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Title: Technophilia, An Infantile Disorder Source: Retrieved on April 22, 2009 from h[[http://www.spunk.org/texts/writers/black/sp001647.html][www.spunk.org]]. Proofread text from [[http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=3904][RevoltLib.com]], retrieved on December 5, 2020. Notes: A rejoinder to an authoritarian polemic by âWalter Alterâ published in Fringe Ware Review. The magazine didnât publish it, except for several sample paragraphs, but did post it on the Internet. It also appeared in Green Anarchist, BCM 1715, London WCIN 3XX Authors: Bob Black Topics: Technology, Anti civ, Post left Published: 2009-04-22 10:11:01Z
If patriotism is, as Samuel Johnson said, the last refuge of a scoundrel, scientism is by now the first. Itâs the only ideology which, restated in cyberbabble, projects the look-and-feel of futurity even as it conserves attitudes and values essential to keeping things just as they are. Keep on zapping!
The **abstract** affirmation of âchangeâ is conservative, not progressive. It privileges all change, apparent or real, stylistic or substantive, reactionary or revolutionary. The more things change â the more **things** that change â the more they stay the same. Faster, faster, Speed Racer! â (but keep going in circles).
For much the same reason the privileging of progress is also conservative. Progress is the notion that change tends toward improvement and improvement tends to be irreversible. Local setbacks occur as change is stalled or misdirected (âthe ether,â âphlogistonâ) but the secular tendency is forward (and secular). Nothing goes very wrong for very long, so there is never any compelling reason **not** to just keep doing what youâre doing. Itâs gonna be all right. As some jurist once put it in another (but startlingly similar) context, the wheels of justice turn slowly, but they grind fine.
As his pseudonym suggests, Walter Alter is a self-sanctified high priest of progress (but does he know that in German, **alter** means âolderâ?). He disdains the past the better to perpetuate it. His writing only in small letters â how modernist! â was quite the rage when e.e. cummings pioneered it 80 years ago. Perhaps Alterâs next advance will be to abandon punctuation only a few decades after James Joyce did. And well under 3000 years since the Romans did both. The pace of progress can be dizzying.
For Alter, the future is a program that Karl Marx and Jules Verne mapped out in a previous century. Evolution is unilinear, technologically driven and, for some strange reason, morally imperative. These notions were already old when Herbert Spencer and Karl Marx cobbled them together. Alterâs positivism is no improvement on that of Comte, who gave the game away by founding a Positivist Church. And his mechanical materialism is actually a regression from Marxism to Stalinism. Like bad science fiction, but not as entertaining, Alterism is 19th century ideology declaimed in 21st century jargon. (One of the few facts about the future at once certain and reassuring is that it will **not** talk like Walter Alter any more than the present talks like Hugo Gernsback.) Alter hasnât written one word with which Newt Gingrich or Walt Disney, defrosted, would disagree. The âthink tank social engineersâ are on **his** side; or rather, heâs on theirs. They donât think the way he does â that barely qualifies as thinking at all â but they want **us** to think the way he does. The only reason he isnât on their payroll is why pay him if heâs willing to do it for nothing?
âInfo overload is relative to your skill level,â intones Alter. Itâs certainly relative to **his**. He bounces from technology to anthropology to history and back again like the atoms of the Newtonian billiard-bill universe that scientists, unlike Alter, no longer believe in. The breadth of his ignorance amazes, a wondering world can only, with Groucho Marx, ask: âIs there anything else you know absolutely nothing about?â If syndicalism is (as one wag put it) fascism minus the excitement, Alterism is empiricism minus the evidence. He sports the toga of reason without stating any reason for doing so. He expects us to take his rejection of faith on faith. He fiercely affirms that facts are facts without mentioning any.
Alter is much too upset to be articulate, but at least heâs provided an enemies list â although, like Senator McCarthy, he would rather issue vague categorical denunciations than name names. High on the list are âprimitivo-nostalgicâ âanthro-romanticistsâ who are either also, or are giving aid and comfort to, âanti-authoritariansâ of the âanarcho-left.â To the lay reader all these mysterious hyphenations are calculated to inspire a vague dread without communicating any information whom they refer to except dupes of the think tank social engineers and enemies of civilization. But why should the think tank social engineers want to destroy the civilization in which they flourish at the expense of most of the rest of us?
