Kevin Kelly's Complexity Theory: The Politics
and Ideology of Self-Organizing Systems
Steve Best and Douglas Kellner
Abstract
Regarded as a contemporary prophet of the new
technology and economy, widely acclaimed author and editor of
Wired, Kevin Kelly argues that the realms of nature and human
construction are becoming one. Human-made things are becoming
more lifelike and life is becoming more engineered. Utilizing
complexity theory and other concepts fashioned on the paradigmatic
logic of biological systems, Kelly envisions a future with radically
different forms of social and organizational control. In this
future world, control is dispersed in highly pluralistic, open
and decentralized systems. Natural, technological, economic, and
social elements of the system co- evolve towards a superior, neo-biological
civilization that (among other things) will foster bottom-up control,
coordinated change, and cooperation among all elements.
We contest Kelly's metaphysic of the new economy
and new technology, arguing that he illicitly collapses technology
and the economy into nature, using nature metaphors to legitimate
the new forms of economy and organization. We argue that Kelly
fails to factor in the logic of capital into his scenario and
fails to explore the consequences of the new organization of economy
and new technology for the environment and society. As technology
becomes more animated and autonomous, I think we should be asking
ourselves where it wants to go, what its biases are and how far
it can govern itself. We need to know this at the very least in
order to push back expertly and with appropriate force--otherwise
we push in blindness.
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Kevin Kelly
Every major intellectual field and academic discipline
has taken a postmodern turn in recent years, challenging or overthrowing
modern paradigms and establishing new ones. In fields ranging
from the life sciences to business organization to war, provocative
arguments are being developed that we are emerging into a new
global economy, an innovative high-tech society and culture, and
novel postmodern ways of life and identities. Kevin Kelly, former
editor of The Whole Earth Review, cofounder of the Well, promoter
of various cyberevents like the Hacker's Convention, and now Executive
Editor of Wired, is being presented as a prophet of the New Economy
with the publication of his book New Rules for the New Economy
(1998). This text builds on his earlier Out of Control (1994;
paper edition, 1995) which establishes the theoretical framework
in which he celebrates the new economy and new technologies as
forces of inestimable progress and worth that should not be tampered
with or regulated by mere human beings.
Kelly argues we need new paradigms, new ideas,
and new practices to make sense of and deal with the tumultuous
changes that we are undergoing due to the global restructuring
of the economy, the proliferation of new technologies, rapid social,
political, and cultural change, and the emergence of new modes
of thought. We agree that momentous changes are occurring and
that we need new thinking and practices to deal with the fallout
of the technological revolution and the global restructuring of
capitalism that we see as the motor of the "great transformation"
that we are now undergoing (Best and Kellner, forthcoming). Yet
while we appreciate the importance of appropriating ideas from
new sciences to help understand the technological revolution and
advent of a new economy, we believe that we also need critical
social theory to make sense of the current transformations. Accordingly,
in this article, we will sort out Kelly's key ideas, provide a
critical evaluation of his work, and indicate the extent to which
we believe his writings do or do not illuminate the novel and
emergent conditions, phenomena, and challenges that we are currently
confronting.
Getting over Humanism: Technology and
Economics "Out of Control"
"In an age of smartness and superintelligence,
the most intelligent control methods will appear as uncontrol
methods. Investing machines with the ability to adapt on their
own, to evolve in their own direction, and grow without human
oversight is the next great advance in technology. Giving machines
freedom is the only way we can have intelligent control."
Kevin Kelly
Kelly's Out of Control contains an impressive
synthesis of current perspectives on science, technology, nature,
and human beings that provides a lucid introduction to new paradigms
in thinking about these topics. Subtitled The New Biology of Machines,
Social Systems, and the Economic World, Kelly provides striking
examples of the ways that human-made things are becoming more
lifelike, while life is becoming more manufactured and engineered.
Drawing on cybernetics, chaos and complexity theory, evolutionary
theory, information theory, and discussions of new technologies,
Kelly claims that we need fresh models of thought that articulate
the parallels between the organization of nature, the novel environments
of technology, and the dynamic human and social milieux. Offering
a concept of "vivisystems" to describe these domains,
Kelly argues that "the realm of the born--all that is nature--and
the realm of the made--all that is humanly constructed--are becoming
one" (1).
For Kelly, the biological is becoming technological
as technology intervenes in the very processes of life with the
emergence of bionic bodies, the genetic engineering of plants,
animals, and human beings, and cloning. Yet he also insists that
technology is taking on the forms of natural, living systems as
it creates new "ecological" environments like the Internet
or the global economy, and as it models natural processes, generates
new evolving forms of digital art and digital DNA on the computer,
and unfolds in self-organizing modes. A partisan of holistic systems
theory and cybernetics, Kelly advocates Big Picture thinking,
seeing the emergence of innovative biological-technological-social
systems and their unity, as well as the need for creative and
flexible paradigms and thought to comprehend and adapt to the
brave new world of complex, co-evolving systems.
While cybernetics emerged after World War Two
as a science of control, Kelly advocates a countercybernetics,
a renunciation of attempts at systems-steering and control, urging
us to allow the systems--natural, technological, economic, and
social,--to engender their own forms of self-development and self-organizing
evolutionary dynamics. His vision is driven by the conception
that: "The world of the made will soon be like the world
of the born: autonomous, adaptable, and creative but, consequently,
out of our control" (4). The common denominator of these
"vivisystems" is an absence of imposed centralized control,
the autonomous nature of subunits, high connectivity between parts,
and a "webby" nonlinear causality interacting among
subsections (3ff.).
Such vivisystems can be observed, he claims,
by examining the restoration of a prairie system, the construction
of an artificial ecosystem such as Biosphere 2, the development
of computer networks, artificial life experiments, and the emergence
of the Internet and global economy. Kelly is fascinated with networked
systems--whether they are biological, mechanical, or social--which
he initially describes with the perhaps infelicitous metaphor
of "swarm systems" and the "hive mind" (5ff).
His project is to show that concepts and metaphors derived from
natural processes illuminate our technological and social worlds
and that these models and paradigms can be used to clarify a wide
range of phenomena and processes ranging from biology to the global
economy.
The concept of "biologic" implies that
future societies will have very complex and lifelike technological
systems which will involve intricate interactions between humans
and machines. On this view, the only way to the future is not
through the old mechanistic paradigm, where we model our thinking
on machines, but rather on an ecological paradigm that emulates
the complexity of nature. This process is also called "biomimicry"
(Benyus 1997) whereby technological systems are constructed by
imitating nature. For Kelly, the goal is "to extract the
logic of Bios" (2), to study the complex systems of nature
in order to make our technology more complex, to solve more difficult
tasks, and thus to allow our machines to self-replicate, self-govern,
learn, and evolve and do things on their own. Examples of biomimicry
include trying to model computer chips on the complexity of DNA
and its greater information processing ability, analyzing how
spiders manufacture their webs to make materials stronger than
steel, or studying the organization or bird flocks to create better
car traffic flows. Kelly's own favorite example of biologic is
the construction of Biosphere 2, which replicates ecological dynamics
within a new technoenvironment modelled on careful study of natural
ecosystems (138ff).
