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	<title>christoph.eckrich</title>
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		<title>Landing</title>
				
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jul 2018 19:09:58 +0000</pubDate>

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	Christoph 
Eckrich
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		<title>About</title>
				
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Jul 2018 19:10:02 +0000</pubDate>

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Christoph Eckrich is foremost a student, immersing himself
in learning in and around the discipline of architecture as much as possible.
He is pursuing a b.arch degree at Carnegie Mellon University with a minor in Intelligent
Environments and Architectural History. Currently his time is split between studio, Freedom by Design,
Sigma Phi Epsilon, inter·punct, and the Miller ICA. He has spent time doing
stage setup and audio mixing, designing the identity for wats:ON?, and working
at Kieran Timberlake,&#38;nbsp;Bohlin Cywinski Jackson,&#38;nbsp;Ultra Low Res Studio, STUDIOGRUBER, and A&#124;SH Architekten. During whatever
free time he stumbles across he reads, bikes, listens, and makes lots of
coffee. His work is currently exploring many different directions and seeks to
be able to have a conversation about all of them. And he always welcomes music
recommendations. 







Contact: cfteckrich@gmail.com&#38;nbsp;
Connect: instagram · linkedin
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	<item>
		<title>Thesis</title>
				
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↓


	
wow how wild, it’s almost done.&#38;nbsp;
click here to enter the plenaes archive
[through the singularity - narrative conjectures beyond the zero hour]




This page will be periodically updated with in progress work throughout the course of the Spring 2021 semester. Recent developments at the top, older ideas towards the bottom. Click here to view the proposal.&#38;nbsp;







	Text

Notes
&#38;nbsp;





Wittgenstein Plays Chess with Marcel Duchamp – Amit Dutta


“one does not realize something because it is always before
ones eyes”



Our memory serves to allow us a comparison of an object to the
personal past of such an item. Truth is easy to understand if you do away with
preconceptions about where it is supposed to lie. 



“Architecture, as philosophy, is actually more of a kind of
work on oneself. On one’s own conception. On the way one sees things, and what
one demands of them.” 



Was really about perceptions of reality, ways of seeing the
world, and truth. 



 


Folding Beijing – Hao Jingfang


Nice character introduction at the beginning, introducing
motivations and traits. Music is power… once again. First hooks you into the
story, then doubles back and gives the setup. 



“I’ll just stick to unemployment. I’m sure you understand
the concept,” Lao Ge continued. “As the cost of labor goes up and the cost of
machinery goes down, at some point, it’ll be cheaper to use machines than
people. With the increase in productivity, the GDP goes up, but so does
unemployment. What do you do? Enact policies to protect the workers? Better
welfare? The more you try to protect workers, the more you increase the cost of
labor and make it less attractive for employers to hire people. If you go
outside the city now to the industrial districts, there’s almost no one working
in those factories. It’s the same thing with farming. Large commercial farms
contain thousands and thousands of acres of land, and everything is automated
so there’s no need for people. This kind of automation is absolutely necessary
if you want to grow your economy—that was how we caught up to Europe and
America, remember? Scaling! The problem is: Now you’ve gotten the people off
the land and out of the factories, what are you going to do with them? In
Europe, they went with the path of forcefully reducing everyone’s working hours
and thus increasing employment opportunities. But this saps the vitality of the
economy, you understand?



“The best way is to reduce the time a certain portion of the
population spends living, and then find ways to keep them busy. Do you get it?
Right, shove them into the night. There’s another advantage to this approach:
The effects of inflation almost can’t be felt at the bottom of the social
pyramid. Those who can get loans and afford the interest spend all the money
you print. The GDP goes up, but the cost of basic necessities does not. And
most of the people won’t even be aware of it.”



He felt that he had approached some aspect of truth, and
perhaps that was why he could catch a glimpse of the outline of fate. But the
outline was too distant, too cold, too out of reach. He didn’t know what was
the point of knowing the truth. If he could see some things clearly but was
still powerless to change them, what good did that do? In his case, he couldn’t
even see clearly. Fate was like a cloud that momentarily took on some
recognizable shape, and by the time he tried to get a closer look, the shape
was gone. He knew that he was nothing more than a figure. He was but an
ordinary person, one out of 51,280,000 others just like him. And if they didn’t
need that much precision and spoke of only 50 million, he was but a rounding error,
the same as if he had never existed.



“I’ll just stick to unemployment. I’m sure you understand
the concept,” Lao Ge continued. “As the cost of labor goes up and the cost of
machinery goes down, at some point, it’ll be cheaper to use machines than
people. With the increase in productivity, the GDP goes up, but so does
unemployment. What do you do? Enact policies to protect the workers? Better
welfare? The more you try to protect workers, the more you increase the cost of
labor and make it less attractive for employers to hire people. If you go
outside the city now to the industrial districts, there’s almost no one working
in those factories. It’s the same thing with farming. Large commercial farms
contain thousands and thousands of acres of land, and everything is automated
so there’s no need for people. This kind of automation is absolutely necessary
if you want to grow your economy—that was how we caught up to Europe and
America, remember? Scaling! The problem is: Now you’ve gotten the people off
the land and out of the factories, what are you going to do with them? In
Europe, they went with the path of forcefully reducing everyone’s working hours
and thus increasing employment opportunities. But this saps the vitality of the
economy, you understand?