If by religion is meant reverence for something not understood, Alter is fervently religious. He mistakes science for codified knowledge (that was natural history, long since as defunct as phrenology). Science is a social practice with distinctive methods, not an accumulation of officially certified âfacts.â There are no naked, extracontextual facts. Facts are always relative to a context. Scientific facts are relative to a theory or a paradigm (**i.e.**, to a formalized context). Are electrons particles or waves? Neither and both, according to Niels Bohr â it depends on where you are looking from and why. Are the postulates and theorems of Euclidean geometry âtrueâ? They correspond very well to much of the physical universe, but Einstein found that Riemannâs non-Euclidean geometry better described such crucial phenomena as gravitation and the deflection of light rays. Each geometry is internally consistent; each is inconsistent with the other. No conceivable fact or facts would resolve their discrepancy. As much as they would like to transcend the inconsistency, physicists have learned to live with the incommensurable theories of relativity and quantum physics because they both work (almost). Newtonian physics is still very serviceable inside the solar system, where there are still a few âfactsâ (like the precession of Mercury) not amenable to Einsteinian relativity, but the latter is definitely the theory of choice for application to the rest of the universe. To call the one true and the other false is like calling a Toyota true and a Model-T false.
Theories create facts â and theories destroy them. Science is simultaneously, and necessarily, progressive and regressive. Unlike Walter Alter, science privileges neither direction. There is no passive, preexisting, âorganised, patterned, predicted and graspableâ universe out there awaiting our Promethean touch. Insofar as the Universe is orderly â which, for all we know, may not be all that far â **we make it so**. Not only in the obvious sense that we form families and build cities, ordering our own life-ways, but merely by the patterning power of perception, by which we resolve a welter of sense-data into a âtableâ where there are âreallyâ only a multitude of tiny particles and mostly empty space.
Alter rages against **obnosis**, his ill-formed neologism for ignoring the obvious. But ignoring the obvious is âobviouslyâ the precondition for science. As S.F.C. Milsom put it, âthings that are obvious cannot be slightly wrong: like the movement of the sun, they can only be fundamentally wrong.â Obviously the sun circles the earth. Obviously the earth is flat. Obviously the table before me is solid, not, as atomic-science mystics claim, almost entirely empty space. Obviously particles cannot also be waves. Obviously human society is impossible without a state. Obviously hunter-gatherers work harder than contemporary wage-laborers. Obviously the death penalty deters crime. But nothing is more obvious, if anything is, than that all these propositions are false. Which is to say, they cannot qualify as âfactsâ within any framework which even their own proponents acknowledge as their own. Indeed, all the advocates (of such of these opinions as still have any) stridently affirm, like Alter, a positivist-empiricist framework in which their falsity is conspicuous.
So then â to get down to details â forward into the past. Alter rants against what he calls the âromanticist attachment to a âsimpler,â âpurerâ existence in past times or among contemporary primitive or âEasternâ societies.â Hold it right there. Nobody that I know of is conflating past or present primitive societies with âEasternâ societies (presumably the civilizations of China and India and their offshoots in Japan, Korea, Burma, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, etc.). These âEasternâ societies much more closely resemble the society â ours â which âanarcho-leftistsâ want to overthrow than they do any primitive society. Both feature the state, the market, class stratification and sacerdotally controlled religion, which are absent from all band (forager) societies and many tribal societies. If primitive and Eastern societies have common features of any importance to his argument (had he troubled to formulate one) Alter does not identify them.
For Alter it is a âcrushing reality that the innate direction that any sentient culture will take to amplify its well-being will be to increase the application of tool-extensions.â Cultures are not âsentientâ; that is to reify and mystify their nature. Nor do cultures necessarily have any âinnate direction.â As an ex- (or crypto-) Marxist â he is a former (?) follower of Lyndon LaRouche in his Stalinist, âNational Caucus of Labor Committeesâ phase â Alter has no excuse for not knowing this. Although Marx was most interested in a mode of production â capitalism â which, he argued, did have an innate direction, he also identified an âAsiatic mode of productionâ which did not; Karl Wittfogel elaborated on the insight in his **Oriental Despotism**. Our seer prognosticates that âif that increase stops, the culture will die.â This we know to be false.
