Monday, January 23, 2017

We Can Stop Talking About Trump Now

                In the wake of the beautiful marches all across the country last Saturday, I think we have seen the beginnings of a new politics and a new vision for America.  That vision was diffuse and diverse and included a range of generations, identities, and issues.  It focused on what was unifying and not on the specifics of any one agenda.  To realize the potential it revealed, I think it has to do one more thing: it has to stop talking about Donald Trump.
                Trump was obviously the catalyst for the March.  It is the opposition to his ideas and values (he doesn’t really have policies) that made so many people come together to resist.  But we’ve seen his act.  He will continue to defy logic and reality.  He will trot out little minions spouting nonsense about ‘alternative facts,’ and he will continue his utter lack of decency.  He will always be stupid, reckless and incoherent, and we will, of course, have to resist his actions.  But there is no future that honors the spirit of the marches that keeps a focus on him.  Trump is an energy sink.  He will absorb and devour all the attention we give him.  Maybe the best thing to do is to ignore him.
                I’ve been part of protests that were fueled by anger – anger against a war or a policy, but Saturday didn’t seem like another one of those.  Maybe because it was organized and lead by women.  It seemed so much more inclusive and tolerant.  There were no pictures of burning limos or smashed windows.  After a campaign that failed to stop his rise to the presidency, the marches seemed like the ideal way to blunt his power.  People marched for something.  They drove across the country in the dark and the fog and crashed on couches in the living rooms of people they barely knew in order to show up and be heard.  Their signs and chants were funny and sometimes profane—as any carnival should be—but their intention was essentially humane. 
                Trump made us realize that if we want a better future we have to make it; it won’t happen on its own.  He made it possible for 2 million people on the streets and millions more at home to find each other.  Now that we have, let’s not let go.  The politics and future we want should be built to honor the people who are important to us and not just to negate Trump.  We need to remember the people who inspired us, who made – and still make – us believe we can be better.  We need to honor the people we love, the ones we get up every day to protect and care for.  We need to honor our mentors and teachers and accept responsibility for the ones who see us in those roles. 
                Focusing on Trump is a one way ticket to the bottom.  There is nothing there worth building on.  We can be vigilant without becoming obsessed with his tawdry and childish actions.  It’s important to organize – it’s even more important to organize the- right way and for the right reasons.

                

Intelligence as Action and Non-Action
                Maturana likes to say that ultimately intelligence leads to action.  One of his favorite examples is about playing the piano.  You can talk all you want about how much you know about the piano, but at some point you have to actually play.  I take the point to be that intelligence is not something that is just mental.  Intelligence is an active element of the world.  This is similar to the point Hutchins makes in Cognition In The Wild, that intelligence is a cultural activity not just an individual capacity.  It makes no sense to think of intelligence as something stored in memory, rather it be in a book, a hard drive or an individual’s mind.  Intelligence is part of our being in the world not just our observation and contemplation of the world.
                I think this is another reason to shift our focus to the body as the center of intelligence.  We act in the world through our body and our senses.  We can think and language about the world, but tangible proof of that is expressed through the body.  The body is in the present.  We can think about the past or the future, but we can only act in the present, which means that we can only be intelligent in the present.
                The other important consideration for me is that intentional non-action is as important as action.  What we choose not to do or say has as much impact as what we say and do.  I want to avoid implying that the body is only present in action.  It can also be still and silent.  In fact, intelligence is often choosing wisely between action and no-action.  I have not called it inaction because that implies a passive and unconscious state.  Intelligence is our mindful participation in existence and not a test score or memory game.
                This post is short, but I hope it makes a point I can return to in the foll

