Resisting Reduction: A Manifesto
https://jods.mitpress.mit.edu/pub/resisting-reduction
(via Instapaper)

Resisting Reduction

Designing our Complex Future with Machines


Review, research and editing team: Catherine Ahearn, Chia Evers, Natalie 
Saltiel, Andre Uhl

While I had long been planning to write a manifesto against the technological 
singularity and launch it into the conversational sphere for public reaction 
and comment, an invitation earlier this year from John Brockman to read and 
discuss The Human Use of Human Beings by Norbert Wiener with him and his 
illustrious group of thinkers as part of an ongoing collaborative book project 
contributed to the thoughts contained herein.

The essay below is now phase 1 of an experimental, open publishing project in 
partnership with the MIT Press. In phase 2, a new version of the essay enriched 
and informed by input from open commentary will be published online, along with 
essay length contributions by others inspired by the seed essay, as a new issue 
of the Journal of Design and Science. In phase 3, a revised and edited 
selection of these contributions will be published as a print book by the MIT 
Press.

Version 1.0

Nature’s ecosystem provides us with an elegant example of a complex adaptive 
system where myriad “currencies” interact and respond to feedback systems that 
enable both flourishing and regulation. This collaborative model–rather than a 
model of exponential financial growth or the Singularity, which promises the 
transcendence of our current human condition through advances in 
technology—should provide the paradigm for our approach to artificial 
intelligence. More than 60 years ago, MIT mathematician and philosopher Norbert 
Wiener warned us that “when human atoms are knit into an organization in which 
they are used, not in their full right as responsible human beings, but as cogs 
and levers and rods, it matters little that their raw material is flesh and 
blood.” We should heed Wiener’s warning.

INTRODUCTION: THE CANCER OF CURRENCY

As the sun beats down on Earth, photosynthesis converts water, carbon dioxide 
and the sun’s energy into oxygen and glucose. Photosynthesis is one of the many 
chemical and biological processes that transforms one form of matter and energy 
into another. These molecules then get metabolized by other biological and 
chemical processes into yet other molecules. Scientists often call these 
molecules “currencies” because they represent a form of power that is 
transferred between cells or processes to mutual benefit—“traded,” in effect. 
The biggest difference between these and financial currencies is that there is 
no “master currency” or “currency exchange.” Rather, each currency can only be 
used by certain processes, and the “market” of these currencies drives the 
dynamics that are “life.”

As certain currencies became abundant as an output of a successful process or 
organism, other organisms evolved to take that output and convert it into 
something else. Over billions of years, this is how the Earth’s ecosystem has 
evolved, creating vast systems of metabolic pathways and forming highly complex 
self-regulating systems that, for example, stabilize our body temperatures or 
the temperature of the Earth, despite continuous fluctuations and changes among 
the individual elements at every scale—from micro to macro. The output of one 
process becomes the input of another. Ultimately, everything interconnects.

We live in a civilization in which the primary currencies are money and 
power—where more often than not, the goal is to accumulate both at the expense 
of society at large. This is a very simple and fragile system compared to the 
Earth’s ecosystems, where myriads of “currencies” are exchanged among processes 
to create hugely complex systems of inputs and outputs with feedback systems 
that adapt and regulate stocks, flows, and connections.

The Paradigms Themselves
Jonathan Zittrain
Interesting to muse on whether the paradigms themselves are the result of 
natural processes—the evolutionary biologists who say that greed is somehow an 
adaptive benefit, selected for, along with some threads of cooperation—and yet 
unlike with Darwin's evolution, this has propelled us towards a dead end...
Unfortunately, our current human civilization does not have the built-in 
resilience of our environment, and the paradigms that set our goals and drive 
the evolution of society today have set us on a dangerous course which the 
mathematician Norbert Wiener warned us about decades ago. The paradigm of a 
single master currency has driven many corporations and institutions to lose 
sight of their original missions. Values and complexity are focused more and 
more on prioritizing exponential financial growth, led by for-profit corporate 
entities that have gained autonomy, rights, power, and nearly unregulated 
societal influence. The behavior of these entities are akin to cancers. Healthy 
cells regulate their growth and respond to their surroundings, even eliminating 
themselves if they wander into an organ where they don’t belong. Cancerous 
cells, on the other hand, optimize for unconstrained growth and spread with 
disregard to their function or context.

THE WHIP THAT LASHES US

The idea that we exist for the sake of progress, and that progress requires 
unconstrained and exponential growth, is the whip that lashes us. Modern 
companies are the natural product of this paradigm in a free-market capitalist 
system. Norbert Wiener called corporations “machines of flesh and blood” and 
automation “machines of metal.” The new species of Silicon Valley mega 
companies—the machines of bits—are developed and run in great part by people 
who believe in a new religion, Singularity. This new religion is not a 
fundamental change in the paradigm, but rather the natural evolution of the 
worship of exponential growth applied to modern computation and science. The 
asymptote1 of the exponential growth of computational power is artificial 
intelligence.