If Alter is correct, for a society to regress to a simpler technology is inevitably suicidal. Anthropologists know better. For Alter itâs an article of faith that agriculture is technologically superior to foraging. But the ancestors of the Plains Indians were sedentary or semisedentary agriculturists who abandoned that life-way because the arrival of the horse made possible (not necessary) the choice of a simpler hunting existence which they must have adjudged qualitatively superior. The Kpelle of Liberia refuse to switch from dry- to wet-cultivation of rice, their staple food, as economic development âexpertsâ urge them to. The Kpelle are well aware that wet (irrigated) rice farming is much more productive than dry farming. But dry farming is conducted communally, with singing and feasting and drinking, in a way which wet farming cannot be â and itâs much easier work at a healthier, more comfortable âwork station.â If their culture should âdieâ as a result of this eminently reasonable choice it will be murder, not suicide. If by progress Alter means exterminating people because we can and because theyâre different, he can take his progress and shove it. He defames science by defending it.
Even the history of Western civilization (the only one our ethnocentric futurist takes seriously) contradicts Alterâs theory of technological will-to-power. For well over a thousand years, classical civilization flourished without any significant âapplication of tool extension.â Even when Hellenistic or Roman science advanced, its technology usually did not. It created the steam engine, then forgot about the toy, as China (another counter-example to Alterism) invented gunpowder and used it to scare away demons â arguably its best use. Of course, ancient societies came to an end, but they all do: as Keynes put it, in the long run, we will all be dead.
And I have my suspicions about the phrase âtool extension.â Isnât something to do with that advertised in the back of porn magazines?
Alter must be lying, not merely mistaken, when he reiterates the Hobbesian myth that âprimitive life is short and brutal.â He cannot possibly even be aware of the existence of those he tags as anthro-romanticists without knowing that they have demonstrated otherwise to the satisfaction of their fellow scientists. The word âprimitiveâ is for many purposes â including this one â too vague and overinclusive to be useful. It might refer to anything from the few surviving hunter-gathering societies to the ethnic minority peasantry of modernizing Third World states (like the Indians of Mexico or Peru). Life expectancy is a case in point. Alter wants his readers to suppose that longevity is a function of techno-social complexity. It isnât, and it isnât the opposite either. As Richard Borshay Lee ascertained, the Kung San (âBushmenâ) of Botswana have a population structure closer to that of the United States than to that of the typical Third World country with its peasant majority. Foragersâ lives are not all that short. Only recently have the average lifespans in the privileged metropolis nations surpassed prehistoric rates.
As for whether the lives of primitives are âbrutal,â as compared to those of, say, Detroiters, that is obviously a moralistic, not a scientific, judgment. If brutality refers to the quality of life, foragers, as Marshall Sahlins demonstrated in âThe Original Affluent Society,â work much less and socialize and party much more than we moderns do. None of them take orders from an asshole boss or get up before noon or work a five-day week or â well, you get the idea.
Alter smugly observes that âdamn few aboriginal societies are being created and lived in fully by those doing the praising [of them].â No shit. So what? These societies never were created; they evolved. The same industrial and capitalist forces which are extinguishing existing aboriginal societies place powerful obstacles to forming new ones. What we deplore is precisely what we have lost, including the skills to recreate it. Alter is just cheerleading for the pigs. Like I said, theyâd pay him (but probably not very well) if he werenât doing it for free.
Admittedly an occasional anthropologist and an occasional âanarcho-leftistâ has in some respects romanticized primitive life at one time or another, but on nothing like the scale on which Alter falsifies the ethnographic record. Richard Borshay Lee and Marshall Sahlins today represent the conventional wisdom as regards hunter-gatherer societies. They donât romanticize anything. They donât have to. A romanticist would claim that the primitive society he or she studies is virtually free of conflict and violence, as did Elizabeth Marshall Thomas in her book on the San/Bushmen, **The Harmless People**. Leeâs later, more painstaking observations established **per** **capita** homicide rates for the San not much lower than from those of the contemporary United States. Sahlins made clear that the tradeoff for the leisurely, well-fed hunting-gathering life was not accumulating any property which could not be conveniently carried away. Whether this is any great sacrifice is a value judgment, not a scientific finding â a distinction to which Alter is as oblivious as any medieval monk.
About the only specific reference Alter makes is to Margaret Mead, âa semi-literate sectarian specializing in âdoping the samplesâ when they didnât fit into her pre-existent doctrineâ (never specified). Mead was poorly trained prior to her first fieldwork in Samoa, but to call the author of a number of well-written best-sellers âsemi-literateâ falls well short of even semi-literate, itâs just plain stupid. Iâd say Alter was a semi-literate sectarian doping the facts except that heâs really a semi-literate sectarian ignoring the facts.
