Ana Viseu on Mon, 15 May 2000 16:44:39 +0200 (CEST)


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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> It's not me it's my genes, or is it my memes?


I received this answer to my nettime post 'Its not me its my genes, or is
it my memes?'. I think it is an interesting answer so I am fowarding it
(with the author's permission) to the list. 

Best. Ana

===================================
Date: Sun, 07 May 2000 16:06:03 -0400
Subject: memes and genes
To: aviseu@oise.utoronto.ca
From: kenneth <kmcleod56@hotmail.com>

The more we seem to advance along the parallel lines of  cyber- and genetic
learning, a weird process is suggesting itself to me; a philosophical
devolution of the human concept from the ‘paragon of animals’ to a metaphor
of the computer paradigm. Instead of finding new reforms for our models of
morality to take, that is, to have our humanity mature at a pace with our
new knowledge,  we seem to be internalizing our technology. We speak of
ourselves as biological machines, wired by DNA, fated by our species’ 
programming. I can’t help feeling that this is a sign of a self-justifying
excuse for society to apply 'medicine' where it sees a need for 
'correction'; eugenics brushes dangerously along the territorial line of
prescribing 'cure' after the conclusion of 'diagnosis'. It’s starting to
sound like we need 'fixing', doesn’t it?

I see this approaching perspective as a greater danger than any amoral
license born of the 'boys will be boys' (or 'all men are dogs') school. I
don’t see ourselves as some sort of fleshware lugging around irresistible
Neanderthal programming, waiting for some eugenics’ version of Prozac to
make us citizens. Chaos would perhaps be reduced in our daily lives, but so
would the growth that comes from imperfection. Lifestyles and good health
has been our alternative to surgery and medication; if we apply this
holistic outlook to our genetic profiles, we may still have the freedom to
be responsible for adjusting to this new knowledge of ourselves 'know who
and what you are, and thus take care of yourself'. I can’t wait to tell
somebody, "You’ve got more memes than brains, buddy!"


-------------------------------------
Tudo vale a pena se a alma nao e pequena.
http://fcis.oise.utoronto.ca/~aviseu


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