[FRIAM] cults

Steve Smith sasmyth at swcp.com
Thu Oct 5 15:50:32 EDT 2023


Glen sed:
> All reasonable, as is Steve's suggestion that socially stable options 
> for identification can be dynamic/emergent (e.g. populism's various 
> forms). But I'd argue that one cannot build one's own 
> identity/narrative in a quiet space ... hedging a bit on what "quiet" 
> might mean. 
Great point...   but my aphorism-of-relevance: "no man is an island but 
we might all be archipelagos".    In the extreme, "what is /self/ 
without /other/?".  Life itself seems to be a consequence of 
"partitioning" or at the very least "loci of complexity"?     I'll grant 
"silent" (in space nobody can hear you scream?) but think that an 
annealing schedule of "quietude"/"noise" is a good thing?
> This article was interesting:
>
> http://blog.practicalethics.ox.ac.uk/2023/10/why-i-dont-have-pronouns-in-my-bio/ 
>
>
> "Ironically, my experience of interpellation might itself reflect how 
> I am interpellated. Us WEIRD people are individualists, and we’re 
> individualists because social forces make us this kind of being. If I 
> weren’t interpellated as an individualist, I probably wouldn’t feel 
> uncomfortable at being interpellated as the kind of subject I am. 
> Interpellation as an individualist is a kind of ironic interpellation: 
> it’s inherently unstable insofar as it leaves the interpellation 
> person unhappy with their interpellation on the grounds that it is 
> interpellation. Nevertheless, my discomfort is real."
I appreciate the introduction to the term interpellation 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpellation_(philosophy)> here...  
reflects a bit of revisiting done here recently (or offline with 
Guerin?) on Emic vs Etic <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emic_and_etic> 
POVs.  My own "individualism" is armatured significantly around "/I 
don't like to be told/" with being */told who I am/* perhaps the most 
egregious, even if I'm being told that "/I'm someone who doesn't like to 
be told who I am"/.   And all this in stark contrast to the point  you 
make below.
> The idea that _one_ might be able to settle on a narrative somewhat 
> isolated from the ambient goo indicates a conclusion embedded in the 
> premise of individualism. Rather, I'd argue there is no such thing as 
> an individual. There is no self to "dissolve" and any narrative 
> construct that seems to be an individual is, at least, fraught with 
> loopy causation or, at worst, incoherent. So while I like the idea 
> that some individuals are more robust against modal identification, it 
> relies on a flimsy approximation to the real situation.

I hope this topic gets broader discussion here... I think the ideations 
of /objectness/ and /boundaries /are very interesting and relevant to 
questions about "life itself' and "consciousness".

The implications of your introduction of narrative v episodic identities 
from Strawson <https://lchc.ucsd.edu/mca/Paper/against_narrativity.pdf> 
have been ringing in my self/other/whole image for many years now:

> With internet, we _are_ no longer what we would be without internet. 
> Counterfactuals are useful, but only actionable in the most 
> antisceptic environments (e.g. randomized controlled trials)..

*I* have definitely not been the same since I became an online creature 
(most minimally around 1978 (UUNet), with inflections in 1981 
(ARPA/NSF/ES/DOD/TLA-nets) and then the early 90s with the broad 
availability to the public, and then again around 2000 when search 
engines and other automated aggregators reached a level of effectivity.

I would also suggest that we are in another inflection point that maybe 
began with the advent of SIRI/Alexa/GoogleAssistant and now much more 
acutely with LLMs of the ChatGPT style.   The distinction here being 
that I now think of there being "entities" whose capabilities give the 
previously "dumb" agents of collectivity at least the "illusion" of 
sentience/consciousness no matter how limited/flawed/nascent/idiosyncratic.

When I interact with GPT 3.5 it is with the illusion that there is a 
proto-sentience on the other side of my screen.  If find myself (yet 
more) polite with it than I am with Google or Bing and I always try to 
craft my interactions almost exactly as I would with another human 
being.  I avoid sentence fragments, arbitrary contractions or acronyms, 
overly directive stylization, etc.   I like to joke (not joke) that 
ChatGPT is my "new bar friend".   I try to interact with it in the same 
mode as I would another human I have just met with whom I have little 
history or future but recognize as at least "something of a peer".   I 
assume that my "bar friend" likely knows more about a wide range of 
things than I do, but also may be open to entertaining some of my own 
unique perspectives and giving me a reasonable discussion if not actual 
argument around some of my sacred cows...

I am no longer the person I was before I dropped into this new 
"tavern".  I'm reminded of the (fictional) denezins of Clarke's "White 
Hart Pub", Spider Robinson's "Callahan's Cross Time Bar", Stephenson's 
"Black Sun" or maybe Adams "Restaurant at the End of the Universe" or 
"Quark's Bar", "Mos Eisley's", "Prancing Pony", "Blind Ios", "Green 
Dragon", "Three Broomsticks", etc.) and the way characters use these 
"watering holes" to both relax/refresh and self-stimulate through 
semi-predictable, somewhat random encounters and interactions.   The 
pre-public-internet dialup WELL (whole earth 'lectronic link) served 
this for many/some as did many other BBS type systems.  USENET 
Newsgroups had a good long run as well.

