The Inhabitants on the Sea

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@poplifereadings
The Inhabitants on the Sea
The Baronâs Brother
(Note: All of my new and old little writings will now be contained on this blog)
I had just left the end of autumn in London and arrived at the beginning of winter in Stockholm. I was 19-years-old and in the last year of the 20th century, 1988. My Stockholm visit was a graduation present from my parents, and I stayed with a baron who did nothing except bitch about the aggressive way the government had taxed his inheritance. The baron had lots of red wine, a beautiful wife, and a younger brother. The younger brother had the blondest hair, the smallest shoulders, a bedroom at his mother's house, two turntables in that bedroom, and, like me, the ambition to become a hiphop DJ. One evening, while comparing, mixing, and scratching records in his bedroom, the baron's brother introduced me to Sir Mix-A-Lot. On one turntable he spun De La Soul's "Plug Tunin'," on the other, "Posse on Broadway." The dreamy DJ then deftly faded De La into Mix-A-Lot's rising boom. I stood from a comfortable chair beside the bedroom's large window, approached the baron's brother and asked: "Is the rap about Broadway, New York?" He removed the Sony earphones from his blond head and said: "No, man, he is rapping about Broadway, Seattle." I thanked him for clearing the confusion, returned to the chair next to the snow-falling window, and carefully listened to Mix-A-Lot's rap about the nightlife in that distant city.
Session 010: SUNDAY JUNE 6 @ 5pm
Poplife happens at Hidmo Eritrean Cuisine (20th & Jackson) Seattle
Suggested reading for Session 010: Â Joseph Schumpeter by Steve Shaviro
Joseph Schumpeter
Joseph Schumpeter sees the process of âcreative destructionâ as the essential dynamic of capitalism. Entrepreneurs turn the market upside-down with their innovations, forcing the adoption of new patterns of production and consumption. Schumpeter, in contrast to the orthodox neoclassical economists, has little use for the idealizations of âperfect competition,â or for the putative rationality of the free market. He ridicules the notion of market equilibrium, and sees little value in the efficiency that results when firms selling similar products compete on the basis of price, performance, and marginal advantage. Schumpeter prefers monopolies and oligopolies, with their ability to realize economies of scale, to standardize production, and to take advantage of their control of the market in order to nurture innovations that might not be immediately profitable.
Schumpeter is the only right-wing, pro-capitalist economist of note to give Marx his due as a thinker. His theory of âcreative destructionâ is an expansion of Marxâs insight that capitalism can only work by continually revolutionizing the relations of production. For Schumpeter, the competition that really matters â- in contrast to mere price competition â- is that which a given product faces âfrom the new commodity, the new technology, the new source of supply, the new type of organization.â Even monopolies can collapse overnight when faced with this sort of unexpected shift. The âever-present threatâ of innovation from outside compels monopolies and oligopolies to stay on full alert and seek to expand their business, rather than simply raising prices and restricting supply. The neoclassical notion of equilibrium is nonsense, because capitalism is âan evolutionary process. . . [that] not only never is but never can be stationary.â Schumpeter clearly means âevolutionaryâ here in a Darwinian sense. Capitalism, he writes, is a âprocess of industrial mutation â if I may use that biological term â that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one. Destruction is the essential fact about capitalism.â
Thereâs an irony here that needs unpacking. The neo-Darwinian synthesis in contemporary biology is grounded in a vision of harsh competition under conditions of scarcity. Yet it emphasizes stability and continuity rather than revolution and destruction. It assumes that organisms are basically conservative. It tends to regard the organismâs external environment (or the âfitness landscapeâ defined by that environment) as essentially stable; it underestimates both the mutability of the environment, and the self-reflexive feedback effects that organisms have on their own environments. Instead, it calculates Evolutionarily Stable Strategies, using equilibrium models that are borrowed from neoclassical economics, and ultimately from 19th-century, pre-quantum and pre-complexity, physics. Schumpeterâs biological analogy, to the contrary, involves catastrophic destructions and dislocations. Stability is only a relative and temporary condition, a lull in between moments of radical mutation. Schumpeter even seems to anticipate the Eldredge-Gould theory of punctuated equilibrium: âthese revolutions are not strictly incessant; they occur in discrete rushes that are separated from each other by spans of comparative quiet. The process as a whole works incessantly, however, in the sense that there always is either revolution or absorption of the results of revolution, both together forming what are known as business cycles.â In biology, it can at least be argued that punctuated equilibrium does not really contradict Darwinian gradualism, and can be folded into the neo-Darwinian synthesis. But in Schumpeterâs case, no such reconciliation with the neoclassical model is possible. The irony is that, during the Internet bubble of the late 1990s, Schumpeterâs celebration of entrepreneurship and âcreative destructionâ became popular right alongside the neoliberal faith in perfectly rational and efficient markets â- despite the radical incompatibility of these viewpoints.
