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	<title>mutually occluded &#187; Design</title>
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	<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com</link>
	<description>media &#38; film, design, philosophy, politics</description>
	<pubDate>Tue, 18 May 2010 02:12:52 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>The first fully compostable snack chip bag</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/the-first-fully-compostable-snack-chip-bag/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/the-first-fully-compostable-snack-chip-bag/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 13:00:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Noted]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Commodity]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[environment]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/?p=1665</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SunChips, Frito-Lay&#8217;s popular line of multigrain snacks, will introduce for Earth Day 2010 the first fully compostable snack chip bag made from plant-based materials. Packaging Digest describes the key design innovations behind SunChips&#8217; new packaging:
Current snack food packaging has three layers: a printed outer layer with packaging visuals/graphics, an inner layer, which serves as a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>SunChips, Frito-Lay&#8217;s popular line of multigrain snacks, will <a href="http://www.packagingdigest.com/article/CA6652685.html?nid=3910">introduce for Earth Day 2010</a> the first fully compostable snack chip bag made from plant-based materials. <em>Packaging Digest</em> describes the key design innovations behind SunChips&#8217; new packaging:</p>
<blockquote><p>Current snack food packaging has three layers: a printed outer layer with packaging visuals/graphics, an inner layer, which serves as a barrier to maintain the quality and integrity of the product, and a middle layer that joins the other two layers. When the packaging is 100% compostable, it will fully decompose in about 14 weeks when placed in a hot, active compost pile or bin. <a href="http://www.natureworksllc.com/">NatureWorks LLC</a> is providing the PLA, which is trademarked under the Ingeo name.</p>
<p>&#8220;Packaging is clearly the most visible interaction consumers have with Frito-Lay&#8217;s brands,&#8221; said Jay Gehring, vice president, packaging R&amp;D, Frito-Lay North America. &#8220;To make packaging that would interact differently in the environment we had to change the composition of packaging and invent key technologies. Using plant-based renewable materials, we have a promising solution that will transform packaging and significantly impact the billions of snack food bags produced annually.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Frito-Lay will also &#8220;fund the collection and upcycling of its used packaging through a program in conjunction with <a href="http://www.terracycle.net/">TerraCycle</a>.&#8221;</p>
<p>Their coming marketing campaign will also be an opportunity to see how appealing a large brand&#8217;s sustainable packaging rebranding will be to the general public. Will people dramatically flock to this product <em>for</em> this reason? If they do, it&#8217;s not hard to see how <a href="http://www.thedieline.com/blog/2008/03/sustainable-pac.html">sustainable packaging</a>, in terms of market appeal and positive associations, could generate all sorts of incentives for companies to rethink their full consumption cycle.</p>
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		<title>BLDGBLOG Book Release</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/bldgblog-book-release/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/bldgblog-book-release/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Apr 2009 14:51:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Noted]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>

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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/?p=1552</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[




The much-awaited BLDGBLOG book is out. Sounds like the visually-stunning, encyclopaedic tour de force we&#8217;ve been expecting: 
&#8220;It&#8217;s got five major chapters and a huge bibliography; it&#8217;s got interviews, full-color photo spreads (by Simon Norfolk! David Maisel! Edward Burtynsky! Ilkka Halso! Bas Princen! and more!), as well as original illustrations by my colleague at Dwell, Brendan Callahan; it&#8217;s [...]]]></description>
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<dl class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 485px;">
<dt class="wp-caption-dt"><a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2009/04/bldgblog-book.html"><img title="BLDGBLOG book" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3382/3425609226_44938024e9_o.jpg" alt="BLDGBLOG book" width="475" height="707" /></a></dt>
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<p>The much-awaited BLDGBLOG book is <a href="http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2009/04/bldgblog-book.html">out</a>. Sounds like the visually-stunning, encyclopaedic <em>tour de force</em> we&#8217;ve been expecting: </p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;It&#8217;s got five major chapters and a huge bibliography; it&#8217;s got interviews, full-color photo spreads (by <a href="http://www.simonnorfolk.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Simon Norfolk</span></a>! <a href="http://www.davidmaisel.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">David Maisel</span></a>! <a href="http://www.edwardburtynsky.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Edward Burtynsky</span></a>! <a href="http://ilkka.halso.net/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Ilkka Halso</span></a>! <a href="http://www.iconeye.com/index.php?view=article&amp;catid=348%3Agallery&amp;layout=gallery&amp;id=2903%3Abas-princen&amp;option=com_content&amp;Itemid=58" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Bas Princen</span></a>! and more!), as well as original illustrations by my colleague at <em>Dwell</em>, <a href="http://www.semigood.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Brendan Callahan</span></a>; it&#8217;s got maps and plans and architectural sections; it&#8217;s got renderings; it&#8217;s got 19th-century British ruin paintings, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0811214133?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=bldgblog-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0811214133"><span style="color: #8a4117;">W.G. Sebald</span></a>, and J.G. Ballard; it&#8217;s got <a href="http://fashionarchitecturetaste.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">FAT</span></a>, geology, and rogue tunneling machines; it&#8217;s got urban farming, icebergs, archaeology, and Archigram; it&#8217;s got a saddle-stitched paperback binding that can open up flat, as well as multi-colored paper and an awesome use of a changing page grid; it&#8217;s got two original comic strips by BLDGBLOG (my first!), drawn by <a href="http://joealterio.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Joe Alterio</span></a> and printed on the inside covers; it&#8217;s got runaway climate change, undersea cathedrals, artificial reefs, lost cities, oceangoing utopias, and the Chinese Olympics; it&#8217;s got injected landforms, spray-foam monuments to the nuclear power industry, Gustave Doré&#8217;s black and white visions of the underworld, and the architecture of Gothic horror; it&#8217;s got blimps, retractable villages on the British coast, the San Andreas Fault, underground warfare in the mountains of Afghanistan, and a short interview with <a href="http://pruned.blogspot.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Alex Trevi</span></a> (among so many other interviews! dozens! from <a href="http://crabstudio.co.uk/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Sir Peter Cook</span></a>, <a href="http://www.strangeharvest.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Sam Jacob</span></a>, and <a href="http://www.negrophonic.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">DJ /rupture</span></a> to <a href="http://lebbeuswoods.wordpress.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Lebbeus Woods</span></a> and <a href="http://timesonline.typepad.com/dons_life/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Mary Beard</span></a>); it&#8217;s got exploding stars, simulated mountain ranges on Venus, Mars habitats, and a quantum tomb for Albert Einstein; it&#8217;s got <a href="http://www.massstudies.com/" target="_blank"><span style="color: #8a4117;">Minsuk Cho</span></a>, China Miéville, Christopher Wren, Frederick the Great, and <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0140424393?ie=UTF8&amp;tag=bldgblog-20&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0140424393"><em><span style="color: #8a4117;">Paradise Lost</span></em></a>.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Detroit Green-Ready Houses Going for $100</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/detroit-green-ready-houses-going-for-100/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/detroit-green-ready-houses-going-for-100/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Apr 2009 17:03:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Noted]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>

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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/?p=1545</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Somehow I missed this inspiring development: artists are moving in to Detroit, buying up houses for dirt cheap and converting them into linked-up, green artist communities.
