[iDC] Oh Yeah? Well, Magic Still Stinks,
and It's Stunk for a Long Time
Bruce Sterling
bruces at well.com
Wed Oct 11 07:37:02 EDT 2006
Well, if one wants to re-define "magic" as biological and cognitive
phenomena that are really complicated, inherently chaotic and
emergent, and not reducible to bombastic reductionist absolutism (in
the way Natalie does, rather elegantly I must say), then we don't
have an argument. That's not the "magic" that stinks. That's
material reality which is difficult to test. I agree that it exists
and is very important, but I object to resorting to superstition in
order to name that.
I can't predict where the bubbles will rise in boiling oatmeal, and
neither can anyone else, but it's vapid to choose to call that
"magic." Why even employ that term? Why go there? You might as
well invoke the Flying Spaghetti Monster.
I have a rather less Jesuitically contorted approach to "magic." I
don't think magic has got much to do with deterministic chaos,
complex technosocial sense-making, situatedness, symbolic
interactionism, or diversity campaigning. I bow to none in my
fondness for complex technosocial sense-making -- (I mean, that's
what I'm doing right now, when I ought to be doing something else)
-- but I think magic is hocus-pocus and I think it stinks.
If you're way, way into technology, but you're also oozing a weird
tide of magic newage, these people are your spiritual ancestors.
TECHGNOSIS by Erik Davis
Amazon.com: TechGnosis: Myth, Magic, and Mysticism in the Age of
Information: by Erik Davis.
www.amazon.com/ TechGnosis-Myth-Magic-Mysticism-Information/dp/
060980474X
www.techgnosis.com/
Techgnosis
In turn, TechGnosis also shows how the language and ideas of the
information society ...
All techgnostics should read this fine tome of Erik's. Really.
You'll thank me. You'll find all kinds of marvels in here --
visionary guys and gals who used the telegraph for spiritualist table-
rapping, Crowleyite jet-propulsion freaks, wow, amazing stuff,
amazing people. Of course, they've mostly been long-forgotten. Not
because they were cruelly repressed by reductionist Gradgrinds who
couldn't appreciate their situated ethics or tender poetry, however.
They vanished because they were cranks. Cranks by their nature are
auto-marginalizing.
If you're a crank, then you swan through life empowered your own
intuitions, unhampered by feedback from objective reality. You don't
have to conjure up rationalist conspiracies in order to find yourself
unheard. You're a crank, and you're a flake. Eventually, no one
will listen. Actually, they'll listen pretty eagerly, and then
they'll try to do something useful with the so-called knowledge
you're generating, and they'll come to grief. Then they'll not only
forget you, but kinda resent you.
Palmistry and astrology are still pretty well whipping along, mostly
because they just tell people to do stuff they were gonna do anyway.
However, the magic practices that actually invade science and tech,
like say Lysenkoists preaching Marxist liberation to barley so that
it involves into wheat, well, they do tend to crumble into dust.
Lysenko doesn't smell of roses. Lysenko stinks.
I wouldn't claim that magic is some kind of big crisis. I'm
definitely a pro-science rationalist empiricist pragmatist
posthumanist rationalist secularist type, but I'm not gonna run
around beating up techgnostic magicians. They're great copy, they've
got a nice spangly sci-fi feel to them, and sooner or later they'll
cheerily destroy their own credibility without any effort from me.
That isn't what I'd consider a serious problem.
We're not seeing any hot Two Cultures combat between stoic
masculinist engineering types and tender soulful magic poets. That's
just not in the cards right now, not what's going down at this era
in time. Instead, we're seeing massive, global culture war launched
against every form of enlightened behavior by heavily armed,
fanatical fundamentalists. These are guys who read one book, one
sacred book alone, swallow every contradictory screed in it, and then
launch imperial wars and blow themselves to shreds right in the
shopping malls.
If you're really upset about ontological imperialism from the
arrogant scientific set, then you've got a major ally: Leon Kass, the
architect of stem cell policy and the head of the President's Council
on Bio-ethics. While civilized ontological feminists are sipping
tea and logic-chopping, this guy's actually cutting the science
budgets. That's serious. Meanwhile, in the basement next door, Exxon-
Mobil is spewing carbon monoxide fumes all over the climate-science
findings. That's serious, too -- very serious. Compared to these
massive predators, Aleister Crowley the Great Beast is like some kind
of lab-hamster.
So, I think there's a moral issue here. If you're a pop musician or
an actress, it's kind of cute to declare that you really, really
believe in real magic. It's got a nice period Woodstocky feel. But
it is corny, and, as a method of describing emergent technologies,
"magic" is just way too easy -- it's fatuous, like telling a little
kid that Santa Claus brought her the presents.
Worse yet, if you're techno-intelligentsia in a time of violent
Lysenkoism and you are promulgating magic, you're in complicity with
the dark side of the force. Because you're a minor obscurantist in
an era of major ones.
And yeah, that kinda stinks.
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