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author | grr <grr@lo2.org> | 2024-04-02 01:09:13 -0400 |
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committer | grr <grr@lo2.org> | 2024-04-02 01:09:13 -0400 |
commit | 00eacd3a5e8d8dab39e30d56a8f7c73c7cd8423f (patch) | |
tree | 0185711e19f80decd43d9e8d6b7d77de80e92faf /ch13.tex | |
parent | 2a089e08dd565f867100ec75987436d571a4493e (diff) | |
download | behold_metatron-00eacd3a5e8d8dab39e30d56a8f7c73c7cd8423f.tar.gz |
break chapters out into individual files, hopefully helps editors
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diff --git a/ch13.tex b/ch13.tex new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f92738e --- /dev/null +++ b/ch13.tex @@ -0,0 +1,250 @@ +\chapter{}% 13 + +We have been moving from time-series to +simultaneities. Serial and synchronous time +threaten to become surreal time. + +Speed and distance are functions of time. +In the world of linked up computers, messages move faster at the center than at the +peripheries where messages move an entirely different way. What's the center? One +can propose a model: a set of rings. Messages +in the inner ring move fastest: less distance +to travel. Messages to and from the outer ring +move slower. Dante's model. This is a conceptual device that expresses the state of +communications today. However the center +is in fact spread and networked all over the +world. It is faster, for, say, Citicorp to get a +message to Hong Kong from Lexington Avenue, than it is to deliver a message across +Manhattan walking, riding a bicycle or taking a taxi. Citicorp-Hongkong is a center: +9,000 miles. Lexington Avenue-Eighth Avenue is a periphery: 1/2 mile. + +When we take into account pricing and +power, the the problem becomes even more +complicated when the message traffic has to +go through some center or complex of centers. It is asserted that if everyone is linked +up by interactive terminals and microcomputers, this blazing center of knowledge will +be available to all. This is nonsense. In the +real world competetive advantage depends +on your opponent's being relatively ignorant. We're not even beginning to talk about +price and the horrendous effects, in the U.S., +of the AT\&T divestiture. Prices of computers +go down: this is true. But prices of communications not only go up, but will be unavailable to a large group of people. And anyway, +one has to reeducate oneself to use these +clumsy machines. + +If we are to make a transition to the information economy, in which information is a +certain kind of currency, certain steps must +be taken. Treasure is meaningless if everyone has it. Treasure, and every good, has +built into it a political and business version +of the second law of thermodynamics. Maxwellian demons concentrate treasure, energy +and information. These are shrunk, massed, +concentrated into smaller and smaller class-spaces. When knowledge becomes treasure, +the value of it is meaningless if everyone has +it. But there's a problem. The spread of +information is limitless. If we tell a number +of people something, then they all have it. So +the purpose of the information revolution is +to put a value, a price on information and +add to the rituals of learning by technologizing it so that few may have it. In the context +of the present attempt to make the grand +transition to this new era, we have come to +see what this means. It is a way of recapitalizing the past and to undo what Lucifer or +Prometheus did. Think of the whole complex of modern telematics as one, gigantic, +central, country-spanning intelligence and +counter-intelligence agency. It also means +that everyone outside this informtion economy is doomed, and that, perhaps, is half the +world's population. This is important to remember. + +It is said that the speed of generating and +processing messages inside of a computer +may be faster than in the human brain. That's +one way of looking at it. But, in fact, the +permissible messages, their content and +form, in a computer are enormously different than the message traffic inside of a +brain, especially if one considers the development costs (which are in their way a +function of time and energy). + +The application of abstraction to things or +people creates problems. One can say two, +four, six...: obviously the next number +should be eight. But we can also pick any +number at all and make that the next step +after six, and invent a logical proof for that +choice. A logical proof can be invented to +justify \emph{any} arrangement. (We are moving +toward a consideration of time-series in a +modern, quantumized, relativized, financial, +informationalized context.) + +There are values, variables, with a multiplicity of identifiers, from different yet convergant frameworks, assigned to the stored-up residues of past, present and future human activity. It may be a genetic identifier, a +financial identifier, a cliometrical identifier, +a literary identifier, a physical identifier. +The arrangements of history and the sequence +of the buildup of capital of all sorts (taking +into account the falsified and adjustive historiography as common practice: for instance, +CIA or Church historiography) is somewhat +like a problem in scheduling information +traffic in a computer. It must be controlled by +timers managing the sub-routines, moving +and saving bytes, using loops, querying the +memory, all contributing to the flow of traffic, +done as events happen, after events happen, +before events happen; a sort of time-travel. +Given something abstracted, but accepted as +an act of faith and so lived-by, as a pool of +credit, one can fill in any history one wants. + +But in order to do so requires that one +overcome deviant memories and histories. +One has to fight to control the history, its +event, its passions, its humans, its meaning. +This we surely know: people died miserable +to contribute to that pool. Defining the +meaning of that pool becomes a political and +ideological fight over good will. The winner +writes history. + +The derivation or invention of any series +takes place both in historical contexts and +according to \enquote{deeper needs.} But these +\enquote{deeper needs} are not to be found in nature, +or \enquote{Man,} but are the shared desires of a +small part of the world's population who +constantly fine-tunes the ancient methodologies of series\slash simultaneity-making. The +\enquote{facts} --- whatever those are --- or processable +specifications, establishes a background +theory for those \enquote{facts.