Kelly's Out of Control opens with nine chapters
outlining some of the new paradigms of thinking about life and
technology, followed by five chapters on the new economy and social
system, and ten concluding chapters sketching parts of his own
synthetic vision. His method is to begin with personal experiences
and observations, or interviews with cutting-edge scientists and
technotheorists, and then to proceed to sketching out more general
theoretical positions which he then illustrates with a set of
examples. Kelly excels as a journalist and his credentials with
Whole Earth Review and Wired enabled him to gain access to major
figures in the most advanced sciences, new technologies, and high
tech economy. Consequently, his portraits of the major players
and gurus within the New Age science, technology, and economy
community are frequently interesting and informative. Despite
the rapid changes in the technological and economic environment
since the publication of the book, it is still well-worth reading
(although the section on "e-money," for example, and
references to debit cards, now register as economic history rather
than as "futuristic" projection of a new economy). Overall,
Kelly provides a substantive introduction to fresh thinking about
nature, technology, economics, and our emerging postmodern world,
while his own synthesis and analyses provide many stimulating
ideas and perspectives.
In the opening chapters, Kelly is especially
interested in how natural processes can be modelled in computer
simulations and, conversely, how technoenvironments such as Biosphere
2 can be constructed. By the same token. he believes that concepts
of "industrial ecology" and "network economics"
can illuminate the changes going on in the socio-economic world
(Chapters 10 and 11). These reflections are obviously given credibility
by the tremendous explosion of the Internet and the global networked
economy best described by Manuel Castells (1989, 1996, 1997, and
1998). Castells vividly demonstrates that we are living in a world
of unparalleled change and that we need new theories and perspectives
to help us make sense of globalization, the information revolution,
the rise of a networked society, and the new world economy.
One of Kelly's key arguments involves discussion
of the coevolution of humans, technology, and nature (69ff). Here
it is important to cite the influence of Stewart Brand who was
publisher of both the Whole Earth Catalogue which Kelly once edited,
as well as the founder and publisher of CoEvolutionary Quarterly
and co- founder of the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link (WELL), which
Kelly also participated in. Brand moved from countercultural ecological
perspectives to affirm the new computer technology, helping push
the New Age intelligentsia, including Kelly, into affirmation
of new technologies (Brand 1968 and 1987). These and other hip,
'60s intellectuals mutated into the "digerati," promoting
the emergent cyberculture and its new technologies. Kelly follows
Brand in this trek and returns to his mentor's conception of coevolution
to push the notion that humans and technology are evolving together
in a relationship of codependency.
Kelly argues that we are symbiotic with our technologies,
that there is coevolution of humans, nature and technology, and
that as our technological environment develops we ourselves evolve
and mutate. This provides a stronger naturalistic metaphysics
of the new technologies than, say, Jean Baudrillard who has no
nature or biology in his theory and who, like Fredric Jameson
at times (1991: 34-38), tends to posit postmodernity as the replacement
of nature by technology (see the critique of Baudrillard in Kellner
1989a). Rather, for many postmodern theorists, technology becomes
more and more a second nature, a new environment, in which technology
and nature implode into each other in the creation of synthetic
technoenvironments and smart machines.
While we believe it is extremely important to
see the co- evolution of nature, technology, and human beings,
we would argue the points differently and would make distinctions
that Kelly implodes. On one hand, Kelly is too eager to collapse
technology into nature, seeing technologies as life-forms, possessing
more and more qualities of natural and human life. The drama of
his book concerns how humans will relate to the new technologies
and whether humans or technology will prevail, with Kelly eventually
proposing a copartnership as we note below. As our opening epigram
from a 1998 interview indicates (http://www.salonmagazine.com
), Kelly both subscribes to and affirms a form of technological
determinism. His optic collapses nature and social systems into
one process of coevolution, all of which follow similar laws and
dynamics. In this totalizing tour de force, however, Kelly does
not adequately distinguish between humans, nature, technology,
and societies, while also failing to trace appropriately the relations
between new technologies and social systems, the ways that a new
economy is helping to shape and construct new technologies, and
the sort of economy and society that new technologies are creating.
In short, as we argue below, Kelly leaves capitalism and its logic
and dynamics out of this coevolutionary picture, collapsing the
economy into technology and both into nature.
In our view, it is today's theoretical challenge
to see how science, technology, nature, human beings, and social
systems interact and coevolve, to grasp how changes in one dimension
effect the others, to trace and chart the dialectical interaction
among these spheres, and to analyze how capitalism shapes all
these dynamics. The most advanced contemporary philosophies of
science and technology convincingly argue against the autonomy
of technology, science, and society, demonstrating that human
artifacts, techniques, practices, and conceptual schemes are socially
constructed within specific socioeconomic systems, while tracing
out the ways that disparate societies fabricate different sciences
and technology (see Harding 1998). Kelly, however, is more interested
to demonstrate the co-evolution of nature and technology, and
is generally unconcerned to theorize the defining features of
the human and social, while privileging natural metaphors (hive,
swarm, biologic, etc.) when he discusses human and social systems.
Thus, Kelly fails to adequately theorize the role of the economy
in the construction of the allegedly new worlds that we are entering,
and how this process in turn is shaped by power and resistance.
Kelly posits a continuum ranging from an extreme
form of control ("total domination") contrasted to a
situation of "out of control." Only toward the end of
the book does Kelly concede that his hyped conception of "out
of control" is an exaggeration, that in fact he is seeking
something like co-control, whereby we guide systems, while they
retain their own autonomy (329-331). Words like "shepherd"
or "manage" come close to describing the degree of control
that Kelly seeks, but "Partnership, Co-control, Cyborgian
control," hence a sharing of control and our "destiny"
with our creations is what Kelly purports to seek (331). But this
notion of co-control arises in the context of our relationship
to technology and its relevance to the economic or social system
as a whole is not clear. Obviously, in the economic and political
domain there is a competitive quest for control of markets, votes,
and power. Surely, the current titanic battles between software
corporations like Microsoft, Netscape, and other high tech firms--not
to mention the war in the U.S. between the Republicans and supporters
of Bill Clinton--suggest that models which abstract from power
and struggle miss key dynamics of the contemporary world.
Thus Kelly covers over the virulence of agonistic
competition in the contemporary world and makes the problematic
suggestion that more profit is to be gained through alliances
than competition, pointing to a tendency to overgeneralize and
a naivete concerning economics that we will highlight in the succeeding
sections. Hence, while his analysis puts in question determinist
schemes and humanist fantasies about absolute control over the
object world, and contains the reasonable insight that to control
(guide) the behavior of objects in some domains, we must relinquish
(absolute) control, this dialectic of guidance/letting go only
has specific relevance in describing our relationship to natural
and technical objects. However, when applied to the social world,
this view suggests that government and citizens should not fundamentally
tamper with such things as socio-economic systems or domains like
the Internet. Such a notion renounces the project of refunctioning
technology and our social systems to serve human needs rather
than profit, as well as downplaying the need to promote social
justice, preserve the environment, and meet basic human needs.
