From: Lawrence Garfield <elgar@cais.cais.com>
Newsgroups: alt.discordia,alt.illuminati,alt.slack,alt.neo-tech
Subject: Virtual Assassin - 3/3


                              THE INFORMATION WAR
                                       
   Hakim Bey
   
   Humanity has always invested heavily in any scheme that offers escape
   from the body. And why not? Material reality is such a mess. Some of
   the earliest "religious" artefacts, such as Neanderthal ochre burials,
   already suggest a belief in immortality. All modern (i.e.
   post-paleolithic) religions contain the "Gnostic trace" of distrust or
   even outright hostility to the body and the "created" world.
   Contemporary "primitive" tribes and even peasant-pagans have a concept
   of immortality and of going-outside-the-body (ec-stasy) without
   necessarily exhibiting any excessive body-hatred. The Gnostic Trace
   accumulates very gradually (like mercury poisoning) till eventually it
   turns pathological. Gnostic dualism exemplifies the extreme position
   of this disgust by shifting all value from body to "spirit". This idea
   characterizes what we call "civilization". A similar trajectory can be
   traced through the phenomenon of "war". Hunter/gatherers practised
   (and still practise, as amongst the Yanomamo) a kind of ritualized
   brawl (think of the Plains Indian custom of "counting coup"). "Real"
   war is a continuation of religion and economics (i.e. politics) by
   other means, and thus only begins historically with the priestly
   invention of "scarcity" in the Neolithic, and the emergence of a
   "warrior caste". (I categorically reject the theory that "war" is a
   prolongation of "hunting".) WWII seems to have been the last "real"
   war. Hyperreal war began in Vietnam, with the involvement of
   television, and recently reached full obscene revelation in the "Gulf
   War" of 1991. Hyperreal war is no longer "economic", no longer "the
   health of the state". The Ritual Brawl is voluntary and hon-hierarchic
   (war chiefs are always temporary); real war is compulsory and
   hierarchic; hyperreal war is imagistic and psychologically
   interiorized ("Pure War"). In the first the body is risked; in the
   second, the body is sacrificed; in the third, the body has
   disappeared. (See P. Clastres on War, in Archaeology of Violence.)
   Modern science also incorporates an anti-materialist bias, the
   dialectical outcome of its war against Religion - it has in some sense
   become Religion. Science as knowledge of material reality
   paradoxically decomposes the materiality of the real. Science has
   always been a species of priestcraft, a branch of cosmology; and an
   ideology, a justification of "the way things are." The deconstruction
   of the "real" in post-classical physics mirrors the vacuum of
   irreality which constitutes "the state". Once the image of Heaven on
   Earth, the state now consists of no more than the management of
   images. It is no longer a "force" but a disembodied patterning of
   information. But just as Babylonian cosmology justified Babylonian
   power, so too does the "finality" of modern science serve the ends of
   the Terminal State, the post-nuclear state, the "information state".
   Or so the New Paradigm would have it. And "everyone" accepts the
   axiomatic premises of the new paradigm. The new paradigm is very
   spiritual.
   
   Even the New Age with its gnostic tendencies embraces the New Science
   and its increasing etherealization as a source of proof-texts for its
   spiritualist world view. Meditation and cybernetics go hand in hand.
   Of course the "information state" somehow requires the support of a
   police force and prison system that would have stunned Nebuchadnezzar
   and reduced all the priests of Moloch to paroxysms of awe. And "modern
   science" still can't weasel out of its complicity in the
   very-nearly-successful "conquest of Nature". Civilization's greatest
   triumph over the body.
   