Schumpeter refuses to minimize the dislocations and inequities caused by the process of creative destruction: âany pro-capitalist argument must rest on long-term considerations. In the short run, it is profits and inefficiencies that dominate the picture. In order to accept his lot, the leveler or the chartist of old would have had to comfort himself with hopes for his great-grandchildren. In order to identify himself with the capitalist system, the unemployed of today would have completely to forget his personal fate and the politician of today his personal ambition.â This argument is remarkably bracing and contrarian, especially in contrast to the usual neoliberal paeans to the perfection of the market. Schumpeter is indeed arguing that âtrickle- downâ economics works, that a rising tide ultimately lifts all boats, and that the immiseration of the British working class noted by Engels in 1844 was in the long run not a bad thing, because it led to a somewhat higher standard of living for British workers a hundred years later. But at least he doesnât tell me â as Thomas Friedman does â that I myself will be made happier by living in a world without any social guarantees, and that I ought to feel grateful for the opportunity to raise my productivity by working longer hours for less pay.
There is reason to wonder, of course, whether the distant future that Schumpeter promises to my great-grandchildren will ever actually arrive. For if capitalism survives, the cycles of creative destruction will still be going on then too, and the promise of prosperity for all will continue to be deferred indefinitely. If, however, as Schumpeter fears, capitalism itself were to âbecome atrophicâ and disappear, then there would no longer be any innovation or material progress at all: âhuman energy would turn away from business. Other than economic pursuits would attract the brains and provide the adventure.â I must say that such a prospect seems quite delightful to me; but Schumpeter regards it with unqualified disgust. Indeed, he scarcely distinguishes between the inertia of bureaucratic socialism, which he loathes, and the actual fulfillment of capitalismâs long-deferred promises of abundance. Nothing seems worse to him than âa state of satietyâ in which âthe wants of humanity might some day be so completely satisfied that little motive would be left to push productive effort still further ahead.â And the only thing that can rescue us from such a state, he adds, is the infinite restlessness of desire itself: âas higher standards of life are attained, these wants automatically expand and new wants emerge or are created. . . particularly if we include leisure among consumersâ goodsâ (131). This is again a remarkable piece of contrarianism. Usually, social critics (like Stuart Ewen) attack capitalism for colonizing leisure, and for soliciting artificial desires; while defenders of capitalism (like Virginia Postrel) indignantly reject these charges, and insist that the market gives us everything we truly want. But Schumpeter has the perversity to celebrate capitalism precisely for its creation of artificial ânew wants,â and for its commodification of leisure time.
All this suggests that Schumpeter values the process of creative destruction itself, more than he does any long-term prosperity that might arise therefrom. Indeed, one might wonder whether he cares about prosperity at all. His glorification of capitalism centers on the heroic image of the entrepreneur; and this image, like the idea of âcreative destructionâ itself, owes far more to Nietzsche than it does to Adam Smith. Schumpeterâs entrepreneur is a charismatic figure, whose injection of new energy rescues the capitalist system from its otherwise fatal entropic tendencies (Iâve benefitted for this point from some suggestions by Douglas Collins). His deeds âlie outside of the routine tasks which everybody understands.â The entrepreneur, like the man of Nietzscheâs fantasized master race, acts spontaneously, without reflection or resentment. âThe function of entrepreneurs,â Schumpeter says, âis to reform or revolutionize the pattern of productionâ: this function âdoes not essentially consist in either inventing anything or otherwise creating the conditions which the enterprise exploits. It consists in getting things doneâ despite massive opposition. In all these ways, Schumpeterâs entrepreneur is not really a bourgeois figure at all, but a mythical aristocratic one.
