Media Events.: Virtual Reality
Media Events.: Virtual Reality
Media Events.: Virtual Reality
Virtual reality.
History refers to both the events themselves and to the telling of those events (Hegel); the term
equivocates events and their representation. This equivocation is sometimes the most cunning and
sometimes the most delusive ruse of (variously) nature, psyche and society. ‘Being is
unrecognisable unless it succeeds in seeming, and seeming is weak unless it succeeds in being
(Gorgias of Leontini, the earliest Greek theorist of the media).’ Think of those virtual realities
that, having been made up, have taken on a life of their own: genes, symbols, selves. And history.
Narrative art, the modern forms of which are small screen, cinematic, novelistic and dramatic
fiction, has always been history’s gadfly, reminding it that it is a mere shadow of its would be
self.
Action, Disaster, War, Sci-fi, Drama, Romantic Comedy, Teen, Family, Art House
Whether historical events occur as tragedy or farce, their telling occurs as romance or satire: the
romance of telling the past ‘as it actually was’; the satire of showing it as it has been told so that it
may thereby convict itself of its untruth.
Navel gazing.
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The media has an unconscious for the same reason psyche does: to differentiate itself from what’s
‘out there’. It tries to escape from itself (the scene of the crime) by not acknowledging its
inescapable self-descriptive predicament. This is a kind of self-analysis by default, like the
tiptoeing child who covers her ears so she won’t be heard sneaking away. Any report on the topic
of the news that claimed to be news itself would be condemned as navel gazing. As this
confusing, recursive way of putting it should immediately demonstrate, the story will never get
up.
Selection or drift?
Just as history is about history, politics is about political communications: the accusation; the
declaration; the vote; the act (of parliament); the decree; the impeachment; the inquiry; the
resignation; the interview; etc. It is mainly when communication becomes non symbolic⎯we
might say non communicative⎯when it becomes war, violence, torture, that history finds itself
concerned with a past-as-it-actually-was that is no longer empirical. Violence is about the
destruction of ‘the past as it actually was’. In the selection of media events, violence is like
sampling error. Kindness must live on, so it must speak. Speech of course left no empirically
observable documents. It was so fleeting that first prosody and later writing were acts of
technological innovation against the violence of the past⎯‘the nightmare of the past’ which
‘weighs on the brains of the living’ (Marx). Herein lies the Utopian character of those
technologies that employ adaptations to society that are designed to make communicative acts
survive.
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However, they do become reified, and then, failure to discourse in them is immediately
inadequate, because in the ‘real world’ no-one listens. In the self-descriptions of society⎯in
politics, in media analysis, in everyday sociology⎯inability to engage in discourse and inability
to be heard is death. It is said that what they teach students of communications and journalism is
not about the real world. The real world has already been selected over at the main game. All the
disciplines of everyday sociology make up a discourse that is about itself.
Devil’s dictionary
Examples of some handy terms that use us in society’s self descriptions: the media, the
community, society, culture, image, issues, real issues, deal with issues, public opinion, voter
feeling, in touch with, ordinary Australians, take offence, out there, low socio-economic,
generation, young people, listen to, send the wrong message, sell, take on board, look ahead, what
we need, leadership, work towards, manage change, at the end of the day, etc. Francis Bacon
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(Novum Organum) complained about the ill-defined reference of the terms of physical science,
terms (if I remember rightly) like density, friction, weight, mass etc. He complained?
Making up.
Mistakes, misapprehensions, inadequate concepts are all parleyed into ruses of reason, self-
identities, self-delusions, received wisdoms. Human psyche does this in its self construction
(Lacan). Society does it in its self construction (Luhmann). The reified misapprehensions of
psychic and societal self description⎯the makeshift fabrications whereby we make up our
psychic and social world, the ‘fictions’ that serve as our only purchase on these things⎯are a
good reason for fiction in the artistic sense to make a virtue of the necessity of this process of
reflexive reification of consciousness.