Meadâs major conclusions were that the Samoans were sexually liberal and that they were, relative to interwar Americans, more cooperative than competitive. Mead â the bisexual protege of the lesbian Ruth Benedict â may well have projected her own sexual liberalism onto the natives. But modern ethnographies (such as Robert Suggsâ **Mangaia**) as well as historical sources from Captain Cook forwards confirm that most Pacific island societies **really were** closer to the easygoing hedonistic idyll Mead thought she saw in Samoa than to some Hobbesian horrorshow. Alter rails against romanticism, subjectivity, mysticism â the usual suspects â but wonât look the **real**, regularly replicated facts about primitive society in the face. Heâs in denial.
If Meadâs findings as to sexuality and maturation have been revised by subsequent fieldwork, her characterization of competition and cooperation in the societies she studied has not. By any standard, our modern (state-) capitalist society is what statisticians call an outlier â a sport, a freak, a monster â at an extraordinary distance from most observations, the sort that pushes variance and variation far apart. There is no âdouble standard employing an extreme criticism against all bourgeoise [sic], capitalist, spectacular, commodity factorsâ â the departure is only as extreme as the departure from community as itâs been experienced by most hominid societies for the last several million years. Itâs as if Alter denounced a yardstick as prejudiced because it establishes that objects of three feet or more are longer than all those that are not. If this is science, give me mysticism or give me death.
Alter insinuates, without demonstrating, that Mead faked evidence. Even if she did, we know that many illustrious scientists, among them Galileo and Gregor Mendel, faked or fudged reports of their experiments to substantiate conclusions now universally accepted. Mendel, to make matters worse, was a Catholic monk, a âmysticâ according to Alterâs demonology, and yet he founded the science of genetics. Alter, far from founding any science, gives no indication of even beginning to understand any of them.
The merits and demerits of Margaret Meadâs ethnography are less than peripheral to Alterâs polemic. It wasnât Mead who discovered and reported that hunter-gatherers work a lot less than we do. There is something very off about a control freak who insists that ideas he cannot accept or understand are Fascist. I cannot denounce this kind of jerkoff opportunism too strongly. âFascistâ is not, as Alter supposes, an all-purpose epithet synonymous with âme no like.â I once wrote an essay, âFeminism as Fascism,â which occasioned a great deal of indignation, although it has held up only too well. But I didnât mind that because Iâd been careful and specific about identifying the precise parallels between Fascism and so-called (radical) feminism â about half a dozen. Thatâs half a dozen more analogies between feminism and Fascism than Alter identifies between Fascism and anarcho-leftism or primito-nostagia. The only anarcho-leftists with any demonstrable affinities to Fascism (to which, in Italy, they provided many recruits) are the Syndicalists, a dwindling sect, the last anarchists to share Alterâs retrograde scientism. Itâs Alter, not his enemies, who calls for âa guiding, cohesive body of knowledge and experience as a frame of referenceâ â just **one** frame of reference, mind you â for âdiagrams and manuals,â for **marching orders**. There happen to be real-life Fascists in this imperfect world of ours. By trivializing the word, Alter (who is far from alone in this), purporting to oppose Fascists, in fact equips them with a cloaking device.
Artists, wails Walter, âdonât believe that technology is a good thing, intrinsically.â I donât much care what artists believe, especially if Alter is typical of them, but their reported opinion does them credit. Iâd have thought it **obnosis**, ignoring the obvious, to believe in technology âintrinsically,â not as the means to an end or ends itâs marketed as, but as some sort of be-all and end-all of no use to anybody. Art-for-artâs-sake is a debatable credo but at least it furnishes art which for some pleases by its beauty. Technology for its own sake makes no sense at all, no more than Dr. Frankensteinâs monster. If tech-for-techâs sake isnât the antithesis of reason, I donât know reason from squat and Iâd rather not.
The communist-anarchist hunter-gatherers (for that is what, to be precise, they are), past and present, are **important**. Not (necessarily) for their successful habitat-specific adaptations since these are, by definition, not generalizable. But because they demonstrate that life once was, that life can be, **radically different**. The point is not to recreate that way of life (although there may be some occasions to do that) but to appreciate that, if a life-way so utterly contradictory to ours is feasible, which indeed has a million-year track record, then maybe other life-ways contradictory to ours are feasible.