   But who cares? It's all "relative" isn't it? I guess we'll just have
   to "evolve" beyond the body. Maybe we can do it in a "quantum leap."
   Meanwhile the excessive mediation of the Social, which is carried out
   through the machinery of the Media, increases the intensity of our
   alienation from the body by fixating the flow of attention on
   information rather than direct experience. In this sense the Media
   serves a religious or priestly role, appearing to offer us a way out
   of the body by re-defining spirit as information. The essence of
   information is the Image, the sacral and iconic data-complex which
   usurps the primacy of the "material bodily principle" as the vehicle
   of incarnation, replacing it with a fleshless ecstasis beyond
   corruption. Consciousness becomes something which can be
   "down-loaded", excized from the matrix of animality and immortalized
   as information. No longer "ghost-in-the-machine", but
   machine-as-ghost, machine as Holy Ghost, ultimate mediator, which will
   translate us from our mayfly-corpses to a pleroma of Light. Virtual
   Reality as CyberGnosis. Jack in, leave Mother Earth behind forever.
   All science proposes a paradigmatic universalism - as in science, so
   in the social. Classical physics played midwife to Capitalism,
   Communism, Fascism and other Modern ideologies.
   
   Post-classical science also proposes a set of ideas meant to be
   applied to the social: Relativity, Quantum "unreality", cybernetics,
   information theory, etc. With some exceptions, the post-classical
   tendency is towards ever greater etherealization. Some proponents of
   Black Hole theory, for example, talk like pure Pauline theologians,
   while some of the information theorists are beginning to sound like
   virtual Manichaeans.1 On the level of the social these paradigms give
   rise to a rhetoric of bodylessness quite worthy of a third century
   desert monk or a 17th century New England Puritan - but expressed in a
   language of post-Industrial post-Modern feel-good consumer frenzy. Our
   every conversation is infected with certain paradigmatic assumptions
   which are really no more than bald assertions, but which we take for
   the very fabric or urgrund of Reality itself. For instance, since we
   now assume that computers represent a real step toward "artificial
   intelligence", we also assume that buying a computer makes us more
   intelligent. In my own field I've met dozens of writers who sincerely
   believe that owning a PC has made them better (not "more efficient",
   but better) writers. This is amusing - but the same feeling about
   computers when applied to a trillion dollar military budget, churns
   out Star Wars, killer robots, etc. (See Manuel de Landa's War in the
   Age of Intelligent Machines on AI in modern weaponry). An important
   part of this rhetoric involves the concept of an "information
   economy". The post-Industrial world is now thought to be giving birth
   to this new economy. One of the clearest examples of the concept can
   be found in a recent book by a man who is a Libertarian, the Bishop of
   a Gnostic Dualist Church in California, and a learned and respected
   writer for Gnosis magazine:
   
     The industry of the past phase of civilization (sometimes called
     "low technology") was big industry, and bigness always implies
     oppressiveness. The new high technology, however, is not big in the
     same way. While the old technology produced and distributed material
     resources, the new technology produces and disseminates information.
     The resources marketed in high technology are less about matter and
     more about mind. Under the impact of high technology, the world is
     moving increasingly from a physical economy into what might be
     called a "metaphysical economy." We are in the process of
     recognizing that consciousness rather than raw materials or physical
     resources constitutes wealth.2
     
   
   
   Modern neo-Gnosticism usually plays down the old Manichaean attack on
   the body for a gentler greener rhetoric. Bishop Hoeller for instance
   stresses the importance of ecology and environment (because we don't
   want to "foul our nest", the Earth) - but in his chapter on Native
   American spirituality he implies that a cult of the Earth is clearly
   inferior to the pure Gnostic spirit of bodylessness:
   
     But we must not forget that the nest is not the same as the bird.
     The exoteric and esoteric traditions declare that earth is not the
     only home for human beings, that we did not grow like weeds from the
     soil. While our bodies indeed may have originated on this earth, our
     inner essence did not. To think otherwise puts us outside of all of
     the known spiritual traditions and separates us from the wisdom of
     the seers and sages of every age. Though wise in their own ways,
     Native Americans have small connection with this rich spiritual
     heritage.3
     
   
   