“The best way is to reduce the time a certain portion of the
population spends living, and then find ways to keep them busy. Do you get it?
Right, shove them into the night. There’s another advantage to this approach:
The effects of inflation almost can’t be felt at the bottom of the social
pyramid. Those who can get loans and afford the interest spend all the money
you print. The GDP goes up, but the cost of basic necessities does not. And
most of the people won’t even be aware of it.”



https://uncannymagazine.com/article/folding-beijing-2/




 


Down To Earth – Bruno Latour


The main proposition is that a large segment of the ruling
class (read: elites) have decided that it was pointless to act as though history
were going to continue to move toward a common horizon. For reasons of increasing
inequalities, deregulation, climate change etc – we are no longer moving
towards a world in which all humans could prosper equally. This class has
stopped purporting to lead us, and instead is sheltering themselves, repudiating
the concept of a common world we can share. To resist this loss Latour calls us
to LAND somewhere and ORIENT ourselves towards the ways in which
both the affects and the stakes of public life shall be redefined – to come down
to earth if you will.



Great Operating Statement: “As the author lacks any authority
in political science, he can only offer his readers the opportunity do disprove
this hypothesis and look for better ones”



The withdrawal from the paris climate accords proved that
the climate question is at the heart of all geopolitical issues today, and that
it is tied to questions of injustice and inequality directly. 



COP21 showed that there is not enough of earth to sustain
the modernization and globalization plans of all member countries. Begging the
question, do we recalibrate or look for an escape route? 



The typically definition of migrant or refugee as one
from the outside is growing ever closer to those on the inside who
are equally left behind by their countries and governments. We are facing an
ordeal common to all of finding oneself deprived of land (earth). 



To reassure migrants and come
together we must carry out two complementary movements that the ordeal of
modernization has made contradictory: attaching oneself to a particular patch
of soil /and/ having access to the global world on the other. It is said one
has to choose between the two, but current history may bring this apparent contradiction
to an end. 



Look into
Donna Haraway’s Worlding - Kathleen Stewart (2012) provides a definition of worlding
referring to the "affective nature" of the world in which
"non-human agency" comprising of "forms, rhythms and
refrains" (for example)reach a point of "expressivity" for an
individual and develop a sense of "legibility". Through this process
a particular 'world' emerges for the individual through their engagement with a
number of interrelated phenomena. Anderson and Harrison expand on worlding
further: "...the term 'world' does not refer to an extant thing but rather
the context or background against which particular things show up and take on
significance: a mobile but more or less stable ensemble of practices,
involvements, relations, capacities, tendencies and affordances." (https://newmaterialism.eu/almanac/w/worlding.html)



Read more about Haraway’s
Terrapolis - It is clear when Haraway is sketching out her version
of worlding that she is keen to separate her use of the term from that of
Heidegger's: "Finished once and for all with Kantian globalizing
cosmopolitics and grumpy human-exceptionalist Heideggerian worlding, Terrapolis
is a mongrel word composted with a mycorrhiza of Greek and Latin rootlets and
their symbionts" (Haraway, 2016, p. 11). Worlding for Haraway manifests
itself in the SF sense: "a risky game of worlding and storying; it is
staying with the trouble." (Haraway, 2016, p. 13). (https://newmaterialism.eu/almanac/w/worlding.html)



The shift from a local to a global viewpoint ought to mean
multiplying viewpoints, registering a greater number of varieties, taking into
account a larger number of beings, cultures, phenomena, organisms, and people. Yet
what has happened is the opposite – the ubiquitization of entirely provincial
viewpoints, products, cultures, etc – and the unrelenting application of these
across the world. 



The large issue is that those who oppose modernization or
globalization are instantly labeled archaic or obscurantist, deemed by the
elites to have illegitimate positions. 



“In the end, what counts is not knowing whether you are
for or against globalization, for or against the local; all that counts is
understanding whether you are managing to register, to maintain, to cherish a
maximum number of alternative ways of belonging to the world.” – I feel
that in a way, if one subscribes to this, the hegemonic natures of
globalization as singular applicable viewpoint oriented in contrast to the
provincials (populists?) will fall by default. 



This text follows a convention according to which the
lower-case term “earth” corresponds to the traditional framework of human
activity (human beings in nature), while the upper-case “Earth” indicates a
power to act in which we begin to recognize, even if it has not been fully
instituted, something like a political entity. 



The “Othering” of populations is perhaps the most dangerous
affect of the elites ignorance of the New Climatic Regime. The elites have
taken seriously that their dominance was threatened and have decided to
dismantle the ideology of a planet shared by all. 