The notion of Singularity—that AI will supercede humans with its exponential 
growth, and that everything we have done until now and are currently doing is 
insignificant—is a religion created by people who have the experience of using 
computation to solve problems heretofore considered impossibly complex for 
machines. They have found a perfect partner in digital computation—a knowable, 
controllable, system of thinking and creating that is rapidly increasing in its 
ability to harness and process complexity, bestowing wealth and power on those 
who have mastered it. In Silicon Valley, the combination of groupthink and the 
financial success of this cult of technology has created a positive feedback 
system that has very little capacity for regulating through negative feedback. 
While they would resist having their beliefs compared to a religion and would 
argue that their ideas are science- and evidence-based, those who embrace 
Singularity engage in quite a bit of arm waving and make leaps of faith based 
more on trajectories than ground-truths to achieve their ultimate vision.

Singularitarians believe that the world is “knowable” and computationally 
simulatable, and that computers will be able to process the messiness of the 
real world just like they have every other problem that everyone said couldn’t 
be solved by computers. To them, this wonderful tool, the computer, has worked 
so well for everything so far that it must continue to work for every challenge 
we throw at it, until we have transcended known limitations and ultimately 
achieve some sort of reality escape velocity. Artificial intelligence is 
already displacing humans in driving cars, diagnosing cancers, and researching 
court documents. The idea is that AI will continue this progress and eventually 
merge with human brains and become an all-seeing, all-powerful, 
super-intelligence. For true believers, computers will augment and extend our 
thoughts into a kind of “amortality.” (Part of Singularity is a fight for 
“amortality,” the idea that while one may still die and not be immortal, the 
death is not the result of the grim reaper of aging.)

But if corporations are a precursor to our transcendance, the Singularitarian 
view that with more computing and bio-hacking we will somehow solve all of the 
world’s problems or that the Singularity will solve us seems hopelessly naive. 
As we dream of the day when we have enhanced brains and amortality and can 
think big, long thoughts, corporations already have a kind of “amortality.” 
They persist as long as they are solvent and they are more than a sum of their 
parts—arguably an amortal super-intelligence.

More computation does not makes us more “intelligent,” only more 
computationally powerful.

For Singularity to have a positive outcome requires a belief that, given enough 
power, the system will somehow figure out how to regulate itself. The final 
outcome would be so complex that while we humans couldn’t understand it now, 
“it” would understand and “solve” itself. Some believe in something that looks 
a bit like the former Soviet Union’s master planning but with full information 
and unlimited power. Others have a more sophisticated view of a distributed 
system, but at some level, all Singularitarians believe that with enough power 
and control, the world is “tamable.” Not all who believe in Singularity worship 
it as a positive transcendence bringing immortality and abundance, but they do 
believe that a judgment day is coming when all curves go vertical.

Whether you are on an S-curve or a bell curve, the beginning of the slope looks 
a lot like an exponential curve. An exponential curve to systems dynamics 
people shows self-reinforcement, i.e., a positive feedback curve without 
limits. Maybe this is what excites Singularitarians and scares systems people. 
Most people outside the singularity bubble believe in S-curves, namely that 
nature adapts and self-regulates and that even pandemics will run their course. 
Pandemics may cause an extinction event, but growth will slow and things will 
adapt. They may not be in the same state, and a phase change could occur, but 
the notion of Singularity—especially as some sort of savior or judgment day 
that will allow us to transcend the messy, mortal suffering of our human 
existence—is fundamentally a flawed one.

This sort of reductionist thinking isn’t new. When BF Skinner discovered the 
principle of reinforcement and was able to describe it, we designed education 
around his theories. Learning scientists know now that behaviorist approaches 
only work for a narrow range of learning, but many schools continue to rely on 
drill and practice. Take, as another example, the eugenics movement, which 
greatly and incorrectly over-simplified the role of genetics in society. This 
movement helped fuel the Nazi genocide by providing a reductionist scientific 
view that we could “fix humanity” by manually pushing natural selection. The 
echoes of the horrors of eugenics exist today, making almost any research 
trying to link genetics with things like intelligence taboo.

We should learn from our history of applying over-reductionist science to 
society and try to, as Wiener says, “cease to kiss the whip that lashes us.” 
While it is one of the key drivers of science—to elegantly explain the complex 
and reduce confusion to understanding—we must also remember what Albert 
Einstein said, “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no 
simpler.”2 We need to embrace the unknowability—the irreducibility—of the real 
world that artists, biologists and those who work in the messy world of liberal 
arts and humanities are familiar with.

