Wolfgang Schirmacher on Thu, 6 Jan 2000 17:58:37 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Wolfgang Schirmacher: Media Aesthetics & the European Graduate School |
Geert, congratulations! But I am still puzzled how you were able to dig out a text to which no link from our EGS site points. I have not looked at the Artificial Life site where you got the lecture from for quite a time and am painfully aware it needs a much higher standard in terms of sources and links. We are in the process of updating the EGS site anyway, hopefully there is some energy left for the AL site. Maybe, next time you could send me an e-mal before you publish an article of mine - just to spare everybody the embarrassment of a blatantly anachronistic criticism. There was no ZMK at the time of writing, and it took a few more years before I came very close to getting a professorship at KHM. Wasn't Peter Weibel still in the US? Still, the Ars Electronica was a hopeful sign and I should have mentioned it. It may be helpful to acknowledge that the European Graduate School as an academic institution is no longer under the spell of a scholarly book culture: We do accept as a Master or Doctoral Thesis a multi-media project; for example, a film with a written document attached arguing its innovative aesthetic position. Media Philosophy is the focus of our programs but we encourage creative embodiments utilizing all art and media forms. Frank Hartmann's statement that is it hard to apply "traditional philosophy on a new media situation" is not even half-true. What is "traditional" philosophy? A living philosopher who is not merely a philosophy professor (remember Schopenhauer’s criticism of the university philosophy) begins a tradition of his/her own, and information technology is a crucial element of a world to be understood philosophically. How can you NOT be a media philosopher in our time and age? Still, the discussion of the philosophers among themselves helps - as in any other profession - to test your strength and weaknesses and to grow professionally. Therefore, you have to choose the best as your opponents (and most of them happen to be dead already). I am quite eager to see Frank’s book on “Medienphilosophie”! I had little use for so-called media theory in the 15 years I've taught Media Philosophy in New York since I believe you should confront the students with the most challenging minds (most had a French accent) - even if their main concern was not media or communication. My students (many of them working in the media) made the application on their own - and taught me quite a bit. By the way, I’ve postponed publication of my “Media Philosophy” since it should not be only a book - with the resources of the European Graduate School I now will be able to make it a project. THINK MEDIA is the battle cry of the Communication Division - and we mean it. And no, Frank, we are not going for funds and don’t have to: Like at the beginning of the universities, students’ tuition pays for the professors salaries, and the bureaucracy is eliminated which makes up 80 percent of the overhead costs at traditional universities. Consequently, administration, students’ recruiting, and advising is done via the Internet. Wolfgang Schirmacher www.egs.edu # 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