We can and we may, as it were, jump with both feet off the ground into or towards a world of which we trust the other parts to meet our jump—and only so can the making of a perfected world of pluralistic pattern ever take place. Only through our precursive trust in it can it come into being.
William James
Introduction in the form of a pitch and a loop
“Ecological awareness is weird: it has a twisted, looping form. (…) Ecological awareness is a loop because human interference has a loop form, because ecological and biological systems are loops. And ultimately this is because to exist at all is to assume the form of a loop.
[T]here are layers of attunement to ecological reality more accurate than what is habitual in the media, in the academy, and in society at large. These attunement structures are necessarily weird.”
Timothy Morton, Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence, Columbia University Press, New York, 2016, p.6, 159.
The Sphere As Lived Abstraction of Value
Leverage is the way we aim to give our fictitious projections a self-fulfilling, performative quality (…) leverage involves the effort to position oneself as the focal point of the interactive logic of speculation, as an attractor in the social field.(8)
Martijn Konings, Capital and Time: For a New Critique of Liberal Reason, Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2018, p.13-14.
“Optionality of the kind that finance illustrates is more broadly about synchronizing heterogeneous temporalities, indexing heterogeneous cultural discourses, tokenizing the relative rates of change within and among heterogeneous systems of valuing and ranking—the list could go on. Such forms of heterogeneity no longer need to be reduced to a General Equivalent if liquidity can be added through options that can index their changes to those in other, disparate, value realms.” (my emphasis) (9)
Robert Meister, Justice Is an Option. A Democratic Theory of Finance for the 21st century, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2021 (quoted from the yet unpublished manuscript).
“A magical chain brings together plant life, pieces of organs, a shred of clothing, an image of daddy, formulas and words: we shall not ask what it means, but what kind of machine is assembled in this manner—what kind of flows and breaks in the flows, in relation to other breaks and other flows.” (10)
Capitalism and Schizophrenia I: Anti-Oedipus, p.181.
The Precursive Art of Imagineering Flows
The Sphere as Digital Soul Searching
Mankind lies groaning, half crushed beneath the weight of its own progress. Men do not sufficiently realize that their future is in their own hands. Theirs is the task of determining first of all whether they want to go on living or not. Theirs the responsibility, then, for deciding if they want merely to live, or intend to make just the extra effort required for fulfilling, even on their refractory planet, the essential function of the universe, which is a machine for the making of gods.
Henri Bergson, The Two Sources of Moral and religion
“The capacity to aspire is a navigational capacity. The more privileged in any society simply have used the map of its norms to explore the future more frequently and more realistically, and to share this knowledge with one another more routinely than their poorer and weaker neighbors. The poorer members, precisely because of their lack of opportunities to practice the use of this navigational capacity (in turn because their situations permit fewer experiments and less easy archiving of alternative futures), have a more brittle horizon of aspirations.”
Arjun Appadurai, The Future as Cultural Fact, Verso, New York, 2013, p.188–189.
“It strikes me that our entire social organism—its economy, its social policy, its civil order—that these don’t implode (…) that these are held in alignment, by a yoking to this notion of the Future; and humanity, its gazed fixed on this apparition hovering just over the horizon, is thus herded along the requisite channels, its anarchic inclinations kept in check. Certainly, each brief the Company worked on, every pitch we made, involved an invocation of, a genuflection to, the Future: explaining how social media will become the new press-baronage, or suburbia the new town centre, or how emerging economies would bypass the analogue to plunge straight into the post-digital phase—using the Future to confer the seal of truth on these scenarios and assertions, making them absolute and objective simply BY placing them within this Future: that’s how we won contracts. ” (My emphasis)
Tom McCarthy, Satin Island, Penguin Random House, London, 2015, p.104-105.