Absolutely!
Language, in order to be symbolic and linguistic, has always had to be able to be about itself.
Hegel appreciated the inescapable and defining reflexivity of consciousness, experience,
philosophy and modernity. Sociologists (Ulrich Beck, Anthony Giddens) have insisted that
reflexivity is what characterises modernity, and particularly postmodernity⎯or ‘radical
modernity’ as Giddens called it. But doesn’t it characterise society (and psyche)⎯even in
societies (and psyches) that seem utterly unconscious of themselves? In fact, what characterises
postmodernity is the reflexivity of reflexivity. At last reflexivity has become a topic about itself.
There is now even a developing mathematical description of reflexive phenomena: e.g. the
mathematics of non well-founded sets (Barwise and Moss 1996). Does this portend adequate
reflexive sciences⎯adequate sociology, and adequate psychology? Absolute philosophy?
Absolutely!
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fixed points in the recursive toing and froing of dialogue. Many sociological terms have been
coined according to analogy with psychological terms and then taken on a life of their own.
Sociology supervenes on psychology; misapprehension is thereby multiplied by misapprehension.
It is said that…
To narrative art, the recursive function of symbolic communication has always been manifest.
Communication can, and in order to be symbolic and dialogue must, be about itself, and embed
its story in its story. This is not just some contrivance to enervate readers of ludic, postmodern
texts. It was the essence of narrative poetics right from the start. Narrative poetics consists in
showing images of language (Bakhtin), more generally fiction shows narratives of narrative⎯the
mimesis of narrative life (Aristotle). Every story, including the news, begins ‘The story goes
that…’
Originality
No science of psyche or society could predict an original work. Originality is what we cannot
predict. Whatever the mysterious workings of psyche in producing something original, originality
is only revealed after the fact, when it can look so obvious we wonder why we didn’t think of it
before. In this, originality is like many social phenomena⎯promises, an artistic canon,
friendship, memorability⎯phenomena whose actual natures are only confirmable by the future,
and never irrevocable.
Origins
Darwin answered the question of the origin of species by ignoring it. The title of his book was
ironic; he dispensed with the concept of origin altogether and replaced it with the description of a
peculiarly algorithmic narrative: evolution by repeated variation, transmission and selection. In
terms of social selection, all sorts of things are dreamed up, designed, and produced or made up;
and then they await what in the artistic sphere is called the judgement of history. This is why a
canon, however deserving of critique and revision, however it ‘parades its arrogance’, is simply
what survives.
Poetics of progress
Even if originality is only apprehended in retrospect, it describes a kind of historical moment that
has long been appreciated by narrative poetics. Aristotle said that poetic amazement was greatest
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when a plot went against expectation yet, in doing so, revealed a new kind of consequentiality.
Originality refers to just such a turn of plot in the history of art or science or some other social
system. Such plots are themselves given to us by social selection operating on endlessly
generated and transmitted variations. In the self-narrations of society, modernity is characterised
by highly self-conscious self-narrations with plots that go by names such as ‘progress’.
Reflexivity does not stop there: even ‘progress’ is recursively conceived, criticised and revised by
the modernity it plots. The evolution of the word ‘modern’ by selection of variational use of the
meaning of ‘mode’ indicates (as has often been noted) its affinity to fashion with its restless
process of self-differentiation from the most recent past (Benjamin).
Gratification
To gratify the desire for speed is one thing. But it is a harsh form of self-denial, a severe
limitation of the cinematic senses. Gratification is a name for the repression of sensuous
experience, for its limitation to just one sense⎯an assault on pleasure. Hence it is adapted for the
psychic and social functions of habit and self-deception.
