Re: Accelerationism, Prometheanism, and Posthumans

2016-05-05 Thread Brian Holmes

On 05/04/2016 11:13 PM, Frederic Neyrat wrote:


Excerpts from the Accelerationist Manifesto:

"We declare that only a Promethean politics of maximal mastery over
society and its environment is capable of either dealing with global
problems or achieving victory over capital."

"We believe it must also include recovering the dreams which transfixed
many from the middle of the Nineteenth Century until the dawn of the
neoliberal era, of the quest of Homo Sapiens towards expansion beyond
the limitations of the earth and our immediate bodily forms."


These are definitely the worst parts of the Accelerationist Manifesto 
and they're influenced in particular by the theory-fiction guru Nick 
Land. Although the term itself seems to have been coined by Benjamin 
Noys, Land is at the origin of accelerationism, via a reference to the 
Anti-Oedipus on the subversive potential of speeded-up capitalism 
('going even further with deterritorialization" etc). Land must be a 
fascinating and charismatic figure as paens to him and his Cybernetic 
Cultures Research Unit abounded - until recently, when he bacame a 
self-professed neo-reactionary:


http://www.thedarkenlightenment.com/the-dark-enlightenment-by-nick-land

Srnicek and Williams tried to turn the science-fiction energy in a 
different direction, toward a lucid version of renewed communist 
progress, with an updated analysis of 21st-century productive and 
governing technologies. To their credit they got rid of the word 
"accelerationism" after the manifesto, although the populist motif of 
space travel and a few other naive things remain in the book. Steven 
Shaviro has a good recap of the story here:


https://thedisorderofthings.com/2015/11/03/accelerationism-without-accelerationism

Tor me the whole phenomenon is paradoxical, or just ambiguous, like most 
politics. A large number of young and not-so-young people have found in 
the book a way to reorganize themselves politically and to start 
engaging concretely with the possibility of restructuring society, which 
is positive. They call themselves "Left Accelerationists" beause it's 
now obvious that Land is a detestable libertarian nut-job (or as he 
says, "neoreactionaries are libertarians mugged by reality," ha ha, very 
funny). I really don't know where the fascination with Nick Land came 
from, or why Srnicek and Williams felt compelled to draw on him: 
probably they saw the need for a strategic intervention in cultural 
trends, which is fair enough in my view.


It may well be that the book's materialism and its attempt to come to 
grips with contemporary conditions will prove fruitful. It's a lot 
better than plunging back into archaic Marxist cults or going into the 
let's-just-riot-in-the-street mode. Obviously I have nothing against 
Marx, or rioting in the street for that matter, but sectarianism is 
boring and useless. In the same way that Srnicek and Williams dropped 
the term "accelerationist," probably their acolytes will realize the 
arrogance of the blanket critique of so-called "folk politics" and focus 
instead on how to work constructively with the many forms of resistance 
and utopian longing that are out there in society. That's the pathway I 
was trying to indicate in my text.


best, Brian

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Re: Live Your Models

2016-05-05 Thread Jaromil

Shouldn't we be tired of repeating the same reasoning over and over
about deflationary currency? and of making decalogues of what we
critical thinkers from the western black towers of doom think is
good and is bad? is this list becoming a lighthouse for fast and
cheap ethical directions so that all readers on their next gig won't
say anything terribly wrong? Can we please challenge ourselves and
our believes for a moment, have a ride through the jails and the
undergrounds where migrants live and confront their needs with ours?

Everyone is saying the same thing on deflationary currency, probably
because is an appropriate macro-economic reasoning, I also agree on
it. Yet dismissing a communication technology like Bitcoin for a macro
economical analysis is myopical, as the thing has huge grass-roots
implications.

And you know, the dreams and needs and "use-cases" I'm talking
about, were already solved with other evil and unsustainable and
uber-capitalist tech. More precisely, pre-paid telephone card credits:
useful even to buy black-market sigs in jails. But bad for the health
of course.

Thanks for this:

On Wed, 04 May 2016, morlockel...@yahoo.com wrote:

> Viewing debt as a currency feature does not make sense, as it
> misrepresents the social phenomenon as a technical one.

> Storing and saving value in instruments that local fiefdoms cannot
> snatch has definite benefits. If the mechanism to move this value is
> immune to the local fiefdom reach, that also has definite
> benefits. The argument that this can be used to evade fair (or less
> fair) taxation is valid and needs addressing. But the argument that
> inherent non-inflationary nature of the exchange instrument is evil
> is not.

The rant on academia at the end of my intervention was very
appropriate, as most academics around and even critical thinkers have
been incapable of digging beyond the macro-economic implications.
Just thinking big all the time? maybe a prerogative of the cultural
industry slide?

I find Tiziana Terranova a brilliant exception in this discourse:
perhaps once again the feminist political tradition has a lesson for
us. We recently published a collective book in Italian on these
issues, for Derive e Approdi, called "Moneta del Comune":
http://www.deriveapprodi.org/2015/10/moneta-comune/

ciao

-- 
Denis Roio aka Jaromil   http://Dyne.org think  tank
  CTO and co-founder  free/open source developers
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