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Journal - Technologies of the Self

Wed Mar 17 22:35:27 KST 2021

I used to study philosophy. Specifically, the philosophy of

technology and hermeneutics. In the philosophy of technology, there

has recently (recently in academic terms at least) been an increase

in interest in Michel Foucault's late lectures. In these lectures

he continues his examination of power, but turns toward a more

'appropriating' sense of power. To do so, he returns to an ancient

Greek understanding of 'technologies of the self'. Of course, the

term 'technologies' is a bit ambiguous here.

It could also be rendered broadly as 'techniques' of the self, or

'practices' of the self. Nevertheless, through philosophers like

Peter-Paul Verbeek, it has indeed been applied to how we conceive

of modern technologies.

It is also related to the question of hermeneutics (some lectures

are under the title 'hermeneutics of the self'). Hermeneutics is

the study of interpretation.

So, putting all this together, we could say that Foucault's late

lectures are about how the self comes to know/interpret itself

though various technologies/practices/techniques.

The twist is that the 'self' is not a fixed thing, or really a

'thing' at all. So, in the same way that Foucault linked

'knowledge' to 'power/production' in his more famous works, the

question of knowledge of oneself here is also linked to

self-production. All the self *is* is a kind of history/record of

the tools used to produce it

By interpreting/examining myself, I am producing a certain kind of

self. Interpretation is always a qualitative procedure, not a

quantitative one.

One of Foucault's main examples here is the classic Greek dictum

'know thyself', a founding thought for western philosophy and

science.

Foucault points out the context for this kind of command is usually

missed. It can be linked to the practice of visiting the oracle at

Delphi. Before going in to ask the oracle a question, you had to

first examine yourself and discern the most potent question.

In other words, self-knowledge/self-examination was linked to the

broader practice of caring for oneself and directing oneself. You

never just tried to 'know' yourself for the sake of 'science' or

'knowledge', there was always an ulterior motive.

This, of course, *is* how self-knowledge functions in modern

society, it's just that sometimes we take 'knowledge', especially

the kind produced by the sciences, in an overly-neutral sense.

For example, in a positive way, Verbeek has used Foucault's sense

of 'technologies of the self' to frame the introduction of birth

control into society in the 70s. Medical/anatomical/chemical

knowledge produced this simple technology which, in turn, led to a

radical transformation of women's freedoms.

In the negative sense, knowledge of your browsing patterns by major

corporations like Facebook and Google can lead to many practical

consequences too. Maybe you spent to long browsing the Steam store

and now that perfect job-advertisement doesn't pop up on your

screen because you've been marked 'undesirable'. And so on...

In short, self-knowledge is always about self-transformation.

Furthermore, self-knowledge/transformation is always about *power*

and the process of *subjecting* yourself to a power (we become a

'subject' through 'subjectivation'). The ethical task is to

appropriate this process. Instead of subjecting ourselves to major

tech corporations, and becoming their subjects, we should instead

harness the power of technologies to produce a self of our own

making.

In even shorter terms, this post is supposed to be a journal entry.

I've been avoiding the question of self-examination by going on

about the philosophy of self-examination. Hopefully, this is just

preparation for the actual self-examination.

One of Foucault's common 'techniques of the self' is keeping a

diary. The simple act transforms how one thinks and acts in daily

life. That's why I started talking about him here. I was also

wondering about what kind of 'technology of the self' gopher/gemini

are?

I will try harder in the future to talk more about myself. I think

too much about other things and not enough about myself.

- Signing off.

P.S. Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Gemlog