WE ARE ALL PARTICIPANTS

The Cold War era, when Wiener was writing The Human Use of Human Beings, was a 
time defined by the rapid expansion of capitalism and consumerism, the 
beginning of the space race, and the coming of age of computation. It was a 
time when it was easier to believe that systems could be controlled from the 
outside, and that many of the world’s problems would be solved through science 
and engineering.

SERVE
Yo-Yo Ma
Seed, Energize, Reach, Verify, Evolve: SERVE.Goal of all art forms, 
disciplines, leaders. To benefit mankind. Our biological and cultural 
imperative.
The cybernetics that Wiener primarily described during that period were 
concerned with feedback systems that can be controlled or regulated from an 
objective perspective. This so-called first-order cybernetics assumed that the 
scientist as the observer can understand what is going on, therefore enabling 
the engineer to design systems based on observation or insight from the 
scientist.

Today, it is much more obvious that most of our problems—climate change, 
poverty, obesity and chronic disease, or modern terrorism—cannot be solved 
simply with more resources and greater control. That is because they are the 
result of complex adaptive systems that are often the result of the tools used 
to solve problems in the past, such as endlessly increasing productivity and 
attempts to control things. This is where second-order cybernetics comes into 
play—the cybernetics of self-adaptive complex systems, where the observer is 
also part of the system itself. As Kevin Slavin says in Design as 
Participation, “You’re Not Stuck In Traffic—You Are Traffic.”3

Fitness Landscapes
Martin Nowak
Joi,You write beautifully. What you say about evolution is perfect.Fitness 
landscapes arise when you assign a fitness value for every genotype. The 
genotypes are arranged in a high-dimensional sequence space. The fitness 
landscape is a function on that sequence space. In evolutionary dynamics, a 
biological population moves over a fitness landscape driven by mutation, 
selection and random drift. (This is the case of what I call constant 
selection.) In a game the fitness landscape changes as the population moves 
over it.Please take a look at figure 1 here (this is also a good 
citation):http://ped.fas.harvard.edu/files/ped/files/science04_0.pdfFitness 
landscapes are also described in my book “Evolutionary dynamics” (Harvard 
University Press 2006), which you can cite.
In order to effectively respond to the significant scientific challenges of our 
times, I believe we must view the world as many interconnected, complex, 
self-adaptive systems across scales and dimensions that are unknowable and 
largely inseparable from the observer and the designer. In other words, we are 
participants in multiple evolutionary systems with different fitness 
landscapes4 at different scales, from our microbes to our individual identities 
to society and our species. Individuals themselves are systems composed of 
systems of systems, such as the cells in our bodies that behave more like 
system-level designers than we do.

While Wiener does discuss biological evolution and the evolution of language, 
he doesn’t explore the idea of harnessing evolutionary dynamics for science. 
Biological evolution of individual species (genetic evolution) has been driven 
by reproduction and survival, instilling in us goals and yearnings to procreate 
and grow. That system continually evolves to regulate growth, increase 
diversity and complexity, and enhance its own resilience, adaptability, and 
sustainability.5 As designers with growing awareness of these broader systems, 
we have goals and methodologies defined by the evolutionary and environmental 
inputs from our biological and societal contexts. But machines with emergent 
intelligence have discernibly different goals and methodologies. As we 
introduce machines into the system, they will not only augment individual 
humans, but they will also—and more importantly—augment complex systems as a 
whole.

Here is where the problematic formulation of “artificial intelligence” becomes 
evident, as it suggests forms, goals and methods that stand outside of 
interaction with other complex adaptive systems. Instead of thinking about 
machine intelligence in terms of humans vs. machines, we should consider the 
system that integrates humans and machines—not artificial intelligence, but 
extended intelligence. Instead of trying to control or design or even 
understand systems, it is more important to design systems that participate as 
responsible, aware and robust elements of even more complex systems. And we 
must question and adapt our own purpose and sensibilities as designers and 
components of the system for a much more humble approach: Humility over Control.

We could call it “participant design”—design of systems as and by 
participants—that is more akin to the increase of a flourishing function, where 
flourishing is a measure of vigor and health rather than scale or power. We can 
measure the ability for systems to adapt creatively, as well as their 
resilience and their ability to use resources in an interesting way.