Conversely, Schumpeterâs picture of the âstate of satiety,â of a socialist world without entrepreneurs to shake things up, is just like Nietzscheâs vision of the Last Man: âOne still works, for work is a form of entertainment. But one is careful lest the entertainment be too harrowing. One no longer becomes poor or rich: both require too much exertion. Who still wants to rule? Who obey? Both require too much exertion. . . We have invented happiness, say the last men, and they blink.â Schumpeter as for Nietzsche, socialism is basically bourgeois conformism and complacency writ large. Schumpeterâs analysis of the dynamics of capitalism traces the way that the very success of heroic entrepreneurship leads to the creation of an atmosphere in which entrepreneurship is no longer valued, and in which modishly left-wing intellectuals come to increasing prominence. By âintellectuals,â Schumpeter means people like me: âpeople who wield the power of the spoken and written word. . . [in] the absence of direct responsibility for practical affairs,â and who therefore have the leisure to despise capitalist values despite (or because of) the fact that they are themselves the beneficiaries â- and indeed the product â- of those very values.
Schumpeter holds intellectuals in contempt, because they make judgments, and seek to legislate for society at large, without being accountable for the practical consequences of these judgments. In other words, the intellectualsâ judgments are contemplative, disinterested, and therefore â- in Kantian terms â-Â aesthetic. Schumpeter, no less than many Marxists, equates aestheticism with passive consumption, detached from any involvement in the actual processes of production. Schumpeterâs intellectual, like Nietzscheâs Last Man, is a mere consumer: someone who lives under the rule of universal equivalence, who lacks even the desire to make a difference. Who lacks desire altogether, in short, and who is incapable of an act of creative destruction.
But the impasse of Schumpeterâs own thought is a mirror image of the malady he diagnoses in his enemies. Creative destruction comes to grief over the fact that its outcome is just more commodities, more fodder for the regime of universal equivalence. All charisma is quickly routinized. The heroic individualism that Schumpeter glorifies is dissolved by its very success. Nobody is going to confuse Sam Walton, or Bill Gates, with the Ăbermensch. If Schumpeterâs bitter prophecy of capitalismâs decline has not come to pass, this is because such a âdeclineâ is in fact the normative state of actually existing, and fully triumphant, capitalism.
Originally posted at The Pinocchio Theory, August 1, 2005.
SESSION 009: SUNDAY MAY 23 @ 5pm
Two short "Hows" for Session 009:Â
"How Humans Became Such Other-Regarding Apes"Â
by Sarah Blaffer Hrdy & "Kicking Away the Ladder: How the Economic and Intellectual Histories of Capitalism Have Been Re-Written to Justify Neo-Liberal Capitalism"Â
by Ha-Joon ChangÂ
Sessions convene in Seattle at Hidmo (20th & Jackson).
The Inhabitant's Anthem: Our Life is a Smuggle
This is Hoba Hoba Spirit:
This is their big hit, "Trabando." The lead singer of the Hoba Hoba Spirit, Reda Allali, translated the "Trabando" for Pop Life:
Our life is a smuggle
We steal the electricity, the water
Our "windows" is illegal,Â
Everthing is false, every one is crazy
The wolrd is a supermarket
I am a product and a customer
With a dirham, i can get a starving man
With millions, it's zidane
We are lost in this party
No one invited us
We are here, watching our backs
Waiting for a hit
YES, we pirate everything
Because we enrage to be put in a cage
Condamned to eat your overestimated products
Our passivity has limitsÂ
Your greed does not
Mr Bill Gates is so rich he could offers his products ti a whole continent
And the phamacy industry could offer "generics" to africa
Our life is smuggle...
We have heard the player's anthem; this is the anthem of the inhabitant, the subject of the post-neoliberal order. The inhabitant is not a citizen but a hustler. In the future, there will be no workers just hustlersâpeople who put this and that together to make a living. The informal market is going to grow and grow. Indeed, the neoliberal ideal of a self-thriving, self-generating, emergent market may become a reality, but the direction of the pressure behind this emergence will not be from the top down (the neoliberal approach for the past 30 years) but from the bottom up. "Our life is a smuggle."
