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Writing

Dromology in the Age of Synthetic Cognition

Paul Virilio was a French cultural theorist well known for his theory of dromology. Dromology explores the logics and impacts of speed in the modern era. At its core, it theorizes how the velocity of action or decision-making enables actors to accrue wealth and power over others. Virilio often approached this concept through the lens of martial power, contemplating how new means of movement — the horse, the automobile, telemetric control — created new capacities to overcome the frictions of time and space, and to overcome adversaries through heightened sensing and accelerated decision-making.

We exist in an era of digital intensification. Cybernetic systems are now core to many people’s daily realities, including systems over which they have little meaningful influence or control.1 Earlier digital modernity was often described as an “attention economy.” Today, we may be entering what I’ll call a “velocity economy,” which is increasingly grappling with the implications of a faster-moving world.

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Aside Quotations

Quote of the month

evgenymorozov:

From Warren McCulloch, one of the founding fathers of cybernetics:

“I don’t particularly like people, never have. Man to my mind is about the nastiest, most destructive of all animals. I don’t see any reason, if he can evolve machines that can have more fun than he himself can, why they shouldn’t take over, enslave us, quite happily. They might have a lot more fun, invent better games than we ever did.”

quoted in Mary Catherine Bateson, Our Own Metaphor (New York: Knopf, 1972)

Techno-utopianism (dystopianism?) for the win.

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Aside

Hayles, Visualized

An image that immediately (for me) brings Hayles’ critiques of cybernetic visions of the human to mind.