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whose terms? What are the tense and aspect of the tale. Of course, the past tense is the classic
tense of narratives, and like originality, the true tale of a free act must be told after the fact. As
something in the present, as a condition of action, freedom seems to be a kind of baseless
pretence, a mere illusion, a fiction under which we cannot help but act. Hamlet experiences his
freedom as the alienation of all the available symbolic forms of personal agency, until, unable to
seize upon a symbolic form as his own, he himself is seized by the meanest of forms and thinks
he, as avenger, can just angrily and blindly stab a ‘rat’ lurking behind a curtain in his mother’s
chamber. After this fateful deed all hell breaks loose.
Creating freedom
In order for freedom to be a fact we have to make it up. Kant (1785) put the fictive, performative
character of freedom thus; ‘Every being that cannot act except under the idea of freedom is just
for that reason in a practical point of view really free.’ Freedom as such is something socially
convened by the long selection process of reflexive reification, something virtually,
counterfactually real. While it might pretend to occupy the obscure areas, the accidentality that
defies the principles that map out empirical causation, in fact, like fiction, it occupies the
performative, semantic opportunities that the temporality of reflexive meaning opens in the fabric
of history. Freedom only arises from the possible worlds our narrative arguments or teleology can
make for ourselves in nature. So freedom is the sublime telling of oneself and keeping on of
telling oneself for oneself and for others, the emotional and intellectual task of facing and risking
a narrative struggle imposed by the words and deeds one makes one’s own.
Virtual freedom
The immense cognitive labour and cunning taken to produce the virtually observerless
descriptions of the non-reflexive, predictive, empirical sciences also ended up producing the
notion that human freedom was inconsistent with the determinations of natural causation.
Freedom, which is always of and for self-describing psyche, only becomes antinomical if the
psychic self could actually be eliminated from situations of description rather than being merely
dealt with by its as if elimination at the hands of the powerful makeshifts of empirical scientific
methodology; or if psyche and society did not lack the immense computational power needed for
that merely imaginable, thorough-going determinate description of themselves. The possibility of
freedom arises from the aporetic predicament of reflexive descriptions. Freedom appeared
antinomical most poignantly at a time when it had, by social evolution, developed from its
phylogenetic origins in the history of individual, organismic, teleological self-determination, into
an affective and socially consequential concept with both a factual and a normative life. The so
called ‘bourgeois age’ was riven by this contradiction, dividing its spiritual project so that, while
the sciences ground out more and more ingenious predictive descriptions, art forms like the novel
churned out more and more affective counter examples to the all too thoroughly determined life.
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Aristotle saw as its self-generating make-up⎯is a function of the poetics of copying. Such are the
cybernetics of replication. What is a new phenomenon is that the realisation has been transformed
from a fact of natural history into a norm of modernity. And that is a case of making a likeness
too: making a norm in the image of a fact.
Observing creation
People like to ask scientists about their experience of creativity, as if, when the light went on
these expert observers would have been expertly observe it. As with everyone who works
something out or makes something up, the answers reported from the frontier of creation are
empty and unsatisfying. Creators report having arrived at a destination that they did not know
about until their arrival, after journey that they have forgotten already. Creators are busy
observing their works not themselves. Indeed, in self-observation, the self is the work, and if not
made up, it is conspicuous by its absence.
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Selection for infantile gratification preforms both adult consciousness, and society as a
constellation of infantile forms. The preponderance of white sliced bread, relieved only by the
adolescent afterthought of ‘multi-grain’ epitomises the infantilisation of society. But so too does
language. Social forms that can survive in the selection bottleneck of childish consciousness are
likely to be well-adapted to adult consciousness as well. Terrence Deacon has argued that
linguistic syntax and symbols are just such forms. Their seemingly makeshift ‘logic’ is eminently
selectable in the environment of the developing infant brain. Between these extremes of
selection⎯the former a social selection of infantile social forms, the latter a social and probably
also biological selection of a linguistic animal⎯lie selected social phenomena that might be seen
as adolescent forms of life. These include certain artistic and ethical forms (romance and comedy)
and scientific endeavours (mathematics).
