nettime's_31337_h!5+0r!4|| on Mon, 3 Jun 2002 20:19:46 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> ### note to self: digest class <-> hack [hettinga x2, snelson] |
"R. A. Hettinga" <rah@shipwright.com> Anthropological phylogeny and ontogeny and the Geodesic Society "R. A. Hettinga" <rah@shipwright.com> Re: <nettime> On Empire "Kermit Snelson" <ksnelson@subjectivity.com> Re: <nettime> The Hacker Class - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Sun, 2 Jun 2002 16:58:09 -0400 From: "R. A. Hettinga" <rah@shipwright.com> Subject: Anthropological phylogeny and ontogeny and the Geodesic Society -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 At 4:23 AM +0200 on 6/2/02, Diana McCarty wrote: > I'd say the hacker class has done pretty well > for itself already, but they tended to favor the vectoralist > position. Or how many shares does it take to turn a hacker into a > vector? Maybe we are _all_ hackers and we don't know it, but > _they_ found out first. Right. If I might be indulged in a little crackpot anthropology :-), think about these for a minute: Scavenger Hunter/Gatherer Farmer Mechanic Machines Each represents not only a phyla of modern society -- nothing goes away -- but also represents a stage in man's cultural evolution. Currently, we're moving into what I've been calling a geodesic society, after Huber's observation that Moore's law turns hierarchical networks into geodesic networks. I claim that our social structures, economic, force, whatever, map quite nicely to the whatever our dominant communication architecture is at the time. Our network evolution follows our increasing social complexity, if you notice. Scavengers and hunter-gatherers created "star" shaped peer-to-peer networks. Farmers and hunter-gatherers created hierarchical networks to operate in the large populations that agriculture produced at the intersections of agricultural trade routes. Mechanics increased communication speed, but only recently were able to reduce information switching costs, so larger and larger hierarchies evolved as spans of control increased, creating larger and larger economies of scale. The result was larger and larger nation-states and multinational corporations until the ultimate synthesis of both, the totalitarian state, proved that the mechanically calculated transfer-pricing of assets eventually falls down without a market in the feedback loop somewhere. Paradoxically, it was the evolution of markets *towards* this stage of increasing centralization that caused the literal and conceptual downfall of states like Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia and Communist China, and, even, in its own way, the United States, as then organized by Roosevelt's "New" Deal and Johnson's "Great" Society. It was the granting by nation-states of monopoly to telephone switching companies that caused, ultimately, Moore's law, which enabled the "surfacting" of information into smaller and smaller bits, moving closer and closer to where it was needed in the network, all at the very expense of central, even hierarchical, control. It was also the need to "calculate" the price of an asset on a modern large-scale organization's books, in order to transfer it to another place in that organization that caused the fundamental discovery of modern financial theory: that asset prices can only be *discovered* in markets and not *calculated* by firms, paradoxically something that happens precisely *because* of the continual process of asset-price calculation that every firm in a given market must to in order to survive. The synthesis of these two ideas is that Moore's law reduces transaction costs, which, as Coase noted, reduces firm size, thus *increasing* the prevalence of markets where asset calculation by larger firms occurred before. In other words, in a world of increasing global internetworking, a geodesic market, resulting, ultimately, in a geodesic society. In our nascent geodesic society, machines are only just learning to operate by themselves, and are beginning do most of the work. Soon, when they learn enough financial cryptography to buy and sell goods and services from each other without much human intervention, they will operate as their own economic entities, and firms will continue to get smaller, with increasingly smaller device size, until some practical limit to the dis-economies of scale of Moore's law presents itself. Probably, though necessarily, as a result of the size of the machinery and facilities necessary to fabricate smaller and smaller microprocessors, facilities which are currently measured in the single-billion-dollar range, and not expected to exceed the hundred-billion-dollar range, some 10 to 15 years away. Of course, nanotechnology could increase this technology asymptote, with, ironically, geodesic structures made out of carbon, "bucky-tube" transistors, named after Buckminster Fuller are proving to be quite small and efficient, if they can eventually be "grown", near their point use, instead of built and shipped there from some large chip-fab somewhere. Until machines "learn" profit and loss, machines will be, um, lorded over :-), by mechanics (hackers, of course), who, in this phase of man's evolution are the people who are experiencing the greatest increases in income and the people who create the most wealth. As a result, mechanics are increasingly less "farmed" by people we call managers, who, in turn, are even less occasionally "hunted" and "gathered" by aristocrats -- senior managers, asset speculators, and, of course, modern "princes" in the form of the operators of nation-states, unions, and various "quasi" non-governmental organizations, who, in practice, are neither quasi nor non-governmental. All of whom are followed around by various scavengers who try to make sense of it all after the fact: the academy, various bits of the bureaucracy, artists, and, the ultimate scavengers, shamans and religious culture. Scientists, of course, are the dominant scavenger in present society, because they're the ones who teach the hackers how to make the most money, just as bureaucrats did for farmers, and shamans did for hunter-gatherers. Cheers, RAH -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP 7.5 iQA/AwUBPPqGm8PxH8jf3ohaEQKRpQCgjNoavPyNi6S3kiS9XC6l/4AM4ioAoONs WOhozJBXIfzapayRlxLE2lzJ =59s9 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- ----------------- R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah@ibuc.com> The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/> 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA "... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity, [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -\ Date: Sun, 2 Jun 2002 16:00:37 -0400 From: "R. A. Hettinga" <rah@shipwright.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> On Empire At 9:15 AM -0700 on 6/1/02, Russell L. Carter wrote: > My original comments were directed to the > assertion that all useful products are produced by large scale hierarchical > organizations. Moore's law creates geodesic networks out of hierarchical ones. Apply Coase's theorem, and stir neoliberally. Sooner or later profit and loss will slide from the corporate, past the partnership, through the individual, all the way to the device level. So much for such cryptofeudal happy-horseshit nonsense :-) as Marx's "labor" theory of "value". Cheers, RAH -- ----------------- R. A. Hettinga <mailto: rah@ibuc.com> The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/> 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA "... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity, [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "Kermit Snelson" <ksnelson@subjectivity.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> The Hacker Class Date: Sun, 2 Jun 2002 16:47:01 -0700 > Hackers are not 'victims'. This is a complete misreading. > On the contrary, they, together with farmers and workers, > produce all there is. Literally -- we produce the world > as the world. We only have to realise our full potential. > We have a world to win. There was probably no person in history who understood the revolutionary role of intellectuals and artists better than did Karl Marx. Nor has there been anyone who better understood the role that abstraction plays in historical materialism. That being so, Marx was never vulnerable to the philosophical vulgarity of lumping artists, intellectuals, engineers and other "hackers" together into a "producing class" of "symbolic workers." To imagine that Marx saw himself as a "symbolic-analytical service provider" is laughable. Objectively, such ideas can serve only the current neoliberal project to proletarianize the middle class. For an epitome of such ideology, see the writings of both former US Labor Secretary Robert Reich and of Antonio Negri, who cites Reich repeatedly and with enthusiasm in _Empire_. This fact is evidence that the corporate-funded academic Left is now dominated by ideologies that, exactly like their counterparts on the Right, have completely misunderstood and explicitly rejected mankind's still-new experiments with materialism and scientific method. In other words, the very innovations that were not only at the heart of Marx's thought, but which have also been responsible for whatever measure of material prosperity and physical health a still-small portion of humanity currently enjoys. Nevertheless, the left and right wings of the academy are now working together feverishly and ingeniously to end humanity's experiment with scientific method, modern technology and their political counterpart, positive law. In its place, the way is being prepared for a revival of tribalism, myth, magic, gift economies and other pre-industrial technologies of social control. To make such observation requires neither great insight nor great hysteria; it is obvious to anybody who is willing to read and understand the vast literature. Consider this, for instance, from Félix Guattari in 1991: Henceforth, the North-South axis will perhaps function as the third path/voice of self-reference. This is what I call "the barbarian compromise." The old walls marking the limits of "barbarism" have been torn down, deterritorialized once and for all. The last shepherds of monotheism have lost their flocks, for it is not in the nature of the new subjectivity to be herded. Moreover, capitalism itself is now beginning to shatter into animist and machinic polyvocity. What a fabulous reversal, if the old African, pre-Columbian and aboriginal subjectivities became the final recourse for subjective reappropriation of machinic self-reference!" [1] How fabulous, indeed. The ideologies that have buttressed these and other naive and irresponsible attempts by 20th-century Western intellectuals to bring humanity back under the thumb of priestcraft are complex and varied, but nearly all have something to do with reviving pre-scientific conceptions of form, number, method and measure. And so it is with the proposal presently before us, which would add a Keyboard and Mouse to the Hammer and Sickle. In saying this, I don't intend to cast doubts on anybody's personal intentions or good will. My only aim is to point out that when building a society based on human freedom and dignity, it is nearly always a bad design decision to factor out form or "information" as an abstract class separate from its material basis. That such a social "design pattern" works only to ensure poverty and/or tyranny is as evident from logic as it is from history. And with respect to our current situation, such an ontology is much more likely to propel the oncoming, annihilating juggernaut of intellectual property law than it is to stop it. Finally, let me say that after the countless abominations and blasted hopes of the 20th century, it is simply sad that educated people could seriously propose the idea that a symbol-processing "hacker class" is likely to achieve "class consciousness" and thus take on a world-historical role of liberating humanity. Generations of cafe-district communists have wailed over their wine glasses how disappointed they are in the industrial working class for not having adequately performed the historic duty that they had assigned to it. I guarantee you that if these disappointed intellectuals now cast their lot with the "hackers," in thirty years they will have nothing to show for it except the same seat in the cafe, and perhaps a much stiffer drink in front of them. Kermit Snelson Notes: [1] "Regimes, Pathways, Subjects" [in] incorporations J. Crary & S. Kwinter(eds.) New York: Zone, 1992. p.18 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # 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