“The elites have been so thoroughly convinced that there
would be no future life for everyone that they have decided to get rid of all
the burdens of solidarity as fast as possible – hence deregulation; they have
decided that a sort of gilded fortress would have to be built for those who
would be able to make it through – hence the explosion of inequalities; and they
have decided that, to conceal the crass selfishness of such a flight out of the
shared world, they would have to reject absolutely the threat at the origin of
this headlong flight – hence the denial of climate change.”



“This hypothesis would make it possible to explain how globalization-plus has become globalization-minus.
Whereas until the 1990s one could (provided that one profited from it) associate
the horizon of modernization with the notions of progress, emancipation, wealth,
comfort, even luxury, and above all rationality, the rage to deregulate, the
explosion of inequalities, the abandonment of solidarities have gradually associated
that horizon with the notion of an arbitrary decision out of nowhere in favor of
the sole profit of the few. The best of worlds has become the worst.” 



^ all this action on the part of the ‘elites’ is not
entirely conscious, but at some level at least whether the intentions were
there or not have little bearing on the effects of the actions. Subconsciously
it is undeniable that the awareness was there, and it is (sadly) understandably
natural/predictable to act within ones self-interest. 



As a defense of the populists (trump base), these people
have been coldly betrayed by those who have given up the idea of actually
pursuing the modernization of the planet with everyone because they knew such a
task was impossible. Before accusing these people of no longer believing in
anything, one must understand the effect that such a betrayal has on one’s
ability to trust. It has largely been abandoned by the wayside. 



Knowledge and truth do not exist in a vacuum. Facts remain
robust only when they are supported by a common culture, by institutions that
can be trusted, by a more or less decent public life. By extension then, we can
assume the possibility of a reorganization of our core truths based upon societal
shift. It would be possible to wipe away our notions of territorialism and find
a new truth not under capitalism or simply more harmoniously with other
terrestrials. 



Read about Post-Truth Politics



The local-minus
is no longer the same Local. It is a retrospective invention consisting of the
leftovers of modernization, but nevertheless it attracts as powerfully as
globalization (plus or minus). Because of this gap and stalemate the modernization
front no longer exists. The shared horizon is gone, and with it the organizing
arrow of history that it supported for so long. 



“It is as if
the expression modern world had become an oxymoron. Either it is modern, but
has no world under its feet, or else it is a true world, but will not be
modernizable. We have reached the end of a certain historical arc.” 



It is at this
juncture we find ourselves today. We are too disoriented to array the positions
along the axis that went from the old to the new, from the local to the global,
and we are incapable of naming what the third attractor is or describing it in
such a way that allows us to reorganize our society in pursuit of it. (it is
something in the realm of climate – posit: terrestrialism)



“Trumpian
politics is not “post-truth,” it is post-politics – that is, literally, a
politics with no object, since it rejects the world that it claims to inhabit.
The choice is mad, but it is comprehensible. The united states saw the obstacle
and simply refused to proceed, like a horse refusing to jump – at least for the
time being.” 



The
terrifying impression that politics has been emptied of its substance, that it
is not engaged with anything at all, that it no longer has any meaning or
direction, that it has become literally powerless as well as senseless, has no
cause other than this gradual revelation: neither the global nor the local has
any lasting material existence. 



Terrestrial
as a political actor is representative of the way in which the earth is now
participating in history. It is no longer an object to be possessed, it is
fighting back and concerning itself with our operations. 



This concept
of the Terrestrial has been crossed consistently by the green parties already,
seeking to orient public life towards this third axis. An in some sense they
have succeeded, it is impossible to think of any material object that has not
taken on an ecological dimension – even if it is willingly ignored. Ruefully
they are often put in opposition to modernization, and therefore have their
political wings clipped from the outset. But at the same time they propose
things too novel for the right, and so are left in a weird middle ground that
can’t be supported by either half.



Look into Anthony Giddens: Beyond
Left and Right, the future of radical politics



“By what miracle could this operation of reorientation take
place in a world where all the efforts to “escape from the left/right
opposition” or “go beyond the division” or “look for a third way” have failed? For
a simple reason that is bound up with the very notion of orientation. Despite the appearances, what counts in politics are not
attitudes, but the form and weight of the world to which these attitudes have
the function of reacting. Politics has always been oriented toward objects,
stakes, situations, material entities, bodies, landscapes, places. What are
called the values to be defended are always responses to the challenges of a
territory that it must be possible to describe. This is
in effect the decisive discover of political ecology: it is an object-oriented
politics. Change the territories and you will also change the attitudes. 



The modern/terrestrial vector is proposed as a credible and
desirable alternative to the left/right dichotomy that remains so acute. 



So then how do we get there? How do those who feel abandoned
by the historical betrayal of upper/ruling classes and are clamoring for the
security of a protected and familiar space begin to shift away from that sense
of belonging? This impulse is only labeled as reactionary in contrast in the headlong
flight towards modernization – if we stop fleeing then the desire for attachment
must be redefined. Whereas in the local sense it means closing oneself off, in
the terrestrial sense it must mean being situated but opening oneself up. 



Consequently the other half must be convinced how little
globalization-minus relates to access to the Globe and the world. Despite being
bound to the earth and to land, the Terrestrial is also a way of worlding,
in that it aligns with no borders and transcends all identities. 