- “What I mean by “strange loop” is — here goes a first stab, anyway — not a physical circuit but an abstract loop in which, in the series of stages that constitute the cycling-around, there is a shift from one level of abstraction (or structure) to another, which feels like an upwards movement in a hierarchy, and yet somehow the successive “upward” shifts turn out to give rise to a closed cycle.” (my emphasis) Douglas Hofstadter, I Am a Strange Loop, Basic Books, New York, 2007, p.101–102. ↩
- For an analysis of the syntagm « better organized » through a close reading of one of Lydia Davis’ “Varieties of Disturbance”, see my “Like a Tropical Storm”: Exfoliating the Value-Form, in François Lemieux and Edith Brunette (eds.), Going to, Making Do, Passing Just the Same, Galerie Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery, Montreal, 2021, pp.165-180. ↩
- Geert Lovink and Ned Rossiter, “Propositions on the Organizational Form”, in Timon Beyes, Lisa Conrad and Reinhold Martin, Organize, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2019, p. 93; 97. ↩
- In a similar vein, the Vera List Center for Art and Politics has conducted a seminar series suggestively entitled: “As for Protocols – Holding Things Together”. veralistcenter.org/events/to-hold-things-together ↩
- This is indeed what Deleuze and Guattari have in mind when coining the term machinic: “What we term machinic is precisely this synthesis of heterogeneities as such.” Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Capitalism and Schizophrenia II: A Thousand Plateaus, Trans. By Brian Massumi, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1987, p. 330. ↩
- See The Power at the End of the Economy, p. 69–70. ↩
- The passage between the encoding of flows and their economic expression is fundamentally semiotic. It involves signs as differential or machinic operators, something that concerns directly the design of currencies. The Metacurrency project and its post-blockchain architecture, Holochain, is an interesting case in point. Starting with the idea that “the nervous systems of our organizations, governments, and economies are encoded with currencies”, Metacurrency proposes both a pluralist understanding of wealth living systems, and practical means for the design of new types of scalable, commons-oriented currencies. metacurrency.org ↩
- “Hence the code relation is not only indirect, qualitative, and limited; because of these very characteristics, it is also extraeconomic, and by virtue of this fact engineers the couplings between qualified flows. Consequently it implies a system of collective appraisal and evaluation, and a set of organs of perception, or more precisely of belief, as a condition of existence and survival of the society in question—thus the collective investment of organs that causes men to be directly coded, and the appraising eye as we have analyzed it in the primitive system.” Anti-Oedipus, p.248. ↩
- Presented at the 2018 Berlin Biennale, the film 4 waters: Deep Implicancy foregrounds the aquatic element and poetically immerses us in “a primordial moment of entanglement prior to the separation of matter evolving into the planet we know”, a time that Ferreira da Silva describes as “deep Implicancy”. e-flux.com/announcements/251881/denise-ferreira-da-silva-and-arjuna-neuman4-waters-deep-implicancy This end of the diagram could also be called “proof-of-withdrawal”, to mark the reluctance to any form of formal encapsulation of value; or “gift ecology”, foregrounding the informal spirit of speculative generosity away from its monetization or tokenization. Note that the anarchive as a processual and performative set of techniques interfacing with the arts is deeply connected with these concerns ↩
- For a longer discussion of this core tension set up in the fabulatory context of the 2038 project, see my article “After the Attention Economy: Notes toward a cosmo-financial New Serenity”, in Lukas Kubina (ed.), 2038, Sorry Press, Munich, 2021, pp.100–117. ↩
- Yves Citton, Gestes d’humanités. Anthropologie sauvage de nos expériences esthétiques, Armand Colin, Paris, 2021, p. 15. ↩
- Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, What is Philosophy? Columbia University Press, New York, 1996, p.171. On the notion of play-fighting, see Brian Massumi’s hallucinatory essay on mutual inclusion and animality, What Animals Teach us about Politics, Duke University Press, Durham, 2015. ↩
- The complete passage is a development around Gabriel Tarde’s thesis concerning a growing aestheticization of human societies: “Remembering that “the spirit “, which synthesizes our beliefs and desires, derives its etymological origin from “breath” (souffle) and is part of the same lexicon as “inspiration” and “breathing” (respiration), we could summarize the lessons of volatilization by saying that our societies are, today more than ever, aspired by the aspirations they spread in the minds of the multitudes who compose them.” Yves Citton, L’avenir des Humanités : Économie de la connaissance ou cultures de l’interprétation?, La découverte, Paris, 2010, p.34. (My translation) ↩
