Technological progress is like an ax in the hands of a pathological criminal.
…….Albert Einstein
"It is for the painters to find something new"
……Niels Bohr
Conquest, control and domination have been an underlying theme that has propelled Eurasian civilization from its inception in the Athenian polis. These motives were concerted against a nature perceived as inimical to the human. The first objective was to liberate humans from the physical limits imposed by nature. Science, to the ancients and for two millenia thereafter, was simply the disinterested objective consideration of nature. Its application to technology would come later, when empirical method reinforced theoretical invention. But the course, and motive, was first set by art; an art of scrupulous description altered only by an idealized beauty and a corresponding ambition toward imagined perfection. Realism in art, of whatever stripe, is a celebration of control; it is the use of technique to imitate nature with the implicit promise that what can be physically understood and imitated can also be controlled and altered.
From the 17th century to our own era, descriptive realism in art as prophecy became self-fulfilling in technology. The reaction against classical realism beginning with the Impressionists would presage the transition from a Newtonian physics to the present of relativity and quanta. In the mind of most though, in science and art as well as in popular conception, the reflex of pre-Newtonian mechanism and descriptive art (not to mention the "hostile universe" syndrome) still holds sway by inherited instinct.
But the achievements of science and technology overwhelmed any claims made by other fields -including art. Dominion over nature was achieved, though few noticed that the ten to fifteen hours of survival work typical of hunter-gatherers had extended to seventy-two and the egalitarian tribe had become a hierarchy of kleptocracy. Now we begin to see that fabled "dominion "as another kind of wishful thinking. The painting is showing craquelure and it extends to the very supports.
As a knowledge-system science has made possible a great many physical benefits, as a belief-system or a proto-religion, it has brought a level of threat and destruction previously inconceivable. Certainly no religion or aggregate of religions were able to give us the power to end the very existence of life on the planet. We are now faced with the ironic realization that we must use technology and science to counteract the effects of technology and science. We wait for some monolithic Science to tell us what to do. But science is not a monolith, it is not even a co-ordinated whole. There are hundreds of sub-disciplines under its tent, each with itw own specialized concerns and language. They cannot even communicate with each other, let alone present a view of the whole. Waiting for a single vision is like hoping for a consensus in Esperanto from the Tower of Babel. This does not diminish what science offers, it just throws the responsibility back where it belongs—in our lap. The sciences can give us reliable information about their findings but what is done with these remains with the choices we make based on our vision of life as a whole system.
Scientists often speak of their emotional response to discovery in terms like wonder and awe. But we should keep in mind that then they are speaking from the affective poetic side of their own humanity. Some of the most movingly evocative essays have been written by scientists like Freeman Dyson and Loren Eisley. They should be taken as inspiration for artists in every medium. Still we must remember that the source for these reflections is nature, not the scientific formulations in themselves, which are only descriptive and conceptual approximations. Guaged only according to the demands of science the most efficient researcher and recipient of every Nobel prize might be a powerful analytical machine: no living tissue or felt experience required-except for the desire that programs it in the first place, without which nothing would happen at all.
Inheriting a world-view that set humans apart and above, Descartes took it further. Humans were not only separate (having "mind" and "soul") but everything else was mindless mechanism. Today we might see this as psychopathic but the Enlightenment ran with it. Until today, when we can be viewed by some as mindless machines ourselves. Certainly, this is appropriate for science in its brief to study only physical interaction. Although scientists, as human beings, tended not to apply physicality as a final description, our society adopted it more and more. Thinking of the world as a thing to be used led to thinking of ourselves as things programmable for use. Science promised the "whole world" while reassuring us that we had no soul to lose. The decay of this project now can be recognized in the failure of the machine analogy itself. It works, but means nothing.
The most incisive criticism of the mechanistic view comes, quite inadvertently, from one of its most devoted adherents, the physicist Steven Weinberg, who offered, "The more the universe seems comprehensible, the more it also seems pointless." If the universe is only a spinning machine with no product, it is surely pointless. This statement though, is not science as such, it is a philosophical conclusion inevitably derived from a mechanical metaphysic and it marks the collapse of that world-view as well. Yet there is an alternative view from a physicist every bit as credible in science as Weinberg’s, offered by Dyson, who observes the living mind operating on all levels of the universe from the quark to the cosmos.
