Wednesday, April 27, 2016

The Myth of the Artificial


In the late spring a certain flower blooms in the hills near my neighborhood, and this flower is not only beautiful in its purples, blues and greens, but it is heaven for hummingbirds. I enter their peaceful realm whenever I can. I want to be a part of their little world, where they gracefully dance around the air with their turbo-vibrating wings. The scent of spring in the air – it seems such a wondrous life for the little ones in this setting: mating, feeding, and simply enjoying the pleasures of life around them as their full time job. But it is difficult to know their true experience of all these things. Perhaps it is only peaceful and beautiful for me – perhaps it is somehow a world of terror for hummingbirds, a crazed race-to-the-top of nectar harvesting and competition between males and females. This, perhaps, I will never know. And, it seems, it is enough for me that my experience of them is so sublime. But one thing I can tell you for certain is: they live in a different world than I do – and it is a world that gives me great peace.
            Perhaps it would be helpful to imagine another intelligent species entering our human realm and trying to understand, quite hopelessly, the human experience on earth. What would they see? What might they imagine? Would advanced technologies simply seem like a more complex version of beehives? And how much of human experience is merely illusion? Perhaps knowing the true experiences of beings is less important for understanding their existence than it might seem. We human beings, for example, like to use simple categories to understand the world around us. These categories often do not, and have not, accurately described the realities they were meant to depict. So could the alien’s viewpoint be, in fact, more accurate and truthful than our own? Perhaps, the truly accurate depiction of the world would be the most wondrous of all.
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As an adolescent I found myself worried that what I once found strange and awe-inducing would simply become plain, normal and boring. I saw that everyday life is both absurd and miraculous, and yet, over time, it seemed to become something merely mundane. I wanted to keep hold of that vision of life around me that saw its special sort of magic, its absurdity and its odd, ineffable miraculousness. But what was it that instead drew me so strongly toward an imagining of life around me as boring and normal?
Around that time I developed a theory that the science fiction and fantasy I loved so much was part of the problem; that to explore the “extranatural,” or supernatural, was to paint everyday life as less than extraordinary, boring, and mundane. Why was it, though, that these works could have the effect of dulling my everyday experience? And what, really, was the basis of this powerful demystifying process? Could it be that I was somehow tricked into numbness and boredom by the very ideas and cultural norms I lived by? But which beliefs and ideas were to blame? How could such beauty and awe be replaced with such normalcy? Could it be that an idea as plain as “the artificial” plays a substantial role in such an undesirable metamorphosis of mind and life experience?
But the idea of something singularly “artificial” is a myth, and perhaps one of the most powerful myths within many cultures and languages. That nothing can be truly and completely artificial goes against the grain of common sense and basic life experience. Isn’t the computer I now type on clearly “artificial,” or at least the smartphone in my pocket? Or perhaps the car that I drive around? Or, if none of these truly leave the realm of the “natural,” then could at least my own thoughts – or even “artificial intelligence” itself – be considered completely “artificial”? But there is no such thing as the pure artifice of which many conceive. The rest of this essay will attempt to explain why this is, and what consequences (even the demystification of the world) that such a powerful myth can have.
To believe that something can be purely artificial and exist separate from nature is to believe in singularly human place where nature’s laws no longer apply. In this make-believe space and time, ecological consequences can more easily be ignored. Human bodies and minds can exist unhindered by the greater spaces beyond.  The myth of the artificial can be a beautiful creation of space-time away from responsibility and into remarkably creative spheres. But these spheres were always part of nature, as far from it as they may have appeared.  