Yet Kelly seems on the whole to think that our
socio-economic system and technology are just fine and do not
need much tinkering or co-control. His crypto-libertarian political
philosophy advances a Reaganesque "government-off-your-back"
standpoint which translates into corporate hegemony and the capitulation
of government responsibility to protect the health, safety, and
rights of citizens. Moreover, Kelly is extremely technophilic,
uncritical of the "new economy," and lacks any sense
of social or political consciousness or moral concern about the
directions of the global economy and the explosion of new technologies.
A free-marketeer, Kelly posits capitalism as a complex system
that will steer itself into order, providing a replay of Adam
Smith's laissez-faire. Indeed, he sees Smith's "invisible
hand" not only in the market, but in the Internet and the
"Net" of life itself (26). Hence, where Smith limited
the invisible hand to the market and the mysterious laws of supply
and demand, for Kelly the "invisible hand was coevolutionary
life" (78) itself, thus promoting the hand to the very principle
of life and, in effect, God. Like Social Darwinists and their
principle of ruthless competition, Kelly reads social metaphors
into nature, and then back into society, thereby eternalizing
contingent relations and ideas, and legitimating the current organization
of society through a cosmic metaphysics.
In addition, Kelly suggests that systems with
free flows of information and communication inevitably lead to
democracy "as an unavoidable self-organizing strong attractor"
(396). Kelly thus posits democracy, and implicitly capitalism,
as the only viable forms for self-organizing systems. This is
a variant of Francis Fukuyama's conception of "the end of
history" (1992) that capitalism and democracy (as currently
constituted) are the highest, ultimate, and final forms of history
that cannot be surpassed--or are at least the "strong attractors,"
"evolutionary peaks," and "sweet spots" which
our social organizations have generated.
Kelly's mysticism of "life" and the
"Net" thus leads to simultaneous celebration of the
Internet and the capitalist market: "The only organization
capable of unprejudiced growth, or unguided learning, is a network.
All other topologies limit what can happen" (26). Presumably
networks are "natural" phenomena, replicating the organization
of nature, and are thus capable of growth and development, while
artificial organizational forms presumably degenerate and die
(e.g. bureaucracies and large static organizations like the socialist
state or giant modern corporation). Socially constructed systems
and organizations are thus judged by the extent to which they
confirm to the laws and contours of nature and those systems are
deemed best which most accord with nature's supposed self-organizing
and self-evolving logic. Thus, nature seeks, and realizes itself
in, the current capitalist system and its global, networked economy.
Kelly's celebration of new technology and the
new economy are bolstered in his mystical conception of life which
he lyrically posits as an evolutionary force toward diversity,
growth, and development, one that is "unstoppable,"
"irreversible," and even "immortal" (102).
An inveterate optimistic evolutionist, Kelly also posits a "rising
flow" of life that seeks increasing complexity, diversity,
numbers of individuals, specialization, codependency, and evolvability
(412ff). Kelly is taken by notions of systems that are "poised
on the edge between chaos and rigid order" (402). Such systems
are also capable of "self-tuning" which "may be
the mysterious key to evolution that doesn't stop, the holy grail
of open-ended evolution" (403). Thus Kelly posits an inherent
order throughout nature and a networked market economy, as if
the socio- economic system itself were capable of self-organization,
fine- tuning, and unstoppable growth and development, without
the mediation and domination of social and political forces.
Hence, not only does Kelly posit homologies between
nature, technology, and social life throughout the book, he reads
the logic and dynamics of natural systems into social systems
and believes that both can be simulated and replicated in computer
networks. On the whole, while we find chaos and complexity theory
useful for understanding natural processes (Best and Kellner 1997,
Chapter Five, and forthcoming), we are suspicious that conceptions
derived from the study of nature can be unqualifiably imported
into social systems. The degree of complexity seems much greater
in social organization which is, after all, the product of highly
flawed humans and groups who seek their own interests and are
capable of extremely destructive and irrational behavior (as the
media make clear everyday); such agonistic complexity makes social
modelling and prediction extremely difficult and of questionable
validity.
In the final analysis, the title of Kelly's first
book is not a warning that technology will escape our control;
he admits it will, but does not think through the consequences.
He believes, naively, that "No one is in control" (449),
a total mystification of our economic and political system in
which quite specific corporations, groups, and individuals have
significant amounts of power. In the face of the actually existing
constellation of power and control, Kelly's normative urging that
we should allow complex systems to take on their own emergent
chaos and allow machines to take over many human functions and
swallow our human pride obfuscates the power of ruling socio-political
forces and is in effect an injunction to surrender to the current
societal organization and go with the flow it creates.
Interestingly, "out of control" was
a negative metaphor used to critique capitalism and technology,
to point to the dangers of an unregulated market system, unplanned
technological development, or a chaotic polity. While one might
think from its title that Kelly's book might be a warning about
"technology out of control," a humanist admonition to
take control of our economy and technology, in fact it's quite
the opposite. Thus, Kelly inverts a dominant metaphor (out of
control) that once was used to critique both capitalism and technology,
turning a negative into a positive conception, urging us to let
go "with dignity" (127). With Kelly, the concept becomes
a positive feature of a self-organizing economic and technological
hive that models "nature" and that benefits precisely
from lack of control.
We wonder, however, how far contemporary economies
would go without economic regulation and management, the intervention
of the state in times of crisis, state expenditures for military
and welfare to generate economic growth and provide a safety net
for those who fall through, or suffer disadvantage. For Kelly,
however, the emergent network system is more creative, productive,
and exciting precisely because it is "out of control."
Likewise, Kelly sees no danger in releasing potentially harmful
pollutants or transgenic species into the environment. He seems
to assume that with the end of the industrial era pollution by
large-scale manufacturing will no longer be a problem and he does
not consider the dangers of biogenetics and genetic engineering
that Rifkin (1998) and others have documented. Hence, his notion
of "out of control" is undialectical, failing to note
the situations and phenomena that require more control and management
than he imagines. Thus, while there is a positive notion to recognizing
self-management and not interfering with certain natural or technical
processes that is interesting and useful, there is also a highly
regressive and problematic conception of laissez-faire that fails
to recognize the lesson of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, that our
human creations can get out of control, wreak havoc, and ultimately
destroy us.
While Kelly's book is valuable in documenting
implosions between humans and technology and some fascinating
parallels between natural and technological processes, he is not
worried about undoing these boundaries and finds no need to maintain
distinctions between humans and technology, or natural, technological,
and social processes, urging us, in effect, to accept a totally
imploded posthumanist universe. Thus, whereas Kelly is correct
to see unity in all complex systems, there are also differences
that he collapses; e.g. capitalism is something of a self-organizing
system, but its dynamics are also shaped by class struggle, competition
between major economic units, and complex interaction between
economic and political institutions, unlike any natural system.
