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<nettime> Religion and Media |
Nils Roeller Academy of Media Arts Peter-Welter-Platz 2 50676 Koeln nils@khm.de Religion and Media Dissymetries Dissymetry will be the starting point of the following reflections inspired by a colloque on Religion and Media organized by Sam Weber and Hent de Vries. Sam Weber pays in his reading of Derrida attention to the dissymmetry between the words religion and media , the overlapping of the two apparently so different terms" (Sam Weber: Thoughts on Religion and Media - Colloque in Chbteau de la Bretesche). This is a challenge. First of all it is a methodological challenge: We try to approach in the traditional medium of the text a diversity of hybrid phenomenena. Hybrid phenomena are for example films that are transformed into computer games, comic strips that are animated, that are brought into movement. We cannot refer to a history of logoi about media and we don't approach media as philoi. Hent de Vries argues that we have to catch up with scholarship (Hent de Vries: In Media Res- Colloque in Chbteau de la Bretesche). We have to catch up with the philoi and logoi of other disciplins and we have to consider again positivism. I think that nineteenth century positivsim and its philologies have formed the basic for Saussures and Cassirers concepts of language. But where are the Humboldts, the Grimm Brothers, the Bopps of the media, that will lead to a Saussure, to a Cassirer, to a Heidegger of the media? How can we approach media when we are not philoi of the media? We are afraid of their vulgarity, of their relation to institutionalized power and we are not sure how media are able to link people like once the christian religion did ( what al least historians tried to make us believe). The technology of the computer as well as the filmindustriy are inventions of the nineteenth century, but they are unfolding now their impact on our senses, our intuition and our rationality. We are used to combine the media with the spectacular. This combination becomes fragile when we have to add the word digital to media. The word digital can be traced back to the latin digitus. Sentences like Numerare per digitos or novi digitos tuos express that once numbers have been at hand, that once they have been organically connected with the human body and that once there was no distinction between mental procedures and the body.1 At the end of the nineteenth century the definition of numbers was at stake. The mathematician Richard Dedekind asked 1888 "Was sind und sollen die Zahlen?"2. One answer came from Gottlieb Frege. In the Grundlagen der Arithemetik he discusses Kants thesis, that " Verstand " und "Anschauung " depend on each other. 3 Frege denied that. 4 Numbers can no longer be defined through reference to the physical world, related to "a sinnliche Anschaung". Numbers do not enter through the senses in our mind, they are not related to an intuition, that is somehow connected with sensual experiences. As a consequence of these doubts a Grundlagenstreit in mathematics burst out between WI and WII. One result of this are digital computers which are obviously placed in every office of the western industrialized world. But I do consider them as a hidden force that irritates Debords Society of the Spectacle. To talk about media and religion is today not possible without talking about computers. Can we discuss the religio that links the spectacle of the media with the abstract sign processing machine? Is the visual, the spectacular one side of the medal and the abstract denial of intuiton the other side? Who is able to define the material of the medal? Are words materialized in this medal? Is it right to say that the loss of sensual experiences in computerized sign processing is related to the desire to amuse and to join spectacles? (I prefer the plural, because I see concurrencies between different forms of the spectacle that are more or less connected with computer technology and telecommunications. There is for example a concurrence between homebased entertainment and locationbased entertainment, Imax, Segaworld, video journals, pay tv, porno images in the internet.) The Academy of Media Arts has charged Siegfried Zielinki and me to organize the festival Digitale, where we try to accomplish intuitive fieldwork on the relation of digital media and moving images. This fieldwork has to take in regard a political demand. Because now the word digital has a different appeal. Now that is in the last twenty years of our decade, when politicians all over the world try to build High Tech Centers in order to convince investors to