} The accumulation +of many forms of capital is required, each as +a contribution to the information economy, +for we are no longer in that age when the +wishes, ceremonies, sacrifices and incantations of priests and shamans seemed to control the universe: although the sacrifices still continue. + +For capital to be accreted and stored, there +must have been sets of people arrayed in +some time-sequence, laboring to build it up +(and also wasting it) during the historic +process of production, circulation, consumption, storage and reproduction for that subset of humans who are series-makers and rememberancers. Certain goods may have decayed, but they can still be stored eternally, retrieved, called up, as information. + +There's a limit to how long actual grain +can be stored but there's no limit to how long +we can store the abstractions standing for the +grain. It is possible to sell a ton of grain +harvested in Pharoahonic times now. The +only thing is that it cannot be \emph{eaten}, only +bought and sold perpetually. If the buyer +and seller agree, one can sell the Pharoahonic grain and use the money to buy real +grain. Perhaps it is only the designator, +\enquote{Pharoahonic grain} which throws us. Can't +we sell a cargo of grain a thousand times, +symbolically moving it from port to port +without that cargo actually moving? + +At issue is the relation of symbols, information to the non-informational world. What +happens if the informational world collapses? +Panics, depressions, bubbles, inflation are +all \emph{informational} collapses. The non-existant +crowds out the living. + +If we have a pool of symbolic capital, +which stands for, and is used for, stored +energy, stored value, stored time, stored +space, dreams and aspirations, then we implicitly have an accompanying population-continuity and \emph{population-simultaneity}. It +may be fictional but can also be considered +a storage of real and fictional genetic sequences. We may consider how real people +adapt to their changing environments, but +we must also think about how fictional +populations adapt to material environments +and how real populations adapt to fictional +environments. For if they are valued, their +fictional lives impinge on the lives of the +truly living. + +What sort of time-sequence-storage does a +genetic sequence in any one human represent? What we are supposed to have is life, +enormously compressed, a serial simultanized, represented by pools of credit. The +pools of credit are as folded up as any +crumpled helix of genestrings. And if the +production of engineered humans becomes +possible --- given enough money (taken from +where) to suspend the laws of nature --- capital and genetics can be compared, even +equated. A look at the bio-engineering markets is in order. Where do these fictional +populations \enquote{live}? On everted globes, on +satellites and space colonies, or ribbon +planets, in chip architecture, on paradisical +islands before, beyond or at the end of time +itself? What operations must we do with +these time series\slash simultaneities, these lives, +real and false? But what's time? + +We have been bound by several perceptions of time, subject to various revisions. +We have been tied to the tyrannous cycle of +ageing, risings and settings of suns, rounds +of seasons (and seen the priests control those +rounds, inserting themselves between us +and the sky), birth, growth, death: \emph{felt} duration. Our biological clocks can be fooled. + +The perception of time became industrial +gradually, introduced in the 15th century or +so. Time's continuity was fragmented into +equal lengths, matched up against factory +and production ties; unit time, unit goods, +unit prices, unit consumption, units of exchange, but all arranged into the cheerful, +progressive, accumultory one-way-up trajectory. This vision was introjected into the +conciousness of those inhabiting the industrializing world. It is being introduced now +into the consciousness of those inhabiting +the underdeveloped world. + +Time zones were created in relation to the +sun's passage, marking the business day and +year: market time. But all renegotiated timeschema retained this long range trajectory, +the primal beginning and the ultimate end. + +Enter, just before the industrial revolution, +the modern magicians. First wave: mathematicians, scientists, logicians, topologists +(and technicians), the Founding Fathers of the New Age, \emph{circa} the 17th and 18th century... followed quickly by accountants and business topologists, the time and money managers. + +But Leibniz and Descartes were primarily +mystics: Galileo faked the results of experiments. As for Newton, the evidence is that he +was more interested in gnostic\slash astrological\slash alchemical\slash hermetic thought than science. +In astrological thought, for the stars to affect +life, and conversely, \emph{instantaneous} transmission of forces are required. Perhaps for Newton the enterprise of regularizing the universe was required to give a sound and +calculable foundation to astrology. The astrological requires order and regularity as +well as an orderly medium for the transmission of heavenly signals affecting human +life, thought and destiny. Newton tried to +formulate a precise scientific methodology +for dating events, using Scripture and Greek +myths. For Newton, time was teleological. +He related time to a history of royal, Hebraic +dynasties. He matched up time, considered +abstractly, to a special kind of ethnic\slash dynastic genetics (although he didn't use those +words). He felt that the ancient Jews had +secret knowledge which filtered down to the +Pythagoreans. He considered the music of +the spheres a metaphor for the law of gravity. +He believed that the dimensions and configuration of Solomon's Temple concealed alchemical formulae which corresponded to a +divine unity in nature. He explored sacred +geometry, practised alchemy (along with +Robert Boyle), and was of course that perfect +kind of compulsive dualist in all things. +Newton was also alchemically and financially involved with gold; he was Master of +The Mint. Given this, Newton's \enquote{beginning} +is religious, extrapolated to Nature. + +Or maybe he wanted regularity and predictability because he lost money in speculation. + +How much better than Velikovsky was Newton? + +It was this complex of thought upon +which the reconstructions in relativity and +quantum physics are based. + +With the introduction of artificial light, divisions into day and night begin to end. With +sealed, climate-controlled +environments, +the seasons begin to become irrelevant. the +conversion of the natural world into the artificial world, from the raw +to the processed, continues. For some the world is +already the atemporal control room of a +space ship where the ever-chilled, perpetually running, energy-consuming computers, +spinning out their fantasies, are attended. + |