- P. Sloterdijk, Écumes. Sphères III, Paris, Maren Sell éditeurs, 2005, p.41 (my translation) ↩
- This space of encounter corresponds precisely to what Brian Massumi calls “the power at the end of the economy” ↩
- P. Sloterdijk, Écumes. Sphères III, Paris, Maren Sell éditeurs, 2005, p.654. (my translation) ↩
- Ibid., p. 658. ↩
- Arjun Appadurai, The Future as Cultural Fact, Verso, New York, 2013, p.188-189. The quote continues: “I am not saying that the poor cannot wish, want, need, plan, or aspire. But part of poverty is a diminishing of the circumstances in which these practices occur. If the map of aspirations (continuing the navigational metaphor) is seen to consist of a dense combination of nodes and pathways, relative poverty means a smaller number of aspirational nodes and a thinner, weaker sense of the pathways from concrete wants to intermediate contexts to general norms and back again. Where these pathways do exist for the poor, they are likely to be more rigid, less supple, and less strategically valuable, not because of any cognitive deficit on the part of the poor but because the capacity to aspire, like any complex cultural capacity, thrives and survives on practice, repetition, exploration, conjecture, and refutation.” P.189 ↩
- “A lot of the ideological work, in fact, of making a revolution was conducted precisely in the spectral nightworld of sorcerers and witches; in redefinitions of the moral implications of different forms of magical power. But this only underlines how these spectral zones are always the fulcrum of the moral imagination, a kind of creative reservoir, too, of potential revolutionary change. It’s precisely from these invisible spaces—invisible, most of all, to power—whence the potential for insurrection, and the extraordinary social creativity that seems to emerge out of nowhere in revolutionary moments, actually comes.” David Graeber, Fragments of Anarchist Anthropology, Prickly Paradigm Press, Chicago, 2004, P. 34. ↩
- Randy Martin, « A Precarious Dance, a Derivative Sociality », The Drama Review 56:4 (T216) New York University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Winter 2012, p.68 ↩
We can and we may, as it were, jump with both feet off the ground into or towards a world of which we trust the other parts to meet our jump—and only so can the making of a perfected world of pluralistic pattern ever take place. Only through our precursive trust in it can it come into being.
William James
Introduction in the form of a pitch and a loop
“Ecological awareness is weird: it has a twisted, looping form. (…) Ecological awareness is a loop because human interference has a loop form, because ecological and biological systems are loops. And ultimately this is because to exist at all is to assume the form of a loop.
[T]here are layers of attunement to ecological reality more accurate than what is habitual in the media, in the academy, and in society at large. These attunement structures are necessarily weird.”
Timothy Morton, Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence, Columbia University Press, New York, 2016, p.6, 159.
The Sphere As Lived Abstraction of Value
Leverage is the way we aim to give our fictitious projections a self-fulfilling, performative quality (…) leverage involves the effort to position oneself as the focal point of the interactive logic of speculation, as an attractor in the social field.(8)
Martijn Konings, Capital and Time: For a New Critique of Liberal Reason, Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2018, p.13-14.
“Optionality of the kind that finance illustrates is more broadly about synchronizing heterogeneous temporalities, indexing heterogeneous cultural discourses, tokenizing the relative rates of change within and among heterogeneous systems of valuing and ranking—the list could go on. Such forms of heterogeneity no longer need to be reduced to a General Equivalent if liquidity can be added through options that can index their changes to those in other, disparate, value realms.” (my emphasis) (9)
Robert Meister, Justice Is an Option. A Democratic Theory of Finance for the 21st century, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2021 (quoted from the yet unpublished manuscript).
“A magical chain brings together plant life, pieces of organs, a shred of clothing, an image of daddy, formulas and words: we shall not ask what it means, but what kind of machine is assembled in this manner—what kind of flows and breaks in the flows, in relation to other breaks and other flows.” (10)
Capitalism and Schizophrenia I: Anti-Oedipus, p.181.