A local couple, Mitch Cope and Gina Reichert, started the ball rolling. An artist and an architect, they recently became the proud owners of a one-bedroom house in East Detroit [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Somehow I missed this <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/08/opinion/08barlow.html?em">inspiring development</a>: artists are moving in to Detroit, buying up houses for dirt cheap and converting them into linked-up, green artist communities.</p>
<blockquote><p>A local couple, Mitch Cope and Gina Reichert, started the ball rolling. An artist and an architect, they recently became the proud owners of a one-bedroom house in East Detroit for just $1,900. Buying it wasn’t the craziest idea. The neighborhood is almost, sort of, half-decent. Yes, the occasional crack addict still commutes in from the suburbs but a large, stable Bangladeshi community has also been moving in.</p>
<p>So what did $1,900 buy? The run-down bungalow had already been stripped of its appliances and wiring by the city’s voracious scrappers. But for Mitch that only added to its appeal, because he now had the opportunity to renovate it with solar heating, solar electricity and low-cost, high-efficiency appliances.</p>
<p>Buying that first house had a snowball effect. Almost immediately, Mitch and Gina bought two adjacent lots for even less and, with the help of friends and local youngsters, dug in a garden. Then they bought the house next door for $500, reselling it to a pair of local artists for a $50 profit. When they heard about the $100 place down the street, they called their friends Jon and Sarah.</p>
<p>Admittedly, the $100 home needed some work, a hole patched, some windows replaced. But Mitch plans to connect their home to his mini-green grid and a neighborhood is slowly coming together.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Synaesthesia, Aristotle, and Product Experience</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/synaesthesia-aristotle-and-product-experience/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/synaesthesia-aristotle-and-product-experience/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2009 15:05:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Philosophy]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[attention]]></category>

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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/?p=1469</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;Sunaisthēsis is the distant origin of the modern &#8220;synaesthesia&#8221;; the verb from which it was drawn, sunaisthanesthai, can be found in two passages of Aristotle&#8217;s treatises. &#8220;Formed by the addition of the prefix &#8216;with&#8217; (sun-) to the verb &#8216;to sense&#8217; or &#8216;to perceive&#8217; (aisthanesthai), the expression in all likelihood designated a &#8216;feeling in common,&#8217; a [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>&#8220;<strong>Sunaisthēsis</strong> is the distant origin of the modern &#8220;synaesthesia&#8221;; the verb from which it was drawn, <em>sunaisthanesthai</em>, can be found in two passages of Aristotle&#8217;s treatises. &#8220;Formed by the addition of the prefix &#8216;with&#8217; (<em>sun</em>-) to the verb &#8216;to sense&#8217; or &#8216;to perceive&#8217; (<em>aisthanesthai</em>), the expression in all likelihood designated a &#8216;feeling in common,&#8217; a perception shared by more than one. It is telling that the Stagirite invoked it in his analysis of friendship in the <em>Eudemian</em> as well as the <em>Nicomachean Ethics</em>. [Aristotle, <em>Eudemian Ethics</em> H.12.1254b24, and <em>Nicomachean Ethics</em> 9.9.1170b4] At this point in the development of the Greek language, the term applied to the communal life of many, and its meaning lay far from the one that would later be attributed to it by the commentators.&#8221; (Daniel Heller-Roazen, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Inner-Touch-Archaeology-Sensation/dp/1890951765/ref=pd_bbs_1?ie=UTF8&amp;s=books&amp;qid=1238704530&amp;sr=8-1">The Inner Touch: Archaeology of a Sensation</a></em>. New York: Zone Books, 2007: 81.)</p></blockquote>
<p>Modern philosophy&#8217;s focus on consciousness and cognition has in certain ways served to obscure prior &#8217;corporeal&#8217; conceptions of experience, a fact reflected in translators&#8217; persistent grappling with Aristotle&#8217;s terminology, which seems to have no precise modern correlate.  Translations of <em>sunaisthēsis</em> tend to opt for terms that connote its opposite, a mental, cognitive faculty. Thus, in &#8220;contemporary discussions of Alexander, Simplicius, Damascius, Philoponus, and Priscian, one very often finds the Greek expression [<em>sunaisthēsis</em>] rendered by &#8216;consciousness&#8217; and &#8217;self-consciousness&#8217;&#8221;, even though, to be sure, &#8220;other choices have also been made. In his English version of Alexander&#8217;s <em>Quaestiones</em>, Robert W. Sharples consistently translates the term as &#8217;self-awareness,&#8217; and in his edition of Alexander&#8217;s commentary on the <em>De sensu</em>, Alan Towey opts for another expression, further still from the modern idiom: &#8216;joint perception.&#8217;&#8221; (Heller-Roazen <em>Touch</em> 83) These textual decisions seem all the more important when we consider the fact that Aristotle doesn&#8217;t seem to have a term for &#8216;consciousness&#8217; even when he&#8217;s <em>not</em> talking about <em>sunaisthēsis</em>.</p>
<blockquote><p> &#8221;It has been noted more than once that Aristotle, a child of his times, seems to have lacked any exact equivalent for the modern term. At times, the fact has been presented simply as a matter of linguistic means, as when Charles H. Kahn remarked that &#8216;the [page] Greek of Aristotle&#8217;s day has no term which really corresponds to the modern usage of &#8220;consciousness,&#8221; for the process or condition of awareness as such,&#8217; or when Richard Sorabji observed that &#8216;Aristotle has no word corresponding to &#8220;mental act,&#8221; or to Descartes&#8217; <em>cogitatio</em> (consciousness),&#8217; or when, finally, Deborah K.W. Modrak noted that &#8216;Aristotle has no general term for consciousness.&#8217; (Kahn, &#8220;Sensation and Consciousness in Aristotle&#8217;s Psychology,&#8221; p. 22; Sorabji, &#8220;Body and Soul in Aristotle,&#8221; p. 68; Modrak, Aristotelian Theory of Consciousness?&#8221; p. 160.)&#8221; (Heller-Roazen <em>Touch</em> 38–39)</p></blockquote>
<p>Modern mistranslations aside, the concept of <em>sunaisthēsis </em>can be seen to have split, and taken on new meanings, over the centuries since Aristotle first introduced the word. For one, beginning with Galen, the original empathetic and communal connotations were overtaken by a more physiological, perceptual register, which remains to this day. Indeed, as Heller-Roazen describes it, <em>sunaisthēsis </em>became a word for sense <em>as</em> consciousness, a collaboration of the senses that produces awareness, attention, or &#8216;registration&#8217;.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;One of the earliest indications of a shift in the sense of the expression can be found in the medical literature that flourished after the beginning of the Christian era. It has been noted that Galen, for instance, employs <em>sunaisthēsis </em>to designate a sensation &#8216;in common,&#8217; not in that it is shared by many but in that it reaches a single body all at once, while consisting, in effect, of multiple physiological affections: the physician can characterize [page] pain, for example, as being &#8216;felt simultaneously with the perception of the seething of the blood&#8217; (<em>meta sphugmou </em><em>sunaisthēseōs</em>). [Galen, <em>On the Therapeutic Method</em> 8.1 (10.875.14 Kühn)] <strong>In other medical authors of the period, such as Aretaeus, one finds the nominal and verbal forms of the expression used in a much more general sense: here the word appears to designate the acts of &#8216;detection,&#8217; &#8216;registration,&#8217; and &#8216;realization&#8217; of any sensation.</strong> [Aretaeus, <em>Arataeus </em>2.9.2] The word in this broad meaning soon left the terrain of medicine and entered common usage, and it was not long before authors as diverse as Philo Judaeus and Sextus Empiricus could invoke it to refer to the process of &#8216;noticing&#8217; or &#8216;remarking&#8217; upon a felt fact. [Polybius 5.72.5; Philo Judaeus, <em>De virtutibus </em>76; Sextus Empiricus, <em>Adversus mathematicos</em> 9.68]&#8220;  (Heller-Roazen <em>Touch</em> 81–82)</p></blockquote>
<p>This concept, and its historic tension with theories of consciousness, seems especially relevant today, in that the contemporary &#8216;practical sciences&#8217; &#8212; behavioral advertising, product testing, user-based design, etc. &#8212; rely on a conception of the subject that seems closer, in principle, to <em>synaesthesia</em> than to, say, the <em>intellect</em>.  Though the former now for the most part refers to an &#8216;inappropriate&#8217; transfer between senses &#8212; where, for instance, <a href="http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=the-sound-of-sight">you see what you hear</a> &#8212; it also refers to the normal <a href="http://www.mindhacks.com/blog/2008/11/how_synaesthesia_gro.html">developmental process</a> of &#8216;<a href="http://neuroanthropology.net/2008/05/27/children-integrating-their-senses/">integrating your senses</a>&#8216;. However, in a much wider sense, <em>synaesthesia</em> is regularly induced, or manipulated, through artistic and commercial practices. &#8220;<a href="http://www.theelectroniceconomist.com/opinion/displaystory.cfm?story_id=12792420">The way the brain buys</a>&#8221; is, as the phrase suggests, in many ways the result of a complex orchestration of stimuli, environmental conditions, and subjective desires. It is now well-understood that conscious mental acts are only one, small part of the puzzle.</p>
<p>Indeed, product experience, for instance, is increasingly shown to rely upon subliminal, or at least less-than-attentive, sensory factors. Ludden &amp; Schifferstein&#8217;s remarkable paper on the &#8220;<a href="http://www.ijdesign.org/ojs/index.php/IJDesign/article/view/87/77">Effects of Visual-Auditory Incongruity on Product Expression and Surprise</a>&#8221; is the case in point. &#8220;Product experience,&#8221; they conclude, &#8221;is influenced by information from all the senses.</p>
<blockquote><p>Our experiments provide insight into how sounds contribute to the overall experience of a product&#8217;s expression. We manipulated the sounds of dust busters and juicers so that they either did or did not fit the expressions of the products&#8217; appearances. In some, but not all cases, we found an inverse relationship between the degree-of-fit of a sound and the degree of surprise evoked. Furthermore, we found in some cases that the expression of a product&#8217;s sound influenced the overall expression of that product.</p></blockquote>
<p>Though it&#8217;s a little odd that Aristotle would be vindicated in this way, the point to be grasped here is that, beyond deliberation and decision-making, experience is also, in a deeper sense than expected, a complex, sub-conscious negotiation of sensory material. What is noticed, what might seem the most important feature, may, thus, be a decoy or constitutive distraction from a more elaborate interplay of explicit and subordinate affects and features. You might think you&#8217;re buying the juicer for its juicing abilities when, in fact, it&#8217;s that and more &#8212; its sound, its look, and the degree of fit between the two. Which is precisely why Harley Davidson has been <a href="http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/law/st_org/iptf/articles/content/1998101101.html">trying to trademark</a> the Harley-Davidson <em>roar</em>. They&#8217;ve realized that it&#8217;s a bigger factor than you might think in the appeal of their product and your decision to buy it.</p>
<p>All of this points the way to a recovery of the &#8216;communal&#8217; aspect of Aristotle&#8217;s <em>sunaisthēsis </em>&#8211; if only because, ultimately, the relative correlation between a sound and an image, between the juicer&#8217;s look and its whir, is cultural, emergent, and short-lived. Though we can&#8217;t go into it here, this forgotten dimension to <em>sunaisthēsis</em>, and <em>synaesthesia</em>, constitutes that other &#8216;common sense&#8217; &#8211; the general, widespread, uncharted folk knowledge base that defines a people and their shared aesthetic sensibilities.</p>