Better interventions are less about solving or optimizing and more about 
developing a sensibility appropriate to the environment and the time. In this 
way they are more like music than an algorithm. Music is about a sensibility or 
“taste” with many elements coming together into a kind of emergent order. 
Instrumentation can nudge or cause the system to adapt or move in an 
unpredictable and unprogrammed manner, while still making sense and holding 
together. Using music itself as an intervention is not a new idea; in 1707, 
Andrew Fletcher, a Scottish writer and politician, said, “Let me make the songs 
of a nation, I care not who makes its laws.”

If writing songs instead of laws feels frivolous, remember that songs typically 
last longer than laws, have played key roles in various hard and soft 
revolutions and end up being transmitted person-to-person along with the values 
they carry. It's not about music or code. It's about trying to affect change by 
operating at the level songs do. This is articulated by Donella Meadows, among 
others, in her book Thinking in Systems.


Meadows, in her essay Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System, 
describes how we can intervene in a complex, self-adaptive system. For her, 
interventions that involve changing parameters or even changing the rules are 
not nearly as powerful or as fundamental as changes in a system’s goals and 
paradigms.

When Wiener discussed our worship of progress, he said:

Those who uphold the idea of progress as an ethical principle regard this 
unlimited and quasi-spontaneous process of change as a Good Thing, and as the 
basis on which they guarantee to future generations a Heaven on Earth. It is 
possible to believe in progress as a fact without believing in progress as an 
ethical principle; but in the catechism of many Americans, the one goes with 
the other.6

Instead of discussing “sustainability” as something to be “solved” in the 
context of a world where bigger is still better and more than enough is NOT too 
much, perhaps we should examine the values and the currencies of the fitness 
functions7 and consider whether they are suitable and appropriate for the 
systems in which we participate.

CONCLUSION: A CULTURE OF FLOURISHING

Developing a sensibility and a culture of flourishing, and embracing a diverse 
array of measures of “success” depend less on the accumulation of power and 
resources and more on diversity and the richness of experience. This is the 
paradigm shift that we need. This will provide us with a wealth of 
technological and cultural patterns to draw from to create a highly adaptable 
society. This diversity also allows the elements of the system to feed each 
other without the exploitation and extraction ethos created by a monoculture 
with a single currency. It is likely that this new culture will spread as 
music, fashion, spirituality or other forms of art.

As a native Japanese, I am heartened by a group of junior high school students 
I spoke to there recently who, when I challenged them about what they thought 
we should do about the environment, asked questions about the meaning of 
happiness and the role of humans in nature. I am likewise heartened to see many 
of my students at the MIT Media Lab and in the Principles of Awareness class 
that I co-teach with the Venerable Tenzin Priyadarshi using a variety of 
metrics (currencies) to measure their success and meaning and grappling 
directly with the complexity of finding one’s place in our complex world.

Timely
Yo-Yo Ma and Ryan Tanaka
This is brilliant, sophisticated, timely. Question, what do you want to do with 
this manifesto? Socio-economic political cultural movement? To begin with, who 
do you want to read this? In what spaces?I know people who are working on this 
on the political side. I am interested in the arts and sciences ie buildable 
memory cultural side.
Don’t know if people would agree with my conclusions here, but I’ve been 
working on developing my music in relation to housing issues around the Bay 
Area recently.I believe that it’s important for us to develop a sensibility for 
diversity not just as an abstract exercise, but in ways that reflect our day to 
day lives. We’re in need of new visions of how we plan to co-exist with one 
another, and I do think that artists have the ability to pave the way here in 
very real 
ways.https://medium.com/yes-in-my-blog-yes/towards-an-aesthetic-of-an-high-density-society-5cf5e2e82399
I’m also heartened by organizations such as the IEEE, which is initiating 
design guidelines for the development of artificial intelligence around human 
wellbeing instead of around economic impact. The work by Peter Seligman, 
Christopher Filardi, and Margarita Mora from Conservation International is 
creative and exciting because it approaches conservation by supporting the 
flourishing of indigenous people—not undermining it. Another heartening example 
is that of the Shinto priests at Ise Shrine, who have been planting and 
rebuilding the shrine every twenty years for the last 1300 years in celebration 
of the renewal and the cyclical quality of nature.

In the 1960s and 70s, the hippie movement tried to pull together a “whole 
earth” movement, but then the world swung back toward the consumer and 
consumption culture of today. I hope and believe that a new awakening will 
happen and that a new sensibility will cause a nonlinear change in our behavior 
through a cultural transformation. While we can and should continue to work at 
every layer of the system to create a more resilient world, I believe the 
cultural layer is the layer with the most potential for a fundamental 
correction away from the self-destructive path that we are currently on. I 
think that it will yet again be about the music and the arts of the young 
people reflecting and amplifying a new sensibility: a turn away from greed to a 
world where “more than enough is too much,” and we can flourish in harmony with 
Nature rather than through the control of it.



Sent from my iPhone

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