For a 21st century schizoid man of wealth and taste, Alter has an awfully retarded vocabulary. He assumes that babytalk babblewords like âgoodâ and âevilâ mean something more than âme likeâ and âme no like,â but if they do mean anything more to him he hasnât distributed the surplus to the rest of us. He accuses his chosen enemies of âinfantilism and anti-parental vengeance,â echoing the authoritarianism of Lenin (â**Left-Wingâ Communism, An Infantile Disorder**) and Freud, respectively. A typical futurist â and the original Futurists **did** embrace Fascism â heâs about a century behind Heisenberg and Nietzsche and the rest of us. Moralism is retrograde. You want something? Donât tell me youâre ârightâ and Iâm âwrong,â I donât care what God or Santa Claus likes, never mind if Iâve been naughty or nice. Just tell me what you want that I have and why I should give it to you. I canât guarantee weâll come to terms, but articulation succeeded by negotiation is the only possible way to settle a dispute without coercion. As Proudhon put it, âI want no laws, but I am ready to bargain.â
Alter clings to objective âphysical realityâ â matter in motion â with the same faith a child clutches his motherâs hand. And faith, for Alter and children of all ages, is always shadowed by fear. Alter is (to quote Clifford Geertz) âafraid reality is going to go away unless we believe very hard in it.â Heâll never experience an Oedipal crisis because heâll never grow up that much. A wind-up world is the only kind he can understand. He thinks the solar system actually is an orrery. He has no tolerance for ambiguity, relativity, indeterminacy â no tolerance, in fact, for tolerance.
Alter seems to have learned nothing of science except some badly bumbled-up jargon. In denouncing âbad scientific methodâ and âintuitionâ in almost the same bad breath, he advertises his ignorance of the pluralism of scientific method. Even so resolute a positivist as Karl Popper distinguished the âcontext of justification,â which he thought entailed compliance with a rather rigid demonstrative orthodoxy, from the âcontext of discoveryâ where, as Paul Feyerabend gleefully observed, âanything goes.â Alter reveals how utterly out of it he is by a casual reference to âtrue methods of discovery.â **There are no true methods of discovery**, only useful ones. In principle, reading the Bible or dropping acid is as legitimate a practice in the context of discovery as is keeping up with the technical journals. Whether Archimedes actually gleaned inspiration from hopping in the tub or Newton from watching an apple fall is not important. Whatâs important is that these â any â triggers to creativity are possible and, if effective, desirable.
Intuition is important, not as an occult authoritative faculty, but as a source of hypotheses in all fields. And also of insights not yet, if ever, formalizable, but nonetheless meaningful and heuristic in the hermeneutic disciplines which rightfully refuse to concede that if they are not susceptible to quantification they are mystical. Many disciplines since admitted to the pantheon of science (such as biology, geology and economics) would have been aborted by this anachronistic dogma. âConsider the sourceâ is what Alter calls âbad scientific method.â We hear much (too much) of the conflict between evolutionism and creationism. It takes only a nodding acquaintance with Western intellectual history to recognize that the theory of evolution is a secularization of the eschatology which distinguishes Christianity from other religious traditions. But having Christianity as its context of discovery is a very unscientific reason to reject evolution. Or, for that matter, to accept it.
Alter is not what he pretends to be, a paladin of reason assailing the irrationalist hordes. The only thing those on his enemies list have in common is that theyâre on it. Ayn Rand, whose hysterical espousal of âreasonâ was Alterism without the pop science jargon, had a list of irrationalists including homosexuals, liberals, Christians, anti-Zionists, Marxists, abstract expressionists, hippies, technophobes, racists, and smokers of pot (but not tobacco). Alterâs list (surely incomplete) includes sado-masochists, New Agers, anthropologists, schizophrenics, anti-authoritarians, Christian Fundamentalists, think tank social engineers, Fascists, proto-Cubists ... Round up the unusual suspects. Alterâs just playing a naming-and-blaming game because he doesnât get enough tool extensions.
âHow many times a day do you really strike forward on important matters intuitively?â Well said â and as good a point as any to give this guy the hook. Riddle me this, Mr. or Ms. Reader: **How many times a day do you really strike forward on important matters AT ALL**? How many times a day do you âstrike forward on important mattersâ â intuitively, ironically, intellectually, impulsively, impassively, or any damn way? Or do you find as day follows day that day follows day, and thatâs about it? That the only âimportant mattersâ that affect you, if there even are any, are decided, if they even are, by somebody else? Have you noticed your lack of power to chart your own destiny? That your access to âvirtualâ reality increases in proportion as you distance yourself (a prudent move) from the real thing? That aside from working and paying, you are of absolutely no use to this society and canât expect to be kept around after you canât do either? And finally, does Walter Alterâs technophiliac techno-capitalist caterwauling in any way help you to interpret the future, much less â and much more important â to change it?