#281

Ironicwarcriminal posted:
i'll see if i can find a copy in this philistine country.


it's actually published in melbourne iirc, my local library has a copy, i'm sure yours will too

Edited by blinkandwheeze ()

#282
Where is the Gog-Magog Axis in D&G? I'd be interested to read that.

In addition to the Blinkandwheeze / Superabound dialogue I'd simply add that in the terrain of Cyclonopedia (and Lovecraft) is explicitly horizontal, there is no duality placing form or God, or the Ancient ones above but rather everything is immanent and far broader than we can imagine. It's horror of realisation (at the brink of madness) that one is immersed an ocean and not a story of having swum out too far. We are submerged in a field, the operations of which we are only partially aware, yet submerged me remain. This is not only an awareness of our immanence to things which we can not perceive, but also to their agency and interaction with one another. This possibly reflects my coming to things like Cyclonopedia and Lovecraft after reading Graham Harman, but it seems to resound with what Blinkandwheeze is saying.

the reason these forces so beyond us are so active in human affairs is because they are active in every affair

Can anyone more familiar with Spinoza than myself expound upon his relation to all of this please?

Makeshift_Swahili
The tiny burrowing snake is really interesting. I can't remember off the top of my head but I believe there is some stuff in the book about the fig wasp? I might have just been reading about them at the same time as reading the book but the interlocking symbiosis, the tight loops of decay and creation resonate strongly with the book, especially the concept of the Trison. Insistently, for anyone having issues with sorting the out the rather sketchy section under the smoke screen of numerology, this link was really useful for me.

On a side note of the beautiful generative terror of the formless immanent field of matter which the Old Ones bring, here's our friend Nick

"In contrast to the pompous declarations of the orthodoxies, which come from on high (like a stroke of the whip), an infernal message of subterranean, a whipser from the nether-regions of discourse, since 'hell is certainly below'. Just as the underworld is not a hidden world - a real or true - but is that hidden by all worlds, so it the crypt-mutter form hell something other than an inverted scene, concept, or belief. In their infernal lineaments words are passages, leading into and through lost mazes, and not edifications... Poetry does not strut logically amongst convictions, it seeps through crevices; a magmic flux resuscitated amongst vermin. If it was not that the Great Ideas had basements, fissures, and vacuoles, poetry would never infest them. Faiths rise and fall, but the rats persist." Nick Land, Shamanic Nietzsche in "Fanged Noumena" 2011
[interestingly enough, especially considering the distinct possibility that Reza is not actually a person, or at least not the person he supposed to be, while searching to see if this essay was online so I wouldnt have to copy the whole quote form the book I found it pretty much verbatim, yet uncited in an essay by a man called "Adrian Gargett", then when I looked up his name i found this. A little more looking found that he is now a photographer with a different name here though I wouldn't be all that surprised to find out that he is actually Nick Land himself.]

While I have the book out, here is something else from Fanged Noumena that is relevant:
"The sublimity evoked by an experience is in direct proportion to the devastation it wrecks upon the imagination. Because the pain resulting from the defeat of the imagination, or the animal part of the mind, is the tension that propels the mind as a whole into the rapture of the sublime experience. Sublime pleasure is the experience of the impossibility of experience, an intuition of that part of the self that exceeds intuition by means of an immolating failure of intuition. The sublime is only touched upon as pathological disaster" - Delighted to Death

Which is essentially what we were describing earlier in terms of the lovecraftian horror in-comprehendible immensity of the real. However, the previous Land quote, (as well as the rest of that essay) develops the author’s (and Negarestani’s) position against this, which following from Bataille, see reason’s joy at violence toward the imagination as a tyrannical oppression which underpins the horror of modernity. Which leads neatly to Masciandaro, particularly this interview which features some nice stuff on the Sublime. I’m particularly interested in the stuff on rock climbing as relating to Bad and True Infinity (from the trison link). Being quite heavily into bouldering myself, the only way I can effectively climb is to think in terms of the immediate, atemporal moment. To think of the end hold or indeed the notion of grades and routes - which is something I think is not being addressed by Masciandaro- is have a duality of form (language) and matter (the screaming failing body). I'm really uncomfortable about seeing climbing as the romantic conquest of nature by the will. better to see it as it is, ones skin and skeleton forming a network with the rock, with the upward direction being more or less arbitrary (which is suggested at by his "ultimate bouldering problem" idea, but I think movement is a part which is missing from that model). Not wrestling but training. This for me, resounds with the fluid and infinite immanence of things like “leper creativity”.

I'll go read some more of the book now.

