# 11
Machine Language
Languaging
has been the most important feature of human society for 30,000 years or
so. It has sparked what we call
civilization and allowed humans to inhabit the globe. In those 30,000 years, however, nothing has
changed languaging as much as computers have changed it in the last 3
decades. It would be fair to say that
our interactions with each other and the world have never undergone such a
profound change, and it has happened in the blink of an eye. Probably nothing marks the rise of the cyborg
more than the devices that we now use to navigate our world. Everyone with a smart phone holds more
information and computing power than existed in the world a mere 50 years ago.
Who was
the last person to have read everything published in their language and
culture? Erasmus – maybe? Ever since
Guttenberg we have been speeding up the rate at which the meta-languaging of
our culture reproduces and travels. We have
reached the point that machines can do it faster and better than the most
capable humans. The best chess master is
no match for Watson, and Siri can spit out answers faster than the smartest and
most well- read person you know. Every
teacher knows that if they bluff or flub an answer some student in the back row
that you thought was dead or comatose just Googled the right answer and,
contrary to everything you thought you knew about dead people, is raising his
hand to correct you. Calculations that
used to take scientists hours and days to make are now routinely spit out of
computerized instruments in seconds.
What
are we to make of the notion of knowledge or intelligence in this new
context? I think we can only make sense
of these developments by realizing that we’re really talking about two very
different things. Information is not
intelligence. The purpose of human
intelligence is not a more accurate description of what we take to be the
external world. Machine intelligence is
not the same and does not operate on the same principles as human
intelligence. The only real danger posed
by machine intelligence is to confuse it with the purposes and functions of
human intelligence. We have got to let
go of the notion that our ‘brain’ is like a computer and that the more we can
cram into it and the faster we can recall it the smarter we are.
I want
to make it clear that I am not against machine intelligence – unless you want
to replace humans with machines – in which case I’m with Hawking saying that is
dangerous. I think machine intelligence makes patterns
and data comprehendible in ways that are both fascinating and useful. I am not arguing against machine intelligence,
I just want to draw a distinction between it and what I think are the uses and
purposes of human intelligence. In fact,
I would even credit machine intelligence with bringing the West to this point
of consciousness that clearly demonstrates that the Cartesian definition of
knowing is hopeless. We are no more a
challenge to computers and their ability to store, recall and combine
information that John Henry and his hammer were to the steam drill. Now that we should no longer confuse
information with intelligence we have a chance, at last, to ask what it means
to know and to think.
Just as
we learned to stop using our bodies as machines to move and control the
physical world, we have to now learn to stop using our consciousness as a
machine to control and manipulate the social and material world. The things that are lacking in the
intellectual and spiritual world are not lacking because we need more data. They are lacking because we have lost a sense
of connection. Maturana and Fell like to
present the basic condition we all face as having to deal with the fact that we
are always already both connected and autonomous. We are in the world, not outside of it. I am not saying that everything is relative
and there is no reality. I’m saying that
we will never reconnect to the world through reason and science alone. It’s easy to prove that climate change
exists, but almost impossible to get someone who doesn’t already see it to
agree. We argue about facts and let larger
truths and greater wisdom escape in the bargain. Let the machines do what machines do, and let
us start to figure out what it is we should do instead.
Thanks for helping me begin the see the link between Linguistics and political philosophy like no other person has
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