   In such terms, (the body = the "savage"), the Bishop's hatred and
   disdain for the flesh illuminate every page of his book. In his
   enthusiasm for a truly religious economy, he forgets that one cannot
   eat "information". "Real wealth" can never become immaterial until
   humanity achieves the final etherealization of downloaded
   consciousness. Information in the form of culture can be called wealth
   metaphorically because it is useful and desirable - but it can never
   be wealth in precisely the same basic way that oysters and cream, or
   wheat and water, are wealth in themselves. Information is always only
   information about some thing. Like money, information is not the thing
   itself. Over time we can come to think of money as wealth (as in a
   delightful Taoist ritual which refers to "Water and Money" as the two
   most vital principles in the universe), but in truth this is sloppy
   abstract thinking. It has allowed its focus of attention to wander
   from the bun to the penny which symbolizes the bun.4 In effect we've
   had an "information economy" ever since we invented money. But we
   still haven't learned to digest copper. The Aesopian crudity of these
   truisms embarrasses me, but I must perforce play the stupid lazy yokel
   plowing a crooked furrow when all the straight thinkers around me
   appear to be hallucinating.
   
   Americans and other "First World" types seem particularly susceptible
   to the rhetoric of a "metaphysical economy" because we can no longer
   see (or feel or smell) around us very much evidence of a physical
   world. Our architecture has become symbolic, we have enclosed
   ourselves in the manifestations of abstract thought (cars, apartments,
   offices, schools), we work at "service" or information-related jobs,
   helping in our little way to move disembodied symbols of wealth around
   an abstract grid of Capital, and we spend our leisure largely
   engrossed in Media rather than in direct experience of material
   reality. The material world for us has come to symbolize catastrophe,
   as in our amazingly hysterical reaction to storms and hurricanes
   (proof that we've failed to "conquer Nature" entirely), or our
   neo-Puritan fear of sexual otherness, or our taste for bland and
   denatured (almost abstract) food. And yet, this "First World" economy
   is not self-sufficient. It depends for its position (top of the
   pyramid) on a vast substructure of old-fashioned material production.
   Mexican farm-workers grow and package all that "Natural" food for us
   so we can devote our time to stocks, insurance, law, computers, video
   games. Peons in Taiwan make silicon chips for our PCs. Towel-heads in
   the Middle East suffer and die for our sins. Life? Oh, our servants do
   that for us. We have no life, only "lifestyle" - an abstraction of
   life, based on the sacred symbolism of the Commodity, mediated by the
   priesthood of the stars, those "larger than life" abstractions who
   rule our values and people our dreams - the mediarchetypes; or perhaps
   mediarchs would be a better term. Of course this Baudrillardian
   dystopia doesn't really exist - yet.5 It's surprising hovever to note
   how many social radicals consider it a desirable goal, at least as
   long as it's called the "Information Revolution" or something equally
   inspiring. Leftists talk about seizing the means of
   information-production from the data-monopolists.6 In truth,
   information is everywhere - even atom bombs can be constructed on
   plans available in public libraries. As Noam Chomsky points out, one
   can always access information - provided one has a private income and
   a fanaticism bordering on insanity. Universities and "think tanks"
   make pathetic attempts to monopolize information - they too are
   dazzled by the notion of an information economy - but their
   conspiracies are laughable. Information may not always be "free", but
   there's a great deal more of it available than any one person could
   ever possibly use. Books on every conceivable subject can actually
   still be found through inter-library loan.7 Meanwhile someone still
   has to grow pears and cobble shoes. Or, even if these "industries" can
   be completely mechanized, someone still has to eat pears and wear
   shoes. The body is still the basis of wealth. The idea of Images as
   wealth is a "spectacular delusion". Even a radical critique of
   "information" can still give rise to an over-valuation of abstraction
   and data. In a pro-situ zine from England called NO, the following
   message was scrawled messily across the back cover of a recent issue:
   
     As you read these words, the Information Age explodes ... inside and
     around you - with the Misinformation Missiles and Propaganda bombs
     of outright Information Warfare.
     
