Sunday, 30 August 2009

Adaptiveness

the last two days I am working on a great text callled "From Robots to Rothko" by cognitive scientist Michael Wheeler and I found a very nice (dual) definition of adaptation
in page 211 he writes: "Naturally occuring adpative behavior is the result of evolutionary determined pressures on the survival and reproduction prospects of embodied systems. However he will continue that in the animat domain Adaptiveness is a matter of surviving long enough in an environment to achieve certain goals. These goals may not necessarily include reproduction."

2 notes
01/. by animats Wheeler implies artificial animals or alternatively artificial autonomous agents. The class of such systems involves
-robots with actual sensory-motor mechanisms, and
-simulated autonomous agents embedded in simulated environments.
02/. Kampis will clarify the pressures of natural selection in evolution by saying evolution can only act on the phenotype but the real subject of evolution is the genotype.

Saturday, 29 August 2009

a life | the self

John Rajchman will write, in his introduction to Deleuze's book Pure immanence: essays on A life,
"we may think of a life as an empiricist concept in contrast to what John Locke called "the self". A life has quite different features thatn those Locke associated with the self - conciousness, memory and personal identiy. it unfolds according to another logic: a logic
of impersonal individuation rather than personal individualization,
of singularities rather than particularities.
it can never be completely specified. it is always indefinite - a life.
In short, in contrast to the self, a life is impersonal and yet singular, and so requires a "wilder"sort of empiricism - a transcendental empiricism.

A conception of empirisism that departs from the classical definition that says that all our ideas can be derived from atomistic sensations through logic of abstraction and generalization. the real problem of empiricism is rather to be found in a new conception of subjectivity."

David Hume: "thinking with AND instead of thinking IS, instead of thinking for IS: empiricism has never had another secret."



the constitution of organism

Living systems communicate not only through filiative relationships but also through transversal modes that lead to heterogeneous populations and assemblages. This is the point Richard Dawkins, the writer and advocate of the theory of the "selfish gene", made in his book. However an important aspect that Dawkins is missing or under-theorizes is the insight that organisms need to be treated as complex assemblages.


Monday, 3 August 2009

territory and deterritorialization

we shouldn't think in an abstract and strong opposition between the 'territiory' and deterritorialization'. It is clear that for Deleuze and Guattari any given territory, enclosure of things or closed systems enjoy vectors of deterritorialization which in fact they constitute a territory.

so inhabitants are protectors of the territory and vectors of deterritorialization of the system in-formation.

>/."in ATP detteritorialization is said to become 'absolute' when it enhances 'lines of flights' to the power of germinal or vital line of life and draws a plane of consistency (the non dialectical synthesis of heterogeneous and disparate elements)."

>/."it is a world of intensities where 'all forms come undone' "
>/."the absolute doesn't denote a quantity but a certain mode of movement that is held to be neither transcendent nor undifferentiated."
in Germinal Life by Keith Ansell Pearson

Saturday, 1 August 2009

"it was too grand for you!"

intellectual speculative urbanism. “I have heard about” is an urban project developed by François Roche… In 2050, the architect returns with his bitterness for our pathogenic passivity and thirst for servitude. Self-organization, adaptation, ethics of immanence and aesthetics of pragmatics form a novel urban scenario. An architecture of real time, implements open algorithms and in an open source fashion triggers the creative indivitualism to form a machinic assemblage with its environment. but all that “It was too big for us”!
we couldn’t embrace the liberating forces, we couldn’t take the risk to live!

tres grandes pour nous!!!


London / Tate Modern / Starr Auditorium / 26 October 2009

Blog Widget by LinkWithin