To believe that Fukushima’s nuclear reactors could simply exist within their own artificial, constructed space – and never seep out into the greater spheres of which it always was part – is a fairy-tale that certain people badly wished to believe. Similarly, to believe that what happens in cities stays in cities is a naïve and comforting dream that many human beings enjoy. But just as cities reach out into the biospheres beyond (and indeed, exist within them), even private life reaches out into the life beyond (and the separation is merely a comforting, and sometimes benign, dream).
But is the myth of the artificial benign? I do not think so. I think it is an illusion that will soon see its demise, literally and figuratively.  As human societies continue to affect Earth’s biosphere, it becomes clearer that we, as human beings, are ourselves woven into larger ecosystems and climates. Our bodies are microcosms of these greater ecosystems, and they too, will see destabilization and stark reminders that humanity--and the illusion of artifice--were always fundamentally natural. The myth of the artificial was a luxurious belief that human societies could once afford to have.
Why have some resisted seeing the human as natural? Because some fear that that either means all human behavior is then forgiven and equalized, or that somehow humanity is unchanging or biologically determined. But, nature has always changed and the wild branch of nature that is humanity has shown itself to be incredibly dynamic. The plasticity of human culture is not only a great boon for humanity’s potential to survive on earth, but it also makes artifice some of the most unbelievable parts of nature. And perhaps that is another reason that the myth of the artificial is so difficult to shed.   
Imagine for a moment that the sleek sharp-cornered black monolith of Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey” represents artifice and the power to shape and control nature with which human beings seem to be graced. Even though this particular “artifice” was of “nonhuman origin” in the story, it also triggered the use of tools and weapons in proto-human hominids, and leads to the long journey to Jupiter’s moon and also seemed to encourage the increasing advancement of science and technology. What was the moral of this story? That despite the mastery achieved in science and technology, the nature of the universe still strongly held the upper hand on humanity. Even HAL, the computer designed to be superhuman, fell to the trappings of all-too-human weaknesses, themselves bread in, through, and by nature.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) itself is still a part of nature and natural ecosystems. It comes through and by natural biological forces, i.e. human educational and technological systems that were always organic and natural in origin. AI perhaps is the most difficult sphere of nature to see as natural. It is the most purified human construction and yet it, just like human thought itself, cannot escape the realm of nature either. They both are embodied, either through organic matter or metal, electrons and silicon – earthly, universal and natural sources.
The dream of the artificial is like a cubbyhole or a warm cave. It is a place one can feel safe, unhindered by the outside world – it is the dream of complete protection from the storms outside. But this dream has become pathological. The false line between the artificial and the natural must be painfully exposed for the fairytale it has always been.
But if the myth of the artificial is a place of safety, the end of that myth is a place of awe and inspirational reimagining of the universe. It is a turn that could seep wonder back into the mundane. We, our products, and our conscious imaginations, have all miraculously emerged from a complex universe. It is real magic; it is a fairytale itself, but one that entails new responsibilities because it recognizes new limits and fragilities. Human life is far more fragile than the cozy myth of the artificial would have us believe.  
The difficulty of giving up the dream of the artificial is that it requires a re-imagination of the self, a reconsideration of the realities of being human. The facets of our DNA, cells, sinew, bone, fat and muscle; the limited agency of being a highly complex natural organism that is constantly exposed to changing environs, climate and ecosystems.  But these truths of the body, like the truths of the greater natural world, seem to only gain recognition when all options for delusion and deception have finally run dry.
I am reminded, again and again, that the human brain is no truth machine – rather, it is a survival machine. It become more like a truth machine, we should hope, when survival finally requires truth.
If the myth of the artificial is a fantastical safe-haven with colonialist implications, then it is also a form of conceptual territorialization: to denote one conceptual sphere from another is akin to marking off territory. In this case, it is an aggressive and ingrained kind of conceptual territorialization. 