In this sense it solves the issue of place, the earth that
globalization would require simply does not exist, yet the local perspective is
much too restrictive. “There is no Earth corresponding to the infinite horizon
of the Global, but at the same time the Local is much too narrow, too shrunken,
to accommodate the multiplicity of beings belonging to the terrestrial world.”
This is why the orientation of Local and Global along a single trajectory has
been wrong from the beginning. 



The crucial choice had to do with two directions of
politics: “One that defines social questions in a restrictive manner, and
another that defines the stakes of survival without introducing a priori
differences between humans and non-humans. The choice to be made is between
a narrow definition of the social ties making up a society, and a wider
definition of associations that make up what have been called collectives.” 



Critical to understand that global/local does not correspond
with left/right. And the question of positivity or negativity is largely (neutral,
irrelevant, incalculable?) on the larger scales in pursuit of modernization. But
what world exactly, this progress would end up resulting in, was never explicitly
understood – and the horizon of progress became a vague utopia as Earth failed
to give it substance. 



There is a difference between social/economically defined
classes and territorially defined classes. Those defined by territories have
much more agency to advocate for their own sake. With an increasingly online
economy and workforce these powers of the proletariat to organize are being
crippled. Latour argues that class struggles depend on a geo-logic. A
revitalization of Marxists materialist analysis by obliging us to reopen the
social question while intensifying it through new geopolitics. 



“We need to be able to count on the full power of the
sciences, but without the ideology of “nature” that has been attached to that
power. We have to be materialist and rational, but we have to shift these
qualities onto the right grounds.”



“The Globe grasps all things form far away, as if they were
external to the social world and completely indifferent to human concerns. The
Terrestrial grasps the same structures from up close, as internal to the
collectivities and sensitive to human actions, to which they react swiftly” The
fallacy of the Globe is represented in the Galilean conception of the universe,
in that one can from the vantage point of earth perceive the planet as a
falling body amongst other falling bodies translates to the necessity of having
the vantage point of the universe to perceive what is happening on the planet. “The
fact that one can gain access to remote sites from the earth becomes the duty
to gain access to the earth from remote sites. Such a conclusion is in no way
obligatory.” But it is how ‘rational’ ‘sciences’ have come to be defined. The
inevitable consequence: we have begun to see less and less of what is happening
on Earth. 



“It is this brutal division that was to give consistency, as
it were, to the illusion of the Global as the horizon of modernity. From this
point on it was necessary, even if one stayed in place, to shift one’s position
virtually, bag and baggage, away from subjective and sensitive positions toward
exclusively objective positions, finally freed of all sensitivity – or rather
of sentimentality.” It is from this vantage point that one can say earth has
always varied and that it will outlast humans, making it possible to take the
New Climatic Regime as an unimportant oscillation. The Terrestrial does not
allow this kind of detachment.” 



It is easily to fall into an understanding of nature as
passive, writing off earth’s agency as a subjective illusions written onto an
indifferent entity. But, how much of this is also manufactured by our
worldview? Since the 17th century nature has existed in the
collective consciousness largely as a factor in production, a resource, a
statistical risk – it was impossible to figure the natural entities as agents
or actors. Nature-as-universe had so fully obscured nature-as-process that
those who were acting upon these resources were left devoid of words or
concepts to describe the inevitable reactions. 



As a simple example of the relational shift: “If the
composition of the air we breathe depends on living beings, the atmosphere is
no longer simply the environment in which living beings are located and in
which they evolve; it is, in part, a result of their actions. In other words,
there are not organisms on one side and an environment on the other, but a
coproduction by both. Agencies are redistributed.”



Latour’s ideas come into an interesting relationship with
Cixin Liu’s Dark Forest Theory the foundations of which are thus: 



 All
 life desires to stay alive.
 There
 is no way to know if other lifeforms can or will destroy you if given a
 chance.
 Lacking
 assurances, the safest option for any species is to annihilate other life
 forms before they have a chance to do the same.



The options for survival then, are to remain secretive or
acquire technology to the level such that one could immediately destroy any
threat revealed to them. While the Terrestrial is clearly not in strict adherence
to the ‘turtling’ strategy as described in the novels, the preoccupation of the
Terrestrial with the ‘Critical Zone’ does preclude the latter option. “[The
Critical Zone] is the point of departure and also the point of return for all
the sciences that matter to us.”



https://vimeo.com/139097473




Latour posits we must switch from a system of production to
a system of engendering. The system of engendering
brings into confrontation agents, actors, animate beings that all have distinct
capacities for reacting. It does not proceed from the same conception of materiality
as the system of production, it does not have the same epistemology, and it
does not lead to the same form of politics. It is not interested in producing
goods on the basis of resources, but in engendering terrestrials – all terrestrials.
It is based on the idea of cultivating attachments, operations that are more
difficult because animate beings are not limited by frontiers and are
constantly overlapping, embedding themselves within one another. 