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		<title>Face recognition and the Islamic niqab</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/face-recognition-and-the-islamic-niqab/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/04/face-recognition-and-the-islamic-niqab/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2009 20:32:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Der Spiegel reports of another &#8220;Veiled Woman Removed From Bus in Denmark&#8220;:
&#8220;For Amina Farah Suleiman, it was the fourth time in a few months that she has been kicked off a bus in the harbor city of Odense. Her Islamic niqab only had a small opening for the eyes, and the driver refused to accept [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Der Spiegel </em>reports of another &#8220;<a href="http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,617093,00.html">Veiled Woman Removed From Bus in Denmark</a>&#8220;:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;For Amina Farah Suleiman, it was the fourth time in a few months that she has been kicked off a bus in the harbor city of Odense. Her Islamic <em>niqab</em> only had a small opening for the eyes, and the driver refused to accept her season ticket, saying he could not see who she was.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Provided it&#8217;s not simply a thinly-veiled case of discrimination (which it probably is), there are, as a matter of fact, engineers working on the problem. A paper presented at the 2007 <em>Machine Vision </em>conference, entitled &#8220;<a href="http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/freeabs_all.jsp?tp=&amp;arnumber=4469271&amp;isnumber=4469254">A study on partial face recognition of eye region</a>&#8220;, described one possible method for scanning the region around the eyes instead of the face, to avoid just these kinds of problems.</p>
<blockquote><p>In this preliminary study, we have investigated the human eye as an important part of face for personal authentication under certain restricted circumstances related to face occlusion, individual privacy concerns and religious practices.</p></blockquote>
<p>Instead of generating incendiary &#8220;culture clashes&#8221; where there are none &#8212; by, for instance, subjecting people to processes that have failed to take them into account &#8211; we should be arguing over how best to redesign the process <em>for</em> the people.</p>
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		<title>Bruno Latour on the Expanding Meaning of the Word &#8220;Design&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/02/bruno-latour-on-the-expanding-meaning-of-the-word-design/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Feb 2009 02:08:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[In his September 2008 keynote address for the Networks of Design meeting of the Design History Society, Bruno Latour described, with typical circumspection, the implications of the on-going expansion of design. The sheer range of things now subject to it &#8212; objects, cities, and everything in between &#8212; shows just how momentous, and total, this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><div class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 460px"><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/20417508@N05/3255437331/"><img title="One Mans Trash, by Matt Eskuche" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3497/3255437331_496c5f7055_o.jpg" alt="One Mans Trash, by Matt Eskuche" width="450" height="276" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">One Man&#39;s Trash, by Matt Eskuche</p></div></p>
<p>In his September 2008 keynote address for the Networks of Design meeting of the Design History Society, Bruno Latour described, with typical circumspection, the implications of the on-going expansion of <em>design</em>. The sheer range of things now subject to it &#8212; objects, cities, and everything in between &#8212; shows just how momentous, and total, this shift in production promises to be. And yet, he observes, the connotations of design imply a certain &#8216;modesty&#8217;: it&#8217;s less about construction and creation than informed modification and collaboration. To design, Latour points out, suggests redesigning, and improving, something that came before, opposed to working from scratch in solitary, ingenious confinement. It is, thus, recursive and remedial, favoring skill and attention to detail over bold, inaugural ideas that lack accountability.</p>
<p>The democratic, socialist ethos contingent to it is clear. The Green movement, environmentalism, and anything labeled &#8220;sustainable&#8221; suggest as much. One could even say the precautionary consciousness found lacking in classical engineering is the very heart and soul of design. And it is to this shift, Latour suggests, that the dissolution of the great Modernist divide between function and aesthetic may finally be attributed. Indeed, his most compelling, and perhaps controversial, point concerns the political implications of the design &#8216;movement&#8217;.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;I would argue that design is one the terms that has replaced the word &#8220;revolution&#8221;! To say that everything has to be designed and redesigned (including nature), we imply something of the sort: &#8216;it will neither be revolutionized, nor will it be modernized&#8217;. For me, the word design is a little tracer whose expansion could prove the depth to which we have stopped believing that we have been modern.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>This is almost entirely true. If revolution sounds antiquated, it&#8217;s not because what it refers to is now considered too impossible or too far removed from present contingencies. On the contrary, design &#8212; of the green variety, that is &#8212; if taken to its conclusion, promises the most fundamental upheaval of society, the global economic order, and its distribution of wealth. It may be no substitute for good, old-fashioned revolt, but it would be an error of tremendous proportions to mistake its quiet power for impotence.</p>
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<div style="display:none">A Cautious Prometheus? A Few Steps Toward a Philosophy of Design (with Special Attention to Peter Sloterdijk) Keynote lecture for the Networks of Design* meeting of the Design History Society Falmouth, Cornwall, 3rd September 2008 Bruno Latour, Sciences-Po It came to me at a launching party for a Networks of Design meeting – I was struggling to grasp the extent to which the word “design” has been expanded when we were invited to visit an exhibition called “Re-imagining Cornwall”! I was aware that corporations had to be reengineered, natural ecosystems reclaimed, that cities had to be remodelled and wastelands redeveloped. I knew that neighbourhoods had to be beautified and political platforms scripted, and that interiors had to be redecorated and journal layouts restyled. The Cornwall exhibit confirmed that I was indeed on the right track: if entire provinces can be redesigned then the term no longer has any limit. When I was young, the word design (imported to French from English) meant no more than what we now call “relooking” in French (a good English word that, unfortunately, does not exist in English). To “relook” means to give a new and better “look” or shape to something – a chair, a knife, a car, a package, a lamp, an interior – which would otherwise remain too clumsy, too severe or too bared if it were left only to its naked function. “Design” in this old and limited meaning was a way to redress the efficient but somewhat boring emphasis of engineers and commercial staff. Design occurred by adding a veneer of form to their creations, some superficial feature that could make a difference in taste and fashion. Even if design could be greatly admired, it was always taken as one branch of an alternative: look not only at the function, but also at the design. This dichotomy was I thank Martha Poon for having kindly corrected my English and suggested many useful changes. *  112-Design- Cornwall  2  true even though the best design was one that, in good modernist fashion (as it did in “functionalism”), approximated function as closely as possible. “Design” was always taken in this “not only… but also” balance. It was as if there were really two very different ways of grasping an object: one through its intrinsic materiality, the other through its more aesthetic or “symbolic” aspects. I know this is a very poor rendering of what you now want to mean by “design”. (I am well aware that the French use of the word is much more restricted than the Scandinavian or the English one). However, I want to utilize this definition from my youth as a base line from which to fathom the extraordinary career of this term. From a surface feature in the hands of a not-soserious-profession that added features in the purview of much-more-seriousprofessionals (engineers, scientists, accountants), design has been spreading continuously so that it increasingly matters to the very substance of production. What is more, design has been extended from the details of daily objects to cities, landscapes, nations, cultures, bodies, genes, and, as I will argue, to nature itself – which is in great need of being re-designed. It is as though the meaning of the word has grown in what logicians refer to as ‘comprehension’ and ‘extension’. First, it has grown in comprehension – it has eaten up more and more elements of what a thing is. Today everyone with an iPhone knows that it would be absurd to distinguish what has been designed from what has been planned, calculated, arrayed, arranged, packed, packaged, defined, projected, tinkered, written down in code, disposed of and so on. From now on, “to design” could mean equally any or all of those verbs. Secondly, it has grown in extension – design is applicable to ever larger assemblages of production. The range of things that can be designed is far wider now than a limited list of ordinary or even luxury goods. The reason I am interested in the spread in comprehension and extension of the term design is not because of any intimate knowledge of design practice. (I know even less about its history and I hope the many historians of the notion among you will not contradict me too much). Yet I take its expansion as a fascinating tell tale of a change in the ways we deal with objects and action more generally. If it is true as I have claimed that we have never been modern, and if it is true, as a consequence, that “matters of fact” have now clearly become “matters of concern”, then there is logic to the following observation: the typically modernist divide between materiality on the one hand and design on the other is slowly being dissolved away. The more objects are turned into things – that is, the more matters of facts are turned into matters of concern – the more they are rendered into objects of design through and through. If it is true that the present historical situation is defined by a complete disconnect between two great alternative narratives – one of emancipation, detachment, modernization, progress and mastery, and the other, completely different, of attachment, precaution, entanglement, dependence and care – then the little word “design” could offer a very important touch stone for detecting where we are heading and how well modernism (and also postmodernism) has been faring. To put it more provocatively, I would argue that design is one of the terms that has replaced the word “revolution”! To say that everything has to be designed and redesigned (including nature), we imply something of the sort: “it  2  112-Design- Cornwall  3  will neither be revolutionized, nor will it be modernized”. For me, the word design is a little tracer whose expansion could prove the depth to which we have stopped believing that we have been modern. In other words, the more we think of ourselves as designers, the less we think of ourselves as modernizers. It is from this philosophical or anthropological position on design that I address this audience tonight.  