Dear all

that's a text of mine published for the next Moneylab concerning the
question on Money and Value in a broader political prospective.


https://networkcultures.org/moneylab/

Emanuele Braga: Common Intelligence

When the world’s on fire, it will not be an artificial intelligence that
puts it out. What is needed is a common intelligence, a use of technology
that can build a non-oppressed social body. What's beyond the apocalyptic
singularity daughter of the anthropocene? What's beyond the technological
drift that destroys energy resources?

Social cooperation must be radically rethought and must distance itself
from the modern project as an exasperation of control through the technical
domain on nature and bios. We need to better understand how large-scale
social cooperation is destroying the planet, creating economic
inequalities, and the power of life and death along the lines of gender and
race.

The social cooperation that is destroying the planet and reproducing
exploitation processes on multiple levels is inscribed in our bodies. We
want to travel around the world with airplanes, have a big car, devote so
much attention to the luminous screens of our social devices, we want these
techniques of construction of social cooperation. But these same techniques
control us, impoverish us, make us sad and put the Amazon on fire. This
ontological contradiction is interesting to me. Why do we value what
oppresses us?

Let’s follow an unconventional methodology. This essay aims to be an
exercise in sharing questions and references. I will try to define the
boundaries of a struggle and identify its possible alliances.

What do we value?

Talking about value is not just an issue of money, finance, logistics, work
automation and the cost of living. Talking about value also means talking
about what interests us. It’s a question of body and subjectivity.
Something acquires a value that we are willing to pay, only starting from
the fact that we want it. We are willing to pay to realize ourselves, to
build our future, to escape from our anxieties and fears, to satisfy our
needs. In this sense, a question to start with is how does our desire work?

In 1970 Pierre Klossowski writes La monnaie vivante (The Living Currency)
In it he makes an important reading of the relationship between sexuality
and capitalism. Klossowski puts the theory of value in direct relation to
the theory of desire. Michel Foucault will write a letter to Klossowski in
which he greets the manuscript as the most important text of the 20th
century. In reading this text are these questions: what do we value? Why
are we willing to work, to struggle and make all the sacrifices we make?
And why is the value we give to things a social experience? That is to say,
why does the desire to do something, give importance to something, define
an economy, a circulation of values? But above all, why do those who
acquire value are objects, needs, hopes, future scenarios, political
projects, or an equivalent as abstract as that of money? Why in the face of
the need to satisfy our impulses, which are different, amoral, libidinal,
inconsistent, non-negotiable, do we construct objects, social
architectures, fantasies of every kind in which we identify ourselves?

Klossowski says that each of us is made up of a multiplicity of impulses
that we cannot keep together. These impulses are contradictory and
changeable, so instead of satisfying them we create ghosts, fictitious
identities, to which we dedicate our whole life to satisfy. Instead of
satisfying the multiplicity of our impulses, we build phantoms or
fantasies, which we later wish to achieve.

A blind faith in technology

According to Klossowski, imagination always creates a debt. The concepts of
fantasy, phantasm and fiction are directly connected to the concept of
debt. We invest in an object the expectation of what we do not have.
Capitalism, which is not stupid, transforms desire into induced needs. We
thus find ourselves wishing for a series of things to which we will
dedicate our whole life, like a job, a series of objects and lifestyles
that we cannot do without having or achieving. This imaginative force, this
collective production of ghosts / fictions and the circulation of desire is
what creates an enormous debt, to which we dedicate all our life and that
of future generations to repay. And that's why we love, we want a good job,
beautiful cars and beautiful women, being famous, social fictions that bind
us and suddenly become undisputed social needs. Even Maurizio Lazzarato in
La fabbrica dell 'uomo in debitato, describes the debt as a permanent
anthropological situation that defines the existence of the post-Fordist
person. The imperative of having to repay a debt in order to be able to be
successful, and the production of subjectivity that derives from it, in
hindsight, has its roots more in religion than in secular political
economy: "Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors ”. In the Our
Father (Lord’s prayer), the most important Christian prayer, salvation is
invoked in proportion to our ability to repay debts. And, again as
Lazzarato points out, in German there is only one word to define both guilt
and debt: “Schuld”.