Kelly's chapters on the economy are wholly uncritical and say
nothing about such things as exploitation or monopoly control,
and not much about ecological problems. He has little sense of
how power operates and of how big organizations manipulate the
economy and polity for their own ends. It is indeed not clear
to us how an economic system can be self-organizing when it is
shaped by giant corporations, quasi-monopoly control of key technologies,
and the state. In Kelly, old market ideologies thus return in
a new hip pseudo-scientific clothing, recycling old concepts for
the new millennium. Hence, despite Kelly's exuviation toward new
views of science and technology, he has not shed his old mystical,
New-Age cocoon.
Thus, while we can applaud Kelly's potentially
populist emphasis on "control from the bottom up" and
appeal to complexity theory to argue that complex systems incorporate
evolution from below, from the simple to the complex, generating
distributive networks and growth and innovation from the margins,
much of his "wisdom" is common-sensical ("cultivate
increasing returns," "honor your errors," and cultivate
change) and banal. Moreover, his admonitions to "seek disequilibrium"
and free technology from all control could have disastrous social
and ecological implications. Yet, on the whole, Out of Control
will probably be disappointing to those searching for new models
of economy, business organization, and strategy. Much of what
Kelly writes on the market and business organization is somewhat
abstract and now outdated, and there are few concrete examples
or case studies. Economics is overwhelmed in his first major book
by his relentless desire to assimilate technological and biological
systems and his quest to erase fundamental differences between
humans, technology, and nature. His more recent book, however,
focuses on the new global high-tech economy and provides more
substance concerning his economic thinking, a topic that we will
critically engage in the following sections.
The New Rules of Acquisitive Individualism
"In the coming order, there will be
winners and there will be losers. The losers will outnumber the
winners by an unimaginable factor." -Jacques Attali
In contrast to the epic verbosity of Out of Control,
New Rules (1998) is rather short, indeed, too slight, for it is
exceedingly sketchy and superficial, having the feel of an "instant
book" written at warp speed to catch the fleeting (third)
wave of the moment, as it flashes unwarranted promotional hype
on its jacket. In New Rules, Kelly applies the basic scientific
and technological concepts of Out of Control toward an analysis
of the emergent global and networked economic organization. In
contrast to the philosophical bravado of Out of Control, New Rules
is more a pragmatic than a theoretical work, another "how-to"
manual that suggests ways to exploit the "new economy."
Indeed, as George Gilder's blurb on the back cover hails, New
Rules is a "handbook for happening entrepreneurs," although
we are skeptical as to whether Kelly's rules are going to produce
new fortunes, or that there is all that much new or original about
them.
As a pragmatic text geared for the average J.R.
Capitalist, the metaphysical baggage of Out of Control is conspicuously
missing (Kelly no doubt realized that capitalist positivism is
interested primarily in profit and not in his Hericlitean-cum-Teilhard
de Chardin ontology), save for scarce references to the economy
as a dynamic, complex system in constant flux and disequilibrium.
So in place of speculative metaphysics and their corollary "laws,"
the reader finds utilitarian "rules," although ultimately
one may find these as fuzzy as the Bergsonian-Nietzchean vitalism
informing Out of Control. Kelly has an incorrigible penchant for
distilling messy complexity into simplicity, into, first, nine
laws, and, second, ten rules. Perhaps Eleven Blends of Chicken
Soup for the Self- Organizing Soul is next? Or Twelve Ways to
Prepare Tofu for the New Age Entrepreneur?
Readers of Out of Control who had suspicions
of the conservative implications of Kelly's asocial metaphysics
and theory of technology will find these dramatically confirmed
in New Rules. Kelly comes out of his Wired closet as a full-blown,
pro- development, growth-oriented, laissez-faire economic thinker,
a neo-liberal blithely indifferent to the major social and ecological
problems of our time. The title of New Rules implies two major
claims. First, a generic argument that we are now in a new stage
in capitalist development, which Kelly vaguely links to postindustrial
discourse. Second, if one wants to circumnavigate the new scene,
Kelly argues that we need new maps and compasses. Thus, any would-
be capitalist who wants to gain/maintain their fleet of yachts
and BMW's is in luck, for Kelly promises to provide the ten basic
rules they need for wealth and happiness--a ten-step program for
an addictive desire to money. According to Kelly, opportunities
have never been better for amassing wealth; but the booty will
not always be ripe for the picking, since the turbulent winds
of change can shake the trees of fortune bare at any time.
Trumpeting yesterday's news, Kelly proclaims
that a "new economic order" has emerged which "represents
a tectonic upheaval in our commonwealth," occurring as "our
world shifts to a highly technical planetary economy" (1998:
1). Kelly sees both continuities and discontinuities between the
old (industrial) and new (postindustrial) capitalism. For Kelly,
both forms are based on fast-paced, frenetic change, but he says
nothing about the continued hegemony of accumulation, exploitation,
alienation, and the like in the new utopian soft capitalism. On
Kelly's view, classical capitalism is built on a "hard"
design of steel, industry, automobile manufacturing, and other
tangible commodities, while the new economy is organized around
"soft" and "intangible" goods, such as information,
knowledge, services, and entertainment.
While we find that there are indeed qualitatively
new phenomena in the recent reorganization of capitalism, driven
by such international organizations as transnational corporations,
NAFTA, GATT, and the IMF, as well as by the explosion of consumerism,
computers, and information on a global scale, Kelly has no concrete
analysis of when and how these changes occurred, and he exaggerates
the novelty of what he claims is the cardinal characteristic of
the "new economy"--a dense interconnection of networks.
As Marx and Engels described vividly in the Communist Manifesto,
classical capitalism dismantled premodern cultures and traditions,
ran roughshod over national barriers, and "nestle[d] everywhere"
(1978: 476). The colonialist and imperialistic dynamics of capitalism
forced it to create a complex maze of economic, political, and
cultural "networks" that have indeed intensified in
the last few decades, but arguably a "network economy"
is rather shaky ground for positing a rupture in history, as Kelly
does, since transportation and communication systems have been
essential to capitalism from the beginning.
Kelly is most apt in his description of the novelties
of a postindustrial capitalism, or what he terms a "soft
capitalism" Hard-style industrial capitalism still exists,
of course, but Kelly claims that soft-capitalism is quickly devouring
it, as steel, iron, and lumber irrevocably are being sucked into
the black hole of information, circuitry, and software. Thus,
"the hard world is irreversibly softening" (3). Bit
by byte, information and the net are ensnaring the entire world,
and consequently "the logic of the network will overtake
every atom we deal with" (75). Except for one statistic (11),
Kelly provides no evidence for his core claim that the erection
of a hard capitalism is deflating into the soft. His concern,
rather, is to encourage the Oedipal patricide of the Hard Capitalist
Father and to rejoice in the messy complexity of its offspring
the network economy, following the Siren Song of beckoning profit
and new forms of capital realization.
For Kelly, therefore, we are at a key crossroads
between the old and the new, "between a resource-based economy
and a connected- knowledge one" (114). In fact, Kelly does
not theorize the current crossroads between the old and the new,
as he fails to adequately analyze the continuities and discontinuities
between the industrial and postindustrial economic systems. Lost
in '60s pseudo- libertarian nostalgia, intoxicated with neo-liberal
fantasies, he does not grasp, among other things, that the new
"network economy" is still dominated by a competitive
and predatory capitalist logic (as so many recent mergers and
takeovers demonstrate), and that government intervention is still
necessary to regulate this terrain to protect the public interest,
a fact Bill Gates and other supporters of the information economy
also like to ignore, as well as the environment.