Monday, January 16, 2017

Epistemology #6

The Body – it ain’t what you think
                It’s increasingly clear that the Western concept of mind is seriously flawed.  Even the research into brain function and cognition continually points to the importance of the body.  The insular consciousness that Descartes and Kant place at the center of knowing is a myth.  The mind/body split is a well- known problem in Western Philosophy, but it’s hard to get any further beyond it than Husserl and Phenomenology.  I’m not interested in Phenomenology.  No matter how much it expands the idea of consciousness, it still leaves the mind in the center of what it means to know.  I want to argue that a 21st Century epistemology has to place the body at the center of cognition.
                It is hard for those of us (probably everyone reading this) who grew up with the ingrained idea of a self that had consciousness to feel very comfortable with this idea.  It is second nature for us to start any discussion of intelligence and knowing with the mind.  Descartes taught us to start our exploration of the world on the inside and move outward.  The problem is that we have never been able to define or locate the ‘mind.’  We assume that our consciousness is our own, and that it exists separate and independent from the ‘objective’ reality of the world.  I think we have to question that assumption.  There at least two levels of this challenge.  The first is to see the body as the source of not just all of our experiences in the world but as the only source of intelligence we possess.  The second is to see the body connected to the intelligence in the world which is not human.
                We exist as a body.  All of the input we use in cognition and consciousness is generated through it.  We experience the world as part of it, not as some alien and unconscious creature outside of it.   Whatever correlation exists between consciousness, intelligence and life, we participate in it through our body.  We not only think in this matrix, we feel in it.  We are an extension of it, and the habit we’ve developed of devaluing our experience and mistrusting the immediate experience of our existence has led us to a concept of intelligence that is both flawed and dangerous.  It is flawed because it assumes we can step outside ourselves and find a purer way of ‘knowing’ the world.  We all know the physical and emotional side of us is inferior.  The image from Plato of white and black horses fighting over control of the chariot comes from the Greek skepticism of the physical world and two millennia of Christian doctrine fearing and mistrusting the body and the physical world (and anything feminine) has made this a naturalized view of what it means to be human.  The best example of an alternative view I’ve read recently is Daniel Hinton’s book, Existence.   
                The danger of thinking of intelligence as disembodied is that it tempts us to lose our biological connection to the world.  We lose the capacity to see the limits of what we can think and maintain our structural coupling, in Maturana’a terms, with the world.  In fact, I think that one of the dangers some people see in AI come from the way it mirrors a disembodied view of the mind and intelligence.  There is no doubt that it has been powerful.  As Sloterdijk demonstrates in, In the World Interior of Capital, it is precisely this move that allows a Eurocentric view of the world to diminish a cosmic consciousness and turn everything and everyplace into a way to make money.  The consequences of that are all too obvious in the impending environmental disaster we face.  We will never ‘solve’ the problems of the environment or rampant capitalism as long as we hold on to a disembodied concept of mind.
                The second challenge to shifting our focus to the body and away from a mythical notion of the ‘mind,’ is to see the possibility of intelligence and consciousness as more than just human.  We live surrounded by other forms – plant and animal – that are essentially made of the same things we are.  We share the same dynamic and shifting membrane of reality with them.  How is it then, that we are the only form of intelligence or consciousness.  What if the world is animate and not inanimate.  My point here is not mystical; it is empirical.  There is mounting evidence that our insular ideas about what is and what is not ‘intelligent’ are badly out of step with the research.  My goal here is not to sell or promote one version or another of what that greater reality might be called or how it might function.  I just want to argue that we can no longer speak of intelligence or consciousness and ignore the implications of its existence.  An epistemology that accounts for an expanded sense of intelligence will have to grapple with that question.
               

                

Thursday, January 5, 2017

Trump Validates Postmodernism

                I’m a postmodernist, an unapologetic one at that.
                I’ve spent years reading and hearing about how bad that is and how we are responsible for the moral decline of the West (like they had any morals to decline).  Mostly, people bemoan the fact that postmodernists have destroyed something they call “truth.”  Lately this has been a common theme among people responding to the election of Trump and demanding that institutions, particularly schools, get back to the business of teaching what is true, or this perceived decline in values will continue.
                My reading of the election of Trump and the appointment of his cabinet of rich, white guys is just the opposite.  I think this administration is about to prove once again (as if we haven’t seen this movie often enough already) just how dangerous “truth” can be.  I don’t think we will have to venture all that far into the world according to The Donald before the skeptical insights at the heart of postmodernism will be more and more valuable.  I think we’re about to get more “truth” than any of us can stand.
                For too many people, postmodernism is nothing more than surrender to moral and cultural relativism.  From a strong postmodern perspective, the observations about relativism are merely descriptive.  We look at a world where honest people acting in good faith see the same things and respond to them differently.  We look at a world where languaging creates not one but many “realities” that all claim a moral and objective high ground.  Pointing this out is not some kind descent into unresolved futility, it is simply recognizing that we live in a world where no single standpoint is adequate or just.  From this perspective it makes sense to distrust narratives about progress, freedom and justice because they are always already constructed out of only part of the whole.  Derrida teaches us that these kinds of hinges work both ways, that the free always contains the not free, that the just always contains the unjust.  The object is not to throw up our hands and say it’s too hard to figure out what we should say is true, but to recognize that it will take a lot of work and dialog among dissonant standpoints to arrive at a provisional truth.  All of us are blind to some things, whether that be privilege or bias, that are only exposed in contact with others. There are people who call themselves postmodernist who stop at the relativity part or engage in clever but bloodless word games, but I don’t think it’s fair to dismiss the more substantial parts of the philosophy because of them.
                I always find it amusing when people blame postmodernism for the decline in moral clarity.  They make it sound like a few poorly funded post-docs in English and Philosophy have destroyed the world.  These are people who often can’t even pay their rent.  The real destroyers of moral clarity are the regular suspects, the rich and the powerful.  They are the ones who shut off dissent and engagement to strangle the facts in support of their position.  They want to live in an oligarchy or plutocracy instead of a democracy.  With Trump taking office, they are closer than ever to getting their wish.  Neither Trump or the people he has surrounded himself with believe in dissent or alternative points of view.  They believe they – and only they – possess the truth.  They do not make good neighbors.  They are about to try and bring moral clarity to your world on their terms.  They are about to make “truth” the ugly and dangerous thing it has always been to those on the other side.
                Democracy is inherently an unstable form of governance.  When that instability gets mixed with unhealthy amounts of fear and clan identity it can get ugly.  The era of Trump is an ugly era.  The natural response is to defend ourselves from the anger and fear, but that is a flawed response.  We need to defend the other – the people least like us and most vulnerable.  If we’re going to continue to evolve as a democracy (and that’s a long way from certain), it is their voices and their perspectives that will take us there.  I think the insights of postmodernists are critical to this effort.  We have to expand our definition of who we are and not contract it.  We’ve been plodding along as if the future was guaranteed to us – it never is.  We have to make it. This will be hard work.  It is more dialogical than it is political in the sense that the institutions we’ve built to sustain a democratic society are in ruins.  Building a new, more diverse and decentralized social order will be difficult and take time and imagination, but the only way forward is often the hardest way.  See ya on the other side.