The withdrawal of the u.s. from the climate accords was
tantamount to an invasion or occupation of all other signatory countries – if not
with troops, then with co2 which we retained all rights to produce. It is a new
expression of a right to dominate in the name of a modernized lebensraum. 



The issue with anthropocentrism is the assumption that there
is a center, either man or nature, between which we supposedly have to choose. The
statement “we are earthbound, we are terrestrials amid terrestrials” does not
lead to the same politics as saying “we are humans in nature” or even “we are
all animals anyway”. 



Partially it avoids the trap of thinking harmony with nature
is possible. This is not the aim, rather than seeking agreement between all
actors, we are learning of our dependencies as well as theirs on ours. 



With the shift from production to engendering comes more
allies in our fight. While humans may be alone in system and Earth focused on
production, we are not alone in an Earth centered around living. The other
Terrestrials may then be considered potential allies in our struggles against
injustice. 



“Fighting to join one or another utopia, the Global or the
Local, does not have the same clarifying effects as fighting to land on Earth!”



“It makes no sense to force the
beings animating the struggling territories that constitute the Terrestrial
back inside national, regional, ethnic, or identitary boundaries; nor does it
make sense to try to withdraw from these territorial struggles so as to “move
to the global level” and grasp the Earth “as a whole.” The subversion of scales
and of temporal and spatial frontiers defines the Terrestrial. This power acts
everywhere at once, but it is not unifying. It is political, yes; but it is not
statist. It is, literally, atmospheric.” 



Generate Alternative Descriptions – First Step We
must first take inventory, have a period of surveying, before any true
recalibration can be made. 



 


Like a Thief in Broad Daylight – Slavoj Zizek


The State of Things -- 



“… The function of philosophy is to corrupt the youth, to
alienate them from the predominant ideologico-political order, to sow radical
doubts and enable them to think autonomously. The young undergo the educational
process in order to be integrated into the hegemonic social order, which is why
their education plays a pivotal role in the reproduction of the ruling ideology.”



“Techno scientific progress is perceived as a temptation
that can lead us into ‘going too far’ - entering the forbidden territory of biogenetic
manipulations and so on, and thus endangering the very core of our humanity.”



“We live in an extraordinary era in which there is no
tradition on which we can base our identity, no frame of meaningful universe
which might enable us to lead a life beyond hedonist reproduction. Today’s
nihilism – the reign of cynical opportunism accompanied by permanent anxiety –
legitimizes itself as the liberation from the old constraints.” The freedom our
society has to do whatever we please engenders itself as an obligation to
constantly change. I’m not sure I totally agree, but if you couple this nihilistic
freedom with the nihilism faced by the despondent nihilism of societal collapse…
well maybe.&#38;nbsp; 



An example perhaps of the
Terrestrial paradigm; local authorities often prove to be more sensitive to
global issues than higher state authorities. RE: local mayors honoring commitments
of climate action despite Trump’s cancellation of the same regulations. 



“Capitalism is openly disintegrating and changing into
something else. We do not perceive this ongoing transformation because of our
deep immersion in ideology.”



Three events marking the three stages of the communist
movement, separated by 50 years each: Marx’s Capital outlined the theoretical
foundations of the Communist revolution, the October Revolution was the first
successful attempt to overthrow a bourgeois state and build a new social and
economic order, while the Shanghai Commune stands for the most radical attempt
to realize the most daring aspect of the Communist vision, the abolition of
state power and the imposition of direct people’s power, organized as a network
of local communes



The new communists are, as in Guattari’s Communists Like
Us, precisely “like us” – that is, ordinary academic cultural leftists.
Ideologically pure but actively weak. The target audience is wrong. 



“To really change things, one should accept that nothing can
really be changed within the existing system…. When only constant
self-revolutionizing can maintain the system (consumerism etc), those who
refuse to change anything are effectively the agents of true change: a change
to the very principle of change.”



The Big Other (the symbolic
substance, the domain of unwritten customs and wisdoms best expressed in the
stupidity of proverbs). – I feel like this is getting at something shared but I’m
not quite sure how to put it into words. I think it’s kind of like a Marxist
version of the recalibration Latour is calling for: “Leaders like Lenin and Mao
succeeded (for some time, at least) because they invented new proverbs, which
means that they imposed new customs that regulated daily lives.”



The paradox of our predicament is that the two tendencies of
against global capitalism – resistance and self-disintegration – seem to move
at different levels and do not meet. Plus ideologically the movement is being
undercut by the most ‘progressive’ mega capitalists like Musk and Zuckerberg are
the ones who are spearheading the conversation of post-capitalism, as if it is
being appropriated by capitalism itself. Gates at least realizes that if we are
to survive we must institute regulatory forces that do not belong to the
market, because the market by nature is too selfish to fight for the planet. 



… yeah guys… capitalism is defined by capitalist relations
of production, not by the type of state power… That being said, it still does
matter who controls the state power. 



“Classical Marxism and the ideology of neo-liberalism both
tend to reduce the state to a secondary mechanism that obeys the needs of the
reproduction of capital; they both thereby underestimate the active role played
by state apparatuses in economic processes.”