#283

FrancoNero posted:
Where is the Gog-Magog Axis in D&G? I'd be interested to read that.


haha i was saying that gog-magog, and qiyamah to an extent, are fundamental aspects of negarestani's war machines as distinct from d&g

that's really fantastic work discovering adrian gargett. fischer & co in that comment thread sure seem to think he's simply a thief, but obviously land is anarchic enough to open any possibility. to be clear i do believe that reza is who he says he is, if only because being an active part of the blogosphere for several years before publishing anything substantial is far too elaborate a ruse, but if we were to assume he's a fiction i'd look in the direction of a collaboration between land & mehrdad iravanian, both who undoubtedly have the knowledge to pull something like this off (check out iravanian's really fantastic article on deleuze for collapse, haha!), and both have conspicuously absent online presences

i don't know nearly enough about spinoza as i should, but this line leads to bataille, who is becoming a frequent touchstone in our discussion it seems

Most materialists, even though they may have wanted to do away with all spiritual entities, ended up positing an order of things whose hierarchical relations mark it as specifically idealist. They situated dead matter at the summit of a conventional hierarchy of diverse facts, without perceiving that in this way they gave in to an obsession with the ideal form of matter, with a form that was closer than any other to what matter should be. Dead matter, the pure idea, and God in fact answer a question in the same way (in other words perfectly, and as flatly as the docile student in a classroom)-a question that can only be posed by philosophers, the question of the essence of things, precisely of the idea by which things become intelligible. Classical materialists did not really even substitute causation for the must be (the quare for the quamobrem, or, in other words, determinism for destiny, the past for the future). Their need for external authority in fact placed the must be of all appearance in the functional role they unconsciously assigned the idea of science. If the principle of things they defined is precisely the stable element that permitted science to constitute an apparently unshakeable position, a veritable divine eternity, this cooice cannot be attributed to chance. The conformity of dead matter to the idea of science is, among most materialists, substituted for the religious relations earlier established between the divinity and his creatures, the one being the idea of the others.
Materialism will be seen as a senile idealism to the extent that it is not immediately based on psychological or social facts, instead of on artificially isolated physical phenomena. Thus it is from Freud, among others-rather than from long-dead physicists, whose ideas today have no meaning-that a representation of matter .must be taken. It is of little importance that the fear of psychological complications (a materialism that only bears witness to intellectual weakness) causes timId souls to see In this attitude an aversion or a return to spiritual values. When the word materialism is used, it is time to designate the direct interpretation excluding all idealism, of raw phenomena, and not a system founded on the fragmentary elements of an IdeologIcal analysis, elaborated under the sign of religious relations.


(think about negarestani's concept of geotrauma)

those are some really great thoughts on rock climbing, franconero. closely to that, you can look at eyal weizman pointing towards the idf use of the situationist concept of dérive, ostensibly arbitrary movement subsumed by the logic of urban space...

haha, speaking of that and the conquest of mountains, here's laura oldfield ford:

I think a lot of what is called psychogeography now is just middle class men acting like colonial explorers, showing us their discoveries and guarding their plot.

Edited by blinkandwheeze ()

#284
my copy of hollow land is In Da Mail
#285
khamsek your study thing sounds fascinating + im rly jealous
#286
i introduced a friend of mine who is a geography student to david harvey and now he's writing his dissertation on some of the stuff
#287
re: horizontality, i thought one of the key points in negarestani was of not thinking in terms of horizontal planes but of holey and deformed spaces, he writes that with the plane of consistency d&g betrayed radical thought.... every supposed horizontality also contains a within or submerged that is the source of horror.... surely horror is that which is not immanent but not transcendent either, something which is present but submerged, an abject sensation of that which is both here and elsewhere...... iono
#288

deadken posted:
re: horizontality, i thought one of the key points in negarestani was of not thinking in terms of horizontal planes but of holey and deformed spaces, he writes that with the plane of consistency d&g betrayed radical thought.... every supposed horizontality also contains a within or submerged that is the source of horror.... surely horror is that which is not immanent but not transcendent either, something which is present but submerged, an abject sensation of that which is both here and elsewhere...... iono


i think what we're talking here is in terms of a conceptual model of the speculative physics engaged in by lovecraft in reza, that horizontality is in terms of their anarchic / non-hierarchical universal model as opposed to Superabound's suggestion of higher & lower order universes (and consequentially the concept of a 'false' reality below a 'real' one), horizontality in terms of structural arrangement and organizational principle rather than a liter horizontality. lovecraft & reza's speculative realities are full of cracks and holes, a flux of matter submerging into each other and gradually emerging, there is no transcendence because upwards movement is impossible. there are holes, deformed spaces, but falling through them doesnt send you to lower state, or lower order universe, it sends you into another swerve ... the geometry isn't euclidian

so there you have lovecraft, and then bataille, but you also actually get althusser, actually (who is of course fundamental to our pals zizek, badiou & co, what i was thinking of previously as a platonic/aristotelian divide to our buddy reza, obviously distinct philosophical projects but at the same time intertwined)

