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	<title>Comments on: Lanier on Meta-Intelligence</title>
	<link>http://www.timbomb.net/blog/2006/06/09/lanier-on-meta-intelligence/</link>
	<description>that gum you like is back in style...</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2008 23:01:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>by: Dennis</title>
		<link>http://www.timbomb.net/blog/2006/06/09/lanier-on-meta-intelligence/#comment-588</link>
		<pubDate>Sat, 10 Jun 2006 09:47:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://www.timbomb.net/blog/2006/06/09/lanier-on-meta-intelligence/#comment-588</guid>
					<description>&lt;p&gt;That’s interesting. The downside of any loss of authority is certainly always the opening into the unknown. Especially, when it comes down to hot political debates even the swiftest work of passionate wiki-gnomes is rendered meaningless as they are outnumbered by nuts. 
However, the nice quote from above somehow paraphrases a bad bad tendency that has already been diagnosed ages ago: sometimes “the medium is [still] the message”. Unfortunately, there is no way out of it, since every medium ultimately inscribes its dispositive into what it tries to put across. 
I think Nietsche’s typewriter is usually seen as the first example of that and I would say that the Computational Representational Understanding of Mind employed by many working in AI and Cognitive Science is a further instance of it. 
However, it occurs to me as if especially Web 2.0, brings to the foreground what has elsewhere been debated under such abdominal buzzwords as “post-structuralism”. Especially the long forgotten, though quite entertaining debate between Derrida and Searl rushes to our google-damaged senses here. 
With the end of modernity and the notion of a “subject-agent” we ultimately face the end of any individually centred intentionality and I believe only few people are actually able to understand what that means. Maybe it’s a too hasty shortcut to equate “intelligence” with “intentionality”, but let’s do it for strategic purposes here: Thus: to assume some kind of meta-intelligence or “intentionality” is definitely a fetish that (un)consciously tries to mask the lack of answers for question it paradoxically introduces in the first place. Who is in charge ?  As chance would have it, the Wikipedia is the best example of what Derrida has called “Dissemination”. What happens with the “intention” of an author,  when it is freed or kidnapped from its context ? Who is to blame for accidental inferences when signs are reiterated in different contexts? Is that all just the Wittgensteinian  Language Game? Or is there more to it? Well, there is obviously no outside of Web 2.0 and I hope that we can also turn it into the perfect venue for what, again the wise Jacque Derrida, has called “deconstruction” in short: the ongoing collective negotiation of “truth” and “meaning.”&lt;br /&gt;
Thanks for this thought provoking post !&lt;/p&gt;
</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>That’s interesting. The downside of any loss of authority is certainly always the opening into the unknown. Especially, when it comes down to hot political debates even the swiftest work of passionate wiki-gnomes is rendered meaningless as they are outnumbered by nuts. 
However, the nice quote from above somehow paraphrases a bad bad tendency that has already been diagnosed ages ago: sometimes “the medium is [still] the message”. Unfortunately, there is no way out of it, since every medium ultimately inscribes its dispositive into what it tries to put across. 
I think Nietsche’s typewriter is usually seen as the first example of that and I would say that the Computational Representational Understanding of Mind employed by many working in AI and Cognitive Science is a further instance of it. 
However, it occurs to me as if especially Web 2.0, brings to the foreground what has elsewhere been debated under such abdominal buzzwords as “post-structuralism”. Especially the long forgotten, though quite entertaining debate between Derrida and Searl rushes to our google-damaged senses here. 
With the end of modernity and the notion of a “subject-agent” we ultimately face the end of any individually centred intentionality and I believe only few people are actually able to understand what that means. Maybe it’s a too hasty shortcut to equate “intelligence” with “intentionality”, but let’s do it for strategic purposes here: Thus: to assume some kind of meta-intelligence or “intentionality” is definitely a fetish that (un)consciously tries to mask the lack of answers for question it paradoxically introduces in the first place. Who is in charge ?  As chance would have it, the Wikipedia is the best example of what Derrida has called “Dissemination”. What happens with the “intention” of an author,  when it is freed or kidnapped from its context ? Who is to blame for accidental inferences when signs are reiterated in different contexts? Is that all just the Wittgensteinian  Language Game? Or is there more to it? Well, there is obviously no outside of Web 2.0 and I hope that we can also turn it into the perfect venue for what, again the wise Jacque Derrida, has called “deconstruction” in short: the ongoing collective negotiation of “truth” and “meaning.”<br />
Thanks for this thought provoking post !</p>
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