The precariat is our new form of proletariat.
The problem with refugees is that in a sense they are both below and above the
proletariat. They are striving with all their being to become the proletariat,
but in that way are also embodying an ambition and will to achieve that is
often missing from the true proletariat – strangers who had been left behind by
their own country. 



Connection to the worlding in Folding Beijing: “Today’s
explosion of economic productivity confronts us with the ultimate case of this [80/20]
rule: the coming global economy trends towards a state in which only 20% of the
workforce can do all the necessary jobs, so that 80% of the people are
basically irrelevant and of no use.” Is not such a system itself irrelevant? 



The welfare state has collapsed to such an extent that we
call these human rights “benefits”. Unbelievable. We have to look at the ‘benefits
package’ at our workplace to see what the company is gracious enough to give their
workforce in terms of basic health and survival. Our generation sees these as privileges
instead of the half of the social contract that the government is meant to
uphold.



“Parties like Die Linke represent the interests of their
working-class constituency… this automatically puts them within the confines of
the existing system, and their goal is therefore not authentic emancipation.”



The debt/credit form of fictitious capital is also directly
intertwined with the education topic in a productive-technocratic sense of getting
ready for the competitive job market. A student goes into debt to pay for their
education, and this debt is repaid through self-commodification. 



“Bourgeois society generally obliterates castes and other
hierarchies, equalizing all individuals as market subjects divided only by class
difference; but today’s late capitalism, with its spontaneous ideology, endeavors
to obliterate the class division itself by way of proclaiming us all ‘self-entrepreneurs’”
– the difference being only in the quantity of money we borrow. 



Ayn Rand (I know, I know) – “When money ceases to become the
means by which men deal with one another, then men become the tools of other
men. Blood, whips, and guns or dollars.”



On credit/debt economies: “Insofar as its distribution money
is no longer grounded in the process of valorization (workers being paid for
their labor etc), it begins to function as a direct means of domination. In other
words, money is used as a means of political power, as a way to exert this
power and control its subjects. Furthermore, although some theorists claim that
we thereby move beyond relations of commodity exchange and exploitation-through-valorization,
one should insist that valorization via the circulation of capital remains the
ultimate goal of the entire process of economic reproduction.” – The problem
with fictitious capital is not that it is outside of valorization, but that it is
parasitic on the fiction of a valorization to come. 



Zizek mentions Tri-Solaris (Cixin Liu) as an analogy for the
unpredictability our own planet is hurtling towards.



Aligning with Latour – “… we humans can no longer rely on
the Earth as a reservoir ready to absorb the consequences of our productive
activity. We must acknowledge that we lice on a Spaceship Earth, and be
responsible and accountable for its condition… A new way to relate to our
environs is necessary once we realize this: we must become modest agents
collaborating with our environment, permamently negotiating a tolerable level
of stability.”



Capitalism is precluded from acting against this crisis because
the very nature of the risk involved fundamentally opposes a market solution. 



In anticipation of vast climatic change, we must be prepared
to live in a more plastic and nomadic way. If great populations are displaced,
national sovereignty will have to be radically redefined and new levels of
global cooperation invented. 



“Our unfreedom is most dangerous when it is experienced as
the very medium of our freedom – what can be more free than the incessant flow
of communications that allows every individual to popularize their opinions and
form virtual communities at their own free will?” 



Vagaries of power --



 



 


We Have Never Been Modern – Bruno Latour 


1.5 – What does it mean to be a modern?



The Moderns, as Latour defines them, are always existent in
contrast with the Ancients. In much a similar way to the Global/Local dichotomy
– this conflict has been stretched along the axis of time’s ‘irreversible arrow’.
But now the Ancients win almost as much as the Moderns. 



“The hypothesis of this essay is that the word ‘modern’
designates two sets of entirely different practices which must remain distinct
if they are to remain effective, but have recently begun to be confused. The first
set of practices, by ‘translation’, creates mixtures between entirely new types
of beings, hybrids of nature and culture. The second, by ‘purification’,
creates two entirely distinct ontological zones: that of human beings on the
one hand; that of nonhumans on the other.”



“What link is there between the work
of translation or mediation and that of purification? This is the question on
which I should like to shed light. My hypothesis – which remains too crude – is
that the second has made the first possible: the more we forbid ourselves to
conceive of hybrids, the more possible their interbreeding becomes – such is the
paradox of the moderns, which the exceptional situation in which we find
ourselves today allows us finally to grasp.”



“The second question has to do with premoderns, with the
other types of cultures. My hypothesis – is that by devoting themselves to conceiving
of hybrids, the other cultures have excluded their proliferation. It is this disparity that would explain the Great Divide
between Them – all other cultures – and Us – the westerners – and would make it
possible finally to solve the insoluble problem of relativism. The third
question has to do with the current crisis: if modernity were so effective in
its dual task of separation and proliferation, why would it weaken itself today
by preventing us from being truly modern? Hence the final question, which is
also the most difficult one: if we have stopped being modern, if we can no
longer separate the work of proliferation from the work of purification, what
are we going to become? Can we aspire to Enlightenment without modernity? My hypothesis
– is that we are going to have to slow down, reorient and regulate the
proliferation of monsters by representing their existence officially. Will a
different democracy become necessary? A democracy extended to things?”