Epicurus tells us that, before the formation of the world, an infmity of atoms were falling parallel to each other in the void. They still are. This implies both that, before the formation of the world, there was nothing, and also that all the elements of the world existed from all eternity, before any world ever was. It also implies that, before the for­ mation of the world, there was no Meaning, neither Cause nor End nor Reason nor Unreason. The non-anteriority of Meaning is one of Epicurus' basic theses, by virtue of which he stands opposed to both Plato and Aristotle. Then the clinamen supervenes. I shall leave it to the specialists to decide who introduced the concept of the clinamen, present in Lucretius but absent from the fragments of Epicurus. The fact that this concept was 'introduced' suggests that it proved indispen­ sable, if only on reflection, to the 'logic' of Epicurus' theses. The clinamen is an infmitesimal swerve, 'as small as possible'; 'no one knows where, or when, or how' it occurs, IQ or what causes an atom to 'swerve' from its vertical fall in the void, and, breaking the parallelism in an almost negligible way at one point, induce an encounter with the atom next to it, and, from encounter to encounter, a pile-up and the birth of a world - that is to say, of the agglomeration of atoms induced, in a chain reaction, by the initial swerve and encounter.
The idea that the origin of every world, and therefore of all reality and all meaning, is due to a swerve, and that Swerve, not Reason or Cause, is the origin of the world, gives some sense of the audacity of Epicurus' thesis. What other philosophy has, in the history of philo­ sophy, defended the thesis that Swerve was originary, not derived? We must go further still. In order for swerve to give rise to an encounter from which a world is born, that encounter must last; it must be, not a 'brief encounter', but a lasting encounter, which then becomes the basis for all reality, all necessity, all Meaning and all reason. But the encounter can also not last; then there is no world. What is more, it is clear that the encounter creates nothing of the reality of the world, which is nothing but agglomerated atoms, but that it corifers their realiry upon the atoms themselves, which, without swerve and encounter, would be nothing but abstract elements, lacking all consistency and existence. So much so that we can say that the atoms' very existence is due to nothing but the swerve and the encounter prior to which they led only a phantom existence.
All this may be stated differently. The world may be called the accom­ plishedfact in which, once the fact has been accomplished, is established the reign of Reason, Meaning, Necessity and End . But the accomplishment qf thefact is just a pure effect of contingency, since it depends on the aleatory encounter of the atoms due to the swerve of the clinamen. Before the accomplishment of the fact, before the world, there is only the non-accomplishment qf thefact, the non-world that is merely the unreal existence of the atoms.
What becomes of philosophy under these circumstances? It is no longer a statement of the Reason and Origin of things, but a theory of their contingency and a recognition offact, of the fact of contin­ gency, the fact of the subordination of necessity to contingency, and the fact of the forms which 'gives form' to the effect of the encounter. It is now no more than observation : there has been an encounter, and a 'crystallization' of the elements with one another (in the sense in which ice 'crystallizes'). All question of Origin is rejected, as are all the great philosophical questions: 'Why is there something rather than nothing? What is the origin of the world? What is the world's raison d'etre? What is man's place in the ends of the world?' and so on. I repeat: what other philosophy has, historically, had the audacity to entertain such theses?


which is really wonderful, imo, i need to read more althusser to understand fully the implications of this. more bataille, too ...

#289
yeah im probably bein a bit overly literal in my reading of horizontality..... its true though that the flat plane as an organisational concept is p prevalent in the current western episteme and scouring it for fissures and disruptions is an important project.... ima re-read the bit about matter and void because its cool and there are a bunch of implications for all kinds of shit.... im taking this class on literature and the urban focusing on los angeles and it could be really interesting to consider urban geography in terms of ( )hole complex i think
#290

deadken posted:
im taking this class on literature and the urban focusing on los angeles and it could be really interesting to consider urban geography in terms of ( )hole complex i think


yea, it is really interesting, i was approaching it before here, but thats warfare oriented, there are more things to say

#291
yeah what i like about the deleuzian war machine is that while its genealogical development emerges from actual warfare its operation can be seen everywhere, to the extent that it can approach the practice of war from the outside
#292
haha i just noticed that the Enemy always sequesters itself in holes, like even when bin laden was living in a two-storey house near Abbotabad everyone kinda assumed he was hiding out in some cave somewhere, any holey opposition to the flat plane is conceived of as intrinsically evil
#293
theres a bit near the beginning of cyclonopedia where its proposed that the monotheistic eschatology of the flat desert is actually generated by subterranean blasphemies... is this something he expands on because its p kewl
#294

deadken posted:
haha i just noticed that the Enemy always sequesters itself in holes, like even when bin laden was living in a two-storey house near Abbotabad everyone kinda assumed he was hiding out in some cave somewhere, any holey opposition to the flat plane is conceived of as intrinsically evil


haha maybe so, for the purpose of delusions, but you're forgetting the gog-magog axis, jihadists fight for horizontality as much as any western technocapitalists. you kno mohamed atta wrote his masters thesis as a critique on the introduction of western skyscrapers in the middle east?