Friday, January 29, 2016

The "Petrolocene"

In the age of the "Petrolocene" the combustion, transformation, and subsequent impacts of fossil fuels have become the greatest factors on the geological scale.

The geological epoch cannot necessarily be defined simply by the human species itself, as in the Anthropocene, or by capitalism (as in the "Capitalocene") because there are many human beings (and even some who participate in capitalism) that do not contribute to the use of fossil fuels (which, if any other species used as homo sapiens sapiens has, would lead to the same impacts).

Current population size, agricultural practices, and technological developments have all been powered, and in some sense driven, by the use and transformation of fossil fuel based energies.  

Saturday, February 2, 2013

What is nature for?














Let us first assume that everything in the photos above, including the pictures themselves and this writing here, is part of nature. What, then, is nature for? It both encompasses and transcends the question "what is the purpose of life?" because it goes beyond life - to the "inanimate objects" that exist in the universe.

To inquire about purpose or meaning is a very human thing to do - the inquiry itself a part of nature. One purpose could be inquiry, one purpose existence, one purpose admiration, love and/or appreciation. But what is the universe for? A silly question, I might add. Silly because the question's inherent complexity is enough to befuddle any genius. Many geniuses have tried, and all have practically failed, to explain or answer such a question. But perhaps the meaning is simply in asking the question? The answer, always beyond reach, rendered insignificant.

In questioning one can experience the befuddlement, the mystery that entangles both the inanimate and the animate parts of nature/the universe. The artificial, human creations themselves full of insidious mysteriousness. 

Another day, another day.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

The Eye Test







When I look around me I cannot help but see the overlays of the "artificial" and the "natural" - trees, power lines, ocean, bridges, buildings, islands and lights. For so long it was normal to see these things as two separate categories - those things built by humans and those things not. But even the trees and the islands have had their share of human hands on them.

So I came up with the term "artinatural" to talk about things that are simultaneously artificial and natural. But my main point perhaps was not to insist on the artificiality of the natural (which is, indeed, a human concept), but rather to see the naturality of artifice. These words, of course, are all artificial, all socially-constructed (and imperfect I might add) concepts to help comprehend the world and, more basically, to simply function. There was never a requirement that words and concepts be true, but rather, merely that they be useful. Perhaps this is why things must be separated out, categorized, and defined so narrowly.

Pictures help me think. I look at them and they say something that I never tried to spell in words. They hold their own kind of truth. They are not merely worth one thousand words, they can transcend words. So maybe the word artinatural comes closer to the truth of the photos above. And, although they capture a piece of the artinatural landscape out there, they themselves are artinatural entities consisting of magnetic data, electricity, the workings of the photographers eye - itself both artificial and natural (especially with the contact lenses I wear). Alas, the world is so overwhelmingly complex, intertwined and overlapping.... 

The subways and roads are like arteries, the buildings like beehives, the lights a clever re-directing of the sun's energy. But this is not to say that the natural is always right, or that it is always meant to be. All of the above are subject to change; they are temporary attributes of the landscape. They may have gotten it quite wrong, actually. The "appeal to nature" (which implies that something is right if it is natural) is fallacious - since nature is in constant flux, and because nature contains all that is both good and bad, one cannot claim that something is good, right, or correct simply because it is natural. Of course, this happens all the time and it should be watched. Again, "nature" needs to be better, and more humbly, understood.





Friday, January 4, 2013

Nature: the mother (and father) of all contradictions


Besides being a form of self-reflection, to contemplate nature is akin to contemplating life itself. Such a strange, multitudinous, complex, and overwhelming thing, so full of contradictions. Nature - "the universe in its entirety" - is so unfathomably unfathomable it seems hubristic, or just plain silly, to attempt to describe it.

It's a silly thing to do... maybe that's why so few have tried - but have they not? One could argue that organized religions and religious thought have tried to encompass the vastness of nature in their quests to explain divinity. But why not approach the topic more directly? Why isn't there a field of study that at least attempts to formulate understandings of nature? Again, one could argue that biology and physics have aimed at these understandings - but not in the way that I'm speaking of.

I think the time is ripe for a new field of study called Nature Studies - one aimed at bringing together perspectives on the idea of nature. The truth is, nature has already been the central topic for so many minds. It would be nice, though, to provide a fuller platform with which to comprehend a subject, that some would argue, will always be incomprehensible.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Gollum and the Future of Technology


Pondering the future of technology after viewing an interview with Steve Jobs on Netflix... I can't help to question whether the "perfectification" of computer technology that makes Apple products so congenial and so useable that one forgets they are using a computer at all is something that will lead society toward greener pastures, or, rather, toward more frightening possibilities. Films like The Matrix show how an almost complete computerization (or digitization,"virtualization") of life on earth might look. It seems appropriate to invoke Gollum here too - with computer devices like Macbook Airs and iPhones that people covet so severely, I am reminded of that little cave-dwelling once-healthy beast so concerned about his most "precious" shiny possession. What will become of those who attach themselves too much to these addiction-creating devices? Detachment from those things that actually promote and sustain their lives? And, as can be seen in various post-apocalyptic renditions - this very detachment, alienation, will eventually lead to a jarring re-assertion of the more immediate and direct needs (I am thinking here of The Road and the incessant trial for survival in a hostile environment).