“Prometheus Bound” (via Hesiod, Aeschylus, Heidegger, McLuhan)
Thinking of the Kuhn discussion, I’d like to look at how a mythical culture understands an innovation of techné/craft; here treated as both a divinely revealed gift and the ground of human tragedy.
We start with the Titan Prometheus. In the Theogony, Hesiod depicts Prometheus as a sly trickster who angered Zeus by giving him the bones of an ox wrapped in glistening fat to eat. For unclear reasons, Zeus responded by vowing to keep the secret of fire from mankind, but Prometheus secreted away a ray of fire for man in a fennel stalk, a story that could reflect earlier man’s experience with fire sparked by lightning and carried by similar means. When he found out, Zeus punished Prometheus by having him bound to a pillar, where his liver was munched on by an eagle each day and regenerated each night, until he was finally freed by Heracles. Man, meanwhile, was punished with the creation of woman, according to the misogynist Hesiod, the source of all his troubles. Ever the Zeus propagandist, Hesiod uses the Prometheus story to show, “It is impossible to hoodwink Zeus, or to surpass him”. But, of course, Prometheus did hoodwink Zeus.
Living in a time of Athenian optimism (mid-400s BCE), Aeschylus, instead, depicts Zeus as a tyrant, recently enthroned by coup, paranoid about losing power, and planning to exterminate man. Some readers doubt the generally pious Aeschylus could have created this Zeus, but he isn’t much different from the bullying character elsewhere in mythology. Also, Aeschylus doesn’t really describe Prometheus’s gifts as pure windfalls. For example, his first gift, the ability to imagine a happy future, hides from men their wretched actuality. The other gifts: medicine, astrology, writing, metallurgy, and fire are also mixed blessings. Man’s imaginative creations somehow alienate him from his own condition, allowing him to deceive himself as to his mortal physical state. Prometheus is still a trickster. This is pilfered divine knowledge, hidden from men because, with it, they would be as gods, but not gods. The human condition is tragic precisely because we can imagine a future brighter than we are allowed by nature.
Aeschylus recognizes that the Promethean revelations changed the character of human life. Before them, humanity lived underground, trapped in caves, with eyes that did not see and ears that did not hear. As in Plato’s depiction, this is a state of sensorial immediacy in which man is rapt in the body and the present moment. Aeschylus makes much of the name Prometheus, which is connected to “fore-thought”. Prometheus allows man to conceptualize the future and, thus, to escape embodied immediacy; to extend himself in time. Writing lets him do this with speech, separating it from thought and making it possible for his language to be extended thousands of years into the future. Writing also separates action and reaction, the mind and the body.
For allowing man to extend his mind beyond his body, Prometheus is punished by being nailed down to his own body. In a sense, Aeschylus realizes that the body, which we experience in finite space, is misled by the mind, which we experience in extended time. Human tragedy is in forgetting where we are, which is who we are.
Socrates worried about writing in part because he thought this externalization would cause the memory to atrophy. Some writers, who have bought into the current mantra/falsehood, “technologies are neither good nor bad, but neutral”, ridicule Socrates on this point. But ask yourself how many contemporaries you know who can recite the Iliad.
Innovation then is a mixed godsend. Heidegger writes of Greek techné as poi?sis- bringing forth, involving the mutual play of four causes: Material, Aspect (eidos), Boundaries, and the workman’s considering carefully (forethought). For example, Prometheus’s shackles were brought forth mutually by: Material (iron), Aspect (the form the shackles assume when completed), Boundaries (staying within physical boundaries, but also the boundaries of its purpose), and the ironsmith’s forethough. Heidegger’s point about techné is that the Greeks saw it as a bringing forth and a revealing of truth. He compares this to technology, in which nature is “reframed” as a storehouse of raw material and sees the Greek conception as superior. A typical German mystic, he mistakes a Greek curse for a volkish blessing.
Communications technologies are something else entirely. Against the Panglossian sunshine of an Esther Dyson (We are living in the best of all digital worlds), let’s counter with the Catholic mystic Marshall McLuhan, who saw machine technology as an extension of the human body and communications technologies as an extension of the human central nervous system; but who also saw this externalization as creating numbness and atrophy in the bodily part superseded by its own externalized creation. We became what we beheld. In changing our scale, we lose our place.