READING FOR NEXT POPLIFE: Session 008 May 9, 2010
Rich speaking:
This is not an easy text to read. Althusser is widely regarded as difficult and technical. Â Of course, our reading also suffers from being translated from the French original.
Many of the terms, like 'conditions of production', refer to specific ideas raised in Karl Marx's CAPITAL, a big, old, brilliant attempt to scientifically analyze the logic and social effects of capitalism. Â Also known as, "The way the world has been run for the last few hundred years." Â
Please feel free to stop by and participate in the Hidmo sessions even if this language seems uninviting. Â Also, consider listening to Professor David Harvey's excellent series of podcast lectures where he goes chapter by chapter through CAPITAL. Â They are very entertaining and provocative and you don't have to be a "marxist" to enjoy and learn from them. Â Charles has recommended the introductory lecture and number 8. Â (I am still working my way through #5.)
Harvey's lectures in podcast and/or streaming video can be found at www.davidharvey.org.
Note that the comments are open if you want to post to this note below with any questions.Â
Suggested Reading for Pop Life 007: April 4, 2010
Please complete Wendy Brown's discussion of Neoliberalism (download here) and any additional material you find interesting below.
Session 007 will take place from 5 to 6pm, Sunday April 4 at Hidmo Eritrean Cuisine, 20th & Jackson, Seattle. Â Pop Life invites all participants to purchase a beverage or meal with the session in respect of Hidmo's generous gift of space for these meetings.
Recommended Sources: Podcasts
Professor David Harvey has offered a 14-week reading of Karl Marx's CAPITAL, v. 1 every year for the last 40 years. Â Find a set of his lectures offered as podcasts here: Reading Capital.
Lecture #8 is particularly relevant to the POP LIFE conversations.
   ~  +  ~
The Brain Science podcast series hosted by Ginger Campbell, MD is another excellent source of current inquiry into issues that concern POP LIFE.
The following Brain Science podcasts are highly recommended:
#65. Jaak Panksepp, PhD: author of Affective Neuroscience: The Foundations of Human and Animal Emotions
#66. Randy Gallistel, PhD: co-author of Memory and the Computational Brain: Why Cognitive Science will Transform Neuroscience
#67. Thomas Metzinger, PhD: author of The Ego Tunnel: The Science of the Mind and the Myth of the Self
Suggested reading for Pop Life 006: March 21
Wendy Brown, "Neoliberalism and the End of Liberal Democracy" (7 MB pdf file).
Suggested Reading for Pop Life 005: March 14
Freeman Dyson's  "Our Biotech Future", a review of Carl Woese's essay (find a link below in Session 004 notes).
The Darwin Footnote
It was David Harvey who pointed out the significance of this footnote in Capital:
A critical history of technology would show how little any of the inventions of the 18th century are the work of a single individual. Hitherto there is no such book. Darwin has interested us in the history of Natureâs Technology, i.e., in the formation of the organs of plants and animals, which organs serve as instruments of production for sustaining life. Does not the history of the productive organs of man, of organs that are the material basis of all social organisation, deserve equal attention? And would not such a history be easier to compile, since, as Vico says, human history differs from natural history in this, that we have made the former, but not the latter? Technology discloses manâs mode of dealing with Nature, the process of production by which he sustains his life, and thereby also lays bare the mode of formation of his social relations, and of the mental conceptions that flow from them.
That footnote now dominates how I think about the entire book and Marxism in general. Indeed, I'm more and more reaching the conclusion that any adequate thinking about culture--its developments, inventions, directions, and breaks--cannot be done without some Darwin in it. The footnote points in that direction--a kind of theory, thinking, conceptualizing that removes the line between nature and culture, biological and artificial. What we see from now on is a complicated process that is not completely blind and not completely conscious.Â
Three Quotes that are Haunting My Mind
The first is by Steven Shaviro:This is one way of understanding Whiteheadâs insistence that philosophy must not âexplain awayâ anything, but must accept the reality of the beautiful sunset as well as the reality of photons of different energy levels. (The point of Whiteheadâs example is precisely that the beautiful sunset is part of ânatureâ just as much as the photons are, and that it cannot be âexplained awayâ as being merely a subjective human interpretation, or as involving âsecondary qualitiesâ instead of primary ones, etc. The sunset, every bit as much as the photon, is itself a real object, irreducible to the way that human consciousness posits and grasps it)
The second is by William James:The generalized conclusion is that therefore the parts of experience hold together from next to next by relations that are themselves parts of experience. The directly apprehended universe needs, in short, no extraneous transempirical connective support, but possesses in its own right a concatenated or continuous structure.