2.1 – The Modern Constitution



The divide between the sciences and politics has been so
well drawn up that the separation is viewed as a double ontological distinction.
In reference to the translation/purification split of the Moderns, once one reestablishes the common understanding that
organizes the separation of natural and political powers, one ceases to be
modern. 



The Constitution believes in the
total separation of humans and nonhumans, but simultaneously cancels out this
separation. This has made the moderns invincible? I need clarification here… 



2.14 – We have never been modern



Okay but this statement seems contradictory to my previous
interpretations: “Either I defend the work of purification – and I myself serve
as a purifier and a vigilant guardian of the Constitution – or else I study
both the work of mediation and that of purification – but I then cease to be
wholly modern.”



The postmoderns reject all empirical work as illusory and
deceptively scientistic. They feel that they follow the moderns, but by doing
so operate under the moderns assumptions of classification of time/eras. They
have tagged the slogan ‘no future’ onto the modern slogan of ‘no past’ – so then
what remains? Disconnected instants and groundless denunciations. 



“A nonmodern (or amodern) is anyone
who takes simultaneously into account the moderns’ Constitution and the populations
of hybrids that that Constitution rejects and allows to proliferate.” I’m
really struggling with conceptualizing all these ontological dualities… 



3.2 – What is a quasi-object?



It appears to me that a quasi-object exists as a
deconstruction of the dualism between nature and society. Latour writes: “quasi-objects are in between and below the two poles, at the
very place around which dualism and dialectics had turned endlessly without
being able to come to terms with them. Quasi-objects are much more social, much
more fabricated, much more collective than the ‘hard’ parts of nature, but they
are in no way the arbitrary receptacles of a full-fledged society.”



5.1 – The impossible modernization



“Modernizing, although it destroyed the near-totality of
cultures and natures by force and bloodshed, had a clear objective. Modernizing
finally made it possible to distinguish between the laws of external nature and
the conventions of society.”



5.2 – Final Examinations



It seems as if Latour is advocating for the preservation of
the modern ideals of progress and production, but the subtraction of over
generalization and categorization that have until now accompanied them. 



“To retain the production of a nature and of a society that
allow changes in size through the creation of an external truth and a subject
of law, but without neglecting the co-production of sciences and societies. The
amalgam consists in using the premodern categories to conceptualize the
hybrids, while retaining the moderns final outcome of the work of purification –
that is, an external Nature distinct from subject.” –
External Nature? Really?



5.3 – Humanism Redistributed



“Modern humanists are reductionist because they seek to
attribute action to a small number of powers, leaving the rest of the world
with nothing but simple mute forces. It is true that by redistributing the
action among all these mediators, we lose the reduce form of humanity, but we
gain another form, which has to be called irreducible. The human is in the
delegation itself, in the pass, in the sending, in the continuous exchange of
forms.” 



5.4 – The nonmodern constitution



First Guarantee: the non-separability of quasi-objects, quasi-subjects.
Every concept, institution, or practice which interferes with the continuous deployment
of collectives and their experimentation with hybrids will be deemed immoral. 



Second Guarantee: All concepts,
institutions, and practices that interfere with the progressive objectification
of Nature – incorporation into a black box – and simultaneously the
subjectivization of Society – freedom of manoeuvre – will be deemed immoral. Without
this second guarantee, the networks liberated by the first would keep their
wild and uncontrollable character. 



Third Guarantee: we can combine assosciations freely without[t
ever confronting the choice between archaism and modernization, the local and
the global, the cultural and the universal, the natural and the social. Afterwards,
every call to revolution, epistemological break, Copernican upheaval, claim
that practices have become outdated forever – will be deemed immoral. (I’m not sure I agree with this last bit, is it a rejection
of the power to alter course?)



Fourth Guarantee: the production of hybrids, by becoming explicit
and collective, becomes the object of an enlarged democracy that regulates or
slows down its cadence. 



&#60;img width="624" height="466" src="file:///C:/Users/qwatc/AppData/Local/Temp/msohtmlclip1/01/clip_image002.jpg" style="width: 624px; height: 466px;"&#62;



5.5 – The Parliament of Things



“When we amend the Constitution, we continue to believe in
the sciences, but instead of taking in their objectivity, their truth, their
coldness, their extraterritoriality – qualities they have never had, except
after the arbitrary withdrawal of epistemology – we retain what has always been
most interesting about them: their daring, their experimentation, their
uncertainty, their crazy ability to reconstitute the social bond.”