In modernist design, while fantasy creates a debt to the real, technology
shows how to implement it. In short, capitalism transforms desire into the
naturalization of certain needs, and need transforms desire into a
functional program. This is how we move from a series of non-negotiable
impulses to a functional program that defines what is useful to do.
For this reason, there is no opposition between faith, trust, cooperation
and technology. It is necessary to have faith and to cooperate (to obey the
same protocols) to implement the program. In the modernist project faith in
a collective project that must be realized goes hand in hand with the
social algorithms we need to implement it.

In The Question Concerning Technology in China: An Essay in Cosmotechnics,
Yuk Hui places Western thought at the end of the path undertaken with the
Enlightenment project, characterized by the invention of the role of
science and technology as opposed to that of nature. Mathematics and
technique are the place where humanity can dominate/defend/control and
rationalize the bios. The project is about to finish, in his opinion,
because humanity at the end of this program dissolves in the technical
aspects. Humanity realizes that it is nothing more than an algorithm and
that around it there are much faster and much more powerful algorithms,
which it will no longer be able to control. The Enlightenment project of
determining nature through science leads to the predominance of technical
singularity.

Yuval Noah Harari writes in Homus Deus that we are at a crossroads between
techno-humanism and dataism. In the first scenario, we try to broaden the
perceptive boundaries of the human species, increasing horizons through
technological control. Dataism, on the other hand, is the religion to come,
in which organic algorithms will dissolve in the flow of digital data and
processors. Everything suggests that if in the past fantasy gave meaning to
things and their functioning, now technology can transform every fantasy
into reality and everything has lost its meaning. But are we so sure that
the dichotomy between bodies, relational fabric, organic unity on the one
hand, and technology, datafication and artificial intelligence on the
other, is so clear?

Social cooperation is a techno-fiction

Matteo Pasquinelli in 3000 Years of Algorithmic Rituals: The Emergence of
AI from the computation of Space recalls the image of the Agnicayana Indian
rituals where the God shatters into pieces. The ritual consisted of the
spatial reconstruction of the fragmented body of the God. The algorithm is
this procedure in which the spatial division into units of measurement is
ritualized. It is not unlike the first Artificial Intelligence prototypes
in which a machine transforms space into processable units. This is the
case of Perceptron (Frank Rosenblatt), the first artificial intelligence
prototype to translate a real image into computable patterns.

I am in the Salt Museum of Trapani, Sicily where a guide explains to me how
the extraction of salt from seawater worked for centuries. Until fifty
years ago, workers worked hard in the sun singing all day to remove salt
clods from the soil of the tanks and transport them to the drying areas.
They sang together a song that had the function of counting the baskets of
salt. At the same time, the singing kept the rhythm of the gathering action
and each refrain progressively declared how many baskets were filled with
salt. The chief supervisor, when he heard an entire round of verse ending,
knew that 24 buckets had been harvested and marked an extra notch on a
leather strap tied to his belly. In this way, at the end of the day, the
piece rate was calculated, that is proportional to the amount of salt
collected. The salary was distributed equally among all the workers in the
group, because the value produced was the result of a cooperative work. The
more we sweated at the same time, the more we earned at the end of the day.
This is an example of how a pre-industrial algorithm defines a production
process and how singing can be its calculation tool and, finally, how the
story is rich in different patterns of attribution of the value produced.
Social cooperation has always invented algorithms that transform the
workforce into informational data and value units. The repetition of these
protocols is a ritual that attributes and distributes linguistic values and
meanings. In the Roman Empire, salt was used as a currency to pay for work
and the word (from the Latin salis = sale) Salary as a pay of labour seems
to derive from these rituals.

I'm sitting in a room full of people. Paul B. Preciado starts a conference
in an art centre in Milan and says that first of all he wants to ask us a
question: what's the matter? What's going on? What is happening is that
necro-capitalism is implementing through technology a definition program of
the bios and does so by trying to define the concept of nature, as a
fiction-politics of domination. It refers to the definition of the concept
of gender difference, the definition, the restriction, the simplification
of what a man is and what a woman is, and the control over reproduction
exemplifies the various processes of individuation that operates the
techno-fiction policy. For Preciado, we have all always been built by
technologies as subjects. The political action we must take is to become
aware of what techno-political fictions we are constituted. This is the
point. And in this opening there is the possibility of building new
alliances and assemblages. Science is the new ideology, science is the new
religion. Because science through the definition of a program, selects the
fantasies in which to believe, and consequently the economy of our desire.