Five advantages of the concept of “design” I dare to articulate this odd argument based (very flimsily I agree) on the various undertones of the word “design” itself. It is the weaknesses of this vague concept that give me reason to believe that we can take it as a clear symptom of a sea change in our collective definition of action. The first section of this lecture will review five successive connotations of the concept of design. In the second I will provide an introduction to Peter Sloterdijk’s philosophy of design. And finally, I with end with a brief conclusion on how to draw things together, that is, to design. As a concept, design implies a humility that seems absent from the word “construction” or “building”. Because of its historical roots as a mere addition to the “real” practicality, sturdy materiality and functions of daily objects, there is always some modesty in claiming to design something anew. In design there is nothing foundational. It seems to me that to say you plan to design something, does not carry the same risk of hubris as saying one is going to build something. Introducing Prometheus to some other hero of the past as a “designer” would doubtlessly have angered him. Thus, the expansion of the word “design” is an indication (a weak one to be sure) of what could be called a post Promethean theory of action. This theory of action has arisen just at the moment (this is its really interesting feature) when every single thing, every detail of our daily existence, from the way we produce food, to the way we travel, build cars or houses, clone cows, etc is to be, well, redesigned. It is just at the moment where the dimensions of the tasks at hand have been fantastically amplified by the various ecological crises, that a non- or a post- Promethean’s sense of what it means to act is taking over public consciousness. A second and perhaps more important implication of design is an attentiveness to details that is completely lacking in the heroic, Promethean, hubristic dream of action. “Go forward, break radically with the past and the consequences will take care of themselves!” This was the old way - to build, to construct, to destroy, to radically overhaul: “Après moi le déluge!” But that has never been the way of approaching a design project. A mad attention to the details has always been attached to the very definition of design skills. And ‘skill’ is actually a term that is also attached to design, in the same way that design is associated with the words ‘art’ and ‘craft’. In addition to modesty, there is a sense of skilfulness, craftsmanship and an obsessive attention to detail that make up a key connotation of design. The reason why this is a point worth remarking is because it was unthinkable to connect these features of design with the revolutionary and modernizing urges of the recent past. To the contrary, a careful attention to detail, craft and skill, was precisely what seemed reactionary as this would only have slowed the swift march to progress. The expanding concept of design 3  112-Design- Cornwall  4  indicates a deep shift in our emotional make up: at the very moment when the scale of what has to be remade has become infinitely larger (no political revolutionary committed to challenging capitalist modes of production has ever considered redesigning the earth’s climate), what means to “make” something is also being deeply modified. The modification is so deep that things are no longer “made” or “fabricated”, but rather carefully “designed”, and if I may use the term, precautionarily designed. It is as though we had to combine the engineering tradition with the precautionary principle; it is as though we had to imagine Prometheus stealing fire from heaven in a cautious way! What is clear is that at this very historical juncture, two absolutely foreign sets of passions (foreign for the modernist ethos that is) are having to be recombined and reconciled. The third connotation of the word design that seems to me so significant is that when analyzing the design of some artefact the task is unquestionably about meaning — be it symbolic, commercial, or otherwise. Design lends itself to interpretation; it is made to be interpreted in the language of signs. In design, there is always as the French say, un dessein, or in Italian, designo. To be sure, in its weakest form design added only superficial meaning to what was brute matter and efficiency. But as it infiltrated into to more and more levels of the objects, it carried with it a new attention to meaning. Wherever you think of something as being designed, you bring all of the tools, skills and crafts of interpretation to the analysis of that thing. It is thus of great import to witness the depths to which our daily surroundings, our most common artefacts are said to be designed. To think of artefacts in terms of design means conceiving of them less and less as modernist objects, and conceiving of them more and more as “things”. To use my language artefacts are becoming conceivable as complex assemblies of contradictory issues (I remind you that this is the etymological meaning of the word “thing” in English –as well as in other European languages).* When things are taken has having been well or badly designed then they no longer appear as matters of fact. So as their appearance as matters of fact weakens, their place among the many matters of concern that are at issue is strengthened. The transformation of objects into signs has been greatly accelerated by the spread of computers. It is obvious that digitalization has done a lot to expand semiotics to the core of objectivity: when almost every feature of digitalized artefacts is “written down” in codes and software, it is no wonder that hermeneutics have seeped deeper and deeper into the very definition of materiality. If Galileo’s book of nature was written in mathematical terms, prodigiously expanding the empire of interpretation and exegesis, this expansion is even truer today when more and more elements of our surroundings are literally and not metaphorically written down in mathematical (or at least in computer) terms. Although the old dichotomy between function and form could be vaguely maintained for a hammer, a locomotive or a chair, it is ridiculous when applied to a mobile phone. Where would you draw the line between form and function? The artefact is composed of writings all the way down! But this is not only true of Latour, B., From Realpolitik to Dingpolitik. How to Make Things Public. An Introduction., in Making Things Public. Atmospheres of Democracy, B. Latour and P. Weibel, Editors. 2005, MIT Press: Cambridge, Mass. p. 1-31. *  4  112-Design- Cornwall  5  computerized artefacts and gadgets. It is also true of good old-fashioned materiality: what are nano- or bio-technologies if not the expansion of design to another level? Those who can make individual atoms write the letters “IBM”, those who implant copyright tags into DNA, or who devise nano cars which “race” on four wheels, would certainly consider themselves to be designers. Here again, matter is absorbed into meaning (or rather as contested meaning) in a more and more intimate fashion. The fourth advantage I see in the word “design” (in addition to its modesty, its attention to detail and the semiotic skills it always carries with it), is that it is never a process that begins from scratch: to design is always to redesign. There is always something that exists first as a given, as an issue, as a problem. Design is a task that follows to make that something more lively, more commercial, more usable, more user’s friendly, more acceptable, more sustainable, and so on, depending on the various constraints to which the project has to answer. In other words, there is always something remedial in design. This is the advantage of the “not only… but also” feature although I criticized it above. This split is a weakness to be sure (there is always the temptation of seeing design as an afterthought, as a secondary task, as a less serious one than those of engineering, commerce and science) but it is also an immense advantage when compared to the idea of creation. To design is never to create ex nihilo. It is amusing that creationists in America use the word “intelligent design” as a rough substitute for “God the Creator”. They don’t seem to realize the tremendous abyss that exists between creating and designing. The most intelligent designers never start from a tabula rasa. God the designer is really a redesigner of something else that was already there —and this is even truer for His Son as well as for the Spirit, who both are sent to redeem what has been botched in the first place… If humanity “has been made (or should I have said designed?) as the image of God”, then they too should learn that things are never created but rather carefully and modestly redesigned. It is in that sense that I take the spread of the word design as a clear substitute for revolution and modernization. I do so furthermore, because there is always something slightly superficial in design, something clearly and explicitly transitory, something linked to fashion and thus to shifts in fashions, something tied to tastes and therefore somewhat relative. Designing is the antidote to founding, colonizing, establishing, or breaking with the past. It is an antidote to hubris and to the search for absolute certainty, absolute beginnings, and radical departures. The fifth and decisive advantage of the concept of design is that it necessarily involves an ethical dimension which is tied into the obvious question of good versus bad design. In the modernist style, this goodness and badness were qualities that matters of fact could not possibly possess. They were supposed to sit there, undisputable, and removed from any normative judgment. This was so much so that their entire purpose was to make the fact/value distinction possible. “We are there whether you like it or not”. But it is easy to understand that when you say that something has been “designed”, you are not only authorized but forced to ask whether it has been well or badly designed. The spread of design to the inner definitions of things carries with it, not only meaning and hermeneutics, but also morality. More exactly, it is as if materiality and morality were finally coalescing.  5  112-Design- Cornwall  6  This is of great importance because if you begin to redesign cities, landscapes, natural parks, societies, as well as genes, brains and chips, no designer will be allowed to hide behind the old protection of matters of fact. No designer will be able to claim: “I am just stating what exists”, or “I am simply drawing the consequences of the laws of nature”, or “I am simply reading the bottom line”. By expanding design so that it is relevant everywhere, designers take up the mantle of morality as well. I will come back to this in the conclusion: suffice it to say now that this normative dimension that is intrinsic to design offers a good handle from which to extend the question of design to politics. A politics of matters of facts and of objects has always seemed far fetched; a politics of designed things and issues is somewhat more obvious. If things, or rather Dinge, are gatherings, as Heidegger used to define them, then it is a short step from there to considering all things as the result of an activity called “collaborative design” in Scandinavia. This activity is in fact the very definition of the politics of matters of concern since all designs are “collaborative” designs – even if in some cases the “collaborators” are not all visible, welcomed or willing. A small parenthesis on our two disciplines: when science and technology studies (STS) scholars began to revisit the old materialist traditions some forty years ago, they too would deeply transformed objects into projects. They too had brought meaning into what was defined as mere “material constraints”; they too had disputed the form versus function argument; transformed matters of fact into complex and contradictory assemblies of conflicting humans and non humans; they too had demonstrated that “artefacts have politics” and that a parliament of things could be assembled. But because of the word “construction” (used especially in the infamous expression “social construction”), they too were divided by the modernist opposition between what was social, symbolic, subjective, lived and what was material, real, objective and factual. No matter how many efforts were made to escape the trap that the modernist constitution has laid in the path of empirical inquiries, science and technology studies has always lurched into it. (Would things have looked better had we talked of “social design” instead of “social construction”? I doubt it). The trap has been nearly impossible to escape. Impossible that is, so long as we remained officially modern. But what is so interesting to me in that in the spread of design, this concept has undergone the same amazing transformations as my own field. STS, that was until a few years back but a small subfield of social (alas, alas, so social!) science, has now received the formidable support of a much larger movement. What was a slightly far fetched and a clearly scandalous claim, namely that there are no objects but only things and disputed assemblages, is now fast becoming common sense. Everything that was conceived of earlier as hard objective undisputable material drives (remember the “irresistible path of progress” “the white heat of technology”?), has now melted into air. Yes, everything that has been designed during the four or five former industrial revolutions has had to be redesigned —including Cornwall. It is the same material world, but now it has to be remade with a completely different notion of what it is to make something. What has gone is mastery —this odd idea of mastery that refused to include the mystery of unintended consequences.  