“Natures are present, but with their
representatives, scientists who speak in their name. Societies are present, but
with the objects that have been serving as their ballast from time immemorial. Let
one of the representatives talk, for instance, about the ozone hole, another
represent the Monsanto chemical industry, a third the workers of the same
chemical industry, another the voters of New Hampshire, a fifth the meteorology
of the polar regions; let still another speak in the name of the State; what
does it matter, so long as they are all talking about the same thing, about a quasi-object they have all created, the
object-discourse-nature-society whose new properties astound us all and whose
network extends from my refrigerator to the Antarctic by way of chemistry, law,
the state, the economy, and satellites. The imbroglios
and networks that had no place now have the whole place to themselves. They are
the ones that have to be represented; it is around them that the Parliament of
Things gathers henceforth.”



“Half of our politics is constructed in science and
technology. The other half of Nature is constructed in societies. Let us patch the
two back together, and the political task can begin again.” 



Latour writes “is it asking too
little simply to ratify in public what is already happening?” And answers that
no, the official representation is effective rather than opting for more
revolutionary programmes of action. I feel as though his stance on that has
changed over the years? In Down to Earth it feels as though he is certainly
advocating for a revolutionary recalibration.



 


Cloud Atlas – David Mitchell


An excerpt from the notebook of Isaac Sachs: 



· &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; Exposition: the workings of the actual past+ the virtual past may be illustrated by an event well known to
collective history such as the sinking of the Titanic. The disaster as it
actually occurred descends into obscurity as its eyewitnesses die off, documents
perish + the wreck of the ship dissolves in its Atlantic grave. Yet a virtual
sinking of the titanic, created from reworked memories, papers, hearsay,
fiction – in short, belief – grows ever ‘truer’. The actual past is brittle,
ever-dimming + ever more problematic to access + reconstruct: in contrast, the
virtual past is malleable, ever-brightening + ever more difficult to circumvent/expose
as fraudulent. 



· &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; The present presses the virtual past into its
own service, to lend credence to its mythologies + legitimacy to the imposition
of will. Power seeks + is the right to ‘landscape’ the virtual past. (He who pays
the historian calls the tune.)



· &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; Symmetry demands an actual + virtual future too.
We imagine how next week, next year, or 2225 will shape up – a virtual future,
constructed by wishes, prophecies + daydreams. This virtual future may
influence the actual future, as in a self-fulfilling prophecy, but the actual
future will eclipse our virtual one as surely as tomorrow eclipses today. Like
Utopia, the actual future + the actual past exist only in the hazy distance,
where they are no good to anyone. 



· &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; Q: Is there a meaningful distinction between one
simulacrum of smoke, mirrors + shadows – the actual past – from another such
simulacrum – the actual future? 



· &#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp;&#38;nbsp; One model of time: an infinite matryoshka doll
of painted moments, each ‘shell’ (the present) encased inside a nest of ‘shells’
(previous presents) I call the actual past but which we perceive as the virtual
past. The doll of ‘now’ likewise encases a nest of presents yet to be, which I
call the actual future but which we perceive as the virtual future.&#38;nbsp; 



I regret not taking notes as I was reading this, but some reflections
to follow. 



One, the narrative structure which resembles the description
of time above is quite attractive to me. I particularly align with the ways in
which certain artefacts tie these stories together – less enamored with the
ideas that the character’s souls are tied, or that they are reincarnations etc.



As we all move through the world we both receive and leave
behind artefacts which have a much greater history than our own conscious
experience. These objects carry varying levels of meaning on personal/emotional
levels and societal/cultural scales. Throughout our lives it is as if we are
dropping a breadcrumb trail towards identifying our existence, who we truly
are. The trail is not a trail to a destination as such, but a line of puzzle pieces
that once one has reach the last can perhaps be put together to form a picture.
This picture is incomplete, but illustrative. What is missing from it? Is it
the actual personal contact with the individual/entity that it describes? Even
with deep, meaningful, and prolonged interaction there is no guarantee that there
is true understanding from one entity to another. So what do we do with our
incomplete pictures of the world? 



The so-to-speak breadcrumb trails crisscross, mix, and tangle
as certain piece overlap with others – acquire meaning from different sources,
all on their own path, as they pick up and put down the pieces of other’s
stories. 



Union as a fabricated revolutionary organization is
exceeding elegant. “… its raisons d’etre are not to foment revolution. First it
attracts social malcontents like Xi-Li and keeps them where Unanimity can watch
them; second, it provides Nea so Copros with the enemy required by any
hierarchical state for social cohesion.”



 


Piranesi – Susanna Clarke


Again, I did not take notes while reading, but some
reflections to follow. 



The way in which this story unfolds and reveals information
to us is quite remarkable. The character, as a sort of new-born brain-washed
level of intelligence is highly experienced in his perception of reality but
clueless as to ours. What we as readers can understand from simplistic descriptions
or allegories, Piranesi is clueless about. As he slowly regains his prior
conscious, more about the real world and his current situation is slowly
revealed. Despite his return to ‘our’ world at the end, part of him and his
epistemology is deeply attached to the House. He has learned to perceive the
world through the meanings and teachings the House has within its walls. The
statues symbolize certain emotions, characteristics, personalities, situations
etc – and it is with these that he identifies, and uses to create meaning of
the world around him. 













	Image
&#38;nbsp;Precedent
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