The oppressed is always under the carpet

Another important aspect of this construction of the fiction domain is the
process of invisibility of the oppressed. Why doesn't it work that Marilyn
Monroe is a slave? Klossowski asks himself. Because Marilyn sells the
simulacrum of the female to be desired. Marylin sells her body and cannot
sell that anything else, as a fictional construction, transformed by
Hollywood industry into a normalizing need for millions of spectators. The
point is that it would not work in the same way if the truth were revealed,
it would not be the same charm if it were treated as a slave.

In 2019, Italian feminists launched the demonstration on 8 March, focusing
on the concept of strike from unpaid care work and free labor. I know to be
hired as a saleswoman / caregiver / housewife / mother / teacher / scholar
because the construction of my body produces the political fiction of the
charming/nurturing/submissive/intelligent woman ..., I know what that I am
obliged to do, but for which I am not paid, it is this work of socially
useful care. And this care work is invisible, unpaid, unrecognized. This
implicit pact of oppression constructs this political fiction that produces
recognized but unpaid value. And it does not matter that it is also crossed
by rebellion, struggle, resistance and conflict. If you don't give me a
smile I'll quit. In a similar way, Preciado creates the concept of
techno-patriarchal baroque: "the result of the exercise of politics
conceived as the sovereignty of a single body over the totality of the
planet". Baroque as the aesthetics of colonization, the baroque that hides
the process of oppression and dispossession. The Baroque is the excess of
"gold to show" to hide the oppressed.

This process of extracting value from reproductive aspects not recognized
as "commonly understood work" has become for many commentators the true
figure of our time. In other words, traditional capitalism has turned into
bio-capitalism, that is, into a process of financialization of social
reproduction. And for the most part, a social reproduction normalized by a
techno-political exercise that makes the oppression invisible in favor of a
bright oiled, and techno-futuristic baroque aesthetic.

In Art After Money Money After Art, Max Haiven analyses a similar process
of financialization in artistic production. Contemporary artists are mostly
slaves (low paid) at work to create simulacra, or objects that feed
techno-political fictions. In the same way, the attitude to produce
fictions and artistic narratives has spread within the society that needs
more and more of a continuous creative information flow. As Gregory
Sholette describes well with the concept of Dark Matter, the artistic
creative production in the contemporary world has a huge invisible,
non-visible weight, similar to the dark matter of which most of the
universe is made, which reproduces the social body daily. The processes of
financialization of art tend to capitalize on this value in the listing of
few artists, treated as visible and glittering stars in the firmament, but
which, on closer inspection, acquire value due to the continuous work of
cultural production dispersed in society. Contemporary society makes us
want to be creative, we cannot fail to be creative (Paolo Virno, Grammar of
the Multitude), but this work of normative subjectification is not paid
and, consequently, for a process of financialization, the value of this
social function is expropriated and valued in a few luxury circuits. Again
the baroque gold that hides new forms of oppression.

What’s to be done?

For the avoidance of doubt, I believe it is impossible to leave the world,
that is to say, to exit from techno-political social cooperation. Preciado
says that to reject the baroque techno patriarchy, that is to reject the
power of life and death exercised by the sovereignty of a single body over
the totality of the planet, it is necessary to "open the pill, decode the
technologies that produce the political fictions that we believe to be”. We
need to open the black box in which it is written how we were programmed
and constructed as subjects.

In other words, we must dis-identify from the baroque normative
financialization processes. We must assemble new common fictions, reprogram
ourselves differently. We must build body. But the construction of a
fiction of another body is slow. How can we embody this process of hacking
the oppressed subject? How to give body to a Common intelligence?

Klossowski commenting on the work of Sade and Fourier says that what is
monetized is the value that social fictions create, money finally is
nothing but ghost traffic. To get out of this type of trade, it is
necessary to create other societies (and other circuits of value. For the
first, they are the society of friends of crime while, for Fourier, the
architecture of the Harmony Society. Although in a different way, for both
the treatment has a common trait: it is necessary to control in a communal
way how the desire turns into need, it is necessary to empty the ghost. The
common trait of these cited cases is that the point of attack is in the
technical construction of a body, a techno-political, architectural
construction, a heretical, conflictual, sick, shapeless body, depraved,
undermined and therefore resistant to patriarchy but, at the same time
constituent,
revolutionary movement. The concept that we have developed within the
Commons movement starting from Italian movements has many features in
common with this type of political analysis. The point is undoubtedly to
conceive a form of common management of resources, both energy and data,
capable of hacking monopolies (the unique body of the natural ruler).