     Traditionally, war has been fought for territory/economic gain.
     Information Wars are fought for the acquisition of territory
     indigenous to the Information Age, i.e. the human mind itself ... In
     particular, it is the faculty of the imagination that is under the
     direct threat of extinction from the onslaughts of multi-media
     overload ... DANGER - YOUR IMAGINATION MAY NOT BE YOUR OWN ... As a
     culture sophisticates, it deepens its reliance on its images, icons
     and symbols as a way of defining itself and communicating with other
     cultures. As the accumulating mix of a culture's images floats
     around in its collective psyche, certain isomorphic icons coalesce
     to produce and to project an "illusion" of reality. Fads, fashions,
     artistic trends. U KNOW THE SCORE. "I can take their images for
     reality because I believe in the reality of their images (their
     image of reality)." WHOEVER CONTROLS THE METAPHOR GOVERNS THE MIND.
     The conditions of total saturation are slowly being realized - a
     creeping paralysis - from the trivialisation of special/technical
     knowledge to the specialization of trivia. The INFORMATION WAR is a
     war we cannot afford to lose. The result is unimaginable.8
     
   
   
   I find myself very much in sympathy with the author's critique of
   media here, yet I also feel that a demonization of "information" has
   been proposed which consists of nothing more than the mirror-image of
   information-as-salvation. Again Baudrillard's vision of the Commtech
   Universe is evoked, but this time as Hell rather than as the Gnostic
   Hereafter. Bishop Hoeller wants everybody jacked-in and down-loaded -
   the anonymous post-situationist ranter wants you to smash your telly -
   but both of them believe in the mystic power of information. One
   proposes the pax technologica, the other declares "war". Both exude a
   kind of Manichaean view of Good and Evil, but can't agree on which is
   which. The critical theorist swims in a sea of facts. We like to
   imagine it also as our maquis, with ourselves as the "guerilla
   ontologists" of its datascape. Since the 19th century the
   ever-mutating "social sciences" have unearthed a vast hoard of
   information on everything from shamanism to semiotics. Each
   "discovery" feeds back into "social science" and changes it. We drift.
   We fish for poetic facts, data which will intensify and mutate our
   experience of the real. We invent new hybrid "sciences" as tools for
   this process: ethnopharmacology, ethnohistory, cognitive studies,
   history of ideas, subjective anthropology (anthropological poetics or
   ethno-poetics), "dada epistemology", etc. We look on all this
   knowledge not as "good" in itself, but valuable only inasmuch as it
   helps us to seize or to construct our own happiness. In this sense we
   do know of "information as wealth"; nevertheless we continue to desire
   wealth itself and not merely its abstract representation as
   information. At the same time we also know of "information as war;"9
   nevertheless, we have not decided to embrace ignorance just because
   "facts" can be used like a poison gas. Ignorance is not even an
   adequate defense, much less a useful weapon in this war. We attempt
   neither to fetishize nor demonize "information". Instead we try to
   establish a set of values by which information can be measured and
   assessed. Our standard in this process can only be the body. According
   to certain mystics, spirit and body are "one". Certainly spirit has
   lost its ontological solidity (since Nietzsche, anyway), while body's
   claim to "reality" has been undermined by modern science to the point
   of vanishing in a cloud of "pure energy". So why not assume that
   spirit and body are one, after all, and that they are twin (or dyadic)
   aspects of the same underlying and inexpressible real? No body without
   spirit, no spirit without body. The Gnostic Dualists are wrong, as are
   the vulgar "dialectical materialists". Body and spirit together make
   life. If either pole is missing, the result is death. This constitutes
   a fairly simple set of values, assuming we prefer life to death.
   Obviously I'm avoiding any strict definitions of either body or
   spirit. I'm speaking of "empirical" everyday experiences. We
   experience "spirit" when we dream or create; we experience "body" when
   we eat or shit (or maybe vice versa); we experience both at once when
   we make love. I'm not proposing metaphysical categories here. We're
   still drifting and these are ad-hoc points of reference, nothing more.
   We needn't be mystics to propose this version of "one reality". We
   need only point out that no other reality has yet appeared within the
   context of our knowable experience. For all practical purposes, the
   "world" is "one".10 Historically however, the "body" half of this
   unity has always received the insults, bad press, scriptural
   condemnation, and economic persecution of the "spirit"-half. The
   self-appointed representatives of the spirit have called almost all
   the tunes in known history, leaving the body only a pre-history of
   primitive disappearance, and a few spasms of failed insurrectionary
   futility.
   
