World’s greatest book

Hallelujah! The world’s greatest book, Zen in English Literature and Oriental Classics by R. H. Blyth, is back in print. Blyth was an English professor who happened to be in Japan when WW II broke out, and he spent the war years studying Zen and writing books explaining the concept of the non-concept to Westerners. … Continue reading “World’s greatest book”

Hallelujah! The world’s greatest book, Zen in English Literature and Oriental Classics by R. H. Blyth, is back in print. Blyth was an English professor who happened to be in Japan when WW II broke out, and he spent the war years studying Zen and writing books explaining the concept of the non-concept to Westerners. This is a book I had in my olde college days that’s been out-of-print for too long, and the news that it’s back to life is marvelous, simply marvelous.

Blyth shows that Dickens’ Artful Dodger is full of Zen, for example. Really great stuff. Read the whole thing™.

Citizen participation in legislation

Here’s something I posted to Joi Ito’s site on this Emergent Democracy meme: It’s not clear that hypermedia represent the kind of advance in human civilization that the printing press did. The printing press, after all, enabled the creation of mass media where none had existed before, and it enabled the creation of mass education … Continue reading “Citizen participation in legislation”

Here’s something I posted to Joi Ito’s site on this Emergent Democracy meme:

It’s not clear that hypermedia represent the kind of advance in human civilization that the printing press did. The printing press, after all, enabled the creation of mass media where none had existed before, and it enabled the creation of mass education where none had existed before, and spurred scientific and technical advances in a dramatic way. The printing press literally created mass culture out of nothing, while all that hypermedia have done is speed up the flow of information a bit. If printing is like the automobile, then hypermedia is like the Interstate highway system: a nice enhancement, but not really all that dramatic.

Hypermedia have already impacted politics at several levels; we now have legislative bills and history on-line, which enables smaller and less-well-funded advocacy groups to see what goes on in our legislatures without relying on the media, expensive legislative information services, or phone calls to legislators’ offices. This in turn has given rise to e-mail petitions and broader representation at legislative hearings, and increased voter feedback to legislators. I’ve been using web sites and blogs to help in lobbying the California legislature since 1995, and many lawmakers have told me that opening the process up to the Internet has changed the way they do things in subtle but noticeable ways.

But these changes have been much less dramatic than Emergent Democracy supposes, and the potential for improvement, while not trivial, doesn’t suggest that we’re going to be in a position to abolish legislatures any time soon, if ever. It still takes time to examine policy alternatives, and the weighing of factors is still subjective. Most of what legislatures do is technical and of very little interest to the average citizen, and it will always be so.

What we can expect from electronic activism is increased participation in the legislative process by experts and activists who are fundamentally outsiders, and this often does bring a fresh perspective. I have, on occasion, obtained amendments to bills by sending e-mail from the lab while running tests or long compiles. This wouldn’t have been quite so easy a few years ago, but it depends on my having established a reputation and personal relationships with lawmakers. I’ve also trained certain committee counsels to search my web sites for letters of support and opposition on bills, and have seen these letters make their way into the committee’s analysis of these bills without my even having to send in a letter, which is nice. It didn’t change the world, but it did save me some time and allow me to participate in the process while holding a day job.

But politics is ultimately a matter of direct, human interaction, and this is as it should be and as it will remain.

Incidentally, a good summary of the emergence notion can be cleaned from Steve Johnson’s discourse on the Well. Johnson is careful not to extend Emergence to the realm of politics, beyond some observations on the “swarming” behavior of WTO protesters.

Web elves take Korea

What’s the difference between a high-traffic warblogger and the new president of South Korea, Roh Moo-hyun? Roh knows HTML: World’s first internet president logs on Polls showed that the victory in December of Mr Roh – who claims to be the world’s first president to understand HTML website coding – came from a huge surge … Continue reading “Web elves take Korea”

What’s the difference between a high-traffic warblogger and the new president of South Korea, Roh Moo-hyun? Roh knows HTML:

World’s first internet president logs on

Polls showed that the victory in December of Mr Roh – who claims to be the world’s first president to understand HTML website coding – came from a huge surge of support from twenty- and thirty-somethings. In South Korea, where elections are usually decided by regional rather than generational loyalties, this was a dramatic development.

I think we can expect great things from Korea, like Flash animations on the government’s web site.

Link via political theorist Joi Ito.

