BIG01.EXPRESSION
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times” –
Charles Dickens
What makes culture tick?
BIG outline: The organic world of
nature emerged from the physical world, and with it ‘life’. At one point in the
history of the universe there was no life, but it came about when the dimension
of nature came about. Keep that in mind, because I’m going to tell you now that
‘time’ only came about when the dimension of culture emerged from the natural
world. Humans make stuff. Actually, they can’t stop not making and
creating stuff. This stuff is all around us as the artificial (not
natural/human-made) and it feeds back on us all the time. Actually, it feeds
back on us AS time. All artefacts are ‘conversational mediums’. That’s easier
to understand with books, art and Kickstarter Projects like this, but more
tricky will other artefacts. However, just like a conversation goes back and
forward so does our engagement with the billions, even trillions of artefacts
all around. We express ourselves (create) into the stuff all around us, and it
sticks around (continues) through expressed interest. To understand the laws of
motion and notion of culture we need to understand this constant circulation
between, (a) the stuff we have created around us, (which I call placetime)
and (b) the effect it has on the here and now, (which we call meantime).
We refer to ‘information’ but by this we really mean these two times ‘in
formation’. We record our experience into placetime, and this loads back onto
us constantly as/in meantime. This is tricky, using words to describe something
so dynamic, so I’ve worked on a system of diagrams displaying how this all
works.
Evolution doesn’t manage this process, it is one of Expression.
1. We
express ourselves into the artificial world around us we create.
2. This
creation is continued by our expressed interest (adoption, not adaptation), and
3. This is an express process. This revolution upon revolution gets quicker and
quicker and we’re now in a position to understand it like never before. Stephen
Jay Gould called culture ‘the Lamarckian juggernaut’ and it’s really important
to realise this is not cultural evolution, but cultural expression. It
is a process that we, a single species are responsible for. We don’t live in
ecological niches, we live in ‘times’, the constant action and interaction of
placetime and meantime. In a BIG sense, we need to take responsibility for our
time(s).
BIG outcome: Culture comes
from human creative expression as the artificial world we see around us of
trillions and trillions of artefacts. Unlike DNA, this is the source code of
culture. In buildings, books, clothing, technology, laws, media, etc we design
a world that in turn plays a telling
part in defining us. It’s not possible at this time to be certain of all the
outcomes, but again, think about how Newton-level, and Darwin-level bodies of
work have changed the world, and we’re looking at something like that. Newton’s
Principia was published in 1687. 172 years later we had Darwin’s Origin
of Species in 1859. If we can get these 11 x TED-style lectures out for
next year that’ll be 159 years after Darwin. Newtonising the social sciences
(arts and humanities) is a wonderful coming of age in the same sense that
physics and the biological sciences came of age with Newton and Darwin. We’re
talking about providing an intellectual spine for all work, all expression, all
disciplines along the social epistemological spectrum (I’ll try and keep the
fancy words to a minimum). The other 10 BIGs that I’m going to outline are
stand alone BIGs, but together they represent a body of work that isn’t just
bigger than anything that has come before, we’re talking BIG. Full stop
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