INFORMATION LANGUAGE AND SOCIETY |
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Extracts from Norbert Wiener's "Cybernetics" ( MIT 1948 ) |
Community as a product of intercommunications:
....social animals may have an active,
intelligent flexible means of communication long before the
development of language. Whatever means of communication the race
may have, it is possible to define and to measure the amount of
information available to the race and to distinguish it from the
amount of information available to the individual. Certainly no
information available to the individual is also available to the
race unless it modifies the behaviour of one individual to
another, nor is even that behaviour of racial significance unless
it is distinguishable by other individuals from other forms of
behaviour. Thus the question as to whether a certain piece of
information is racial or of a purely private availability depends
on whether it results in the individual assuming a form of
activity which can be recognised as a distinct form of activity
by other members of the race, in the sense that it will in turn
affect their activity, and so on.
Decision-making & autonomy:
It is possible to give a sort of measure to
this by comparing the number of decisions entering a group from
outside with the number of decisions made by the group. We can
thus measure the autonomy of the group. A measure of the
effective size of a group is given by the size which it must have
to have achieved a certain stated degree of autonomy. Extent of
the community: I have spoken of the race. This is really too
broad a term for the scope of most communal information. Properly
speaking, the community extends only so far as there extends an
effectual transmission of information. A group may have more
group information or less group information than its members. A
group of non-social animals, temporarily assembled, contains very
little group information, even though its members may possess
much information as individuals. This is because very little that
one member does is noticed by the others and is acted on them in
a way that goes further in the group......... (There is no
necessary relation in either direction between the amount of
racial or tribal or community information and the amount of
information available to the individual).
Communications in healthy small
communities:
In a small rural community which has been
running long enough to have developed somewhat uniform levels of
knowledge-intelligence and behaviour, there is a very respectable
standard of care for the unfortunate, of administration of roads
and other public facilities, of tolerance for those who have
offended once or twice against society. After all these people
are there, and the rest of the community must continue to live
with them..... Small closely knot communities have a very
considerable measure of homeostasis; and this, whether they are
highly literate communities in a civilised country or villages of
primitive savages......
Communications and The State:
..... In connection with the effective amount
of communal information, one of the most surprising facts about
the body politic is its extreme lack of efficient homeostatic
processes. There is a belief, current in many countries, which
has been elevated to the rank of an official article of faith in
the United States, that free competition is itself a homeostatic
process: that in a free market the individual selfishness of the
bargainers, each seeking to sell as high and buy as low as
possible, will result in the end in a stable dynamics of prices,
and with redound to the greatest common good. This is associated
with the very comforting view that the individual entrepreneur,
in seeking to forward his own interest, is in some manner a
public benefactor and has thus earned the great rewards with
which society has showered him. Unfortunately, the evidence, such
as it is, is against this simple-minded theory.
Games Theory and The Market:
The market is a game......strictly subject to
the general theory of games, developed by von Neumann and
Morgenstern.....the individual players are compelled by their own
cupidity to form coalitions; but these coalitions do not
generally establish themselves in any single, determinant way,
and usually terminate in a welter of betrayal, turncoatism, and
deception, which is only too true a picture of the higher
business life, or the closely related lives of politics,
diplomacy, and war. In the long run, even the most brilliant and
unprincipled hucksters become tired of this and agree to live in
peace with one another, and the great rewards are then reserved
for the one who watches for an opportune time to break his
agreement and betray his companions. There is no homeostasis
whatever. We are unwilling spectators to the business cycles of
boom and failure, in the successions of dictatorships and
revolution, in the wars which everyone looses, which are so real
a feature of modern times. (Naturally, von Neumann's picture of
the player as a completely intelligent, completely ruthless
person is an abstraction and a perversion of the facts. It is
rare to find a large number of thoroughly clever and unprincipled
persons playing a game together).