Kelly naively believes that the parts of the
disintegrating old industrial economy are being magically sewn
together in a complex new tapestry: "What industrialization
began by shattering, the network economy completes by weaving
together and serving with great attention. The web of broken shards
is now the big picture" (132). Kelly seems to believe, therefore,
that the differentiating logic of classical capitalism is being
superseded by the de- differentiating, implosive, and ultraconnective
dynamics of the network economy. Thus, whereas the atom was the
core metaphor of early capitalism, a trope for a society of fragmented
individuals, intense class divisions, and competing corporate
powers, the network is the metaphor appropriate for the present
age, where all people, businesses, and nations are interlocked
into a massive hive-like system of technology, economics, and
communication.
For Kelly, many "shards" of modernity
are now being rewoven into new wholes, as nation states, for example,
are becoming units within a single capitalist system. With the
globalization of a network economy, Kelly believes that the identity
divisions between "us" and "them" become obsolete,
at least in the corporate world, since everyone is plugged into
the same network; thus "individual allegiance moves away
from firms and toward networks and network platforms" (65).
But Kelly misses how, overall, old divisions persist, as competition
between major economic units intensifies, as the gap between the
world's rich and poor grows wider every year (see Athanasiou 1996),
as new conflicts between ethnic and religious groups explode (Barber
1996), and as new fragmentations are being created in the turbulence
of economic and cultural change, providing a welter of competing
ideologies, identities, and social groups (see Best and Kellner,
forthcoming).
Yet the networks are being assembled, and the
"happening entrepreneur" sipping cappucino at Starbucks
in Seattle or Austin needs to grasp this phenomenon first and
foremost: "Unless we understand the distinctive logic of
networks, we can't profit from the economic transformation underway"
(2). On Kelly's vision, the network economy realizes the postmodern
cultural logic of capitalism (the causal connections, of course,
are never theorized by this asocial thinker). "Network principles
renounce rigidity, closed structure, universal schemes, central
authority, and fixed values. Instead networks offer up plurality,
differences, ambiguity, incompleteness, contingency, and multiplicity"
(159) -- features we identified with the emerging new postmodern
paradigm (see Best and Kellner 1997, Chapter 6, cited by Kelly
on p. 159).
In fact, Kelly is asking us to believe that the
new capitalism is also generating a pluralist, open, and decentralized
system. In comparison to the old Soviet Union or to Iran, this
may be true, but in relation to radical libertarian visions of
society, such as advanced, for example, by anarchist thinkers
like Michael Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin, Paul Goodman, and Murray
Bookchin, Kelly's claim is laughable. A small handful of corporations
such as Disney, General Electric, Westinghouse, Microsoft, and
IBM own and control the means of communication and information,
while the very logic of the market censors alternative culture
that is not as profitable as the standardized pablum fed to the
public. Kelly's parade of questionable claims continues as he
insists that "This new global economic culture is characterized
by ... pools of knowledge instead of pools of capital (156), as
if knowledge were not a primary commodity in a scientific and
technologically dominated capitalism. Curiously, Kelly decenters
the importance of computers and constructs a false dualism between
computers and communication: "Computers are over .... Communication
is the economy" (5). Does Kelly perhaps have a huge group
of town squares in mind? How does global networked communication
take place without computers?
Probably Kelly means that individual computers
in the home or office are no longer as significant as the network,
a claim no one would deny, but this above example is emblematic
of Kelly's propensity to cloak the obvious in the forms of aphoristic
gnomicisms. Moreover, Kelly's description of a new decentralized
capitalism suggests that the capitalist system can co-opt just
about anything, and this includes the rhizomatic logic championed
by Deleuze and Guatarri (1983; 1987). As Kelly showed convincingly
in Out of Control, capitalism has indeed adopted a decentralized,
networking approach through innovative strategies such as subcontracting,
or "outsourcing," whereby one corporation delegates
various production tasks to other corporations in the interests
of speed and efficiency. Indeed, David Harvey (1989) has demonstrated
that capitalism has shifted from a rigid Fordism to a more "flexible
mode of accumulation" in its relation to the labor market,
products, consumption patterns, and so on.
But to argue without qualification--as Kelly
does--that the world system of capitalism is now more open, decentralized,
and pluralist, that it renounces "closed structure, universal
schemes, [and] central authority" is mystification of the
highest order. May we remind Kelly that the 1990s saw the greatest
megamergers in history, that in the era of NAFTA, GATT, and the
Euro, ever-fewer corporations and organizations are gaining control
over markets and people, that along with the New World Order of
homogenized markets comes an increasingly homogenized global culture
and simplified natural world, that the World Bank enforces unspeakably
vicious austerity policies on developing nations, and that sweatshops
and child exploitation are on the rise?
Hence, Kelly fails to grasp the dialectic of
contemporary capitalism that is both more organized and disorganized
than previously, that is generating at once new forms of centralization
and decentralization, and that is thus promoting both new forms
of homogenization and standardization as it proliferates difference,
fragmentation, and variety (see Best and Kellner, forthcoming).
Since Kelly is well aware that capitalism is a protean beast,
the ten "rules" he offers are not hard and fast laws,
but rather "rules of thumb designed to illuminate deep-rooted
forces that will persist into the first half of the next century"
(2). Given his premise that the hard is devolving into the soft,
Kelly's rules are designed to apply to all businesses, industrial
or postindustrial, in Detroit or Silicon Valley, and so he expects
industrialists too to take notice.
The problem is that Kelly's rules--like those
in the endless genre of how-to-be-happy books--are by and large
common-sense injunctions that are obvious to most informed participants.
To be sure, some may find Kelly's emphasis on networks and the
new soft economy incisive, some of his rules helpful and his ideas
fruitful (e.g. that complexity must be grown not installed, whether
for a technological or economic system). One of his rules ("No
Harmony, All Flux") which enjoins the entrepreneur to seek
constant innovation mixes an obvious platitude with a novel injunction
that disharmony, flux, and disequilibrium may be more advantageous
to the budding entrepreneur than the harmony and stability sought
in Keynesian and neo-classical models. Other of his rules, such
as "Increasing Returns," enlightens the would-be Bill
Gates with the bromide that connections spawn more connections
and success breeds success. Many of Kelly's rules are simply advice
to cyberize one's business. Most rules advance his philosophy
of decentralization, rhizomatic multiplication, and yielding rigid
control as the best modes of management and profit making. The
reader is thus urged to "Embrace the Swarm" ("the
competitive advantage belongs to those who learn how to embrace
decentralized points of control" [161]) and to "Let
Go at the Top" ("what we are discovering is that peer-
based networks with millions of parts, minimal oversight, and
maximal connection among them can do far more than anyone ever
expected. We don't yet know what the limits of decentralization
are" [18]). So, if cybercapitalism is your cup of tea, just
"skate to the edge of chaos," "explore flux instead
of outlawing it," and you're on your way....