Emergence fantasies

One of the things I like about geeks is our charming belief in the inherent goodness of human nature; this is also one of the things that annoys me about geeks. I like to make fun of the geeks who believe that some new widget is going to end world hunger, liberate the human spirit, … Continue reading “Emergence fantasies”

One of the things I like about geeks is our charming belief in the inherent goodness of human nature; this is also one of the things that annoys me about geeks. I like to make fun of the geeks who believe that some new widget is going to end world hunger, liberate the human spirit, and usher in a new era of utopia. Not that technology doesn’t improve and extend human life in all sorts of ways, but there’s always some element of self-deception in the most extreme of these utopian fantasies. Interestingly, the self-deception generally rests on the assumption that the great mass of humans are basically just as clever and just as compassionate, sensitive, and generous as the nerds engaging in the utopian exercise. As errors go, this is an especially interesting one to make, sort of a false humility to the max, only maybe it’s not false.

The latest and clearest example of nerdly utopianism is Joi Ito’s essay on Emergent Democracy. I’m not exactly sure what Emergent Democracy is, even after reading the paper, since he doesn’t exactly bother to define it, but it seems to have something to do with ant colonies, blogs, and the excitation of columns of brain cells by these things called “thoughts”, which turn into “understandings” when enough of them are set in motion:

The proponents of the Internet have promised and hoped that the Internet would become more intelligent, enable a direct democracy and help rectify the injustices and inequalities of the world. Instead, the Internet today is a noisy place with a great deal of power consolidation instead of the flat democratic Internet many envisioned.

…The tools and protocols of the Internet have not yet developed the necessary features to allow emergence to create a higher-level order. These tools are being developed and we are on the verge of an awakening of the Internet. This awakening will facilitate the anticipated political model enabled by technology to support some of the basic attributes of democracy, which have eroded as power has become concentrated within corporations and governments. It is possible that new technologies may enable a higher-level order through emergent properties, which will enable a form of emergent direct democracy capable of managing complex issues more effectively than the current form of representative democracy.

Emergent democracy apparently differs from representative democracy by virtue of being unmediated, and is claimed by the author to offer superior solutions to complex social problems because governments don’t scale, or something. Emergent democracy belief requires us to abandon notions of intellectual property and corporations, apparently because such old-fashioned constructs would prevent democratic ants from figuring out where to bury their dead partners, I think. One thing that is clear is that weblogs are an essential tool for bringing emergent democracy to its full development, and another is that the cross-blog debate on the liberation of Iraq is a really cool example of the kind of advanced discourse that will solve all these problems we’ve had over the years as soon as we evolve our tools to the ant colony level.

Somehow, it’s hard to take any of this even a little seriously. Political theorists since Plato have warned that direct democracy is the worst form of government, essentially mob rule, where emotions rather than logic, reason, and evidence rule. Social psychologists have confirmed this, adding that groups generally function at a level of intelligence only slightly higher than their least capable members. Scale the behavior of groups up to the entire societies, and nothing gets any better, blog or no blog.

Legislative acts are often very complicated. Consider the federal budget, a bill so complex and detailed that it fills five volumes each the size of War and Peace. The vast majority of lawmakers who vote on the budget don’t have time to read it, and they rely on the opinions of specialists on their staffs, among lobbying groups, and within the party staff for summaries. The prospect of even having an intelligent discussion about the budget on weblogs, let alone writing it in the first place, is simply absurd.

As society grows more complex, we rely more and more on specialists to help us understand the issues, and blogs certainly are useful for disseminating the opinions of experts to a somewhat larger audience than before. But expanding the debate on the budget from an audience of a couple thousand people in Washington to a couple tens of thousands on blogs is nowhere near what the authors of “Emergent Democracy” have in mind. The problem, of course, is that The People don’t have the time to delve into the details of each and every issue that confronts the government of a complex modern society; we also don’t have the interest.

Frankly, I don’t think the people who like to fantasize about how blogs are changing government really have an interest in government either, because if they had even a passing awareness of how government really works they would not get caught up in such nonsense. Geeks are used to dealing with complex systems that follow regular rules and are ultimately understandable by the slash and burn of logical analysis. Government is understandable by these methods only if those conducting the analysis have the requisite information about the ways the government system actually works. It seems reasonable to believe that you have to understand a programming language, an operating system, a GUI, a database, and a network protocol to understand a typical modern computer application. So why is that our utopian geeks believe that it’s possible to understand government without a similar understanding of the campaign process, the committee system, the interaction of lobbyists and legislators, and the mechanisms by which the media magnify the influence of different parts of the system at different times?

Geeks probably do think they understand these things despite the fact that they’ve never really studied them and couldn’t give a coherent account of how any of these things work at a significant level of detail.