The human mind will always insist on a structure of meaning-there can be no such thing as a "post-metaphysical culture" because the end of one metaphysic is always followed by the rise of another. Even nihilism is a metaphysic. The search then is for an interpretation, a metaphysic, that allows for the most creative order within the greatest diversity-something nature does well. If we inevitably adopt a metaphysic but it cannot be proved beyond doubt, why should we choose one that fails to enhance our experience of life and that of others as well?
From an outside, objective, view we can all be described causally as machines- producing a painting can be considered as a step-by-step sequence of events leading to a result with no need to posit a mind, invisible to the viewer directing it. It was Warhol’s explicit wish to be a machine— do we accept that he succeeded? Still, it is because we objectively resemble the painter and are subjectively aware of our own mind that we give the painter the benefit of the doubt by assuming that she or he has one. Furthermore, there is no good reason to confine that assumption just to what resembles us. One day we may meet (or make) something very different and hope it doesn’t think of us as a raw material or a toy.
In the West we’ve gone through two stages so far. First, the world as a machine run by an external puppet-master. Then, the first revolution, where the puppet-master was dethroned and the chimp in the lab-coat took over the machine. Our originating Western myth isolated us from the universe and nature but our revolution just carried this to its end and cast it in concrete- we ignored both the suggestion of intuition and the wider range of reason, making power and self-absorption our metaphysic. Now we wonder why it is insufficient. Our isolation has rendered us, not the universe, pointless. We begin to ask the question; "what if it’s not a machine?" This may be the beginning of the second revolution.
What does art bring to the discussion? Art creates models of experience that act on the whole mind, including imagination and feeling as well as reason. It can stimulate us to explore the unfamiliar as well as remind us of the familiar we value. Experience is felt as an end-result rather than just a means to something else. Art affects the mind directly through perception, its sensory stimulus creates a response similar to one we have in the life-world but not confined to a literal action in that world. Our response to a visual work is not limited to the effect of photons hitting our retina. A work of art may encourage us to take a whole range of actions (or none)but it does not physically compel anything at all. Even the most effective advertisement doesn’t actually push anyone into a store. A drawing is no more than marks on a piece of paper but it can evoke a whole range of experience well beyond its literal nature. A picture of an elephant is not an animal but we respond almost as if it were-and without getting trampled in the bargain. A movie, itself nothing but photographic film, can propel us into the urgency and misery of war without killing or being killed. Some paintings have done this without even the expense of actors and sets.
Although art has no physical function its psychological affect may be profound. Simply put, art provides the value of experience without the collateral damage of consequence. Does this mean art is separate from and irrelevant to life? Quite the opposite; it may teach us how to appreciate the world without having to turn it into a cog in our machine.
Another part of the appreciative response encouraged by art brings a certain distance from our experiences in life- those we either take too much for granted or summarize by some conventional reaction. This "distancing" of art can help us both evaluate and appreciate without the knee-jerk reaction of the ordinary and centric self. In this way art allows our reason to join emotion and train our ability to evaluate intuitively.
Surely art will not be guided longer by the puerile fantasies of literary theory that held reality to be captive of text. Science may have borders to its view but they are not either so ludicrous or strained. We have had decades of mainstream art celebrating the mindless slavery of production and consumption regarded with the slave’s blank indifference. This was jarred only by the raw sensation that prods instinctual reflex, which all together sum to no more than a nihilist impotence that feeds the greed of dominion. These are the values that are killing us.
Will the "painters find something new "? The study of dissipative systems shows us the arrow of time goes one way. We can change. But we can’t go back. We wake to the smell of coffee burning but is there time to get to the switch?
Sources:
Jared Diamond, Guns, Germs, and Steel
Antonio Damasio, The Feeling of What Happens
Mary Midgley, Evolution as a Religion
Elisabet Sahtouris, Earthdance, Living Systems in Evolution
Lynn Gamwell, Exploring the Invisible; Art, Science and the Spiritual
George Johnson, Fire in the Mind
Christian DeQuincey, Radical Nature
Richard Feynman, The Value of Science
Christian de Duve, Life Evolving
Jean-Pierre Changeux and Paul Ricoeur, What Makes Us Think?
David Gelernter, Machine Beauty
Hans Moravec, Robot
Richard Taylor, The Visual Complexity of Pollock’s Dripped Fractals
Robin Hogarth, The Advantages and Disadvantages of Analytic and Intuitive Thought
Richard Lewontin, Billions and Billions of Demons ( NYTimes Book Review. 1/9/97 |