>This vision quest is not over.
It's never over.

Back to rolling in the grass and looking for my new cyborg body. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Gus Koehler
Sent: Thursday, April 12, 2007 10:22 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity
Coffee Group'
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Can you guess the source.

Steve:

Actually, your question is really hard. I have been involved in tracing the
significant issues--economic, political, ethical, philosophical--associated
with the emergence of various advanced technologies here in California.
These include biotechnology, nanotechnology, IT, intelligent transportation
systems, alternative fuels, and the global marketplace in general. In each
case there are deep drivers that conflict with basic human and environmental
values.  One is the nexus between a value free science and  the unlimited
drive for profit. A second is the disconnect between IT based communications
and the direct experience of the body, be it facial expressions, gestures,
vibes, scent, movement-in-context, and the like. Third, is the isolation of
decision-makers via IT, ideology, and the way policy choices are developed
from the lived experience of these policies--a homeless person, killing on
the battle field and the wounded soldier or citizen, the last butterfly.
Fourth, the creation of cyborgs and Chimeras without a careful investigation
of what this means in terms of self, animal nature, Gaia, etc.  Fifth, the
emergence of a new, very privileged, very rich elder-aristocracy that
controls immense amounts of wealth and that will live a very long time using
cyborg technologies above and various IT related health care monitoring
extension that include the capacity to control from afar.  On the other IT
side, there are communities wired in such a way that multiple cultures and
people participate together in urban planning. There is medicine at a
distance.  These efforts REQUIRE free technohippies to interpret the
limitations of like how GIS can be biased in such a way as not to show
indian grave yards under proposed sky scrappers.  Technohippies can identify
the ethical and moral limits, design webs that are grounded in the knowing
of what is cut-off and what is brought forward.  They can insist on
face-to-face meetings and rolling in the grass.  All of these issues have
been investigated by science fiction, often very poorly but still
interestingly.

Okay, what about your group.  First, you live in an environment that is
suffused with artists, poets, environmentalists, indians and others as well
as national laboratory scientists, your private sector guys, the Santa Fe
Institute... Why not identify some of the most interesting intersects
above--chimera, cyborgs--and pull together some hands on immediate, body
oriented explorations of what it feels like via touch, emotions, vision,
sound.  Explore this new terrain very directly.  Identify what is lost and
what is gained.  How about this virtual reality, what does it taste like and
how does it extend into us with what shaping affects?  Visualization is
abstraction by definition.  What is abstracted in and what out? The French
philosopher Bodreard gave this a lot of thought as did other post moderns
and their inheritors.

Finally, there what Ginsberg called the search for the connection to the
starry dynamo in the machinery of night.  The real vision quest thing.
Check out Alex Gray's work on the net.  In my opinion, it was the serious
effort to blow up the worn out, corrupted visionary roots of America by a
direct investigation of what it means to be human that really scared the
crap out of the powers that be--even now.  And we turned to native
Americans, Hindus, Buddhists, sex, and other means in an attempt to REALLY
find out what's what.  It was kinda crude and ended up in really bad places
for many (I recall coming back from the Peace Corps and walking the Haight
to see a guys and gals laying on the street out of their mind on speed....).
This vision quest is not over.  There are many guides who have found things
as well as the ancients still here who can help out.

Here are some interesting links. From the Urban Dictionary: technohippy  34
up, 2 down  
 
 1. a computer nerd with hippy ideals

2. there are cyberpunks and script kiddies, but technohippies are a breed of
their own. they are not malicious, but only interested in the way things
work. usually not the "l33test", (in terms of knowledge of a specific area),
but they have a broad wisdom of many different technologies. the favored
music of the technohippy consists of (but is not limited to): post-rock,
electronica, ambience, eccentric cultural music, and any other obscure
music. technohippies are often very philosophical, but are open to new ideas
(as long as they are somewhat intelligent). ignorance and hatred is looked
down upon by the technohippy, and some may even be a bit cynical. all in
all, a technohippy is a philosophically-open eccentric geek.
 http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=technohippy some links here
too.

Kung Fu Technohippies Kicking Some Ass http://betterdonkey.org/node/524

Also, http://billyjoemills.blogspot.com/2006/03/rebellion-of-nerds.html

And then there's the technohippy band.