settle down and to localize a benefit gained from a general trend of computerization. In Northrhine - Westfalia the Minister of Economy has established the Digitale as a part of his political strategy. The festival is asked to motivate local film-, television- and multimedia-producers to compete with international productions and the festival has to pay special attention to computerbased production. The festival is asked to produce content for a technolgy, a technology that tends to be integrated in different modes of representations like film, foto, audio, print... The budget does not permit to invite George Lucas, the creator of the mass epos Star Wars, and this would not match with the interest of the Academy of Media Arts as the organizer. We respect George Lucas but we cannot work within the categories of Showbiz. The Academy takes the festival as a chance to investigate popular forms of digital culture. Last year the Academy has invited Artists from Brasil, Russia and Japan and asked wether there is a general trend to one global dialect. We found out, that these three countries have different approaches to combine computers with techniques of image production. I would like to give a short overview, in order to explain how we tried to approach the plural media. Brasil: Military government enforced the building of efficent and modern television network. As a result Brasil has one of the largest televison audiences of the world. Nearly every household in Brasil has access to television, everybody is connected to the oneway traffic of the channels that sends telenovelas. In the eigthies when the military establishment became "too tired" to resist against redemocratization, also mediapolitics changed but the oneway traffic - which is only from senders to the receivers of televisual messages and not back - remains a problem. Military government has prohibited the import of computer technology, also telephone lines have remained a service for the happy few. The connection between individuals was not wellcome. So we have a vivid television- and videoscene but a poor internet and multimedia-industry. Still people have to wander hundreds of miles in order to express in the capital their political interests.5 Russia: Here the distinction between universal computers and special purpose calculators has to be taken into account. Russia had a computerculture:networks reserved for intelligence services as well as for scientific institutions and Russia did have a tradition of computer engineering, it is better to say of electronic calculators.6). But this machines are build to calculate with the highest reliability functions, especially ballistic functions to determine the flight of transcontinental rockets. This computers are not universal in the sense that they could be applied for multi media production. The latter would imply universal programmability. 7, The Russian machines worked reliable also in extreme climates. Their errors have been of such an astonishing minimal scale that since the end of the Cold War specialists of the Nasa book timeshifts at these computers. Russians still tell the joke that Americans let two computers operate in order to check whether there is an error in a calculation not taking into account that both computers may not be reliable. It is obvious that restrictive government policy tends to controll the production of spectacles and prohibits the use of computers that may serve in connection with the internet as tool for indivual production and industry. Japan is different. The consumer industry is innovative, competing and challenging. This is the well known hardware side. The software side or better the content side may become as challenging. Apart from institutionalized forms of the spectacle, for the flow of images, there is a strong popular culture for the production of images that uses computers to create on production centers. Enforced by strong demand for images, comics with cute girls in blue skirts and white socks are one component of the large production of Manga and Anime, that can be traced back to an adaption of Walt Disney by Osamu Tezuku. But result is high integration of different media: print, tv, film, music, CD-Rom, internet chats, games are vivid examples of a convergence of computerbased technologies and sensualization through cinema. For the Digitale we concentrated on the representation of the cities in Manga and Anime and we had to face unexpected values and concepts. Cities are destroyed and rebuild within seconds. This images are animated by a permanent expectation of a final battle. Tours de Souabe Personally I was astonished about the