Both McLuhan and Heidegger are unequivocally pessimistic about technological change. I wonder if it’s not possible to do further damage to their ideas by blurring their warnings together. I wonder if McLuhan isn’t also talking about reframing thought as a reified and externalized storehouse of “raw material”. Certainly, when you watch digital addicts trying to function in the physical world, you recognize their discomfort with the body (boring!); but also their discomfort with the mind as private, internal, and sacred (even more boring!). The mass Gnosticism of the internet seems more like yearning for release from body and soul. Nevertheless, we remain nailed in place.
Ultimately, I think Aeschylus sees the creative imaginings of man as blessings of divine revelation, in that they have allowed us every innovation that has improved our lot; but the root of our tragedy, in that they have allowed us to imagine dethroning the gods and placing ourselves inside a larger scale than our finite existence really allows, at least without tragedy ensuing. And following the atomic bomb and factory-produced deaths of the last century, it’s hard not to feel that we would benefit a bit from a revival of the tragic sense. Sadly, the gods have already been dethroned.
This is an excellent post. It strikes me as almost certainly true that we are coming to see information as a raw material and our minds as a store of resources. I wonder if the technology of the office, as Weber called it, isn’t more to blame than the internet, though? Isn’t viewing minds as resources a feature of bureaucratic organization?Report
It definitely does have to do with bureaucracies in an “information economy”. I worry it will go beyond that, though- seeing the net as a storehouse of information and our minds as referents- more like footnotes to the internet.Report
Rufus me lad, do I detect a hint of luddite in this?
I think I get the objections but I think they fall short. In my mind the damage/danger of the new nascent technology lies in its impact upon the early users. The first men to use fire burn and soften themselves, the first people to use writing weaken their memories, the first people to use digital tech loose touch with their inner private selves. But with the former technologies we see (in my opinion) that once mankind adapts to the new techs they then use them to soar. The later users of fire use it to illuminate the world. The later writers create epics, sagas and treatises that illuminate the mind. Who knows what wonders the later users of our digital creations shall achieve.Report
Isn’t this a contingent process? That is, we can either fail or succeed at integrating new technologies into cultural accounts of meaning, what it means to live a good life, etc. Our recent failures as a culture on this front don’t give me any great hope that the future of information technology will be more humane, or human, at least.Report
Have we ever failed to integrate new technologies into cultural accounts of meaning? What would it even look like if we failed? Extinction or merely anarchy?Report
Maybe not extinction or mere anarchy, but spiritual lassitude. My own fears about the future are that it will be endless boredom stretching out to infinity and punctuated by random violence.Report
The car, as Rufus mentions below, is a perfect example. From the 30s through the 70s the United States underwent a massive, concerted effort to change the physical structure of our communities in order to accommodate the car. It now seems clear that this was a terrible mistake, precisely because we failed to realize that the ability to walk places, to pass acquaintances in the street, etc., was part of what constitutes a good human life. If you look back at texts from the time, there wasn’t any actual discussion about this at all except in the books that have since become the founding texts of contemporary urbanists (Jacobs and Whyte in particular seemed to be the only ones who really understood what was going on). Mostly you had animated videos about how wonderful it was going to be to live in a country full of freeways from ocean to ocean.Report
I don’t know if I’d call it a hint of the Luddite so much as riffing on Aeschylus, who I don’t take to be as positivist as a casual reading might suggest. Besides, it’s not as if the Luddites were exactly wrong- I mean, their way of life was being ended. I think technologies bring trade offs, and I guess what I’m skeptical about is the mantra: “Technologies are neither good, nor bad; they’re neutral.” Only when not in use I’d say.
Take the automobile. I love cars and married into a family of gearheads. I love the mobility and speed they’ve provided to humans and how they’ve interconnected our communities. But, it’s easier to kill yourself with a car than with a hansom carriage. And you don’t have to be an eco-extremist to think that probably the exhaust isn’t great for the atmosphere. Not to mention that the car enabled us to make sprawling suburbs where you can’t walk to anything and everyone’s a little bit fat. In one sense, none of that is implicit to the technology, but I’d say it is implicit to incorporating the technology into our lives without thinking critically- we need a hint of the Luddite!
Of course, part of this is (as usual!) shaped by working in a profession that continues to spout mindless techno-utopianism while trying to teach a generation of internet-addicts to “navigate” the old obsolete paper technology. Recently, the experts at our university have started suggesting we hold lectures on Youtube and let the students email their questions instead of meeting in the farty old physical world. What bothers me is the implication tech-gurus always make that you have no choice- it’s the same coercion that progressivism in general seems inclined to. “Your way of doing things is outdated and ‘unsustainable’. Step with me now into the future! Why do you look nervous?”