The Precursive Art of Imagineering Flows
The Sphere as Digital Soul Searching
Mankind lies groaning, half crushed beneath the weight of its own progress. Men do not sufficiently realize that their future is in their own hands. Theirs is the task of determining first of all whether they want to go on living or not. Theirs the responsibility, then, for deciding if they want merely to live, or intend to make just the extra effort required for fulfilling, even on their refractory planet, the essential function of the universe, which is a machine for the making of gods.
Henri Bergson, The Two Sources of Moral and religion
“The capacity to aspire is a navigational capacity. The more privileged in any society simply have used the map of its norms to explore the future more frequently and more realistically, and to share this knowledge with one another more routinely than their poorer and weaker neighbors. The poorer members, precisely because of their lack of opportunities to practice the use of this navigational capacity (in turn because their situations permit fewer experiments and less easy archiving of alternative futures), have a more brittle horizon of aspirations.”
Arjun Appadurai, The Future as Cultural Fact, Verso, New York, 2013, p.188–189.
“It strikes me that our entire social organism—its economy, its social policy, its civil order—that these don’t implode (…) that these are held in alignment, by a yoking to this notion of the Future; and humanity, its gazed fixed on this apparition hovering just over the horizon, is thus herded along the requisite channels, its anarchic inclinations kept in check. Certainly, each brief the Company worked on, every pitch we made, involved an invocation of, a genuflection to, the Future: explaining how social media will become the new press-baronage, or suburbia the new town centre, or how emerging economies would bypass the analogue to plunge straight into the post-digital phase—using the Future to confer the seal of truth on these scenarios and assertions, making them absolute and objective simply BY placing them within this Future: that’s how we won contracts. ” (My emphasis)
Tom McCarthy, Satin Island, Penguin Random House, London, 2015, p.104-105.
- “What I mean by “strange loop” is — here goes a first stab, anyway — not a physical circuit but an abstract loop in which, in the series of stages that constitute the cycling-around, there is a shift from one level of abstraction (or structure) to another, which feels like an upwards movement in a hierarchy, and yet somehow the successive “upward” shifts turn out to give rise to a closed cycle.” (my emphasis) Douglas Hofstadter, I Am a Strange Loop, Basic Books, New York, 2007, p.101–102. ↩
- For an analysis of the syntagm « better organized » through a close reading of one of Lydia Davis’ “Varieties of Disturbance”, see my “Like a Tropical Storm”: Exfoliating the Value-Form, in François Lemieux and Edith Brunette (eds.), Going to, Making Do, Passing Just the Same, Galerie Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery, Montreal, 2021, pp.165-180. ↩
- Geert Lovink and Ned Rossiter, “Propositions on the Organizational Form”, in Timon Beyes, Lisa Conrad and Reinhold Martin, Organize, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2019, p. 93; 97. ↩
- In a similar vein, the Vera List Center for Art and Politics has conducted a seminar series suggestively entitled: “As for Protocols – Holding Things Together”. veralistcenter.org/events/to-hold-things-together ↩
- This is indeed what Deleuze and Guattari have in mind when coining the term machinic: “What we term machinic is precisely this synthesis of heterogeneities as such.” Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, Capitalism and Schizophrenia II: A Thousand Plateaus, Trans. By Brian Massumi, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 1987, p. 330. ↩
- See The Power at the End of the Economy, p. 69–70. ↩
- The passage between the encoding of flows and their economic expression is fundamentally semiotic. It involves signs as differential or machinic operators, something that concerns directly the design of currencies. The Metacurrency project and its post-blockchain architecture, Holochain, is an interesting case in point. Starting with the idea that “the nervous systems of our organizations, governments, and economies are encoded with currencies”, Metacurrency proposes both a pluralist understanding of wealth living systems, and practical means for the design of new types of scalable, commons-oriented currencies. metacurrency.org ↩