Corruption of The Media:
Where the knaves assemble, there will always be
fools; and where the fools are present in sufficient numbers,
they offer a more profitable object of exploitation for the
knaves. The psychology of the fools has become a subject well
worth the serious attention of knaves. Instead of looking out for
his own ultimate interest, after the fashion of von Neumann's
gamesters, the fool operates in a manner which, by and large, is
as predictable as the struggles of a rat in a maze. -
"This" policy of lies (or rather, of statements
irrelevant to the truth) will make him buy a particular brand of
cigarettes; - "That" policy will (or so the party
hopes) will induce him to vote for a particular candidate (any
candidate) or to join in a political witch hunt. - A certain
precise mixture of religion, pornography and pseudo science will
sell an illustrated newspaper - A certain blend of wheedling,
bribery, and intimidation will induce a young scientist to work
on guided missiles or the atomic bomb..... To determine these,
they have their machinery of popular fan ratings, straw votes,
opinion samplings and other psychological investigations with the
common man as their object.......
Importance of non-commercial media:
Luckily for us, these merchants of lies, these exploiters of gullibility, have not yet arrived at such a pitch of perfection as to have things all their own way. This is because no one is either all fool or all knave. The average person is quite reasonably intelligent concerning subjects which come to his direct attention and quite reasonably altruistic in matters of public benefit or private suffering which are brought before his own eyes. It is only in the large community, where the Lords of Things as They Are protect themselves from hunger by wealth, from public opinion by privacy and anonymity, from private criticism by the laws of libel and the possession of the means of communication, that ruthlessness can reach its most sublime levels.
Of all anti-homeostatic factors in society, the
sociopathic control by business of the means of communication is
the most effective and most important. One of the lessons of the
present book is that: "Any social structure is held together
by the possession of means for the acquisition, use, retention
and transmission of information". In a society too large for
the direct contact of its members, these means are the press,
radio, telephone, posts, the theatre, television, the movies,
school and church....
Existing Local media:
Besides their intrinsic importance as means of
communication, each of the above serves other, secondary
functions. The newspaper is a vehicle for advertising and an
instrument of monetary gain for the proprietor as are movies and
the radio...... In a society like ours, avowedly based on buying
and selling, in which all natural and human resources are
regarded as the absolute property of the first businessman
enterprising enough to exploit them, these secondary aspects of
the means of communication tend to encroach further and further
on the primary ones. This is aided by the very elaboration and
the consequence expense of the means themselves.... The local
paper may continue to use its own reporters to canvass the
villages around for gossip, but it buys its national news, its
syndicated features, its political opinions as stereotyped
"boiler plate"...... The great news services cost too
much to be available to the publisher of moderate means.....
The Problem:
.....A triple constriction of the means of communication: the elimination of the less profitable means in favour of the more profitable; the fact that these means are in the hands of the very limited class of wealthy men, and thus naturally express the opinions of that class; and the further fact that, as one of the chief avenues to political and personal power, they attract above all those ambitious for such power.
That system which more than all others should
contribute to social homeostasis is thrown directly into the
hands of those most concerned in the game of power and money,
which as we have already seen to be one of the chief
anti-homeostatic elements in the community. It is no wonder then
that the larger communities, subject to this disruptive
influence, contain far less communally available information than
the smaller communities.....
False Optimism:
There is a group who see nothing good in the
anarchy of modern society, and in whom an optimistic feeling that
there must be some way out has led to an over evaluation of the
possible homeostatic elements in the community. Much as we may
sympathize with these individuals and appreciate the emotional
dilemma in which they find themselves, we cannot attribute too
much value to this type of wishfull thinking...... It is the mode of thought of the mice
when faced with the problem of belling the cat. Undoubtedly it would be very pleasant
for us mice if the predatory cats of the world were to be belled,
but - who is going to do it? Who is to
assure us that ruthless power will not find its way back into the
hands of those most avid for it? I mention this matter because of
the considerable, and I think false, hopes which some of my
friends have built for the social efficacy of whatever new ways
of thinking this book may contain. They are certain that our
control over our material environment has far outgrown our
control over our social environment and our understanding
thereof. Therefore they consider that the main task of the
immediate future is to extend to the fields of anthropology, of
sociology, of economics, the methods of the natural sciences, in
the hope of achieving a like measure of success in the social
fields. From believing this necessary, they come to believe it
possible. In this, I maintain they show an excessive
optimism........
Extracts from Norbert Wiener's * "Cybernetics"
( MIT 1948 )
* The inventor of the term "Cybernetics".