   Spirit has ruled - hence we scarcely even know how to speak the
   language of the body. When we use the word "information" we reify it
   because we have always reified abstractions - ever since God appeared
   as a burning bush. (Information as the catastrophic decorporealization
   of "brute" matter). We would now like to propose the identification of
   self with body. We're not denying that "the body is also spirit", but
   we wish to restore some balance to the historical equation. We
   calculate all body-hatred and world-slander as our "evil". We insist
   on the revival (and mutation) of "pagan" values concerning the
   relation of body and spirit. We fail to feel any great enthusiasm for
   the "information economy" because we see it as yet another mask for
   body-hatred. We can't quite believe in the "information war", since it
   also hypostatizes information but labels it "evil". In this sense,
   "information" would appear to be neutral. But we also distrust this
   third position as a lukewarm cop-out and a failure of theoretical
   vision. Every "fact" takes different meanings as we run it through our
   dialectical prism11 and study its gleam and shadows. The "fact" is
   never inert or "neutral", but it can be both "good" and "evil" (or
   beyond them) in countless variations and combinations. We, finally,
   are the artists of this immeasurable discourse. We create values. We
   do this because we are alive. Information is as big a "mess" as the
   material world it reflects and transforms. We embrace the mess, all of
   it. It's all life. But within the vast chaos of the alive, certain
   information and certain material things begin to coalesce into a
   poetics or a way-of-knowing or a way-of-acting. We can draw certain
   pro-tem "conclusions," as long as we don't plaster them over and set
   them up on altars. Neither "information" nor indeed any one "fact"
   constitutes a thing-in-itself. The very word "information" implies an
   ideology, or rather a paradigm, rooted in unconscious fear of the
   "silence" of matter and of the universe. "Information" is a substitute
   for certainty, a left-over fetish of dogmatics, a super-stitio, a
   spook. "Poetic facts" are not assimilable to the doctrine of
   "information". "Knowledge is freedom" is true only when freedom is
   understood as a psycho-kinetic skill. "Information" is a chaos;
   knowledge is the spontaneous ordering of that chaos; freedom is the
   surfing of the wave of that spontaneity. These tentative conclusions
   constitute the shifting and marshy ground of our "theory". The TAZ
   wants all information and all bodily pleasure in a great complex
   confusion of sweet data and sweet dates - facts and feasts - wisdom
   and wealth. This is our economy - and our war.
     _________________________________________________________________
   
   Notes
   
   1. The new "life" sciences offer some dialectical opposition here, or
   could do so if they worked and through certain paradigms. Chaos
   theory seems to deal with the material world in positive ways, as
   does Gaia theory, morphogenetic theory, and various other "soft" and
   "neo-hermetic" disciplines. Elsewhere I've attempted to incorporate
   these philosophical implications into a "festal" synthesis. The point
   is not to abandon all thought about the material world, but to
   realize that all science has philosophical and political
   implications, and that science is a way of thinking, not a dogmatic
   structure of incontrovertible Truth. Of course quantum, relativity,
   and information theory are all "true" in some way and can be given a
   positive interpretation. I've already done that in several essays.
   Now I want to explore the negative aspects.
   
   2. Freedom: Alchemy for a Voluntary Society, Stephan A. Hoeller
   (Wheaton,IL: Quest, 1992), 229-230.
   
   3. Ibid., p. 164.
   
   4. Like Pavlov's dogs salivating at the dinner bell rather than the
   dinner - a perfect illustration of what I mean by "abstraction".
   
   5. Although some might say that it already "virtually" exists. I just
   heard from a friend in California of a new scheme for "universal
   prisons" - offenders will be allowed to live at home and go to work
   but will be electronically monitored at all times, like Winston Smith
   in 1984. The universal panopticon now potentially coincide one-to-one
   with the whole of reality; life and work will take the place of
   outdated physical incarceration - the Prison Society will merge with
   "electronic democracy" to form a Surveillance State or information
   totality, with all time and space compacted beneath the unsleeping
   gaze of RoboCop. On the level of pure tech, at least, it would seem
   that we have at last arrived at "the future". "Honest citizens" of
   course will have nothing to fear; hence terror will reign
   unchallenged and Order will triumph like the Universal Ice. Our only
   hope may lie in the "chaotic perturbation" of massively-linked
   computers, and in the venal stupidity or boredom of those who program
   and monitor the system.
   
