Contributors

Followers

Thursday, June 07, 2007





Virtual, not Real

Two modes of writing, most likely among others: Well, I demonstrate (x); well, I demonstrate (myself). The first compresses, contains, confuses the object; the second smears the object within or against the code/work of the text. To smear the object implies an onto-epistemological corruption or breakdown; it is abjection that determines the problematic relationship between self and object. To demonstrate (x) is to clarify an indexical mapping between symbol and object; to demonstrate (myself) is to dis-embody both object and self; the ontological breakdown is between organism and signifier; the epistemological breakdown implies that knowledge itself is problematized across the boundary. Of course there isn't any boundary; this is all non-sense - in other words, senseless, one can't make sense of these things, there's nothing in the sense of sense as direction - can you sense which way to go? The discussion itself leads to abjection; a w/hole body has no need of dis/splay, dis/comfort; it's there inhabited, sutured, one with inhabitation and self, powerful, commanding, desiring, desired. The body tending towards discussion is already embedded in a futile attempt to construct existence out of shifters, pronouns; the discussed body is already a crude form of empathetic magic, which never works but which constantly requires both sacrifice and repetition. Then one reads it, the same, the differentiated, as autobiography; what is being described adheres to, seems to adhere to, the events of the day, those contortions or fits (fitts) of the writer, and thus replete with projection; this holds as well for fictional characters, but everyone recognizes that avatars at least have no history. The avatar is intermediary/sluice between clarified object and smeared self; its skin labors skin in one very singular direction, that is, from an acceptable exterior distance - but its skin labors space within or close to within. Within what? The prims fall away, replaced by space which mirrors, maps external space, all the way to the ends of the game, game-space, or beyond; mirrors, by association, space itself in the real, which is already virtual, the closer one apporaches quantum or fundamental particle levels. In this very real sense it is the avatar which is real, and our selves, bodies, our organic existence, which is virtual, dependent among other things on an Aristotelian logic that holds only on _this_ level in the holarchy, among others. For the law of distribution, so important in the applica- tion of classical logic to the world, breaks down in favor of the gestural, once the logic is examined closely, once appearance and the reading of the world, such as it is, virtual-real, is foregrounded. We defend ourselves against this through a whole phenomenology of pain and suffering, as if death constitutes the undeniable presence of the material world. That this isn't the case is clear, not by considering death itself virtual, but by recognizing death as the termination of processes in the middle-zone, in the middle-way - and processes them- selves, are by virtual of the ineluctable ontology of time, virtual in their constituation.

In lieu, place, virtual or real, of this, I speak like a madman, like a hungry ghost, already a contradiction, since what would fulfill a ghost, hungry or not, except an internal transform among ghost-organs, ghost- perceptions, ghost-epistemologies? Madness always carries the tinge of the virtual with it, and thereupon the real, just as what one considers the real in everyday life, appears as a dream, false, masquerade, sham, facade, theater and theatrical performance, all of which is true, recognized in every movement or body-speech of an avatar, in one or another world, more real than virtual, as ours is more virtual than real. To write of an object: "Two modes: Well, I demonstrate (x); well, I demonstrate (myself). The first compresses, contains, confuses the object" - is to write of oneself writing of an object; this is elementary. And it is also elementary to realize that "writing of oneself writing of an object" is an aporia, useless, exhausting, falsely-recursive; one might as well stop there and recognize that the smear (stutter, cough, text, pause, punctuation, page or screen) is behind, within, inherent in, every utterance whatsoever. The psyhoanalytical loss of object or good object or bad object is founded on no object at all - none, but food in the eyes of the hungry ghost, or the hungry ghost in the eyes of its prey. Nothing is simple, everything melds within the hallucinatory, and rational action is the apparent ability to 'freeze' those moments, as if they endured beyond the momentary glance or description.

3 comments:

Richard said...

This is good - it helps I am reading (about) Merleau-Ponty - just now - but this can be read alone - I like the "change' in the second para...the "logic" doesn't have to "follow" - it works sans logic as such I feel - although that also adds to it...the philos. etc

I started the (my) 'Sondheim Project' by putting up two "advertisments" for you and your "project" as I call it on My Space and my Blog...

I gave links to this Blog and your other site on EYELIGHT and on My Space.

Cheers. Richard

sondheim said...

I really like Merleau-Ponty - I read him years ago, and Alfred Schutz at the same time; phenomenology really hit home - both senses of the word, philosophy but also science, i.e. phenomenology of particle physics - an exact all-encompassing description -

Richard said...

Cheers Alan - I'll - wait for it! -google Alfred Schutz - phenomenology (or the idea of it) intrigues me - I did read some Heiddeger (who I thought at first was compleletly wrong...and also wasn't happy to hear that he had been a Nazi) and (more recently) bits of Derrida and Husserl is courtesy of the Philosophy Encyc on the internet as I get bogged down in the texts - but I liked (like) reading Barthes...and some of Foucault - will revist it him... (I did some philosophy Uni but we kind of avoided the main texts eg for Camus I read 'The Outsider' and read some stories etc of Sartre for Sartre; and some excerpts of Heidegger and Foucault - but I recall that that year's study was exciting (there were 2 visiting philosophy Professors from the US) - I really enjoyed Satres "Nausea". Regards.

Phenomenology as far as I think I understand it - appeals to me..and science - an interesting combination...(just reading M-Ponty -or an abstract on him - and I keep coming (or trying to come) to him from a "scientific angle" - can see his ideas could connect into other - many other philosophers.

I read some editions of Scientifc American - the recent one on Time was great..particle phsyics is always fascinating but one needs the maths but the maths becomes nearly impossible - but then maths at a certain limit becomes philosophy or language (symbolic language).