Japanese Artist Koichi Ohata. He is a Manga -Artist, he creates comic stories, and he produces Anime, comic films. His speciality is Mecha:. The design of machines, hybrid man-machines, a futuristic mixture between Samurai and medieval knight in futuristic armour. At the Digitale he presented M.D. Geist. Most dangerous Geist. In the Japanese as well as in the American version the German word is reproduced. The integration of other languages indicates a global trend and is not accidential for Japanese mass narrations. Adaptions of western terms and names are often found. You will meet for example spacecommander Jung-Freud in a comic film for teenagers. But my question is how to deal with the syncretistic adaption of the German word. It appears now in the context of popular culture incarnated by a fairy soldier with bright eyes. Here Geist is a product of bio-engineering and is a part of special unit that the "troops of the government" have formed to combat the Negusrom.. This special unit became too dangerous and was exiled on a desert planet. After years one of them M.D. Geist reappears. He joins the Regierungstruppen and animates them in a very rough military sense: "Durch Geist wird die Kampfkraft der Truppe gestdrkt .8 The object of the manoeuvre is to enter Brain Palace. Brain Palace is a central but empty building of the Negusrom, where the programm Death-Force is located. It has the aim to destroy finally the already weak government. Geist fights and opens for government the way to the Brain Palace and to their command-central. The officer of the government troops can stop Death Force.. But Geist kills him and restarts the Death Force "um das Spiel selbst zu beginn. Geist is an outlaw and he is bvhse . He is the agressiv and dangerous synthesis of the battle between Negusrom and the government. And he starts an already written programm for his own interest. This interest is not to become rich and to live in luxury - he denies this before - but only revenge. We have to face the fact that we may find in the internet via search enginge a mailing list of M.D.Geist fans next to a list of group studying Derridas text. Even when we specify our search by: "Geist + power + action" this search will place Ohata and Derrida closely. This is only an example of what we can find if we start to go in Media Res . We have to to consider different meaning of single signchains different cultures. For Ohata Geist is tough, hard-boiled. What does Geist mean to us and when? Before or after reading Derrida? May be we have first to start to gather material, to get an overview. But this can become a tour de Souabe . Two examples: If we reserach with sufficient detail, we have to be sure what is sufficient. Let us take one example of what is not sufficient but taken as if it was sufficient. In German bookstores you can find Hdussermanns short biography on Hoelderlin.9 It was first published in 1961. There you can find a hint how to relate Geist to machines. For sure Ohata did not know this. He did not know that the word Geist implies the philosophy of Hvlderlins collegefriend Hegel. Hdussermann mentions that there is a field worth to be investigated. Still after 35 years this investigations are not well known because their is no common scientific interest to enter the field with sufficient detail. I would like to mention the relationship between the three famous Stiftskvpfe of T|bingen in Swabia: Hvlderlin, Schelling, Hegel to their Ahnen:: Johann Albrecht Bengel (1687-1752)), Friedrich Christoph Oetinger (1702-1782), Philipp Matthdus Hahn (1739-1790). Why is this important? Because you may find in a compendium for the history of technology as many details about Hahn as in a standard synopsis on the history of Protestantism. The three fathers interpreted the biblical text on word-per-word method, they conducted alchemistical experiments, and they designed instruments for precise measurement. Hahn for example was the inventor of the Neigungswaage. .Schelling wrote it in the age of fifteen a poem on Hahns, des "Spdhers " death . He admired the theologician, who measured exactly the "forces of nature": "Sprechet, wog er nicht mit k|hner Schale, Sterblich noch die Krdften der Natur Drang sein Auge nicht durch's Weltall noch im Erdenthale, Sucht' und fand' der Gottheit reinste Spur?"10 Bengel previewed exactly "Jugement Day" to happen in 1839. Obviously the "Swabian Fathers" did fail sometimes. We can avoid errors by taking into account that philosophy, mystic and engineering are more close than historians testify. Xavier Tilliette for example mentions Hahn only twice.11 Historians like Ernst Benz and Robert Minder