Gus


Gus Koehler, Ph.D.
President and Principal
Time Structures, Inc.
1545 University Ave.
Sacramento, CA 95825
916-564-8683, Fax: 916-564-7895
Cell: 916-716-1740
www.timestructures.com
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Stephen Guerin
Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2007 9:23 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Can you guess the source.

Gus,

As I was reading through the full Port Huron statement at
http://history.hanover.edu/courses/excerpts/111hur.html I was thinking, hmm,
maybe if we actually developed some of the distributed net tools we've been
talking about it could help. But then I cam across this passage near the
end: 

"Loneliness, estrangement, isolation describe the vast distance between man
and man today. These dominant tendencies cannot be overcome by better
personnel management, nor by improved gadgets, but only when a love of man
overcomes the idolatrous worship of things by man."

So I thought, ah, technology may not help...it's a bigger problem.

Then you write:
> There were even technohippies that believed that the new computers 
> could really form a basis for communications and analysis--and this 
> was pre-internet.

This made me think that maybe there is a technological angle...

In your opinion, where's the leverage for a group like ours? Is it what we
can offer in technological / ideological realm, or is it local political
action?

-Steve





> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gus Koehler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2007 9:59 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity 
> Coffee Group'
> Subject: RE: [FRIAM] Can you guess the source.
> 
>  
> Lets see, patriot act,
> citizen phone taps without knowledge, bank taps without knowledge, 
> Bush manipulation of fear by terror buggy man, electronic voting 
> subversion resulting from subversion of two presidential elections, 
> "privacy get over it" as the creed of the internet and of all the new 
> video, voice, body fluid MEMS sensors that feed into it, world 
> domination by US navy that controls the seas, air and land preferably 
> with autonomous killer robots (none of our men on the battle field), 
> torture as an acceptable activity without shame for a greater good 
> like the Spanish Inquisition but no saving in an American heaven and 
> supported by our president, pictures of our soldiers in coffins 
> forbidden to be taken, no count of the number of Iraqis or Afghanis 
> killed, loss of most Americans of a retirement, of health care when 
> they are old, and loading up with extreme debt, students graduating 
> from college so in debt that all they can do is work for the man, VA 
> that can't figure out after 4 years that head injuries will be a 
> problem and that urban warfare screws with people's heads, movie 
> marquis that trumpet the most horrible tortures and attacks on women, 
> the disappearance of a black led movement for freedom and dignity 
> replaced with woes and gangsta rap belittle the life and voice of 
> their own people a future dominated by the destruction of our sea side 
> cities, heat waves, death of 30 percent of the world's species, Africa 
> and the poor sent to suffering the most, diseases out of the cut down 
> rainforests that we never expected to emerge because people eat bush 
> meat, a plague that is global and is cutting the foundations out of 
> African societies.....
> 
> These are all things that the Port Heuron Statement could not 
> anticipate but saw the foundations emerging for.
> Santa Fe probably won't be much of a place to live in 30 years and 
> neither will Sacramento.
> 
> I remember the Port Heruon Statement well having been a member of the 
> SDS.
> We, for a short while, saw the beast naked and what it could do.  We 
> even had a vision of wholeness of what men and women could become. 
> Read the rest of the statement.
> 
> There were even technohippies that believed that the new computers 
> could really form a basis for communications and analysis--and this 
> was pre-internet.
> 
> I think the big difference is how subtle all of this has come about 
> without the direct intervention of 1984 like social structures, even 
> right in our faces.
> 
> At least we could see our soldiers being wounded, sent home in boxes, 
> and watch the people suffer on fire with napalm or being shot in 
> ditches whom we were killing so effectively.
> 
> In my view the vision came true and we are even more asleep than we 
> know.
> 
> 
> 
> Gus Koehler, Ph.D.
> President and Principal
> Time Structures, Inc.
> 1545 University Ave.
> Sacramento, CA 95825
> 916-564-8683, Fax: 916-564-7895
> Cell: 916-716-1740
> www.timestructures.com
>  
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Stephen Guerin
> Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2007 8:22 PM
> To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'
> Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Can you guess the source.
> 
> > Does anyone remember the Port Huron Statement?  I'm
> reaching here, and
> > I don't remember the date.  Hell, most of you probably weren't even 
> > BORN yet!
> 
> I cheated with Google and still didn't know who it was. Yep,
> 6 years before I even saw light.
> 
> Thankfully, things have turned out nothing like what was described 
> there ;-)
> 
> -Steve
> 
> 
> 
> 


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College lectures, archives,
unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org


============================================================
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org

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