6  112-Design- Cornwall  7  Of course, all five of these dimensions of design as well as the development of STS could be taken as a clear sign of postmodernism, as a quiet and lazy abandonment of the tasks of Promethean modernism. Some diehard modernists do think that way, but I don’t believe this is the case. As I pointed out earlier, the spread of the word “design” doesn’t come at a time when there is less to do; it comes at a time when there is more to do. Infinitely more, since it is the whole fabric of life that is now concerned thanks to the ecological crisis. What no revolution has ever contemplated, namely the remaking of our collective life on earth, is to be carried through with exactly the opposite of revolutionary and modernizing attitudes. This is what renders the spirit of the time so interesting. President Mao was right after all: the revolution has to always be revolutionized. What he did not anticipate is that the new “revolutionary” energy would be taken from the set of attitudes that are hard to come by in revolutionary movements: modesty, care, precautions, skills, crafts, meanings, attention to details, careful conservations, redesign, artificiality, and ever shifting transitory fashions. We have to be radically careful, or carefully radical… What an odd time we are living through.  “Dasein ist Design” The best way to sum up the first part of this lecture is by quoting a marvellous pun made by Henk Oosterling: “Dasein ist design”. Oosterling is a specialist of the work of Peter Sloterdijk, the great German thinker to whom I will now turn in order to continue this little meditation on the philosophy of design. By taking seriously what Heidegger had only abstractedly meant by Dasein, Sloterdijk has managed to extirpate the Western philosophical tradition from the bifurcated way in which it has always dealt with materiality (always, that is, since the 17th century). This seriousness about Dasein is what makes his philosophy so exciting for people like you who are bombarded with offers to redesign everything from chairs to climates. You cannot indulge anymore into the idea that there are, on the one hand, objective material constraints and, on the other, symbolic, human subjective ones. (Actually, I feel that the organizers of this conference should have invited Sloterdijk to give this keynote instead of me, but my desire to visit a Cornwall I had only “imagined” until now, made me hide this proposition until tonight!).* The reason for why you should have invited him, is that Sloterdijk, very early on and very literally took on the spread in comprehension and extension of the notion of design. So literally, in fact, that he has been made the Rektor, that is the Dean or Master, of a School in Karlsruhe – the Staatliche Hochschule für Gestaltung (Gestalt being the word here for design). This is a tremendously original art, craft, and philosophy institute (that is housed, by the way, in the same revamped factory as ZKM, the place where I have been fortunate enough to curate the two exhibitions of ICONOCLASH and MAKING THINGS PUBLIC). When we say that “Dasein is in the world” we usually pass very quickly on the little preposition “in”. Not Sloterdijk. In what? he asks, and in where? Are you in a Available in English : Sloterdijk, P., Foreword to the Theory of Spheres, in Cosmograms, M. Ohanian and J.C. Royoux, Editors. 2005, Lukas and Sternberg: New York. p. 223-241. *  7  112-Design- Cornwall  8  room? In an air conditioned amphitheatre? And if so what sort of air pumps and energy sources keep it up? Are you outside? There is no outside: outside is another inside with another climate control, another thermostat, another air conditioning system. Are you in public? Public spaces are spaces too, for goodness sake. They are not different in that respect from private spaces. They are simply organized differently, with different architectures, different entry points, different surveillance systems, different soundscapes. To try to philosophize about what it is to be “thrown into the world” without defining more precisely, more literally (Sloterdijk is first of all a literalist in his use of metaphors) the sort of envelopes into which humans are thrown, would be like trying to kick a cosmonaut into outer space without a spacesuit. Naked humans are as rare as naked cosmonauts. To define humans is to define the envelopes, the life support systems, the Umwelt that make it possible for them to breathe. This is exactly what humanism has always missed. (This is why Habermas became so cross at Sloterdijk and launched a very mean attack against him: naked humans on the one hand, fully equipped humans on life support on the other – of course there was no way for those two German thinkers to agree with one another). I hope you are beginning to see why Sloterdijk is your philosopher: in the same way as a space suit or a space station is entirely artificially and carefully designed, so are all of the envelopes that constitutes the fragile life supports of humans. (Sloterdijk calls these “spheres”, and uses the term, “spherology” to name his endeavour.) Human are to be handled with infinite precaution from the womb (natural or artificial) in which they are grown (Sloterdijk defines philosophy as a kind of obstetrics!) all the way to the place where they survive and die. What is so important in the extended metaphors that Sloterdijk pursues to the bitter end is that they begin to accomplish exactly what I was asking for in the first part of this lecture. How can we reconcile the entirely different sets of emotions, passions and drives triggered by the two alternative Great Narratives of modernity – the one of emancipation (the official story) and the one of attachment (the hidden one)? When you check on your space suit before getting out of the space shuttle, you are radically cautious and cautiously radical… you are painfully aware of how precarious you are, and yet simultaneously, you are completely ready to artificially engineer and to design in obsessive detail what is necessary to survive. Whereas modernist or anti-modernist philosophies of history are always considering only one narrative (that of progress or the failure of progress), Sloterdijk is the rare thinker who shows how the stories of both emancipation and of attachment are a single story. This unification is possible provided that you deeply modify what it is to be “in the world”: the cosmonaut is emancipated from gravity because he or she never lives one fraction of a second outside of his or her life supports. To be emancipated and to be attached are two incarnations of the same event, provided you draw your attention to how artificial atmospheres are well or badly designed. The concept that is key for reconciling those two sets of passions and for inventing this strange role of a precautionary Prometheus, is that of explicitation. Explicitation is a consequence of the concept of envelopes. The envelope is a term that will surely draw the attention of architects and designers: we are enveloped, entangled, surrounded; we are never outside without having recreated another  8  112-Design- Cornwall  9  more artificial, more fragile, more engineered envelope. We move from envelopes to envelopes, from folds to folds, never from one private sphere to the Great Outside. Modernism, in the hands of Sloterdijk is no longer a concept. It is a place, a design, a style. It is a very specific type of architecture to which the whole second volume of SPHÄREN is dedicated: that of Globes. A modernist is someone who lives under a vast dome, and who sees things as though sitting under a huge architecture, the Globe of Science, the globe of Reason, the globe of Politics. For the modernist, the humanist is the one who reads a book under a lamp or who sits clothed in some sort of Roman toga on the stairs of a huge amphitheatre under the painted fresco of some immense dome… except that in the modernist architecture, the life supports necessary for this Dome or this Globe to be sustainable have not been explicitated. A modernist takes for granted that there will always be air, space, water, heat, for the development of his or her “global view”. But there is nothing global in globalization. Global is always a lot of globaloney, a lot of hot air. And of course, blowing hot air also requires a mechanism of some sort, a pump, a hairdryer — a designed hairdryer! What happened in the second half of the last century is that modernism disappeared in the exact measure where the life supports were made more explicit, one after the next. Ecological crisis, in such a view, are the slow and painful realization that there is no outside anymore. It means that none of the elements necessary to support life can be taken for granted. To live under a huge inflated Globe you need a powerful air conditioning system and powerful pumps to keep it inflated. Yes, modernist Globes have been deflated; modernism’s fate has been somewhat the same as that of those dirigibles, like the Zeppelin or the Hindenburg. So you see, what was called the “modernist style” in history of design should now be given a much more profound signification and a much longer life span. The very ways in which things have presented themselves as matters of fact which are now visible as a style –and a style that is changing under our very eyes. The aesthetics of matters of fact have always been precisely that: a historically situated aesthetics, a way to light objects, to frame them, to present them, to situate the gaze of the viewers, to design the interiors in which they are presented – and of course the politics with which they are (they were) so strongly associated.