Developing this program better, we realized that on one hand the common
could only be an ongoing process: the commons are not already "given in
kind" but are a "commoning" process: it was not a question of finding
another utopian model, but to be within a constituent process. Common
Intelligence could not have an architecture, a static form, but an
architecture of a process that modifies itself over time and in conflict.

I therefore believe that a Common Intelligence means to understand in a
single movement the stakes of autonomy with that of automation. On the one
hand, we do not want to give up the steering wheel (or womb) to an
artificial intelligence, as much as we cannot think of not being
techno-political subjects. The real question that is pressing on the
contemporary is how the self-organization of non-normed bodies can
technically automate social cooperation.

In my experience of self-organization of artists and groups of activists
that make up the Macao assembly in Milan, of which I am a part, this point
was the field in my opinion most dense with experimentation. First, we
tried to work on the governance protocols of the assembly and of the
self-organization processes. We worked on the rules of accessibility to
decision-making processes, on the relationship between centralization and
decentralization, on the ways in which rules can be modified, on how to
manage conflict or recognition with the authorities that are outside the
organization, on how to interface our system with other systems.

In short, we have tried to give answers to questions that are more or less
shared in between countless other self-organized groups of people. With the
Commoncoin project we then put the issue of value at the centre. Commoncoin
is a pattern of attribution and distribution of heretical value that
regulates internal cooperation within the organization. Commoncoin is also
a digital currency that uses a technological protocol to be able to
transact money, but it is above all a self-organized algorithm that is
constantly being discussed, which defines the value we give to our
resources.

By designing this algorithm, which is nothing more than an automated
protocol of economic behavior, the assembly decided to create a euro fund
to be redistributed equally among the members as income, regardless of how
you decide to spend your time. This decision was politically deeply felt
and discussed. And it has strongly disconnected the quality of time spent
by the money received in return. No time is invested in the organization to
make money because the money that the organization collects are no longer
proportionally distributed to what works. To demonstrate membership in
social cooperation in the organization, members can invent unconventional
attributions of value.

For example, a member can tell the community that it believes it has
produced social value by participating in queer meetings, dedicating itself
to a friendship, participating in a political demonstration, being an
asylum seeker, as much as having performed more managerial tasks. In this
way, a monster organization is created in which common intelligence values
idleness, the fact of having suffered for the tortures just suffered in
Libya, listening to other passing committees, as well as the skill of an
artist. of a programmer and to those who take care of throwing out the
garbage when the concert is over. Because people want to understand (even
in the conflict) what is important for another, we agree to redistribute an
equal income that allows us to take this time of cooperation and
complicity. It is a radical finance project, because the currency itself is
emptied of value, rather it becomes the gateway to discover what is really
important. Let's try to control in a communal way how the desire turns into
need, to empty the ghost by triggering algorithms of the common.

Our social life is a techno-political subject. Society has always organized
itself around body building techniques. What we value and we desire has
always been linked to a fictional construction technology. The protocols
that govern these organizations are social algorithms, as they automate
protocols of cooperative behavior. The techniques of patriarchal
domination, in which a sovereign decides which type of body has the right
to life and death determines (standardizes) the economy of desire within
social cooperation. To regulate the economy of desire means to limit the
field of fictions to which we can give value. To regulate a given
circulation of values, a techno-political financialization is established
through the invisibility of the oppressed and a social division of labor.
The field of greatest invisibility and current financialization is social
reproduction and care work. The oppressed is who wants another fiction. The
oppressed is transsexual, homosexual, migrant, precarious, air and mineral
resources, intensive farm animals, agricultural mono-cultures and burning
forests.

There is no neutral Artificial Intelligence, a bio-technological project or
a Social Network to which to entrust the construction of our bodies and
energy resources. The technologies of the domain show reassuring luminous
screens to hide and render invisible the oppression. Common intelligence
always starts from recognizing the way we are built and from a process of
disidentification. It represents our ability to create transversal
alliances to build our techno-political body. Common intelligence automates
autonomy, it is the constituent space of non-standardized algorithms, in
which the circulation of desire is self-organized.
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