Behind the celebration of "flux," "disequilibrium,"
and "innovation" is an embrace of Joseph Schumpeter
and his conception of "creative destruction" and notion
of the entrepreneur as the key innovative/progressive force of
capitalism (1962). Schumpeter is becoming the new dominant ideologue
of capital, revered by Kelly, Gilder and other apologists for
the new capitalism. Celebration of the market, the entrepreneur,
and the need to destroy passÇ economic and governmental
forms has become the new religion, the ideological force behind
Reaganism/Thatcherism/Clintonism, articulated in a neo-Schumperian
discourse which is replacing Keynesian as the dominant ideology.
This ideology is now a dominant force behind the New Economy hype,
as is evident when Kelly states:
Economist Joseph Schumpeter calls the progressive
act of destroying success "creative destruction." It's
an apt term. Letting go of perfection requires a brute act of
will. And it can be done badly. Management guru Tom Peters claims
that corporate leaders are now being asked to do two tasks--building
up and then nimbly tearing down--and that these two tasks require
such diametrically opposed temperaments that the same person cannot
do both. He impishly suggests that a company in the fast-moving
terrain of the network economy ordain a Chief Destruction Officer
(86).
Certainly economic success requires constant
innovation that involves tearing down and destroying as well as
creating. But Kelly seems oblivious that capitalist "creative
destruction" does not merely entail the "destruction"
of past successes in the drive to always create something new,
but also involves the destruction of firms, competitors, communities,
workers' lives and families, and the environment in the constant
lust to accumulate profit and revolutionize production. Chapter
8 ("No Harmony, All Flux") also celebrates in neo-Schumperian
fashion change, "future shock" (Toffler is also a major
influence), flux, and disequilibrium, a form of "perpetual
disruption" and turbulence that Kelly, as in his earlier
writings, associates with nature itself. But Kelly never considers
the social effects of skating economic systems to the edge of
chaos, toward endless innovation and disequilibrium, nor does
he imagine alternative conceptions of economics that would involve
planning and democratic input. While a prolonged period of "harmony"
might indeed spell death for a natural system, this depends on
what we mean by (social and/or economic) "harmony" and
Kelly rules out in advance stability as a desideratum for a social
order. Surely a genuinely democratic and ecological economy would
have to be dynamic, but Kelly's values fall on the side of disequilibrium
and disruption rather than equilibrium and stability.
Theory, Metaphors, and Ideology in New
Age Economics
"Metaphors are serious things. They
affect one's practice." -Stuart Hall
In New Rules, Kelly extends the complexity theory
that underpinned Out of Control, but it is decentered in relation
to another discourse he emphasized earlier, that of evolution
and biology. For Kelly, the economy is like an ecological system
by being richly interconnected, rife with co-evolving relations,
in constant flux and disequilibrium, and a self-organizing system
with intricate feedback loops. Like other complex structures such
as evolution and life itself, the economy thrives on the "edge
of chaos," at the point where it is neither too rigid and
static nor unbalanced and amorphous. Taking a page out of Stuart
Kauffman, Kelly writes: "If the system settles into harmony
and equilibrium, it will eventually stagnate and die" (11).
Thus, the goal of the new network economy is perpetual innovation,
dynamic disequilibrium, and cycles of social stability and disruption.
The theorization of society and the economy through
biological metaphors such as self-organization is exceedingly
risky, for one can easily lose sight of the enormous differences
between biological and social systems. The new dynamic, holistic,
and ecological outlook toward the natural and social worlds certainly
is a quantum leap in understanding nature beyond the static, deterministic,
mechanistic paradigms of classical modern thought. It allows one
to unravel the false oppositions constructed by modern science,
and Western thought in general, such as between subject/object,
order/chaos, being/becoming, inorganic/organic, and so on. Concepts
such as "complex systems" and "dissipative structures"
have interesting applications to human beings, culture, and health
(see Dossey 1982). Scientists are beginning to overcome falsely
constructed academic fortresses that compartmentalize different
disciplines; in particular, physics and biology are proving to
have deep lines of unity in the dynamic theory of matter (see
Best and Kellner 1997 and forthcoming).
But, as we suggested above, in Kelly, the lines
between different levels of life are blurred and the analysis
of human culture is mystified and depoliticized, or, if politicized
at all, reduced to the most banal liberal cliches about tolerance
and diversity. Unlike in the natural world, the application of
the terms "self" and "organizing" to society
are highly problematic. To begin, the term "organizing"
obscures the disorganizing effects of capitalism and suggests
capitalist societies are a continual march toward ever greater
complexity and order (on "disorganized capitalism,"
see Offe 1985 and Lash and Urry 1987). To say, moreover, that
capitalism is "self-" organized obscures the ways in
which distinct economic agents and powers consciously bend the
system and its laws to their will (certainly not always with success
and exact foresight), the intervention of the state to promote
some degree of economic order, and the manner in which class struggle
and the contestations of various social agents influences economic
policies. To say a society, like an organism, is "self-organizing,"
is to homogenize social diversity, whether in relations of struggle
or not, into a unified "self."
For Kelly, the economy is a self-organizing totality
that is self-regulated by feedback mechanisms and the magic of
the market. Following neo-liberal economist Frederick Hayek (1962),
Kelly attacks "top down" economic management and centralized
attempts to regulate the economy on the grounds that the economy
is too complex to rationally control, that prices and market mechanisms
provide the most efficacious feedback loops, and that "spontaneous
order" emerges from a market economy (Kelly 1995: 121-122).
Hence, the ideological implications of Kelly's scientific-cum-economic
theory are transparent: the anarchic system of capitalism is the
only economy that can bring growth, progress, and prosperity to
citizens. In Out of Control, Kelly accordingly sought to allow
machines and computer programs to run freely and to find their
own solutions. In New Rules, he applies the same idea to economics
and politics, but where human beings are involved there are quite
different implications. "We let the network of objects govern
itself as much as possible," Kelly says, "we add government
when needed" (19).
Similarly, in the world of business, he advocates
decentralization and allowing the "dumb swarm" of workers
to operate independently, in order to develop the intelligence
that can only come from below, but workers nevertheless need the
leadership of management. Kelly therefore rules out the possibility
of both direct democracy in society at large, and workers' control
in organizations, and thereby perpetuates exploitative class hierarchy.
Potentially progressive implications of decentralization themes
in Kelly are rerouted into a reactionary and elitist framework
that gives no more dignity to an individual worker than the queen
bee does to a worker bee, assigning workers value only as producers
for the corporate hive.
Like any scientific theory, such as genetics,
complexity theory can be deployed for different political purposes.
We would distinguish between a conservative and ideological complexity
theory that uses new scientific and technological insights in
order to legitimate the system of global capitalism, and a critical
complexity theory that interprets "bottom-up" power
and intelligence in terms of direct democracy, and not a swarmlike
hive. Such a critical theory, which we ourselves support, would
emphasize the need for sustainability and the construction of
an ecologically viable economy and just society, while criticizing
destructive aspects of the new technology and society.
Kelly, however, fetishizes the existing capitalist
system by making social processes look like natural ones, thus
naturalizing the odious forms of the current organization of society.