* What I find so important in the notion of explicitation, of folding envelopes into envelopes, is that it is a powerful way of retrieving science and technology by completely modifying what is meant by a sustainable artificial life. It is really in that sense, that Sloterdijk is THE philosopher of design. If earlier I have been correct in defining the five reasons why the notion of design was such a powerful substitute to the notion of making, building and constructing, explicitation might allow us to understand that it is possible to rematerialize without importing with the notion of ‘matter’ the whole modernist baggage of ‘matters of fact’. This is exactly what Sloterdijk does. No contemporary philosopher is more interested in materiality, in engineering, in biotechnology, in design proper, in contemporary arts, and in science more generally. Yet when he deals with materialities it is not as Latour, B., What is the Style of Matters of Concern? Two Lectures on Empirical Philosophy. Booklet of the Department of Philosophy Amsterdam, 2005 (accessible on the web at bruno-latour.fr xx). *  9  112-Design- Cornwall  10  if these were so many matters of fact that would inject indisputable natural necessity as the final word in some social or symbolic questions. Instead, when he adds materiality to a site he is rendering another fragile envelope into which we are even more entangled, explicit. This entanglement is as relevant for the envelopes of biotechnology as it is for space stations. This is exactly the reason why Habermas could not accept Sloterdijk’s argument. For a good old modernist humanist, when someone begins to talk about life support, about the necessary conditions to “cultivate human beings”, about the air-conditioning to have them breathe safely, this is a tantamount to a plea for an Orwellian world, for eugenism. What Habermas has entirely missed, however, is that when humanists accuse people of “treating humans like objects”, they are thoroughly unaware that they are treating objects unfairly. A humanist cannot imagine that objects may be things, that matters of facts might be matters of concern, that the whole language of science and engineering might be portrayed as anything other than the boring carriers of the indisputable necessities that modernism has rendered popular. Humanists are concerned only about humans; the rest, for them, is mere materiality or cold objectivity. But Sloterdijk is not treating humans matter of factually as humanists claim. Rather, he treats both humans and non humans as “matters of grave and careful concerns”. By treating human life supports as matters of concern, we pile concerns over concerns, we fold, we envelop, we embed humans into more and more elements that have been carefully explicitated, protected, conserved and maintained (immunology being, according to Sloterdijk, the great philosophy of biology). This little shift in the definition of matter modifies everything. It allows practitioners to reuse all of the notions of materiality and of artificiality by freeing them from the restrictions imposed by the older style of modernist matters of fact. In other words, we can have science and technology without implying naturalization. Not only has nature disappeared as the outside of human action (this has become common wisdom by now); not only has “natural” become a synonym of “carefully managed”, “skilfully staged”, “artificially maintained”, “cleverly designed” (this is true especially of so called “natural” parks or “organic foods”); but the very idea that to bring the knowledge of scientists and engineers to bear on a question is to necessarily resort to the unquestionable laws of nature, is also becoming obsolete. Bringing in scientists and engineers is quickly becoming another way of asking: “How can it be better redesigned?” The bricolage and tinkering elements always associated with design have taken over nature. Actually, they are inherent in nature if we take Darwinian ways as a clever form of bricolage, of “intelligent design”… albeit a blind one. It is somewhat understandable that when Sloterdijk raised the question of how humans could be “designed”, that is, artificially nurtured, this invokes the old phantasm of eugenic manipulations. But the similarities between these two projects prove to be completely superficial when submitted to a close examination. They are similar only in the same way that two trains can both be moving ahead even though they are at an intersection that will lead them toward completely different destinations. Habermas missed the switch, the bifurcation that is so important for us to locate. Yes humans have to be artificially made and remade,  10  112-Design- Cornwall  11  but everything depends on what you mean by artificial and even more deeply by what you mean by “making”. We have returned to Prometheus and to the question of Creation. Are we able to be the God of intelligent design? This is the heart of the matter. This is why it is so important to talk of design and not of construction, creation or of fabrication. To design something as I indicated earlier, allows us to raise not only the semiotic question of meaning but also the normative question of good and bad design. This is true of DNA manipulation, as well as of climate control, gadgets, fashion, cities or natural landscapes, a perfect case of design from beginning to end. Artificiality is our destiny, but it does not mean accepting the modernist definition of an artefact as the invasion of matters of fact over the softer flesh of human frailty forever. To put it even differently by alluding to another line of more fashionable thought: there is nothing necessarily post human in enveloping, folding, veiling humans into their life supports. Humanists as well as post-humanists seem to have no other repertory for speaking of science and technology other than the modernist idiom of matters of fact. The great importance of Sloterdijk’s philosophy (and I think the major interest of a designer’s way of looking at things) is that it offers another idiom. The idiom of matters of concern reclaims matter, matters and materiality and renders them into something that can and must be carefully redesigned. This might be far from the humanists’ limited view of what humans are, but it is every bit as removed from the post human dreams of cyborgs. What is clear is that the collective definition of what artificial life supports are supposed to be becomes the key site of politically minded investigation. Nothing much is left of the scenography of the modernist theory of action: no male hubris, no mastery, no appeal to the outside, no dream of expatriation in an outside space which would not require any life support of any sort, no nature, no grand gesture of radical departure —and yet still the necessity of redoing everything once again in a strange combination of conservation and innovation that is unprecedented in the short history of modernism. Will Prometheus ever be cautious enough to redesign the planet? I hope I have not been too far off the mark by proposing (out of ignorance, surely) these few steps toward a philosophy of design or by introducing Sloterdijk as its main contributor. I wish to conclude by offering a challenge to the specialists of the history of design assembled here. When I said earlier that there is something inherently normative in design because of the necessary follow up question, “Is it well or badly designed?”, I also mentioned that this was a good handle for bringing in the question of politics. If the whole fabric of our earthly existence has to be redesigned in excruciating details; if for each detail the question of good and bad has to be raised; if every aspect has become a disputed matter of concern and can no longer be stabilized as an indisputable matter of fact; then we are obviously entering into a completely new political territory. As every one of you knows too well, it is the perverse character of all ecological questions that they branch out in all sort of counterintuitive ways. It is probably of ecology that St Paul was talking when he said: “I don’t do the good I wish to do and I do the bad that I hate”. Political ecology is bringing political difficulty to the square. For according to this marvellous rather Paulinian quote of de Gaulle: “If of the good only good would  11  112-Design- Cornwall  12  ensue, and if of bad only bad ensued, government would be rather simple: a village parson could do it”. Let me raise the question of design, taken literally in the etymological sense of drawing or rather of “drawing together”. How can we draw together matters of concern so as to offer to political disputes an overview, or at least a view, of the difficulties that will entangle us every time we must modify the practical details of our material existence? We know that whenever we prepare to change our fixtures from incandescent to low energy light bulbs, to pay our carbon expenses, to introduce wind farms, to reintroduce the wolf to the Alps, or to develop corn based fuel, immediately, some controversy will be ignited that turns our best intentions into hell. And we are no longer able to stop the controversies by stating the undisputable facts of the matter because facts are constantly disputed. Fine, unintended consequences are now on everyone’s mind, Prometheus braces himself for the worse. Now here is the challenge: In its long history, design practice has done a marvellous job of inventing the practical skills for drawing objects, from architectural drawing, mechanic blueprints, scale models, prototyping etc. But what has always been missing from those marvellous drawings (designs in the literal sense) are an impression of the controversies and the many contradicting stake holders that are born within with these. In other words, you in design as well as we in science and technology studies may insist that objects are always assemblies, “gatherings” in Heidegger’s meaning of the word, or things and Dinge, and yet, four hundred years after the invention of perspective drawing, three hundred years after projective geometry, fifty years after the development of CAD computer screens, we are still utterly unable to draw together, to simulate, to materialize, to approximate, to fully model to scale, what a thing in all of its complexity, is. We know how to draw, to simulate, to materialize, to zoom in and out on objects; we know how to make them move in 3-D space, to have them sail through the computerized virtual res extensa, to mark them with a great number of data points, etc. Yet we are perfectly aware that the space in which those objects seem to move so effortlessly is the most utopian (or rather atopic) of spaces. It these are the least realistic spaces of circulation ever imagined. They are spaces that does not even fit with the ways in which architects, engineers, designers draw and modify blueprints, nor with the process through which they direct fabrication on the factory floor or manipulate scale models. To use some more German: we know how to draw Gegenstand but we have no clue what it is to draw Ding. I once asked one of the greatest historians of technology to send me what he considered his best drawing of the marvellously complex history of mechanisms he has been writing about for so long. He sent me some doodle which I would not have dared showing to my first year students as an example of what a thing is. How could this doodle be compared to the comfortable and effortless manner in which objects float through the so called “Euclidian space” of a CAD design or to the ways in which I can visit Falmouth before I arrive there through the apparently smooth travel of Google Earth? I know this is a meeting on the history of design, but what would be the use of studying design history, if not for the purposes of providing a scheme for its future?  12  112-Design- Cornwall  13  There is much to suggest that the whole history of technical drawing and of scientific visualizations more broadly conceived has been one of the main driving forces for the development of science and technology in its modernist version. It is more than likely that the same will be true for the development of science and technology, once freed from its modernist limitation. However, what history also shows is that we are a long way from being able to provide for things, that is for matters of concern, a visual, publicly inspectable space that is as remotely as rich, at least as easy to handle, and as codified as what has been done over four centuries for objects conceived of as matters of fact. As long as this lacuna remains there will be no way for design to ease modernism out of its historical dead end. To imagine that a political ecology of the magnitude being anticipated by all of the experts can be carried out without new innovative tools is to court disaster. New innovation will be absolutely necessary if we are to adequately represent the conflicting natures of all the things that are to be designed. (I take here the verb “to represent” here in the largest sense, including artistic, scientific and political representation techniques). So here is the question I wish to raise to designers: where are the visualization tools that allow the contradictory and controversial nature of matters of concern to be represented? A common mistake (a very post-modernist one) is to believe that this goal will have been reached once the “linear”, “objectified”, and “reified” modernist view has been scattered through multiple view points and heterogeneous make shift assemblages. However, breaking down the tyranny of the modernist point of view will lead nowhere since we have never been modern. Critique, deconstruction and iconoclasm, once again, will simply not do the job of finding an alternative design. What is needed instead are tools that capture what have always been the hidden practices of modernist innovations: objects have always been projects; matters of fact have always been matters of concern. The tools we need to grasp these hidden practices will teach us just as much as the old aesthetics of matters of fact —and then again much more. Let me be clear – I am not advocating for another CAD design for Prometheus What I am pressing for is a means for drawing things together —gods, non humans and mortals included. Why should this prove to be an impossible task? Why can the powerful visual vocabulary that has been devised in the past by generations of artists, engineers, designers, philosophers, artisans and activists for matters of fact, not be devised (I hesitate to say restyled) for matters of concern?  13</div>