Aivelin on X: "Arthur #Passengers, the android bartender as Taxus 
baccata. Belongs to series #MichaelSheen roles as hallucinogenic plants. 
https://t.co/P4vdqICKuw" / XBartender Quark - Star Trek Timelines DataCore

I suppose the original FriAM (physical) was this with the mail list a 
(somewhat) weak substitute, and vFriam working well enough for those it 
works for?  I know Glen holds a Salon/Saloon of sorts at a 
?neighborhood? brewpub (or taphouse or?) and others here may well have 
their favorite pub/tavern/coffee house for the same purpose, but in this 
modern age of hyperconnectivity, I find my own appetite for truly 
interesting conversation to be a bit too high for what I am likely to 
find in even as rich of a flux as the Santa Fe area.   I blame a 
combination of "domestic bliss" and the habits/constraints of COVID 
isolation for my current lack of proper "bar friends", but soon I may 
blame the fact of having too many good options online?

*I* think these questions of identity are pretty fundamental and 
interesting in spite of being somewhat unanswerable in any conventional 
sense?

- Steve


>
> On 10/4/23 07:57, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>> If there were no internet, the MAGA, QANON and the anti-WHO/UN folks 
>> would find it harder to maintain a narrative.   With social media 
>> they can find people to mirror the craziest ideas and leaders to 
>> reveal them.   Musk says the same is true on the left and woke.
>>
>> Parochialism is another way that ungrounded beliefs find comfort.   
>> Members protect their bubble enforcing norms and being antagonistic 
>> to people that are different.  Typically in spatial vicinities.
>>
>> In both cases, participants adopt a group story instead of building 
>> their own.  If they were required to build their own story in a quiet 
>> space, they might learn to think and be less reliant on a social role 
>> to maintain self esteem.
>>
>> Enforcing this could be done with a DMZ, or it could be done with 
>> some indoctrination about the risks of groupthink and the benefits of 
>> stoicism and scientism.
>>
>>> On Oct 4, 2023, at 6:52 AM, glen <gepropella at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Well, there is no such thing as a "mind virus". It's a bad 
>>> metaphor. But Steve's right that we're (at least) modal in our 
>>> non-rationality, flipping this way and that according to whatever 
>>> criticality presents itself. The 09A concept of culling seems to me 
>>> similar to Musk's elitism ... a Nietzschean conceit.
>>>
>>>> On 10/3/23 09:23, Marcus Daniels wrote:
>>>> I realized I kind of agree with Musk about the benefits of more 
>>>> isolation.
>>>> https://twitter.com/i/status/1625732016896458755
>>>> However, national boundaries are not the right cutoff.   Any 
>>>> community or cult is the potential nucleation of a mind virus.
>>>> I expect his advocacy above is about creating chaos so that people 
>>>> such as himself are the only ones that have the resources to 
>>>> influence governments.
>>>> A particularly virulent mind virus (like white supremacy, or 09A) 
>>>> could cross national boundaries and not be impeded by law enforcement.
>>>> What does the world look like if P% of the population has broad 
>>>> resistance to mind viruses and (100-P)% does not?
>>>> If P is <= 10, maybe better to fan the flames of crazy and let the 
>>>> chips fall where they may.  Perhaps that is how Musk sees it.
>>>> Marcus
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: Friam <friam-bounces at redfish.com> On Behalf Of glen
>>>> Sent: Sunday, October 1, 2023 6:37 AM
>>>> To: FriAM <friam at redfish.com>
>>>> Subject: [FRIAM] cults
>>>> It's been awhile since I've run across a new-to-me cult. But 09A 
>>>> certainly qualifies as a meaty one:
>>>> https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/28/new-york-satanic-cult-764-fbi 
>>>>
>>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Nine_Angles
>>>> https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1057610X.2023.2195065
>>>> I can't reconcile the apparent contradiction between fascism and 
>>>> individuality. I guess the closest some analysts come is to suggest 
>>>> that they're only aligning with the fascists, for now, to bring 
>>>> about the end of the current aeon and the colonization of the galaxy.
>>>> I guess it reminds me of the "no enemies to the [right|left]" 
>>>> rhetoric: 
>>>> https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/sep/30/conservative-christopher-rufo-florida-twitter-debate
>>>> But otherwise, O9A's ... "beliefs and structure" seem incoherent 
>>>> enough to write them off as just too stupid to care about. However 
>>>> one author nailed it in saying that there are plenty of both 
>>>> impressionable and antisocial people using the internet, 
>>>> susceptible to the "sinister" allure, to cause real damage.
>>>
>
>
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