   6. I will always remember with pleasure being addressed, by a
   Bulgarian delegate to a conference I once attended, as a "fellow
   worker in philosophy". Perhaps the capitalist version would be
   "entrepreneur in philosophy", as if one bought ideas like apples at
   roadside stands.
   
   7. Of course information may sometimes be "occult", as in Conspiracy
   Theory. Information may be "disinformation". Spies and propagandists
   make up a kind of shadow "information economy", to be sure. Hackers
   who believe in "freedom of information" have my sympathy, especially
   since they've been picked as the latest enemies of the Spectacular
   State, and subjected to its spasms of control-by-terror. But hackers
   have yet to "liberate" a single bit of information useful in our
   struggle. Their impotence, and their fascination with Imagery, make
   them ideal victims of the "Information State", which itself is based
   on pure simulation. One needn't steal data from the post-military-
   industrial complex to know, in general, what it's up to. We
   understand enough to form our critique. More information by itself
   will never take the place of the actions we have failed to carry out;
   data by itself will never reach critical mass. Despite my loving debt
   to thinkers like Robert Anton Wilson and T. Leary I cannot agree with
   their optimistic analysis of the cognitive function of information
   technology. It is not the neural system alone which will achieve
   autonomy, but the entire body.
   
   8. Issue #6, Nothing is True, Box 175, Liverpool L69 8DX, UK
   
   9. Indeed, the whole "poetic terrorism" project has been proposed only
   as a strategy in this very war.
   
   10. "The 'World' is 'one'" can be and has been used to justify a
   totality, a metaphysical ordering of "reality" with a "center" or
   "apex" : one God, one King, etc., etc. This is the monism of
   orthodoxy, which naturally opposes Dualism and its other source of
   power ("evil") - orthodoxy also presupposes that the One occupies a
   higher ontological position than the Many, that transcendence takes
   precedence over immanence. What I call radical (or heretical) monism
   demands unity of one and Many on the level of immanence; hence it is
   seen by Orthodoxy as a turning-upside-down or saturnalia which
   proposes that every "one" is equally "divine". Radical monism is "on
   the side of" the Many - which explains why it seems to lie at the
   heart of pagan polytheism and shamanism, as well as extreme forms of
   monotheism such as Ismailism or Ranterism, based on "inner light"
   teachings. "All is one", therefore, can be spoken by any kind of
   monist or anti-dualist and can mean many different things.
   
   11. A proposal: the new theory of taoist dialectics. Think of the
   yin/yang disc, with a spot of black in the white lozenge, and vice
   versa - separated not by a straight line but an S-curve. Amiri Baraka
   says that dialectics is just "separating out the good from the bad" -
   but the taoist is "beyond good and evil". The dialectic is supple,
   but the taoist dialectic is downright sinuous. For example, making
   use of the taoist dialectic, we can re-evaluate Gnosis once again.
   True, it presents a negative view of the body and of becoming. But
   also true that it has played the role of the eternal rebel against
   all orthodoxy, and this makes it interesting. In its libertine and
   revolutionary manifestations the Gnosis possesses many secrets, some
   of which are actually worth knowing. The organizational forms of
   Gnosis - the crackpot cult, the secret society - seem pregnant with
   possibilities for the TAZ/Immediatist project. Of course, as I've
   pointed out elsewhere, not all gnosis is Dualistic. There also exists
   a monist gnostic tradition, which sometimes borrows heavily from
   Dualism and is often confused with it. Monist gnosis is
   anti-eschatological, using religious language to describe this world,
   not Heaven or the Gnostic Pleroma. Shamanism, certain "crazy" forms
   of Taoism and Tantra and Zen, heterodox sufism and Ismailism,
   Christian antinomians such as the Ranters, etc. - share a conviction
   of the holiness of the "inner spirit", and of the actually real, the
   "world". These are our "spiritual ancestors."