So, what I’m encouraging is not so much criticism of new technologies as critical thinking about them. I’m not as gloomy as McLuhan actually was (in spite of how people read him). I’m okay if people have their Blackberries or whatnot- I just don’t want to be begrudged for reading my “dead tree media” in a “dead language”. I’m still living.Report
Fair enuff, thanks for the clarification.Report
No problem. Actually, it occurs to me that my original take on Aeschylus- techne as both an absolute godsend and something we have to remain humble with it in our lives to avoid tragedy- is a lot clearer and closer to my own feelings.Report
Rufus, could you elaborate on Heidegger’s interpretation of the Greek conception of techné? I’m afraid my only exposure to this has been through bad college debate rounds. Usually, the other team would read nine minutes of Heidegger by way of McWhorter and scream that calculative thought is bad and policy-making predictions are a product of technostrategic discourse (or something). I think I understand Heidegger’s basic argument, but I’m not really sure what his alternative – a bringing forth and revealing of truth? – means.Report
Hey, I just got home from a weekend in the woods. I can sure try to explain this, but I should probably try tomorrow after a good night’s sleep.Report
Okay, first, we have to take Heidegger with a large grain of salt. I can’t promise to make him much clearer and I’m undecided in general about how seriously we should take anything he said. Often, when reading him, I wonder if he wasn’t either a bit cracked or a con artist.
So, the essay- The Question Concerning Technology- begins with the idea that we can get to the “essence” of technology by thinking through what was “primally thought” about techné. Heidegger talks often about the concealed original essence of some idea- Being is the big one- with the promise that, if we understand the primal sense of the term we will uncover the now concealed, but not lost, essence of the thing.
So, with techné, he is saying that, on one hand, it just means craftmaking- but on the other that it is intimately connected to Poïesis, which he defines most broadly as a “bringing forth”- an example he uses is be a butterfly emerging from a cocoon. Here one thing steps outside of an original standing to stand as a second thing.
Another example- from The Symposium!- would be Diotima’s idea of Poïesis as a way of stepping beyond mortality- Sexual Poïesis in reproduction, civic Poïesis through lasting fame, or spiritual Poïesis by cultivation in the soul. It’s a creative bringing forth.
Part of what makes this confusing is that techné as craft is more often contrasted with poïesis as art. It’s also not clear that the Greeks saw techné nearly as broadly as Heidegger.
He contrasts techné as “revealing” and technology as “manufacturing”, which is really another sort of revealing, which he calls “enframing”- in which manufacturing is “challenging forth” nature and demanding that nature give itself up as as a “standing reserve”.
Here he compares a windmill to a hydroelectric plant. I think the idea is that a windmill is man making use of the forces of nature, where a hydroelectric plant, in Heidegger’s term, “challenges” Nature. Instead of just drawing from nature, it puts nature (in this case, the Rhine) at our command. Nevertheless, even in doing this, man takes part in “ordering as a way of revealing”.
But not wholly- it happens to some extent outside of his handiwork. And the danger is in loosing sight of that and coming to “obey” technology as it unfolds in meaning. If “ordering” becomes “destining” man runs the risk of being taken as standing reserve. The more we stand inside technology, the more nature recedes into the background, being reduced to a storehouse of raw material. Of course, the really horrifying part of his later thought on technology- and notorious- is that because he believes that technology is somehow an autonomous organizing activity acting upon Nature, and not a neutral tool at our command, he sees mechanized agriculture as being of a metaphysical sort with the death camps. These would be two aspects of technology unfolding in history. On one hand, this argument is appalling in that it removes agency from the Holocaust- on the other hand, it is a really intense condemnation of technology, which he only hints at in the essay. Nonetheless, there, he clearly suggests that technology poses a great threat to human existence on the level of Being.
So, the answer seems to be “listening” to the claims made by technology (on Nature presumably) and in some sense standing outside of technology in order to do so, which means standing back and looking at the concealed truth that reveals itself in technology.
So, I suspect this gets us back to looking at a hydroelectric plant as poïesis in order to reclaim that lost essence. Since Heidegger sees Being as tied to techné, we would presumably regain some lost sense of Being in regaining an original sense of techné as poïesis. I guess the flipside of this is thinking that hydroelectric power is therefore an attack on Being.
Again, I’m not sure that I’ve made anything easier to understand!Report
Ah, ignorance is bliss. Best not to breed sinners, oweing a debt of gratitude to Zeus or Prometheus. Its March Madness, and that means vasectomy time. May we all live an apathetic, happy life.Report