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Wednesday, October 9, 2002
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Out of Town, Out of Mind
For the two of you who follow this blog (who are you people, anyway?), it's
obvious I've been missing a lot of posts. It's just part of our reader deflection
program. Actually, I've been out of town for a week, working off the PowerBook,
thanks to the pointer
from Rob McNair-Huff
on moving radio from one machine to another. My only connectivity is WiFi
at the nearby Starbucks/TMobile hotspot, so it's not like I can post any
time I want.
I ran into the now-well-documented beginning of the month Radio bug. It was
just a matter of updating the Radio Root, which I tried to do from the bug
report page, but that wouldn't work. And then I got this curious cascade
of Radio ills. I couldn't get to my local home, even after multiple restarts
of Radio, Explorer, Mozilla, PowerBook, etc. It seems to work only if I'm
connecting at Starbucks, and only intermittently. Well, good enough, it's
really all a miracle, anyway.
6:05:06 PM
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The Five Scourges
I'm re-reading Howard Bloom's brilliant The Lucifer Principle.
Bloomis a biologist
who's interested in how neural networks (like the Internet) function, and
how they are working at every level in nature, from slime mold through rats,
toads, chimps and humans. The Lucifer Principle describes the
biological mechanisms behind Bloom's quote from Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn:
If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing
evil deeds and it were necessary only to separate them
from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil
cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy
a piece of his own heart?
or, as some sage said,
Behind every person, the saint and the sinner are comparing notes.
The point of neural networks is that they reflect the architecture of the
Internet - lots of relatively low-power processors cooperating to exert an
intelligence greater than the sum of its parts.
In The Lucifer Principle, Bloom describes 5 concepts which dominate
biology, including humans. Together, they explain why we cannot keep from
doing stupid, evil things:
- The principle of self-organizing systems Replicators - bits of
structure that function as minifactories, assembling raw materials, then churning
out intricate products. These natural assembly units (genes are one example)
crank out their goods so cheaply that the end results are appallingly expendable.
Among those expendable products are you and me.
- The superorganism We are not the rugged individuals we would
like to be. We are, instead, disposable parts of a being much larger than
ourselves.
- The meme A self-replicating cluser of ideas. Thanks to a handful
of biological tricks, these visions become the glue that holds together civilizations,
giving each culture its distinctive shape, making some intolerant of dissent
and others open to diversity. They are the tools with which we unlock the
forces of nature. Our visions bestow the dream of peace, but they also turn
us into killers.
- The neural net The group mind whose eccentric mode of operartion
manipulates our emotions and turns us into components of a massive learning
machine.
- The pecking order The naturalist who discovered this dominance
hierarchy in a Norwegian farmyard called it the key to despotism. Pecking
orders exist among men, monkeys, wasps, and even nations. They explain why
the danger of barbarians is real and why the assumptions of our foreign policies
are often wrong.
Five simple ideas. Yet the insights they yield are amazingly rich.
They reveal why doctors are not always as powerful as they seem, but why
we are compelled to believe in them nonetheless. They explain how Hinduism,
the religion of ultimate piece, grew from the greed of a tribe of bloodthirsty
killers and why nature disposes of men far more casually than women. They
shed light on America's decline, and the dangers that lie ahead of us.
Above all, they illuminate a mystery that has eternally eluded man: the root
of all evil that haunts our lives. For within these five small ideas we will
pursue, there lurks a force that rules us.
- quoted from The Lucifer Principle, pp. 10-11
Go buy the $13 paperback version through Bloom's Amazon
Link. If you'd like one reader's reaction, read on. My thinking is so
influenced by this book that it colors most of my perceptions. For one thing,
it causes one to stop bitching about one's circumstances. You don't have
much control over your circumstances, nor do your tormentors. Once you get
over feeling sorry for yourself, you get it that your job here is to be profoundly
excited about your petty, inconsequential endeavor and to get as much support
for it as you possibly can. If you don't get enthusiastic support of others
for your efforts, change your efforts because, without human support, you
will literally make yourself ill and you'll wither and die early. Your and
my immune system will rebel if our peers and loved ones don't literally embrace
us and our work.
This book is a tour de force and should be required reading for anyone
who is part of the neural network called web logging, whether as a writer
or reader. The blogging world seems to generate as many words about
it as we bloggers write about our other interests. This must be a powerful
meme that is probably building its own neural network. Notice that many astute
bloggers are already calling for mechanisms to consolidate our burgeoning
collective so its collective archive is as searchable as one of our RSS feeds.
Did you catch that line about America's decline? In this 1995 book,
Bloom described the real dangers that fundamental Islam poses to the withering
American civilization. The chapter is so prescient that it's now available
online, along with photos
from Bloom's apartment of the burning twin towers.
American Decline?!! Can he say that in Public?
Bloom did say it, in 1995, and his case is airtight. He demonstrates that
we've been in decline since 1973 and any honest reader will be forced to agree
with him. The reason one is forced to agree with him is that he uses real
metrics - not vague impressions - to show that we're behaving just like the
Chinese empire when confronted by the Europeans, the Aztecs facing the Spaniards
and the English upon the rise of the Germans and Americans.
It also answers Larry Lessig's important question - why aren't we Netizens
up in arms over the travesties being perpetrated in Washington by corporate
toadies and religious zealots? The reason is that thinking people have given
up hope and are suffering from a collective depression. The best and brightest
who may be the only ones who might lead us out of this dark political era
are asleep at the switch, presumably watching The West Wing,
imagining how we might also act like Toby and Sam and Bartlett, if we could
only muster the energy.
Interestingly, Bloom implies that he would wholeheartedly support war on
Islam, since our diverse
culture is intrinsically superior to Islam's autocratic despots and the people
they mis-lead; that small bands of passionate, technically inferior fundamentalists
routinely conquer advanced, sophisticated cultures which are distracted by
inward-focused debates like whether or not to profile airline passengers.
While warning against characterizing evil, Bloom suggests that only people
as self-righteous as the Bushies might have the will to colonize Iraq and
divide to conquer the dead-end evolutionary branch called fundamental Islam.
The sad part is that they might never do it if it weren't the biggest oil
play they've ever seen, boy howdy!
If you've not been seduced by howardbloom.net
or the book itself, I'll give you my Cliff's Notes version of his five concepts,
starting tomorrow.
6:00:43 PM
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© Copyright 2006 Britt Blaser.
Last update: 4/17/06; 11:27:09 PM.
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