The third is by David Bohm: In the enfolded [or implicate] order, space and time are no longer the dominant factors determining the relationships of dependence or independence of different elements. Rather, an entirely different sort of basic connection of elements is possible, from which our ordinary notions of space and time, along with those of separately existent material particles, are abstracted as forms derived from the deeper order. These ordinary notions in fact appear in what is called the "explicate" or "unfolded" order, which is a special and distinguished form contained within the general totality of all the implicate orders.
These quotes are not for the next Pop Life meeting. I posted them for the purpose of storage.
Quotes for Pop Life Session 004: Jan 31, 2010
From Chengerai Hove's novel/poem Bones:
"If the city is so frightening as you say... why are so many people living there?"
From Carl Woese's essay "A New Biology for a New Century":
The world of primitive cells feels like a vast sea, or field, of cosmopolitan genes flowing into and out of the evolving cellular (and other) entities. Because of the high levels of HGT, evolution at this stage would in essence be communal, not individual. The community of primitive evolving biological entities as a whole as well as the surrounding field of cosmopolitan genes participates in a collective reticulate evolution.
From Freeman Dyson's review of "A New Biology for a New Century," "Our Biotech Future":
The Darwinian interlude has lasted for two or three billion years. It probably slowed down the pace of evolution considerably. The basic biochemical machinery of life had evolved rapidly during the few hundreds of millions of years of the pre-Darwinian era, and changed very little in the next two billion years of microbial evolution. Darwinian evolution is slow because individual species, once established, evolve very little. With rare exceptions, Darwinian evolution requires established species to become extinct so that new species can replace them.
Now, after three billion years, the Darwinian interlude is over. It was an interlude between two periods of horizontal gene transfer. The epoch of Darwinian evolution based on competition between species ended about ten thousand years ago, when a single species, Homo sapiens, began to dominate and reorganize the biosphere. Since that time, cultural evolution has replaced biological evolution as the main driving force of change. Cultural evolution is not Darwinian. Cultures spread by horizontal transfer of ideas more than by genetic inheritance. Cultural evolution is running a thousand times faster than Darwinian evolution, taking us into a new era of cultural interdependence which we call globalization. And now, as Homo sapiens domesticates the new biotechnology, we are reviving the ancient pre-Darwinian practice of horizontal gene transfer, moving genes easily from microbes to plants and animals, blurring the boundaries between species. We are moving rapidly into the post-Darwinian era, when species other than our own will no longer exist, and the rules of Open Source sharing will be extended from the exchange of software to the exchange of genes. Then the evolution of life will once again be communal, as it was in the good old days before separate species and intellectual property were invented.
Why Pop Life?
Because it's "the recognition of an immense expansion of the cultural sphere in late capitalism" and "the generalization of knowledge (very much including science)" and, finally, "the approach of a genuine world market" (Jameson, Valences of the Dialectic). Life its self has become popular. And so, when considering, say, cosmopolitanism, we can see the term from many sides: Kant's standard position, David Harvey's distinct position, Stuart Hall's critical position, the street position we find in Freundeskreis's "Briefwechse/Letter of Exchange," and even the microbiological position of Carl Woese's "cosmopolitan genes." This is what I mean by pop life--the generalization of knowledge.
Carl R. Woese, 2004
A Quick Note on Haiti
One illusion that the technology of motion pictures dissolved was the passivity of the plant kingdom. With time-lapse, the stillness was shattered and leaves, roots, flowers, branches, rotting came to life. This thriving and dying activity was the truth, and the passivity was revealed to be the untruth. Now if we could do something like a time-lapse on the kingdom of the penniless, the slums of Third World cities, we would see not passivity but a massive catastropheâindeed, a catastrophe such as the one that has induced all of this giving and concern.