Even more extravagant than the fetishism of commodities which
for Marx masked social relations and exploitation, capitalist
ideologues today like Kelly are fetishizing the entire social
system as a self-organizing complex totality. As Marx wrote in
section 4 of the first chapter of Capital (Marx and Engels 1978:
319ff), capitalists attempt to present social relations as relations
among things, and to endow things (commodities) with agency. The
ontological status between subjects and objects, in other words,
is inverted, as subjects become object-like and objects become
subject-like. Kelly has shown that, in fact, such an inversion--an
implosion between subject and object, bios and technos--is taking
place in substantive ways, yet, following the logic of commodity
fetishism, he completely conflates the subject and object worlds,
society and biology. In direct contrast to Marx, who insisted
that we treat capital as a social relation rather than a thing,
Kelly treats the economy as a natural entity.
Changes from one "social system" to
another are not a result of "self-organization," "critical
thresholds," or "evolutionary peaks," but rather
are determined by socio-economic crisis, profound discontent,
class struggle, and political upheaval. Metaphors like "subcritical
economics," threshold points" of growth, and "phase
transitions" of the system simply obscure the all-too-real
impact of capitalist economics on human beings and the natural
world and confirm that the Achilles heel of complexity theory
is its uncritical approach to political realities and social power.
The naturalization of the social world is most blatant in Stuart
Kauffman, who boldly declares "our social institutions evolve
as expressions of deep natural principles" (1995: 304). The
"laws" of capitalism, however, surely include the need
for profit and thus exploitation, accumulation, and endless growth.
How these "laws" play out is determined by political
struggle and not a self- organizing system, which includes social
classes, government agencies, giant and small corporations, and
individuals, which often have competing ends and goals that are
decided through struggle and power, two variables not found in
Kelly's rosy vision.
Kelly thus decenters and occludes the role of
capitalism as the major social constituent and deifies technology
as the Prime Mover. Other complexity theorists also try to comprehend
technological innovation through an asocial model of emergent
complexity, but they fail to grasp the social forces behind these
dynamics. Economist Brian Arthur, for example, sees technology
to be more like an evolving ecosystem than a market-driven commodity,
thereby naturalizing social dynamics of competition and exploitation
(see Waldrop 1992).
Hence, the totalizing application of systems
theory and complexity theory is not a mistake of Kelly's alone;
indeed, it is epidemic in the genre and is blatantly on display
in thinkers like Stuart Kauffman (1995) and Fritjof Capra (1996).
Scientists like Alan Sokal, Paul Gross, and Norman Levitt love
to criticize social theorists for their alleged ignorance of science
and nature, but the ignorance runs both ways as soon as scientists
attempt reflection on history, society, and culture (see Best
and Kellner 1997, Chapter Five). For all their learning and interdisciplinary
emphases, Kaufmann, Kelly, and Co. apparently have never encountered
the likes of Vico, Dilthey, Habermas, and others who advanced
powerful critiques of the positivist conflation of nature and
society, nor have they learned the ABC's of social oppression,
injustice, and inequality. Indeed, complexity theorists celebrate
the free market system, championing the market as a chaotic system,
while failing to see the social and ecological consequences of
its inherent logic.
Old ideologies die hard. "The tradition
of all the dead generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains
of the living," as Marx observed long ago (Marx and Engels,
1978: 595). Today, in addition to the revival of Lockean theories
of property in the phenomenon of biopiracy, where corporations
like Monsanto genetically alter the crops traditional cultures
have cultivated for millennia and then claim the new biogene as
their property, so too is Adam Smith being resurrected, consciously
or not, to bolster the new theories of self-organization. Complexity
theory is a bizarre blend of Adam Smith and chaos theory, with
the market as a homeostatic "feedback loop." Kauffman
too theorizes links between the economy and democracy with complexity
theory, but seems to think that "feedback" is a sufficient
condition for democracy (1995: 28). Democracy does indeed involve
complex "feedback loops" among appointed representatives
or delegates and citizens, but obviously these are under constant
assault in our current plutocracy. While complexity theorists
may offer insights into the holistic and dynamic behavior of societies,
they lack the needed context of a critical social theory. Viable
forms of knowledge for the present and future demand critical
theories of power, as well as normative and utopian visions of
unquantifiable values such as freedom.
Technology and Capital in the New Global
Economy
"Critical Theory today must become more
negative and more utopian in its opposition to the status quo.
(1968: xii)" -Herbert Marcuse
While we believe that Kelly's work contains undeniable
insights and provides a wealth of ideas and information which
illuminates the new worlds of business, technology, and challenging
ideas now emerging, we see him primarily as a synthesizer and
populizer of new and some old ideas rather than an original thinker,
much less a "prophet" or "guru" as he is frequently
presented. He obviously encourages such designata by using religious
metaphors as when he discusses the "common soul" between
"the organic communities we know of as organisms and ecologies,
and their manufactured counterparts of robots, corporations, economics
and computer circuits?" (1995: 4). Or when he offers "nine
laws of God" as his concluding remarks in Out of Control
(468ff), which strikes us as a pretentious and problematic method
of inflating his own ober dicta with the "laws of God"
(to say nothing of positioning himself as Moses!).
Kelly also enjoins his readers to play "god
games" and become "amateur gods" themselves (1995
230ff), a riff on Stewart Brand's motto, "We are as gods
and might as well get good at it" (1968: 22), a rather extravagant
deifying of contemporary human beings in a way that seems to contradict
his post-humanism and calls for deference to the logic of technology.
Kelly thus ultimately presents us with a peculiar blend of New
Age metaphysics, technological determinism, and neo-liberal market
ideology that is highly eclectic, derivative, and fragmentary.
He is not a particularly original or deep thinker, though he is
a hard-working journalist who has produced a wealth of illuminating
material and is an excellent popularizer who has made a set of
complex ideas accessible to a wide-audience. But, as noted, he
is highly technophiliac, mystifies unpleasant social realities,
and is completely uncritical of the developments produced by the
new high tech economy, the new technologies, and new theoretical
and scientific paradigms.
As in Out of Control, in New Rules there is not
a critical position anywhere in sight; New Rules is a cynical,
amoral description of the new economy and a set of suggestions
for how to exploit it. The raison d'etre of New Rules is summarized
in this one sentence: "Those who play by the new rules will
prosper, while those who ignore them will not" ( 1998: 1).
With homage to George Bush's fatuous "vision thing"
of a "thousand points of light," Kelly's last chapter
is entitled "A Thousand Points of Wealth," where he
rhapsodically summarizes his passion for exploiting the wealth
of the network economy. All in all, Kelly is the Dr. Pangloss
of the postmodern age, never tiring of declaring network capitalism
the best of all possible worlds. Kelly takes his place among predecessors
like Marshall McLuhan, George Gilder, and Alvin Toffler who celebrate
technology but remain silent on the ills and defects of capitalism.