Generationalism
Only recently the development of new information technologies began to proceed at a rate that
was commensurate with human generation. The biological fact of societal differentiation by
generations was reflexively fed back into society’s self-descriptions as social norms of
generational self-differentiation and allegiance, market differentiation, and stratification of
competence in information technology. Witness the invention of the teenager, the degeneration of
aesthetic Modernism into sixties pop culture, the developing taxonomy of generationalism,
cyberculture, and so on.
Norms made up from facts⎯and falsehoods.
People say: ‘That’s not a real word. It’s not in the dictionary.’ Lexicographers still blithely insist
that they are describing, not prescribing usage. But people don’t use their dictionaries that way.
Perhaps lexicographers should acknowledge this, and compile accordingly. ‘Any philosopher
who wants to keep his contact with mankind should pervert his system in advance to see how it
will look … after adoption (Moses Herzog).’ Knowing artworks do this within themselves.
Despite what lexicographers (and philosophers) say, people will derive an ought from an is.
Better still⎯or worse⎯they will derive an ought from what’s not. Not on their own though.
Others have to run with it. We are talking about society here. Not about Humpty-Dumpties
making words mean whatever they like. Artistic norms are caught up in this kind of thing. They
make virtues of necessity. Think of what narrative art makes out of the temporal predicament of
narrative meaning. Or out of the necessary fictivity of a report’s selection of events. And think of
reification. Fiction makes a virtue out of this⎯making a spectacle of all this making up.
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Doesn’t this just go to show what a careless trick an ego can be? Undertaken in indolence,
characterised mendaciously, and made up to come back to haunt us.
Skilled workers.
In the observation of artworks, the makers, like the audience, observe their own their own
experience of the work emotionally. The emotions are more or less skilled workers when it comes
to unconscious self-observation. Artworks themselves go further. They stimulate emotions in
order that they too may be observed doing their work of observation. No wonder artworks have a
reputation for piling emotion on emotion. An orgy of self scrutiny. Meanwhile, gratification is a
harsh form of self-denial, a severe limitation of the senses. Gratification is a name for the
repression of sensuous experience, for its limitation to just one sense⎯an assault on pleasure.
Gratification is used for the psychic and social functions of habit and self-deception. Artworks are
only merely gratifying when they want us to bring our senses to bear on gratification.
Making up freedom
Freedom is like originality, only in the ethical or political sphere: we can’t predict it either. Yet
afterwards, we see that an action was free and (like a promise) that we must sometimes keep its
freedom up. And we also see thawt it wqas merely random and that it reveals its own logic. These
considerations should remind us that, by virtue of its generation through time and society,
freedom is coupled with responsibility. Freedom and originality are made up by narratives that
have evolved in the same social environment. Just as an individual must make up and keep up its
own freedom, society must make up and keep up freedom in the lo9ng selection process of
reflexive reification⎯in order for freedom to be a fact. This has happened at the same time that as
society has been making up its instrumental reflexive sciences of itself and ourselves. Sure, the
possibility of freedom arises from the aporetic condition of any human science that wants to be
empirical and predictive. Sure, freedom seems to be a baseless pretence that is only thinkable in
the void of accidentality and causal indetermination that arises from our epistemological
shortcomings. But happily making a virtue of this, we just do it.
Natureculture
Nature is the great creator⎯the self-generating is how Aristotle put it. Even human creation is
human nature and social nature. Yet now, what we once invoked as nature⎯but monotonously
refer to as ‘the environment’⎯ is cultural: all the bits selected and managed as national parks; the
bits restored, reconstructed and reconnected; not to mention those vast oceans that we are still
managing by neglect and ruination. We are making it all up in nature’s image, according to norms
derived from ecology’s facts like biodiversity; and norms derived from technocratic melancholy
like the pristine, the indigenous, and wilderness. Though still more or less unconscious of it, we
have a poetics of nature, a society of nature. Mighty nature’s self-generation is mediated by wild
social nature.
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