#295
lol no i didnt, thats awesome, im really surprised nobodys tried to bomb that fuckin monstrosity towering over the qaaba yet.... i dont think i quite 'get' the gog-magog axis though, as i recall it was tied up with the cross of akht stuff which i skimmed over a bit
#296
ok im just reeling off Cyclonopedia Observations now but the bit where he talks about capitalism pre-existing humanity.... obviously its massively in contradiction with historical materialism but it fits perfectly with the marxian tendency to explore capitalism as some kind of gothic horror
#297
ya i liked that bit too. capitalism as a dormant virus, activated when it enters a host cell
#298
[account deactivated]
#299

tpaine posted:
the xfiles movie already did this.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/xfiles/intro/blackoil.shtml
The X-Files is all over Cyclonopedia

#300
[account deactivated]
#301

discipline posted:

blinkandwheeze posted:
you kno mohamed atta wrote his masters thesis as a critique on the introduction of western skyscrapers in the middle east?

link.


i cant find it sadly, im pretty sure it hasnt been translated from german anyway, found some articles on it at slate here tho

#302
[account deactivated]
#303
haha writing nonsense about lovecraftian physics is how
#304

discipline posted:
that's amazing, life is so weird and perfect sometimes, how can you not believe in god



Why is that weird, if anything it makes perfect sense and he just applied the theory of the subject he was interested in to real life. It would be weirder if he’d written his thesis about donkey farming or something.

hail satan

#305
yea thats not really a coincidence at all, theres no luck involved, he just did what he knew he had to do. to study soemthing is to destroy it. he united theory with praxis
#306
fuck and destroy
#307
indeed
#308
i believe in god but i dont trust him
#309

discipline posted:
philosophy is like, only 1/3 what is correct and truly meant and 2/3rds how the IDF uses it to conduct urban warfare vis-a-vis blasting through living room walls in nablus, wonder what zizek has to say about the cross reference with terry gilliam's Brazil (1985)



i never noticed it before but tbf this pic also has that frederic jameson book critiquing postmodernism.... not sure how much utility that has for zionism
e: actually now that i think about it maybe theyre using it much the same way china has been

not to say the idf doesn't have a thing for misreading d&g of course...

Edited by aerdil ()

#310
9/11 as architectural criticism lol
#311
im going to write a troll essay called that. 9/11 As Architectural Criticism
#312
i will co author. i already said 9/11 is the epitome of modern construction
#313
how are we to go about understanding 9/11 in terms of solidus and void?
#314
GOOGLE BUILDING 7 GEOTRAUMA
#315
it could be argued that 9/11 was already implicit in the architecture of the wtc, that 9/11 represents an architectural shift ultimately precipitated by the building itself and not external factors
#316

deadken posted:
it could be argued that 9/11 was already implicit in the architecture of the wtc, that 9/11 represents an architectural shift ultimately precipitated by the building itself and not external factors



this is ultimately true i think

#317

aerdil posted:
not to say the idf doesn't have a thing for misreading d&g of course...



i dont even think they're misreading it. over and over again in plateau its emphasized that theres nothing magically inherently always good to thinking rhizome

#318

jools posted:

deadken posted:
it could be argued that 9/11 was already implicit in the architecture of the wtc, that 9/11 represents an architectural shift ultimately precipitated by the building itself and not external factors

this is ultimately true i think



the short-skirt rape argument applied to the urban form, i like the way you guys think here

#319

mistersix posted:

aerdil posted:
not to say the idf doesn't have a thing for misreading d&g of course...

i dont even think they're misreading it. over and over again in plateau its emphasized that theres nothing magically inherently always good to thinking rhizome



yeah this has always fascinated me, they write about 'knots of arborescence' in the rhizomatic but it itself can have some p destructive capacities..... do wall street dudes read deleuze. i bet they'd love it

#320
i havent read a thousand plateaus yet, but i think at least most of the theory in anti-oedipus is incompatible with capitalism & fascism (at least the stuff that isn't simply analyzing/describing it)