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- From: rezabek1037@iscsvax.uni.edu (Will be President for Food)
- Newsgroups: alt.cyberspace
- Subject: Re: NET.RECON (was re Extnt, Def, MEMES, etc.)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.002008.10058@iscsvax.uni.edu>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 00:20:08 -0600
- References: <16B59BD9D.BH4781@uacsc2.albany.edu> <1993Jan18.194643.29304@netlabs.com> <1993Jan19.135807.9983@iscsvax.uni.edu> <1993Jan20.170904.7993@netlabs.com>
- Organization: University of Northern Iowa
- Lines: 127
-
- In article <1993Jan20>, lwall@netlabs.com (Larry Wall) writes:
-
- > Far be it from me to denounce those who wish to recycle that which
- > exists into something more useful. But there is also a place under the
- > virtual sun for the creators of cyberspace. Columbus didn't have to
- > manufacture the Atlantic Ocean.
-
- because "cyberspace," as it's called, exists in the form of information, every
- word said in, on, or about cyberspace WILL IN TURN CREATE IT, opening up some
- probabilities for its evolution and closing off others. that's what i'm talking
- about, i'm not talking about trying to go into VR helmet design or designing
- new electronic schematics for potential cyberdeck designs. by the time
- so-called "hard" cyberspace research GETS anywhere USEFUL to the average joe
- user, cyberspace itself will already have changed beyond the scope of said
- designer's previous intentions. just plain old words are all that's necessary
- (and for me, right now, USEFUL) to build -- OR destroy -- what "cyberspace" is
- and can be.
-
- > Your field notes must be organized according to some theoretical model
- > of cyberspace, or they'll be almost as useless as cyberspace itself.
- > Most travel agents would prefer traveling over reading your diary.
-
- well, any sort of pool of into isn't SUPPOSED to takje the PLACE of
- exploration, but is rather meant to AUGMENT it, to make it easier to gnow
- what's lurking out there. there ARE localities lurking out there, and ways of
- living in this transformation that not everyone who may benefit from them
- necessarily knows about.
-
- > Several memes of advice:
-
- heh! ;)
-
- > Don't get trapped by your own metaphors.
-
- - corrolary # 1: unless it is intentionally being done to test a formulated
- hypothesis. if mathematicians were never "trapped by their metaphors," then
- mathematics as it is known would not *be.*
-
- > Virtual reality has real culture, not virtual culture. Try not to
- > dilute the meaning of the word "virtual". It's almost as bad as
- > talking about "gourmet knives" or "laser surgeons".
-
- say, now, i've put an awful lot more "thought" into this than i think you're
- giving me credit for from the start. of COURSE it's a real culture, there'd be
- no reason to have anything to do with it from an academic standpoint if it
- wasn't it is a VIRTUAL culture. in that people congregate to discuss raw IDEAS
- which draw them together... but then, when they meet in the flesh, (the working
- hypothesis goes) they find that they share ARTIFACT in common as well; even
- artifact and influence which some or others haven't ever encountered, BUT WOULD
- PROBABLY GET VAST AMOUNTS OF SATISFACTION FROM DIGESTING. book,s films,
- music... now, if you've met as many of your virtual friends in the flesh as i
- have, i'm sure you know what i'm talking about here. but it is ALSO
- self-evident, and hardly needs to be "formalised" to be experienced or enjoyed.
- that's fine and well, but if i'm to make a case for "cyberspace" as being
- anything more than one big ol' mutual mental masturbation society, i must
- attempt to codify. *sigh.* dry, dry academia. :)
-
- > You've been infected by several capitalization and punctuation
- > memes that render your own meme output highly unpalatable to the
- > meme input processors of the very people you want to write your
- > field notes for.
-
- touche.' in fact, people from a neck of the woods local to mine who are lurking
- here now will agree. i KNOW that. there are REASONS i use them. i've found
- that, in time, these capitalisation things (you should see me when i REALLY let
- go!) don't get in the way of communication with someone who actually want to
- communicate. but, in defferrence to your notice of this schtick of mine, i'll
- take even more care in the future, only using my punctuation when i really need
- to. i AM *quite* conscious of them, though.
-
- > : MEME: fundamental agent of communicative resonance.
-
- > That's one of the metaphors you're trapped by. I submit that you
- > needn't be trapped by any metaphor unless you choose to be.
-
- absosmurfly correct. i choose to employ the memetic metaphor. does that make me
- trapped, if i am choosing to stay there to test a hypothesis or two? the
- validity of the memetic paradigm cannot be tested unless there is at least one
- person who takes it upon themselves to "hang out" there. until i find something
- better to do, or a paradigm more useful or applicable to the research i'm
- doing, i'll HAVE to hang out there. it's a conditional metaphor of this phase
- of my project ANYway. my "higher-up's" would have a FIT if i dumped it now. :)
-
- > Here's
- > where the "meme" metaphor breaks down--you're immune system is entirely
- > reactionary, and can't just up and decide not to get infected. If
- > there's anything to free will, it means you can refrain from believing
- > an idea until you decide you want to, and you can stop believing an idea
- > as soon as you decide not to. The "meme infection" notion is a
- > useful oversimplification, but an oversimplification nonetheless.
- > I only believe it when it's useful to believe it. I fear you've been
- > infected by it. :-)
-
- yes indeedy. and as this is the case, i endeavor to look at it more closely.
- i'm on a mailing list where we've hashed out this meme/free-will thing 'til we
- were all blue in the face, rested awhile, and went at it again. like any
- question of importance, the free-will one cannot be answered. consider that any
- sort of "memetic selection" would have to operate by means of memetic advantage
- -- some memes (ideas) having advantages within local environments over other
- memes. on alt.physics, the "quantum gravity" meme has it all OVER the "how to
- cook tuna-noodle casserrole" meme, due to the local environment. now, of
- course, the "MEME" is a meme too, under its own self-referential definition. if
- there is a locaility in which it is at a disadvantage, then it (or its host)
- either has to find a different way to codify it/approach it, or it will
- die/migrate. maybe i'll give this a shot. i shouldn't have said anything about
- it FIRST, though...
-
- i'm trying to codify and formalise memetics. i feel that i goes further towards
- explaining some of the behavior of the Net than anything ELSE "on the market,"
- and i have reason to believe that utilising it, even as a "metaphor," will
- eventually become crucial to comprehending the Net's role in the world at
- large. but some dislike it, for some of the same free-will reasons you point
- out. i've reconsiled the will i feel with the meme, but if i HAVE truly done
- this, then i shouldn't have to rest my laurels on the meme any more, should i?
- we'll see. :)
-
- > Larry Wall
- > lwall@netlabs.com
-
- nice to meet you, larry!
- .rez
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- "If I cannot bring a smile, a flower, and a cloud into cyberspace, I will not
- enter. I will simply put it down, as I would any other clunky tool."
-
- - Tim McFadden, Notes on the Structure of Cyberspace
- and the Ballistic Actors Model.
-