Friday, June 23, 2017

Bowers Reading 2: The Myth of Progress


The main idea of this chapter seems to be his criticism of progress. He identifies it as a myth and then picks it apart in different ways. I am not going to talk about progress directly here. I am going to pick out parts of his attack on it and examine those. In the end, I like his attack on progress, but I am a bit disappointed in that fact that he doesn’t explain a few things in more detail and he also seems to not go far enough for me in some of his criticism—he seems to use his method selectively. 


Myth and ideology:
He starts by offering different definitions of what a myth is. I was pretty excited about this at first because I thought maybe he was going to try to rehabilitate the idea of myth. At first he says that myth is a story that is believed but is not true. Well, this for me is just dull and avoids the point because we haven’t established what the criterion for truth is. I was excited to hear the Bruce Lincoln definition as “ideology in narrative form.” They can be “truthful depictions of historical events, as an allegory or personification of natural phenomenon, or as an explanation of ritual.” According to Bowers, Lincoln also says that “They are used to convey religious or idealized experience, to establish behavioral models, and to teach.” This to me is a fairly exciting definition of myth. 

Myth has usefulness and meaning though it may not be factually true or accurate in a strict sense. It was very disappointing for me to see Bowers pass this by and move on to talk about a definition from James Conway that says myth is a story or ideology that is untrue. It seems odd that he would move in that direction even though he points out that this means “today’s decedents from ancient cultures living in non-Westernized regions of the world, would be faced with acknowledging that their current lives are based on lies, misconceptions and illusions.” That seems to go against his desire to promote and preserve localism and multiculturalism. He doesn’t stop on that definition, but he does say that it has given him insights that influence what he does settle on.

Bowers’ final definition is “an ideology or, in a more limited sense, as an idea that justifies a series of behaviors and values that are based on misconceptions and illusions essentially destructive to the well-being of a community and the environment.” As I understand it, he is saying that it is an untrue story (like Conway did) and using as his truth criterion that something is untrue if it is “destructive to the well-being of a community and the environment.” This equates myths with lies or misconceptions (the first intentional the second not necessarily so) that are destructive for the people that believe them. I am not sure why he needs to use the word myth here at all and can’t just talk about lies and misconceptions. But that may just be a problem I have because I think myth can be good in many cases and in some ways are actually essential.



Ideology and vocabulary:
Though he does distinguish myth from ideology, Bowers does keep them very close and treat them both as mostly negative. While I agree that “Ideologies control thinking by providing the vocabulary that aligns everyday behaviors and values”, I think he goes a bit too far when he adds that, “The vocabulary is especially important in that it ensures conformity of thinking while at the same time excluding alterative vocabularies and thus alternative ways of thinking and acting.” Words have histories and are living things. An ideology can try to keep the words from changing (or at least in ways that it finds undesirable) and keep their histories hidden, but that is always a struggle and the ideology is never absolutely capable of controlling the words. It is hard for things to change, but they always can and do. 

I would also add that I have been hugely influenced by Nietzsche’s “Truth and Lies” essay. Nietzsche would agree when Bowers says that language controls our “thinking by providing the vocabulary that aligns everyday behaviors and values,” including our understanding of reality and truth. For him, that is what makes a comprehensible world that we can live in together. The point is not to get beyond that (as Bowers seems to me to suggest we need to, but hasn’t yet explained how or what that would be or look like) but to keep the language and/or ideology fresh and in touch with lived experience, goals, outcomes and sustainability of the community that uses them. (Or that is the way I have come to understand Nietzsche.) Bowers seems to suggest that there is something better suited than myth and ideology when it comes to founding language, truth and reality. (Actually, I am not even sure he would question if reality needs to be founded, and maybe not even truth.)



Tradition and Traditionalism:
I like the way that he values tradition and at the same time acknowledges that they are never fixed and are always changing and in need to change. “Time-less and unchanging” traditions don’t exists (or shouldn’t), and traditions are always changing: adapting or evolving. To think that a tradition is unchanging and timeless is rightly called traditionalism, which is really a kind of fundamentalism. Traditions are alive and (should be) dynamic.