In place of the technophilia of Kelly and others,
we propose a critical theory of technology and society that contextualizes
technology within a social, political, and economic framework,
and that assesses both the positive and negative implications
of new technologies in terms of their potential to enhance or
restrict freedom and democracy, to promote or undermine environmental
sustainability, and to create or block the creation of a more
humane and just society (see Best and Kellner, forthcoming). Kelly,
by contrast, celebrates the new technologies and engages in a
form of technological determinism which sees technology as the
agency of a new economy. He thus fails to theorize the complex
relations between the global restructuring of capitalism and the
rise of new technologies, as well as the positive and negative
effects of this process. Ironically, this complexity theorist
is often far too one- sided and simplistic.
By contrast, we see the construction and implementation
of new technologies as crucial to the global restructuring of
capitalism, but as a complex process with costs and benefits which
need careful differentiation. Because of his biological mystifications
and technological determinism, Kelly, however fails to see how
the "new economy" is still all-too-like the "old
capitalism" and recycles the old ideologies as if they are
still relevant in the contemporary era. Kelly is so enthralled
with capitalist institutions and values that he actually praises
the "widespread reliance of economic values as the basis
for making decisions in all walks of life" (1998: 156). But
the logic of commodification and the market has indeed become
the organizing principle for contemporary capitalism, and is the
primary cause for the deterioration of our environment, hospitals
and medical care system, the legal system, schools and universities,
the political institutions, media culture, and culture in general.
To correct Kelly and the current economic order's
one- sidedness, we might turn to old Immanuel Kant, who argued
that nothing is good unless it is informed by the good will, enjoining
the importance of moral agency in shaping one's life and environment.
The praise of scientific, technological, or economic advances
for their own sake, the severing of their development from ethical
values and informed public debate, are two of the cardinal errors
and problems of Western society in the last three millennia. Kelly
perniciously reproduces the capitalist tenet that the only values
that matter are monetary values, and therefore that ethical, social,
and other values are expendable. Money, trade, and economics will
be important to any complex society; yet any culture that exclusively
emphasizes monetary values, acquisitive individualism, and profit-oriented
behavior will suffer myriad pathologies, violence, and crises
without the resources to adequately deal with them and produce
a better world.
While Kelly seems to realize that there is a
serious moral vacuum in the culture of accumulation, he has nothing
to say about it: "Because the nature of the network economy
seeds disequilibrium, fragmentation, uncertainty, churn, and relativism,
the anchors of meaning and value are in short supply" (1998:
159). He does not see how the crisis in human values is a direct
result of our society's embrace of his economic philosophy. Rather
than address the urgency of apathy, violence, nihilism, and the
loss of the sacred in our culture, Kelly ends his book with a
call to self- interested survival: "Those who obey the logic
of the net, and who understand that we are entering into a realm
with new rules, will have a keen advantage of the new economy"
(160).
Kelly thus concludes by making clear that his
new maps and new rules are for those who need safe guidance in
the jungles of Social Darwinism. Unfortunately, Kelly's concern
does not extend to the billions of people on this planet who lack
the most rudimentary necessities of life. Nowhere in his world
does one find a scintilla of compassion for the vast majority
who are hung skins in the global safari of profit. Kelly is perpetuating
the oldest, most vulgar ethos of capitalism, namely, unrestrained
egoism. Even Adam Smith (1965), who naively believed that competing
private interests would magically advance the greater social good,
valued the ideal of a commonwealth of benevolent and empathic
citizens; even Francis Bacon (1960), whose work is redolent with
images and metaphors of the rape of nature, was intensely concerned
that science not be severed from ethical values. Kelly's work,
by contrast, is totally devoid of any trace of altruism, concern
for the public good, or social responsibility.
Kelly thus ultimately projects a view of the
world from high- tech Silicon valley, he is the embodiment of
what Richard Barbrook and Andy Cameron described as "the
California ideology" (1995), that celebrates new technology
in countercultural and New Age terms as the realization of the
utopia dreamed of in the 1960s. Unfortunately for most of the
world, the networked economy is more a promise than a reality
and the "soft," "weightless" (Coyle 1998),
digital and wired, "friction-free" (Gates 1995 and Lewis
1997) postindustrial economy is overshadowed by the hard realities
of low-wage backbreaking labor, gross inequalities, intensified
exploitation, and growing poverty and suffering on a global scale.
Soft metaphors idealize contemporary capitalism, masking its most
vicious and violent features; they beautify the ugliness of exploitation,
poverty, sickness, and hunger amongst the majority of the world's
peoples, and they lead writers down the primrose path of fetishized
analysis uninformed and insensitive to the all-too- concrete,
tangible, weighty, hard, friction-ridden nature of labor, suffering,
and struggle in the belly of the global capitalist beast. While
the view from California may be rosy, for the rest of the world
everyday life smells like what is needed to make the roses grow
and blossom.
Clearly, the "softening" of the capitalist
world is not without the hardening of the heart. The amoral/immoral
non- contextualism of Kelly's argument is clear in passages such
as the following: "the destiny is clear. We are connecting
to all until we encompass the entire human-made world. And in
that embrace is a new power" (1998: 19). What kind of power
is Kelly advocating? What will be the impact on traditional cultures,
wildlife, and the wilderness? Who are the "we" doing
the connecting? What are "we" doing and seeking and
what will be the consequences?
At stake are what concepts are best used to describe
the new economy, our emerging technological society, and our imbrication
in the natural world. Is Adam Smith's "invisible hand"
really the best metaphor to describe a capitalist market economy?
Does it, as Kelly suggests, also best describe nature itself and
our new technological environment? And how do Kelly's metaphors
of the "swarm" and "hive" mesh with Adam Smith's
market metaphors and the complexity of the capitalist system itself?
Isn't the neo- Schumpeterian notion of "creative destruction"
that is central to Kelly's imaginary directly antithetical to
Smith's invisible hand which implies harmony and balance whereas
the former stresses disequilibrium, turbulence, and destruction?
To the extent that Kelly merges these positions he is embracing
two contradictory and incompatible systems--though it could be
argued that Out of Control is more Smithian whereas New Rules
is more Schumpeterian.
But such issues do not concern Kelly who is content
to concoct a mix of highly heterodox elements into his postmodern
ideological brew. Although Kelly would in effect displace social
theory and economic theory for New Age metaphysics, and by collapsing
the social and economic into the natural privileges biological
metaphors, we see the continuing importance of critical social
theory to grapple with the novelties and crises of the present
era. We believe that we are undergoing a "great transformation"
(Polanyi 1957) as massive as that of the industrial revolution,
but that this process is to be interpreted in the context of new
technologies and a global restructuring of capitalism. Hence,
against the postmodern attack on grand narratives (Lyotard 1984),
we believe that the same broad, historical theorizing that Marx,
Weber, Polanyi and other classical theorists used to theorize
the rise of capitalism, and that the Frankfurt School used to
describe the new stage of state and monopoly capitalism (Kellner
1989a), is needed today. Kelly offers broad, novel and bold theorizing
but is too caught up in New Age metaphysics and neo-capitalist
apologetics to provide the sort of theoretical and practical perspectives
needed to deal with the challenges of the epochal transformation
that we are now undergoing.
Notes
forthcoming
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