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		<title>Breast Feeding and Public Space Design</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/02/breast-feeding-and-public-space-design/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2009/02/breast-feeding-and-public-space-design/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Feb 2009 16:14:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A round of articles on the many hurdles facing women who breast feed and/or pump breast milk shows just how inconvenient this activity is in a world designed, so it would seem, with only men in mind. Sara J. Welch notes in a recent New York Times article:
&#8220;Several working mothers spoke of looking for  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A round of articles on the many hurdles facing women who breast feed and/or pump breast milk shows just how inconvenient this activity is in a world designed, so it would seem, with only men in mind. Sara J. Welch <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/10/business/10breastfeed.html?scp=1&amp;sq=TSA%20milk&amp;st=cse">notes</a> in a recent <em>New York Times</em> article:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Several working mothers spoke of looking for  a  place to pump breast milk. Often, a bathroom was the only option.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Sure, accommodations can be made and if you&#8217;re a working mother traveling, many institutions will make arrangements for, say, a private room to be reserved, but even so arrangements must be <em>made</em>. These activities, which are hardly luxurious, are simply not incorporated into public space; breast feeding is not taken into account by designers of airplanes, airports, office buildings, or public spaces.</p>
<p>Which is remarkable if we recall the adjustments that <em>have </em>recently been made in, say, airports, to incorporate simple technological changes, or security protocol, or even for entertainment. Many airports now have private laptop booths, or cubicles in which phone calls can be made &#8212; and yet there is no space for breast-feeding.</p>
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		<title>Ambivalence in the study of the consumer subject</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2008/12/consumption-psychology-subject/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Dec 2008 17:56:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
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		<description><![CDATA[In the chapter &#8220;Mobilizing the Consumer: Assembling the Subject of Consumption&#8221;, from their recent book Governing the Present: Administering Economic, Social and Personal Life, Peter Miller and Nikolas Rose give a fine summary of the state of consumer/consumption theory.
It begins, appropriately, with a sketch of the profound ambivalence that has marked consumer studies since the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the chapter &#8220;Mobilizing the Consumer: Assembling the Subject of Consumption&#8221;, from their recent book <em>Governing the Present: Administering Economic, Social and Personal Life</em>, Peter Miller and Nikolas Rose give a fine summary of the state of consumer/consumption theory.</p>
<p>It begins, appropriately, with a sketch of the profound ambivalence that has marked consumer studies since the early 80s, at least, but more generally since Benjamin. As Rose and Miller remind us, with the shift in focus from production to consumption, and the attention to the work and activity of the consumer-subject that this reversal implied, the characterization of capitalism as a hegemonic, top-down imposition of values has grown increasingly problematic.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Many diagnoses of our &#8216;post-modern condition&#8217; hinge upon debates about consumption: has consumption replaced production as the key to the intelligibility of our present; did the previous emphasis on production in social thought overlook the dependence of an economy of commodity exchange upon the simultaneous constitution of consuming pleasures; have consumption sub-cultures replaced class, region, religion, generation and gender as sources of interests and identifications? <strong>Alongside these debates has been an argument about subjectivity. It has been suggested that the perspective of consumption reveals features of our experience that were undervalued in most classical social theory</strong> - the active arts though [<em>sic</em>] which individuals shape their everyday lives with the materials provided for them by dominant economic, social and cultural forces; <strong>the role of subjectivities, pleasures and desires in the history of our present which is so often painted in the monotonous and sombre tones of state, domination, ideology and hegemony.</strong>&#8221; (114)</p></blockquote>
<p>With this general opposition established, Rose and Miller turn to describing just how irreconcilable the subjective work of the consumer and the hegemonic prescriptions of the marketer appear to be.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Yet there is a deep ambivalence underpinning many diagnoses, at least as they come to bear upon &#8216;the subject of consumption&#8217;, the individual who is imagined and acted upon by the imperative to consume. <strong>On the one hand, it is claimed that human beings, in engaging in acts of consumption and the relations surrounding consumption, achieve pleasures, exert powers, find meanings, construct diverse subjectivities and enact sociality in a creative and innovative manner. On the other hand, it appears that - to the extent that all these are construed as individual achievements, organized in a field whose dynamic is the quest for profit, structured in terms of wealth, culture and gender, shaped by a power relationship in which producers and their agents impose their meanings and values upon others - the pleasures, powers and meanings produced are, in crucial respects, false.</strong> The collective socialities are enacted at the price of turning a blind eye to the regimes of exploitation, illusion and exclusion that foster consumption, and the subjectivities so constructed are enfeebled or damaged.&#8221; (114-115)</p></blockquote>
<p>That being said, Rose and Miller make it clear that their goal is less to &#8220;arbitrate between these two lines of argument&#8221; than &#8220;to make a contribution to the empirical bases of such debates, by examining a number of ways in which different images of the subject of consumption have operated <em>internal</em> to one element of the new &#8216;economy of consumption&#8217;: the shaping and advertising of products.&#8221; (115) Their interest will therefore confine itself to the &#8220;technical&#8221; features of the advertising-consuming process (115).</p>
<p>And this process, for Rose and Miller, is by and large a psychological one. &#8220;To understand this process, it is necessary to look beyond general shifts in cultural understanding or the imperatives of profit, and examine the ways in which the understandings of human individuality, personality and psychology elaborated by the psychological sciences have played a key role in the construction of consumption technologies.&#8221; (115)</p>
<p>Though the two authors intend to &#8220;look beyond&#8221; the fault line running through the discipline, their perspective nonetheless falls closer to De Certeau and Benjamin than to Adorno and Debord.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;For psychological expertise in advertising provides a site where we can explore the extent to which this has been less a matter of dominating or manipulating consumers than of &#8216;mobilizing&#8217; them by forming connections between human passions, hopes and anxieties, and very specific features of goods enmeshed in particular consumption practices.&#8221; (115)</p></blockquote>
<p>In contrast to those who find advertising to be a malicious tool for controlling &#8220;largely irrational or foolish&#8221; consumers, Rose and Miller prepare the reader for a more nuanced view.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;We abstain from a mode of analysis which links the unholy alliance of psychology, advertising and capitalism with a manipulation of desires in the name of private profit, social anaesthesia and commodity fetishism. <strong>We are concerned rather with what one might term the &#8216;productive&#8217; features of these new techniques, the ways in which psychological knowledges have connected themselves up in complex ways with the technologies of advertising and marketing</strong> to make possible new kinds of relations that human beings can have with themselves and others through the medium of goods.&#8221; (116)</p></blockquote>
<p>Though the essay in question focuses on the two decades following World War II, their perspective, and certainly their summary of the theoretical terrain, could just as well find application in the present.</p>
<p>That being said, Rose and Miller&#8217;s privileging of the psychological scene - i.e., the highly charged instance of the advertiser&#8217;s appeal to the consumer - is increasingly but a limited &#8216;moment&#8217; in a more dispersed and more enduring process of consumer subjectification.</p>
<p>The so-called ergonomic turn of design has effectively extended the strategies of aesthetic appeal and identity to the product itself. Beyond the ad form&#8217;s brief, targeted solicitation of the consumer, products are now increasingly designed with &#8216;cues&#8217; built right into them, to be &#8216;activated&#8217; upon use, in settings and through willful consumer &#8216;activity&#8217;. Indeed, with the rise of firms like the <a href="http://www.bresslergroup.com">Bressler Group</a>, which offers &#8220;strategic product planning&#8221; services that wed branding strategies with an ergonomics-based user experience research methodology, we can no longer talk of advertising and consumer perception independently of product use and experience.</p>
<p>And yet, consumption studies of the kind described above have not, in my opinion, begun to seriously take into account the appearance of a new figure, the &#8216;user&#8217;, who cannot simply be reduced to a variation of the &#8216;consumer&#8217;. In fact, what Rose and Miller&#8217;s focus on psychology shows first and foremost is the insufficiency of the ad solicitation framework for understanding this new design paradigm and the culture politics that continue to shape its emergence.</p>
<p><strong>References</strong></p>
<div id="bib-item-info-7730572" class="bib-item-info">Miller, Peter, and Nikolas Rose. <em>Governing the Present: Administering Economic, Social and Personal Life</em>. University Park, PA: Polity, 2008. [<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Governing-Present-Administering-Economic-Personal/dp/0745641016/ref=si3_rdr_bb_product">Link</a>]</div>
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		<title>How Not Paying Attention to Brands Makes Them Stronger</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2008/11/how-not-paying-attention-to-brands-makes-them-stronger/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2008/11/how-not-paying-attention-to-brands-makes-them-stronger/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Nov 2008 21:23:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
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		<category><![CDATA[Commodity]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Branding strategies and the marketing studies that inform them are increasingly taking into account the rules and conventions that shape consumer attention.