Moore’s Law:
The point about Moore’s Law is very good. However, I do wish he would go into why it “is not a law in the same sense as the law of gravity or the law governing the speed of light.” My guess is that those other two laws are physical laws that don’t require human involvement. Gravity and light do what they do if humans are there to watch or not, or even if humans never were. Moore’s Law is like a law in economics or political science. These things require human involvement and really are based on human involvement and activities. If people are not motivated to research ways to fit more transistors into a smaller space, then there will be no progress. Motivation may be curiosity, profit, the belief that progress in this area will have some positive benefit in the world, etc. If people weren’t motivated and did not believe it was possible and desirable, Moore’s Law would not continue to be true. Another issue is the funding to do the research. If money isn’t there to do the research, then it won’t be done and progress won’t happen: the law will not continue to be true. People have an effect on things: how they turnout, how well ideas work, etc.

My guess is that that is what he means but saying they are different, but he doesn’t explain. I wish he would. And I think if he explained this at this point, he would be able to take a more nuanced position on capitalism later. 


Capitalism:
He does well to say that “the primary value of the capitalist system is achieving the greatest possible level of profits.” Yet, this goes against at least two of the economic theorists that he mentions. Smith and Friedman are two that I am familiar with and my reading of them (which is by no means unusual) puts them at odds with this simplification of capitalism and its primary value. Bowers seems to equate selfish interest with self-interest. Yes, that is the way that most people who are pro-capitalism these days see it: they reduce self-interest to profit and see that as the highest value of capitalism. However, when he talks about this drive contaminating politics and government, he is assuming that economics becomes the primary system of values and thinking that govern most of what happens in society. That may be true, but that is not what Smith and Friedman advocated. 

They both saw economics as a field that was not all encompassing, that should coexist with politics, science, etc. as equals having their own purviews and limits. That has been lost in general society. Bowers would do well to talk about how a more positive tradition of capitalism was lost somewhere along the way and maybe see how we can reclaim it. He wants to reclaim localism and other traditions, but he doesn’t look in to the history of capitalism like I think he easily could and see where that could be revived to make it more positive. (Below is a link to something I had been thinking about doing anyway, and I already had some notes and quotes. I finished it to go along with this.) 


On Social Justice:
He is critical of the traditions of capitalism and technology, but he seems to take the traditions of social justice and localism as being without downsides. He says that there are some, “misconceptions and biases of earlier eras, that should not have been constructed in the first place.” Examples he gives are ones that are contrary to our current ideas of social justice like slavery and equality. Now, I don’t mean to justify slavery or inequality, but these are modern values that have come up over time; they are historically relative and have a history and language of their own. However, he seems to want to make them universal (against his championing of localism and cultural diversity) and eternal (against his idea that everything has a history). 

I wonder if this is a blind spot in his thinking, or if he has arguments for doing this that he is just not presenting. He gives reasons for questioning our current thinking on progress and technology, but then he takes up social justice and other things without justifying why they should not also be critiqued. (Or maybe I am being way too much of a post-modernist here.) 



In the end, I still like much of what he has to say because he is taking things to a deeper level than usual. However, I think he is being a bit vague in some places and a bit selective as to where he does go deeper. It makes me think that all of this is done just to push his position on environmentalism, which wouldn’t be bad. Yet, that makes this more of a polemic than a work of philosophy or deeper social criticism. 


Adam Smith And Spontaneous Order: Capitalism, Sympathy and Community

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Bowers Reading One: Main Ideas and Issues


Introduction:

I like what Bowers has laid out so far, and I will touch on the main things I am excited about below.  However, I am a bit disappointed that he hasn’t gone in to more detail about the foundations and influences of his thought.  He wants to emphasize the history and ecology of things like language, tradition and culture—and to talk about emergence—but I don’t see him giving an ecology, history or account of where from or how his ideas have emerged.  Being the geek I am (or half-assed scholar, or dilettante might be better words) I want to know if Nietzsche, Korzybski or who had an influence on his conception of language.  Maybe that will come later, or maybe I will have to look to another book of his to find that. 

A couple of issues with word choice:


First, I am not happy with his choice of the word ecological to talk about the complex and interdependent relationship between things.  I understand why he thinks it works: because it emphasizes that living and interactive nature of systems and relationships.  But he also seems to use the word in the more common sense as well: to talk about eco-systems and the environment.  This confuses me a bit sometimes. 

Neil Postman talks about ecological change in his book Technopoly, and the idea seems to be much the same as what Bowers means:

“One significant change generates total change.  If you remove the caterpillars from a given habitat, you are not left with the same environment minus caterpillars: you have a new environment, and you have reconstituted the conditions of survival; the same is true if you add caterpillars to an environment that has had none.” (Postman Technopoly).

I had always thought about pretty much the same idea in terms of ‘weight and balance’ (like when you load and pilot a plane or ship) until I read that in Postman a couple years ago.  Ecology is a much better way to put it.  So I do really like the idea, I just have a problem with the word ecology seeming to be used in two ways back and forth. 

Second, I am not sure what he means exactly by emergence at this point.  I guess it is simply that things come out of what is already there.  This means that nothing was just always there, that things come and go, and that they come out of and depend on what is/was there.  Maybe that is all it is.  I get the feeling that there should be more to it.  However, that is likely a pretty big thing for a lot of people who pick up the book, though for me it seems pretty obvious. 

Main ideas:


Choosing profits:

He says that the technology giants have put profit over the rejuvenation of democracy.  He seems to think that this is a deliberate choice. I am not sure it is or at least that it is that simple of a choice the way they approach it: do right by democracy or make profit.  I think a way to approach this would be using the set of god-words he pointed out: democracy, freedom and progress.  If approached this way, I think it comes kind of clear that they don’t see that as a choice of either/or.  I am not sure many of the leaders of the tech world see the real possibility of significant conflict between those three ideas and making a profit.  With progress comes more freedom and with freedom comes better democracy, especially if technology can also spread information which is always good for democracy.  Technology that is spreading freedom and helping democracy will be profitable because it will be popular: and what sells makes money.  I don’t think they question that some sort of spontaneous order will come about thought this.  That when freedom and democracy are combined with information and technology, progress towards a desirable world is inevitable.  It is like they believe in divine providence that comes into the world as long as we work towards these god-words. 

God-words:

Overall, I live the idea of the ‘god-words’ and the three he points out here.  They are ideas that are taken to be true, to be known, to be able to justify almost anything, and yet they are words that no one really has a clear and definite definition for though we use them as if we do. 



Internet goes deeper than polarization:

Another great point it is that the internet is damaging beyond the spread of ‘polarizing ideas.’  I see this as related to the conception of data, print and information as well.  Print and data are true or false and there is no need of interpretation.  As a result, something on the internet has a clear meaning and is either clearly true of clearly false—you just need to fact check it to find out which.  News is either real or fake, there is no third option.  This is the case because interpretation and values are ruled out as important: “while data and information, on the surface, appear to be value free, both are interpreted by their collectors and promoters within value-laden conceptual frameworks that emphasize efficiencies, predictive control, continues innovation and profits.”  This is a huge problem with contemporary communication which comes from a narrow conception of what information is and the forgetting of the importance context and culture.



The limits of data are swept aside:

A related point is that “What gets encoded in print or as data is only the surface phenomenon that the surveillance system is designed to represent as data.”  Context is left out.  This means the original context is left out and the context that the collectors were in when the collected and decided how to collect the data are left out.  They are in the margins (I think that is how Derrida might put it, right?) and not noticed unless someone has a disagreement or difficulty with the print or data.  While a discussion of the difficulty and where it comes from can bring context back in, that is usually not what we do these days.  We seem to condemn or insult those that we don’t understand or that don’t understand us. 



Data given supremacy:

He goes on from the misunderstanding and misrepresentation of what data is talk about the importance it is given.  Along with stripping information and data of its origins and context, it is given a privileged status.  Computer scientists have “their simplified and reductionist ways of thinking [which] lead them to assume that data, information and other forms of abstract representations should be the basis of decision making for everyone in the world.”  Lack of data is also cited by technologists as the reason for failures and backwardness in societies and of societies: “data deficiency that impedes their ability to progress economically and technologically.”  Bowers says quite clearly that data is seen as supreme and should replace other forms of knowing and thinking: “data must replace the authority of all other cultural forms of knowledge—as well as the wisdom traditions that are the basis of their moral values.”  


Conclusion:

I agree with his assessment and with his criticism of the modern western worldview.  I would like to hear more details and see a more detailed argument for all of this.  I like it, but it seems like he is preaching to the choir here, and I think this book would fall flat for a more regular audience. 

I also want to hear more about localism and how it is better for the environment.  I can see some ideas, but I hope he justifies this more. 

Apology:

I realize this seems a bit disorganized and random.  At this point I just wanted to get out what I think the big ideas are here so far.  I have also avoided drawing in things from the news that I think are examples or related; I am really not sure we want to go there.

New Project: Bowers Digital Detachment


The Book:

Digital Detachment: How Computer Culture Undermines Democracy by Chet Bowers

The Schedule:

June 15th Reading one: Preface and Chapter 1

June 17th Reading two: Chapter 2

June 20th Reading three: Chapters 3 and 4

June 23rd Reading four: Chapter 5

June 26th Reading five: Chapter 6
June 29th Reading six: Chapter 7