A Body of Maps
Sundayâs talk (JANUARY 17 at HIDMO 5pm) will attempt to unify the ideas contained in these quotes:
Ginger Campbellâs review of The First Idea: How Symbols, Language, and Intelligence Evolved from Our Primate Ancestors to Modern Humans
The basic idea is that the image has an emotional and a sensory component. And [Dr. Stanley Greenspan and Stuart Shanker],
say the content of the first idea [in a baby] would be as diverse as the emotions of early humans. And then symbols come about when perceptions are separated from action. [The write], âThis is achieved by co-regulated emotional interactions with other human beings. Ongoing co-regulated emotional interactions provide emerging and later symbols with meaning throughout life.â
When [they] uses this phrase, âco-regulated,â it starts to sound very academic, but the idea is that itâs a two-way communication. My emotional signals to you are having an effect on you, and then you in turn make emotional signals to me that affect me. Thatâs whatâs meant by co-regulated.
Walter D. Mignoloâs âThe Many Faces of Cosmo-Polis: Border Thinking and Critical Cosmopolitanismâ
In the sixteenth century, the emerging hegemonic imaginary of modernity was built around the figures of orbis and, more specifically, orbis universalis christia- nus. The idea of orbis universalis received support from Renaissance cartography. The 16th century was the first time in the history of humankind that a world map was drawn, on which the continents of Africa, Asia, America and Europe could be connected on the basis of empiri- cal information. The diversity of local cosmographies in complex civilizations (of China, India, Islam, Europe, Tawantinsuyu, Anahuac) were unified and subsumed by a world map drawn by cartographers of Christian Europe. The map, rather than the Internet, was the first step  of  the  imaginary  of  the  modern/colonial  world, which, nowadays, we call globalization
Fredric Jameson's Postmodernism or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism
In a classic work, The Image of the City, Kevin Lynch taught us that the alienated city is above all a space in which people are unable to map (in their minds) either their own positions or the urban totality in which they find themselves: grids such as those of Jersey City, in which none of the traditional markers (monuments, nodes, natural boundaries, built perspectives) obtain, are the most obvious examples. Disalienation in this traditional city, then, involved the practical reconquest of a sense of place and the construction or reconstruction of an articulated ensemble which can be retained in memory....
Antonio Damasio in an interview (this idea is elaborated in his book Looking for Spinoza Joy, Sorrow, and the Feeling)
Yes. The brain is constantly receiving signals from the body, registering what is going on inside of us. It then processes the signals in neural maps, which it then compiles in the so called somatosensory centers. Feelings occur when the maps are read and it becomes apparent that emotional changes have been recorded-as snapshots of our physical state, so to speak.
Tom Vaderbilt on Christian Noldâs Bio Mapping
To interrogate the city; to extract knowledge from what is on the surface unknowable; to render visualizations beyond the dictates of official cartography or planning; to discover secret movements and connections: From the pioneering photography of Nadar to the psychogeography of the Situationists, it is by these Baudelairean methods and motives that artists have sought to comprehend the city and their own place in it, often responding to the technological imperatives of the day even as they employ those same devices.
A recent example of this can be seen in the work of Christian Nold, a young London-based artist who--as someone deeply interested in capturing and visually conveying our moments of psychological "arousal" in the city, or Baudelaire's "jolts of consciousness"--has for the past few years been investigating a practice he calls "emotion mapping" or "biomapping." The technique involves having subjects perambulate certain urban areas wearing finger cuffs that monitor on-the-fly emissions of galvanic skin response (GSR), the technology upon which the lie detector is founded. GSR is used to measure "electrodermal activity," which is believed to correspond to the sympathetic nervous system; for example, when we are aroused by something, good or bad, we begin to sweat more (though not necessarily visibly), thus increasing the conductivity of electricity through our bodies. Because his GSR equipment is linked to a GPS, Nold can later discern--and plot--precisely what things in the urban environment triggered physiological responses.
Spinozaâs Ethics
The mind is the idea of the body.