have documented relations between the Swabian Fathers and the Swabian " Stiftskvpfe ". We can argue with them that the Swabs are " l' Ecossais de l'Allemagne ". We can say with Robert Minder that they are "regardants, calculateurs, iconomes ".12 But an investigation of the relation between measuring instruments and Geist in this time is still missing. This could help to understand the impact that calculating machines did have on German thought. Do we have a method to conduct this research? I may confess that I was participating another tour de Soabe when I tried to define how the concept of simulation changed. Baudrillard connected historical lemmata of the word simulation with the use that computer-scientists have extablished since the fifties. At hand I had a bibliography of dissertations, unfortunatly of dissertations of seventeenth and eigthineeth century. It led me to author like Grotius, Pufendorf, Duns Scouts and Thomas Aquin but also to Paulus and Petrus, to Origines and Augustinus, later I passed Franz Overbeck and Nietzsche, Felix Krull, German health policy, computer film companies like mental images and films like Total recall . I felt lost in a labyrinth of texts. Without a concept, without an idea of how to relate ideas to this mass of texts, languages, sciences. Just try the labyrinth How to know which details are important and which not? The jesuit Robert Busa convinced me indirectly that I was mislead. With IBM he has developped a computerized index of Thomas Aquinas works. When a computer could do this research, why should I behave like a computer? But I was already acting like a computer. I was gathering, storaging documents, recombining texts. And I was caught ba a category that lead to Turings proof. Robin Gandy has written about "the Confluences of Ideas in 1936" the year, when Turing published his paper. Turing made a proof ex negativo. He demonstrated that despite of given well defined procedures, unsolvable questions will allways exist in mathematics. Hilbert had proclaimed that there are no unsolvable questions. "His last words of 1930 are `ein unlvsbares Problem gibt es |berhaupt nicht. Statt des tvrichten Ignorabimus hei_e ich im Gegenteil unsere Losung: Wir m|ssen wissen, wir werden wissen4".13 Turing has defined what is an effective procedure in mathematics. He used this definition to show that there will always be unsolvable questions. His definition "influenced the design and development of high speed computers".14 I proceeded with a well defined method to get a complete view of the use of the word simulation. I followed this part of the Turing proof where judgement and intuition are suspended. They are suspended in favour of a formula, and their iterability. Here we are confronted with a constitutional factor of objective reasoning. We are "at the site of repeatability" like Derrida says in "Faith and Knowledge". To have faith into a procedure means to follow Hilberts optimism. It does not take into account the logical improvability of this optimism. And therefore my search of completenes became a tour de Souabe. Tensors When we consider how Turing became possible we see that he deals with a missing link between formal procedures and creative power. Computers enlarged this link into a gap. This gap was discussed as a gap between absolut subjectivity and rule based objectivity or as a gap between intuitive view of the world and ist objective constructions. The years between WW I and WWII especially 1925 and 1927 are years of a struggle. They inform about different attempts to cover the becoming gap. We refer to this as to the Grundlagenstreit. Usually Hilbert and Brouwer are mentioned as conflict partners. Hilbert establishes mere symbolic mathematics. This is a distinction between numbercrunchers, sign operators on one side and on the other side meta mathematicians, who take care of the proof of operations.15 In a way he uses the division of labour that was introduced in projects of French and British academies, especially by Charles Babbage. His opponent is Brouwer who reintroduced the term intuition into the debate, arguing that mathematical procedures shall always be rooted in intuitions. He did not mean, that numbers should be at hand. The basic of mathematical operations is intuition.16 Between both Hermann Weyl has to be situated. He published 1926 a Philosophy of Mathematics and Physics17 and was therefore called "Halbintuitionist " and "Verrdter an der phdnomenologischen Sache". Weyl confesses to have never solved the conflict between constructive science and the vividity of daily life intuitions. He knows that there is enough evidence that mathematics and physcis are related to the experiences that one faces in daily life, but logical these relations cannot be proofed. Weyl did not follow rigid platonism. He did not express a believe that God could have proceeded in a mathematical way when he created the world. 