[FRIAM] Alignment (with what?)
steve smith
sasmyth at swcp.com
Thu Jun 5 12:40:17 EDT 2025
DaveW
> How could I have forgotten Nicholas??? I would have relished reading
> dozens of books about his adventures.
>
> I do believe we are in agreement, with just enough nuances to suggest
> some wonderful conversations if we ever find ourselves in physical
> proximity again.
I may be a state/lake over from you in August... WI... I'll ping you
with details as that place-time and I approach one another.
> IMO, human potential is just a localized, maybe somewhat specialized,
> expression of Life's potential and consciousness/intelligence is
> universal.
Yes, that is a succinct point I tend to harp on (around?). It may be
entirely confirmation bias if/when/as I feel I have more evidence for
such than ever before... I once believed we were apex, then was told
that was hubristic. Now I am returning to complexity arguments
(IIT-Psi-esque) to recognize in what way we might be (temporarily) the
ultimate locus of complexity (at least across Terra/Sol?). The argument
afoot across this thread is whether the extended phenotype which is the
computronium we are paving the planet with, will represent a qualitative
*jump* in that and whether *it* might polyp off and leave us behind, no
longer needing us as a substrate?
> One of the nuances—I think I am more pessimistic about "groups of
> humans" being on a transcendent path. Reading David Graeber makes me
> think we are kind of an opposite path; from far more optimal forms of
> social organization in the past to the degenerate
> power-politics/rapacious-capitalism of today. But would be very happy
> to see a brighter side to this coin
Graeber and Wengrow do show well (IMO) many of the negative consequences
of the *style* of organizations that our abstraction of "value" (Debt,
currency, UoweMes) has yielded. I also agree superficially with JIm
Scott's stories (how to remain ungoverned and against the grain) do
paint a pretty picture of a liminal transition zone in the "poised
realm" of both organizational complexity of human groups and the
development of a sophisticated extension to our phenotypes. I'm not
sure it is that different in some ways than the picture the
JudeoChristian origin stories paint of the Garden of Eden. You
probably have a more sophisticated understanding of Graeber in this
regard? I would agree that at least in a sense of local (time and
context) sense those modes were relatively optimal. BTW, I think this
is roughly what (your own... meaning LDS) Orson Scott Card was ideating
on in "Folk of the Fringe"? As I remember it, his stories in that
collection did not ideate on re-ascent but rather exploring the local
minima in other directions perhaps (albeit theocraticly informed).
In our 1998 paper
<https://www.santafe.edu/research/results/working-papers/symbiotic-intelligence-self-organizing-knowledge-o>
on /Symbiotic Intelligence: Self Organizing Knowledge on Distributed
Networks Driven by Human Interaction/, one of my contributions was the
Hobbesian backstory presented in /Leviathan/ (c17) of collective
humanity as a (proto) superorganism. Among the few Laurels I have to
rest on, this is the most relevant to our discussion unfolding here.
Our work was rather premature and naive but illuminates one salient
issue perhaps... that humanity has been forming a complex multicellular
superorganism since the earliest protoCities and regional cultures
emerged.. 10k years or more years ago (ignoring Atlantean fantasies of
course)?
Scott's perspective ?romanticizes? a type of self-organized
proto-superorganisms (colony creature) that humans tend to be able to
create as long as they remain ungrounded (semi-mobile, hard to pin down,
independent of resources which are easy to covet or hoard). Hobbes
declared that before such collectivism, life was “solitary, poor, nasty,
brutish, and short.” He was an apologist for /Coercive Sovereign
Power/, so I don't trust his motives, but I think he had a point. We
do find some amazing synergy through specialization and stigmergic
artifacts (infrastructure). What we do with it, of course, remains as
the /Big Rub/?
The bottom line for me might be: "the only way out is through". We
*have* established a certain style of super-organism (or suite of
overlapping ones) such as nation states, global-scale religions,
multi-national corporations, global movements (QAnon, Environmentalism,
Nazi/Communist/Socialist/??? parties, MAGA-ism, etc.). Global Supply
Chains and Global Monetary Systems and Energy Distribution Networks, and
International Courts, are the vascular and energetic systems and immune
systems of the (beyond) slime-mold that we have become collectively. A
total collapse is *one* way we might scrub all this back down to the
bare metal (earth) and rebuild a different version according to a
different logic and even body plan and metabolism? Are there any others
which we might find? I personally don't think "drill baby drill",
"burn baby burn", "put the pedal to the metal" are likely to lead us out
any other way than a spectacular crash, although it does fit the
principle of "through". The JudeoChristian end-times/rapture story
*normalizes", even idealizes this? Billionaire Bunkers and the plebian
"prepper" culture are another expression of this.