According to the New York Times, in a forthcoming article, “The Power of Strangers,” (to be published in The Journal of Consumer Research) Rosellina Ferraro, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Branding strategies and the marketing studies that inform them are increasingly taking into account the rules and conventions that shape consumer <em>attention</em>.</p>
<p>According to the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/16/magazine/16wwln-consumed-t.html?_r=1"><em>New York Times</em></a>, in a forthcoming article, “The Power of Strangers,” (to be published in <em>The Journal of Consumer Research</em>) Rosellina Ferraro, an assistant professor of marketing at the University of Maryland, and her colleagues have found that the efficacy of a brand depends, to a certain extent, on the subject&#8217;s relative state of attention. In one study of what they call “incidental brand-consumer encounters”,</p>
<blockquote><p>each subject was shown 20 photographs of people in various situations and instructed to focus on facial expressions. Afterward, each subject was offered a bottle of water from a selection of four brands. The experiment had nothing to do with facial expressions and everything to do with which kind of water they chose: the subjects had been divided into groups, based on how many of the photos they viewed incidentally included a bottle of Dasani water. Among those who looked at Dasani-free pictures, about 17 percent chose that brand. But about 40 percent of those who viewed a group of pictures that included 12 with a Dasani presence made the brand their pick. <strong>Since subjects who actually noticed the brand in the pictures were eliminated from the results, that spike in popularity evidently came from exposure that the subjects weren’t even aware of.</strong> “In essence,” Ferraro says, “we have these brief social encounters fairly regularly, and they may have an impact on our choices.”</p></blockquote>
<p>The importance of conditions of attention - with brand saturation on one end, and inattentive absorption on the other - to consumer perceptions and purchasing habits is one good reason to oppose studies like Ferraro&#8217;s to the wave of recent scholarship that favors a more ahistorical view of the efficacy of brands.</p>
<p>On the latter end of the spectrum, David Wengrow&#8217;s recent <em>Current Anthropology</em> <a href="http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/523676">article</a> &#8220;Prehistories of Commodity Branding&#8221;, which made some noise amongst the poststructuralist-weary liberal academic left, makes the argument (which I am in fact otherwise partial to) that commodity branding is hardly exclusive to late capitalism. On the contrary,</p>
<blockquote><p>comparisons between recent forms of branding and much earlier modes of commodity marking associated with the Urban Revolution of the fourth millennium BC suggest that systems of branding address a paradox common to all economies of scale and are therefore likely to arise (and to have arisen) under a wide range of ideological and institutional conditions, including those of sacred hierarchies and stratified states.</p></blockquote>
<p class="articleBody_abstractText">The argument then proceeds to examine the &#8220;material and cognitive properties of sealing practices&#8221; in the ancient world; but, again, Wengrow seems to overlook the importance of brand saturation, mass distribution, and the resultant conditions of consumer attention that, in my opinion, more suggest a break with premodernity than continuation with it.</p>
<p class="articleBody_abstractText">The conspicuous absence of this line of thought perhaps explains Wengrow&#8217;s distaste for the poststructuralist theories that seem to too freely dispose of &#8220;choice&#8221; and &#8220;freedom&#8221; on its account.</p>
<blockquote><p>A possible objection to a more catholic approach to commodity branding—one which steps outside the framework of wage-labor capitalism—is that commerce (along with, by extension, consumer choice) was tangential to the organization of pre-modern economies (Polanyi 1957). <strong>For adherents of this view some tyranny or other can always be invoked to explain the uniqueness of modern consumption patterns</strong>: the tyranny of gift exchange, of sacred economics, or of the hierarchical state. Yet there are many reasons to doubt this evolutionary scenario, some of which arise from the recent experience of mass consumerism itself. <strong>The intractable consumer who rejects choice in favor of conformity, who chooses brand loyalty over brand novelty, is an undeniable part of the modern scene (Miller 2001). Frederic Jameson (1991, 266) goes so far as to suggest that “market as a concept rarely has anything to do with choice or freedom, since those are all determined for us in advance”; we select among commodities, “but we can scarcely be said to have a say in actually choosing any of them.”</strong> (8)</p></blockquote>
<p>While Jameson does go too far in claiming consumers&#8217; choices are &#8220;determined for us in advance&#8221;, Ferraro&#8217;s study shows just how erroneous it would be to underestimate the importance of <em>prior</em> states of distraction and inattention to <em>present</em>, seemingly autonomous decisions.</p>
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		<title>Battlespaces: Feral Cities and the Scientific Way of Warfare</title>
		<link>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2008/11/battlespaces-feral-cities-and-the-scientific-way-of-warfare/</link>
		<comments>http://www.mutuallyoccluded.com/2008/11/battlespaces-feral-cities-and-the-scientific-way-of-warfare/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 17 Nov 2008 16:21:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>joneilortiz</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Design]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[architecture]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[urban planning]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
London, November 26: Geoff Manaugh of BLDGBLOG with Antoine Bousquet of Birkbeck College will present a public lecture on &#8216;Battlespace/s: Feral Cities and the Scientific Way of Warfare&#8217;.
Manaugh&#8217;s lecture will be an analysis of &#8216;cities gone wild&#8217; and their relation to war, architecture, science fiction and geopolytics.
Being a fan of Rafi Segal&#8217;s important A Civilian [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://blog.urbanomic.com/cyclon/archives/2008/11/bldg_blog_a_lec.html" target="_new"><img style="float:left;padding:5px;" src="http://blog.urbanomic.com/cyclon/archives/Battlespaces_webbanner.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>London, November 26: Geoff Manaugh of BLDGBLOG with Antoine Bousquet of Birkbeck College will present a public lecture on &#8216;Battlespace/s: Feral Cities and the Scientific Way of Warfare&#8217;.</p>
<p>Manaugh&#8217;s lecture will be an analysis of &#8216;cities gone wild&#8217; and their relation to war, architecture, science fiction and geopolytics.</p>
<p>Being a fan of Rafi Segal&#8217;s important <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Civilian-Occupation-Politics-Israeli-Architecture/dp/1859845495/ref=pd_bxgy_b_text_b"><em>A Civilian Occupation: The Politics of Israeli Architecture</em></a>, I look forward to hearing (or rather reading, since I won&#8217;t be able to attend) Manaugh&#8217;s thoughts on Eyal Weizman&#8217;s <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Hollow-Land-Israels-Architecture-Occupation/dp/1844671259"><em>Hollow Land</em></a>.</p>
<p>via <a href="http://blog.urbanomic.com/cyclon/archives/2008/11/bldg_blog_a_lec.html">Eliminative Culinarism: BLDG Blog: a lecture on feral cities</a></p>
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