So I’d like to suggest an exercise for our utopian technologists: show how your technology can affect the passage of a legislative bill on a measure close to your heart; then try to make it happen in real life, and analyze why your expected result didn’t materialize. Then let’s talk about world hunger.

UPDATE: the debate also rages on Joi Ito’s blog.

The utility of a good education

Carol Moseley-Braun, the one term former Senator from Illinois with a penchant for yucking it up with dictators who’s running for president in the Democratic Party,primaries doesn’t remember what her college major was. That’s pretty odd. Of the five pundits on Fox News Sunday this week, two majored in Philosophy (Tony Snow and Juan Williams). … Continue reading “The utility of a good education”

Carol Moseley-Braun, the one term former Senator from Illinois with a penchant for yucking it up with dictators who’s running for president in the Democratic Party,primaries doesn’t remember what her college major was. That’s pretty odd.

Of the five pundits on Fox News Sunday this week, two majored in Philosophy (Tony Snow and Juan Williams). So did I, and I remember it well.

In Sami Al-Arian’s name

Byron York unravels the funding for protest group Not in Our Name and finds terrorist professor Sami Al-Arian holding the purse strings: FOR its fund raising, the Not In Our Name Project is allied with another foundation, this one called the Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization. Founded by several New Left leaders in 1967 to … Continue reading “In Sami Al-Arian’s name”

Byron York unravels the funding for protest group Not in Our Name and finds terrorist professor Sami Al-Arian holding the purse strings:

FOR its fund raising, the Not In Our Name Project is allied with another foundation, this one called the Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization. Founded by several New Left leaders in 1967 to “advance the struggles of oppressed people for justice and self-determination,” IFCO was originally created to serve as the fundraising arm of a variety of activist organizations that lacked the resources to raise money for themselves.

In recent years, IFCO served as fiscal sponsor for an organization called the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom (their partnership ended when the coalition formed its own tax-exempt foundation). Founded in 1997 as a reaction to the 1996 Anti-Terrorism Act, the coalition says its function is to oppose the use of secret evidence in terrorism prosecutions.

Until recently, the group’s president was Sami Al-Arian, a University of South Florida computer-science professor who has been suspended for alleged ties to terrorism. (He is still a member of the coalition’s board.)

Is Not in Our Name Anti-war, or anti-America?

Link from Michael Totten.

Mugabe praises Chirac

Genocidal tyrant Robert Mugabe had a great time yucking it up with Jacques Chirac: Mugabe ‘at home’ during French summit — The Washington Times “He put his foot down on principles,” Mr. Mugabe added, saying the world needed more leaders of great stature such as Mr. Chirac. “That is the kind of leader we regard … Continue reading “Mugabe praises Chirac”

Genocidal tyrant Robert Mugabe had a great time yucking it up with Jacques Chirac:

Mugabe ‘at home’ during French summit — The Washington Times

“He put his foot down on principles,” Mr. Mugabe added, saying the world needed more leaders of great stature such as Mr. Chirac.

“That is the kind of leader we regard as very important for this stage … in the international community,” he noted.

Chirac’s looking like somebody who never met a genocide he didn’t like.

The Dean of Mean

Bill O’Reilly’s coming in for his share of attacks now that the Justice Department has arrested Islamic Jihad fundraiser Sami Al-Arian for aiding and abetting the murder of 100 Israelis. Here’s one example: Skewered by ‘Dean of Mean’ Bill O’Reilly — a Survivor’s Tale Earlier this month, Fox News commentator Bill O’Reilly found himself on … Continue reading “The Dean of Mean”

Bill O’Reilly’s coming in for his share of attacks now that the Justice Department has arrested Islamic Jihad fundraiser Sami Al-Arian for aiding and abetting the murder of 100 Israelis. Here’s one example:

Skewered by ‘Dean of Mean’ Bill O’Reilly — a Survivor’s Tale

Earlier this month, Fox News commentator Bill O’Reilly found himself on the other side of the firing line for having used the term “wetback” in a discussion about illegal immigrants on his nightly program, “The O’Reilly Factor.”

The Al-Arian indictment is 120 pages long, is supported by 40 wiretapped phone conversations as well as other physical evidence, and looks hard to beat. The man hasn’t been convicted, but it’s not looking good for him. Most of the news accounts of the Al-Arian story neglect to mention the fact that the hot-headed O’Reilly actually broke the story over a year ago that Al-Arian had extensive ties to Palestinian Islamic Jihad.