- “Hence the code relation is not only indirect, qualitative, and limited; because of these very characteristics, it is also extraeconomic, and by virtue of this fact engineers the couplings between qualified flows. Consequently it implies a system of collective appraisal and evaluation, and a set of organs of perception, or more precisely of belief, as a condition of existence and survival of the society in question—thus the collective investment of organs that causes men to be directly coded, and the appraising eye as we have analyzed it in the primitive system.” Anti-Oedipus, p.248. ↩
- Presented at the 2018 Berlin Biennale, the film 4 waters: Deep Implicancy foregrounds the aquatic element and poetically immerses us in “a primordial moment of entanglement prior to the separation of matter evolving into the planet we know”, a time that Ferreira da Silva describes as “deep Implicancy”. e-flux.com/announcements/251881/denise-ferreira-da-silva-and-arjuna-neuman4-waters-deep-implicancy This end of the diagram could also be called “proof-of-withdrawal”, to mark the reluctance to any form of formal encapsulation of value; or “gift ecology”, foregrounding the informal spirit of speculative generosity away from its monetization or tokenization. Note that the anarchive as a processual and performative set of techniques interfacing with the arts is deeply connected with these concerns ↩
- For a longer discussion of this core tension set up in the fabulatory context of the 2038 project, see my article “After the Attention Economy: Notes toward a cosmo-financial New Serenity”, in Lukas Kubina (ed.), 2038, Sorry Press, Munich, 2021, pp.100–117. ↩
- Yves Citton, Gestes d’humanités. Anthropologie sauvage de nos expériences esthétiques, Armand Colin, Paris, 2021, p. 15. ↩
- Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, What is Philosophy? Columbia University Press, New York, 1996, p.171. On the notion of play-fighting, see Brian Massumi’s hallucinatory essay on mutual inclusion and animality, What Animals Teach us about Politics, Duke University Press, Durham, 2015. ↩
- The complete passage is a development around Gabriel Tarde’s thesis concerning a growing aestheticization of human societies: “Remembering that “the spirit “, which synthesizes our beliefs and desires, derives its etymological origin from “breath” (souffle) and is part of the same lexicon as “inspiration” and “breathing” (respiration), we could summarize the lessons of volatilization by saying that our societies are, today more than ever, aspired by the aspirations they spread in the minds of the multitudes who compose them.” Yves Citton, L’avenir des Humanités : Économie de la connaissance ou cultures de l’interprétation?, La découverte, Paris, 2010, p.34. (My translation) ↩
- P. Sloterdijk, Écumes. Sphères III, Paris, Maren Sell éditeurs, 2005, p.41 (my translation) ↩
- This space of encounter corresponds precisely to what Brian Massumi calls “the power at the end of the economy” ↩
- P. Sloterdijk, Écumes. Sphères III, Paris, Maren Sell éditeurs, 2005, p.654. (my translation) ↩
- Ibid., p. 658. ↩
- Arjun Appadurai, The Future as Cultural Fact, Verso, New York, 2013, p.188-189. The quote continues: “I am not saying that the poor cannot wish, want, need, plan, or aspire. But part of poverty is a diminishing of the circumstances in which these practices occur. If the map of aspirations (continuing the navigational metaphor) is seen to consist of a dense combination of nodes and pathways, relative poverty means a smaller number of aspirational nodes and a thinner, weaker sense of the pathways from concrete wants to intermediate contexts to general norms and back again. Where these pathways do exist for the poor, they are likely to be more rigid, less supple, and less strategically valuable, not because of any cognitive deficit on the part of the poor but because the capacity to aspire, like any complex cultural capacity, thrives and survives on practice, repetition, exploration, conjecture, and refutation.” P.189 ↩
- “A lot of the ideological work, in fact, of making a revolution was conducted precisely in the spectral nightworld of sorcerers and witches; in redefinitions of the moral implications of different forms of magical power. But this only underlines how these spectral zones are always the fulcrum of the moral imagination, a kind of creative reservoir, too, of potential revolutionary change. It’s precisely from these invisible spaces—invisible, most of all, to power—whence the potential for insurrection, and the extraordinary social creativity that seems to emerge out of nowhere in revolutionary moments, actually comes.” David Graeber, Fragments of Anarchist Anthropology, Prickly Paradigm Press, Chicago, 2004, P. 34. ↩
- Randy Martin, « A Precarious Dance, a Derivative Sociality », The Drama Review 56:4 (T216) New York University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Winter 2012, p.68 ↩