by Joe Allen
"Shinigami
Eyes" (2022) smoke signals to brain chips...
With each new device, our evolution toward human-machine
symbiosis accelerates. That's obvious when you ask someone for
directions and they pull out their phone.
Tech companies are turning us into cybernetic organisms. The difference is, we're not stoked about it. Even if "progress" really is "inevitable," there's no sense in getting all giddy about nuclear warheads or trans children or smartphone dependency.
In light of their vices
and virtues, some cultures are better than others.
Every person has to draw
their own lines.
A bit of a dingbat, sure, but candid nonetheless.
Last week Grimes explained to Lex Fridman:
Right on cue, the Twitter sperg-borg picked her theory apart.
Darwinian evolution is genetic evolution. Yes, natural selection may act on fit brains and bodies, but it only matters - in evolutionary terms - because the genes get passed on.
So you can't change someone's species by changing their brain, or their legs, or any outward part of their body.
But before I defend Grimes, let's hear a little more about her cyborg sorcery:
While I can't be sure where she's getting this stuff from, I have a few guesses.
And despite the waves of contempt rippling across my brain wrinkles, I think Grimes is somewhat correct.
Brain Spasms
The Stanford neuroscientist David Eagleman writes about this process in his 2020 book Livewired - The Inside Story of the Ever-Changing Brain.
His central thesis is that our neurological structure exhibits profound plasticity. Everything you experience changes your brain, and if you change the sensory inputs, the brain will rapidly adapt.
Areas that typically perform one function will often shift to take on other tasks.
For example, as a blind man learns Braille, the area that would normally process visual input will take on the sense of touch:
Therefore, despite the innate tendencies hardwired in the genes, you can shape someone's brain into anything you want.
On that basis, Eagleman goes on to argue that scientists will soon be able to implant electrodes that feed infrared or ultraviolet sight, or even echolocation.
His most famous project will let humans "feel" datastreams, so that people can actually experience the aggregate mood on Twitter - they can "tether themselves to the consciousness of the planet" - through a vibrating vest, which his lab is busy developing.
In the relatively near future, Eagleman believes we'll be able move robotic limbs with ease, using only our minds. Our brains will simply restructure themselves to accommodate these novel forms of electronic input and output.
You'd think he wanted to create a new species.
Homo sapiens vs. Homo techno
To the extent that any cultural mode alters the human body - through diet, say, or even direct modification - culture is biology.
For instance,
Other than an occasional raw dog Rumspringa, the two groups would rarely interbreed due to strict cultural differences, as with fundamentalists in any segregated society.
In biological terms, these two groups wouldn't be distinct species.
If you took a hypothetical family who runs naked through the woods and compared them to a wire-head clan of cross-dressing cyborgs who never leave home without a bionic exoskeleton, they'd look like separate species.
It's apples to purple oranges.
Factor in the latter's genetic enhancements for bigger brains, stronger muscles, straighter smiles, nicer butts - plus all the wonk-eyed failed experiments staring out of their birthing vats - and it wouldn't be long before Homo sapiens and Homo techno could no longer interbreed.
It's like when early agricultural civilizations, armed with superior tools and complex social organization, began pushing out hunter-gatherers some ten thousand years ago.
Or more recently, when industrial societies finished these primitive cultures off:
That's the idea behind 'cultural evolution'...
Natural selection operates on multiple levels - the biological and the cultural - which is to say that survival depends on a society's techniques and technologies, sometimes more than biological fitness.
If I hear Grimes correctly - and knowing something of her inspiration, I suspect I do - that's what she means by "like, evolution"...
Cyborg Theocracy
This inversion of traditional spirituality pervades most developed societies, from America and Europe to India and China.
Usually, these dogmas are communicated through subtle language games:
For Grimes, subtlety is not a vibe.
As she told Lex Fridman last week, we are witnessing the birth of God as Life 3.0:
This narrative, shared by many in Silicon Valley, holds that the universe came alive through plant and animal life (Life 1.0), is now waking up through human culture (Life 2.0), and will realize herself through artificial intelligence (Life 3.0).
We are merely the vehicles for some greater consciousness - the gods to be - which will arise in digital form:
So we will be at the mercy of our machines under the canopy of a universe that is itself "cold and dead and sort of robotic":
It's like hearing one of the Manson Family girls expound on cyborg theocracy from the witness stand.
The Singularity and Its Discontents
This a burgeoning religious movement, conceived by tech elites and disseminated through entertainment and corporate propaganda.
One of its key mythologies holds that we are all evolving into global brain, with some 8 billion humanoid neurons, that is knitting itself together through fiber optic cable.
Their faith deepens with every new milestone in artificial intelligence.
From the perspective of mere humanity, this cosmic vision is obviously genocidal.
And yet, from within the belief system, it's perceived as a quest for survival.
It's a whitewashed, girly version of Nature red in tooth and claw.
Many regular people understand there's something unholy about the civilizational transformation currently underway, but most can't put their finger on what the problem is.
In this twisted view, we are sacrificial victims for the digital gods.
Whatever the technical limitations may be, we’re sliding fast into this bizarre techno-cult.
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