18 Weyl did not expect an universal code to decipher the structure of the universe. Instead of this Weyl documented tensions and gaps. In Raum, Zeit und Materie he uses the word Tensor.19 When we talk about Raum, Zeit und Medien we may use the term as well. Tensor Analysis may be a way to understand the demand for immanence and the demand for universal problem solving machines. Both demands are crucial for our time. 20 1 Sybille Krdmer: Symbolische Maschinen.. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1988, 7. 2 Richard Dedekind:Was sind und sollen die Zahlen? Braunschweig 1888. 3 Kr.d.V. A50/B74 f.. 4 Gottlieb Frege:Grundlagen der Arithmetik (''89, 90). 5 David Bartelt: Brasilianischer Herbst. Lettre International 37, 105. 6 Yaroslav A. Khetagurov: The Art of Reliable System Creation. In: Lab 1997 - Yearbook of the Academy of Media Arts. Kvln: Verlag der Buchhandlung Walther Kvnig, 1997. 334-342. 7 For a general discussion see: Michael Conrad: The Prize of Programmability: In Rolf Herken (Hrsg.): The Universal Turing Machine. A Half Century Survey. Hamburg/Berlin: Kammerer & Unverzagt (nowWien: Springer), 285-307. 8 Quoted aft the directors cut original Japanese and American version with german subtitles. New York: Central Park Media/Riku Saniyo: Nippon Columbia Co., 1996. 9 Ulrich Hdusserman: Hvlderlin in Selbstzeugnissen und Dokumenten. Reinbek: RoRoRo, 1961/1980. 10 Alfred Beck: Aus Schellings Jugend. T|binger Bldtter 1955, S. 10f (nach Hdussermann). 11 . Xavier Tilliette: Schelling I - Une philosohie en devinir. Paris: Librairie Philosophie J. Vrin, 1970. 12 Robert Minder: Herrlichkeit chez Hegel ou Le monde des Phres souabes. In:Itudes Germaniques, dicembres 1951, 277. 13 Hilbert quoted by Gandy, Robin: The confluence of Ideas in 1936. In Herken, Rolf, 63. 14 Gandy, 90. 15 David Hilbert: Axiomatisches Denken. In: Mathematische Annalen Bd. 78. 1918. ND in: Gesammelte Abhandlungen I-III. Berlin: Verlag von Julius Springer 1932 Hilbert, David: Neubegr|ndung der Mathematik. Erste Mitteilung. In: Abhandlungen aus dem Math. Seminar d. Hamb. Universitdt Bd.1. 1922. ND in: Gesammelte Abhandlungen I-III. 16 Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari refer to Brouwer. Massimo Cacciari discusses Brouwer and Weyl in Icone della Legge. Milano: Adelphi, 1985. 17 Hermann Weyl: Philosophie der Mathematik und Naturwissenschaft. In: Schrvter (Hrsg.): Handbuch der Philosophie. M|nchen: Oldenbourg 1926/27. English Edition: Princeton: 1947. Deutsche Neuausgabe: M|nchen: Oldenbourg, 1966. 18 For a modern expression of platonism see: "But what is expressed there (Penrose, Roger: Shadows of the mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994( is a prejudice of mine, that the whole physical world is governed mathematically, and that there are no parts of it which are not mathematical. The second prejudice is that the whole of the mental world is rooted in the physical world, so that you cannot have souls or so on floating around without any physical basis. And the third, which is a slightly subtler one, is that the whole of the Platonic world is accessible to our intellect; in principle, even though in practice it might not be. Which is to say that there are not mathematical truths which are in principle outside our comprehension. One often worries about this in mathematics; are there statements about numbers which are simply unprovable? And people often think that Gvdel's theorem shows that there are, but it doesn't. Gvdel's theorem shows that you have to go to new types of reasoning all the time, you cannot tie yourself down to a specific set of rules for proving results, but the insights show you always how you can get outside this, to generate new insights. But those insights are potentially within us. So what I am trying to say, is that here is not anything in principle which is inaccessible to the human intellect" (Penrose, Roger: Inverwiew with Jane Clark. In: Journal of Consciousness, 1, No.1. 1994, 23f.). 19 Hermann Weyl: Raum, Zeit, Materie - Vorlesungen |ber eine allgemeine Relativitdtstheorie. Berlin: Julius Springer 1918. 20 David Larchers videoText is one example how Tensor between different media can be developed. Another examples are Thomas Brinkmanns adaptions of Heinz von Foerster, Martin Heidegger and Alan Turing in his electronic music. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl