WHAT
WENT WRONG? To begin with,
the Blueprint -- the "Story," as Daniel Quinn calls it,
that’s driving all this is a very new and unproven
proposal. In fact, if
we can step back far enough,
the whole modern age is one vast, weird experiment. |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Painted
drumhead |
|
|||||||||||||||||
Along the way
we brought into being a new kind of individual freed of the
constraints of tradition, kin, community and all that had
gone before. We unleashed a rush of human energy and
invention. Cobwebs of superstition were blown away. We found
new ways of seeing even, and gazed on vast new horizons. |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
At
this moment an extraordinary engine of salvation enters
human history.
Maybe. |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
The Silicon Chip! Willing slave
of humanity, Jinn of global consciousness. All the labors of
our race seem to intersect and resolve themselves in this
elegant whisper of matter. How many transistors can dance on
a quarter inch chip? Over three million! What can it do?
Just about anything! A new hope is aroused:
“…humans will typically live among five hundred
year old trees and carefully tended gardens, yet within easy
travel distance of an urban area of incredible technological
wizardry. By then, the means of survival…will be
totally automated and at everyone’s disposal,”
says the Celestine prophecies. Cool, but only a start. This
technology just begs for really bold new worlds. Neural
networks…chip implants…bio-mechanical evolution:
who’s to say what the limits are anymore? |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
The
Great Pyramid of Silicon
A brief overview of how microchips are made shows just how extensive a support system the information age requires. •
Microprocessors are manufactured in science-fiction like
facilities routinely working in mind-boggling tolerances of
1000's the thickness of a human hair. |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||
Dance to the music, pay to the piper. This technology has given us a whole new range of experience, a dynamic digital culture. To its insiders, its future seems limitless. But no matter how digitally pristine the Age of Information appears, it rests on the groaningback of a system predicated on the relentless exploitation and plunder of the earth and its peoples. One is reminded of another expansive culture, the aristocratic plantation society of the old South. It was a courtly, civilized experience -- if you were lucky enough to be Scarlet or Rett. Many of its insiders were equally unaware of the backbreaking drudgery in the cotton fields that made crystal chandeliers and polished libraries possible. But then as now, the laws of karma cut only so much slack for ignorance, and the Piper had to be paid his due. Today we find ourselves once again in an unconscionable situation. The environmental and social degradation perpetuated by the silicon chip is a great storm-cloud that can no longer be ignored. As the poet said, there’s a hard rain’s a gonna fall. Ironically, the evolution of the chip itself hints at its own demise. With every iteration it has become magnitudes smaller, faster, finer, as if it has the urge to transcend physical limit, to become the idea of a processor; pure intellect, a field of information. Talk to a true computer theologian and there is always this uprushing feeling: Its “Information” he wants to talk about, and Process, and Knowledge. Hardware is irrelevant, a bridge that will fade away, like the Marxist State was supposed to. The time for that fading has arrived. We have, amid a mountain of info-garbage, the needful knowledge now: how Things Are: quarks and galaxies and everything in between. We know we're one humanity with one home, one delicate web of life. The Technoid-State won't fade easily into its own parade. Power is addicting--it’s hard giving up those glittering dress balls with the orchestra playing under the magnolias. We have to really get it: the computer chip, no matter how elegant in appearance, is terminally corrupted by the vast clanking mechano-womb that gives it birth. An earth-destroying system which can no longer be accepted. As catalyst, as awakener, its job is done. We got it. We are no longer who we were. We human being people have work to do, and it won’t help to cling to the good old digital days. Let's move on. |
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|