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[S3 Discussion] Navigating Neoliberalism #9
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Anekāntavāda, Fuller's World Game need new "cognitive maps" or mental models, internalized and intuitive understandings of these really complex systems it weirdly reminds me of Milton Friedman's pencil example he uses to valorize free market capitalism and also the intro sequence to Lord of War (content warning, disturbing end) but for example, can you make it apparent in the smartphone itself the people and violence involved in its creation? the rituals around, for instance, unboxing gadgets is so made so violently abstract from everything that came before the gadget's boxing.
i feel this way about a lot of dataviz
😞
ugh
the field of AI is gaining revitalized interest in unsupervised learning and an aesthetics of the world from the perspective of AI is one possible outcome I'm excited for, especially as a way to acknowledge the arbitrariness of so many human categories/ontologies some of this also reminds me of Bogost's procedural rhetoric
this is so fucked
this should also be rejected because there is no "God's-eye" view to begin with also conspiracy theories as a way of reducing the complexity of the world to make it more bearable/make problems seem more tractable |
Incapable of extrapolating patterns and cognitively overwhelmed by big data and complex systems, agency becomes reduced to a mere refusal, at best. The attempted negation of the existing order — finding its physical embodiment in the camps of the Occupy movement most recently — attempts to stand steadfast against the momentum of the system. Yet, inevitably, the meek act of refusal is exhausted and the system plods on again. This is so real today but also kind of a paradox for me. Either everyone is able to work w data, or someone has to do the filtering/"dumbing down" for them. That act of filtering obv fills it w bias (you can shape data whatever way you want to tell whatever story you want) It seems quite impossible to me to ever really solve this - and were in this never ending loop where once in a while ppl cry but ultimately nothing really changes. Esp WRT anything in the economy |
Trying to capture the essence of this article - it seems to basically say : there's a lot of data and stuff - it's hard to understand to a person - we should make things (interfaces , cog mapping) to make it easier to understand |
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Nick Srnicek, lays out the "crisis of representation" problem
https://medium.com/after-us/navigating-neoliberalism-f9fae2405488#.kd4aliz0r
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