant Professor
College of Computing
Georgia Institute of Technology
(PhD MIT Media Lab, 1997)
Web:  http://www.cc.gatech.edu/~asb/


Reply to Amy Bruckman
---------------------

From:  Langdon Winner <[log in to unmask]>

My essay looks at the relationship between geographical space and
infospace, noting present lack of success in attempts to find an agreeable
blend of the two domains.  Twenty years after the introduction of the PC,
it seems increasingly obvious that information technology merely adds
another layer to the chaos wrought by the industrial cities and the
automobile.  Responding to the congestion and suburban sprawl, people now
use digital devices in their cars and homes in frantic attempts to restore
coherence within patterns of living  that seem stressed and fragmented.  I
compare this predicament to earlier dreams of the "electronic cottage"
that imagined computers connecting people more strongly with families,
friends, and local communities.

Some who responded assured me that they had realized electronic cottages
in practice, a point I readily concede and celebrate. But I chose to
discuss the broader picture, including the kinds of disorder widely
recognized and lamented in Silicon Valley, Atlanta, and other centers of
the new economy.  Alas, the spread of digital technologies tends to
exacerbate these urban deformities and their human costs.

Amy Bruckman is right.  It was probably a mistake to consult the agendas
of leading research centers looking for possible remedies.  For the most
part, today's info laboratories (not just those in Cambridge) respond to
market forces as defined by their corporate sponsors and ignore the
pressing needs of society at large.  Nevertheless, their work does express
a pungent vision of the future, one not unlike that peddled by Alvin
Toffler two decades back.  Does this vision offer more than threadbare
strategies of digital saturation?  Do the research programs seek a more
reasonable balance between transit and communication?

If asking  such questions is "indiscriminate bashing",  then I
misunderstand the role of technology-focused social criticism.  Alas, one
of the enduring features of  technological utopianism is its eagerness to
ignore failures that stem from similar visions promoted in the past.  Here
amnesia takes an aggressive form:  Don't remind us of what technology
promised two, three or four decades ago; what we are doing is new,
exciting, unprecedented!

Amy points out that there are some good things that have come from
"thinking tags", suggesting that I'm  unaware of these miracles.
Actually, I've noted proposals of this kind since the early 1990s depicted
in rough sketches in European research institutes, where the promise was
that the tags could help people in bars and restaurants spot good
prospective personal contacts without having to go through all the "Come
here often?" chatter. I'm pleased to learn that these devices have now
been applied to more urgent social needs.  Tools looking for uses
sometimes find good uses.  But this says nothing about the kinds of urban
stress and dislocation my essay ponders.

I share Amy's desire to find "positive examples of technological design"
and to encourage socially responsible designers in their work.  I just
wish there were more examples of such work we could offer our students and
readers of NetFuture.

Langdon Winner


A Book on Tripartite Society
----------------------------

Response to:  "Beyond Elite Globalization" (NF-120)
From:  Frank Thomas Smith <[log in to unmask]>

Dear Steve,

You article "Beyond Elite Globalization: The Case for a Tripartite
Society" is reproduced in the current issue of SouthernCross Review.  Your
readers may be interested in knowing that Rudolf Steiner's book, "Basic
Issues of the Social Question", from which Nicanor Perlas drew his
original inspiration concerning the Tripartite Society, is available as an
e-book from SouthernCross Review.  Direct link to the page is:
http://www.southerncrossreview.org/Ebooks/ebbasicissues.html.  Thanks for
continuing to provide your own and our readers with much thoughtful
material.

Kind regards,
Frank
http://www.SouthernCrossReview.org

 =========================================================================

                          ABOUT THIS NEWSLETTER

NetFuture, a freely distributed newsletter dealing with technology and
human responsibility, is published by The Nature Institute, 169 Route 21C,
Ghent NY 12075 (tel: 518-672-0116; web: http://www.natureinstitute.org).
Postings occur roughly every three or four weeks.  The editor is Steve
Talbott, author of *The Future Does Not Compute: Transcending the Machines
in Our Midst* (http://www.oreilly.com/~stevet/index.html).

Copyright 2001 by The Nature Institute.

You may redistribute this newsletter for noncommercial purposes.  You may
also redistribute individual articles in their entirety, provided the
NetFuture url and this paragraph are attached.

NetFuture is supported by freely given reader contributions, and could not
survive without them.  For details and special offers, see
http://www.netfuture.org/support.html .

Current and past issues of NetFuture are available on the Web:

   http://www.netfuture.org/

To subscribe to NetFuture send the message, "subscribe netfuture
yourfirstname yourlastname", to [log in to unmask] .  No
subject line is needed.  To unsubscribe, send the message, "signoff
netfuture".

Send comments or material for publication to Steve Talbott
([log in to unmask]).

If you have problems subscribing or unsubscribing, send mail to:
[log in to unmask] .

************************************************************************************
Distributed through Cyber-Society-Live [CSL]: CSL is a moderated discussion
list made up of people who are interested in the interdisciplinary academic
study of Cyber Society in all its manifestations.To join the list please visit:
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/cyber-society-live.html
*************************************************************************************

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