I believe it is inevitable that if we don't find our way *through* to a
self-organized super-organism which leaves behind the current host of
dysfunctions (global military, economic, social control, etc) we will
only have the option of full-collapse into something “solitary, poor,
nasty, brutish, and short” whereupon we have the *option* of reforming
different organizational modes and structures. Maybe Graeber and Scott
have (had) some insight into whether we might find a different path
toward collective human organization which does not follow the
self-limiting patterns we "already tried"?
> You mentioned RAH's candy coat of feminism surrounding a chocolate
> core of misogyny. I too detected that in his writing. The only female
> characters that seemed somewhat immune were Jubal's three amenuenses,
> especially Ann the Fair Witness.
My cousin, Vonda McIntyre was apparently the prototype for his character
Friday <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friday_(novel)> which both
flattered her (the Dean of SF acknowledging her) and appalled her (the
image he projected of the /ideal/ woman onto her). She was (died just
a few years ago) a fairly radical post-gender voice (early works
reflected familiar feminism of the time but explored trans/bi/poly
questions <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora:_Beyond_Equality> not
just in gender but perhaps species as well... the Divers of the
Starfarers <https://vondanmcintyre.net/the-starfarers-quartet/>quartet
for example). Her last completed/published Novel was The Moon and the
Sun (1998?) but told me in her last weeks (4 years ago?) that she had
completed the final novel she had been working on in the (20 year)
interim armatured around her pet theory of how the Minoan culture
collapsed in a long slow clacking of dominoes, "back in the day". I
can't tell if it is actually in the works for publication.
Her younger sister passed of pancreatic cancer as well, one year
before. They both grew up mostly near Hanford WA with their father as
an executive with Westinghouse (soon to bring us washing-machine sized
nuclear power plants to a village/neighborhood/data-center near you?).
She was deeply ecologically aware but not an eco-freak yet did ask the
question in her last months if that was a correlation with her and her
sister's very similar cancer at a very similar age (approaching 70).
> I was a member of the Church of All Worlds, almost from its beginning,
> circa 1963. When I went to Macalester in St. Paul, I became a member
> of the Lady of the Lakes Nest, circa 1969. It was always interesting
> to me how CAW rapidly transformed from the 'free love promiscuity"
> male fantasies in /Stranger/ to an organization almost exclusively
> characterized by Goddess/Gaia worship.
I was unaware of CAW in IRL... and here we have a (near charter)
member! Another proto-super-organism or a distributed organ/organelle?
(re)Occupy Mars!
> Just an aside (a deep dark confession??), preceding my infatuation
> with the SF heroes I mentioned, my very first hero was Lex Luthor in
> the Superman comics.
I think Science Fiction and Comics (and Graphic Novels and
Action/Adventure films and ...) feed the (mostly male?) appeal of
*Potency*... This is what seems to drive Authoritarian Followers
(fetishizing the trappings of extreme potency) and Bro Culture (Fitness
unto Fighting Dominance, Wealth unto Financial Dominance, Personal
Power Projection unto Social Dominance, etc). It is possible the
female circumstance of reproduction (at least as executed in
mammals/marsupials) might meet the instinct for potency in a more
organic way? Their potency is reserved for reproduction and direct
nurturing/protection of their progeny? We men tend to splash ours all
over the countryside and one another (Occupy Mars! Occupy Luna! Occupy
LaGrange1,2,3,4,5, Occupy Kuiper! Occupy Cyberspace!)
I think Robin Wall Kimmerer
<https://milkweed.org/book/braiding-sweetgrass>makes good
biological/ecological arguments for why our myriad "frontier cultures"
(essentially all those built on colonialism but never matured beyond
said "frontier") are so toxic both to the colonized and to the
colonizer (Occupy Everything!). It being "natural" for some species to
thrive in recently disturbed ecological niches, but also natural for
them to be part of the ultimate "healing" process supporting the return
to whatever homeostatic (homeodynamic/morphodynamic) balance that the
prairie/tundra/forest is good at after the fire or the plowing under or
... but humans' ability to write our own stories allows us to maintain
the illusion that we are living in the "frontier" context long after it
no longer serves us (or the context).
So we now (US) own more personal firearms than we have people to
brandish them at one another, and we drive vehicles many times more
capable than we likely need, many have many times more money
flowing/hoarded than those living (semi-comfortably) at subsistence.
10kWUS vs 5kWEU 2kWCH vs 500W3rd vs 80Wprimitve extended human
metabolisms for example? We fetishize excesses in all ways while
pretending they are necessary to our survival? Occupy Mars!
BTW it was good to see Greta Thunberg interviewed on DN! with a much
more evolved/mature affect but not diverted from her intuitive awareness
of our collective insanity. I wonder if Netanyahu's IDF and Mossad will
kill her on her boat this time? Or Musk's clandestinos since she seems
to twig him nearly as much as MacKenzie Scott does? I hear drone
executions are 'all the rage' these days! Occupy Gaza!
GruRaMumbleStumble,
- Steve
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