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PowerPoint Presentation Lecture

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Lecture


1
actor-network theory literature fdm 20c
introduction to digital media lecture 27.04.2004
warren sack / film digital media department /
university of california, santa cruz
2
last time cscw
  • winograd and flores
  • the language/action perspective of work
  • a diagram of a conversation for action
  • keypoint Every digital media technology has an
    architecture that can be used to transform work,
    play and governance.
  • using diagrams to compare physical architectures
    with digital architectures
  • agre
  • the surveillance model
  • architectures of surveillance
  • the capture model its relation to winograd and
    flores

3
outline
  • latours first two rules of method
  • latours first principle

4
rule of method a definition
  • a means to allow outsiders to follow science and
    technology

5
principle a definition
  • a summary of a large number of empiricial facts

6
the first two of latours rules of method
  • We study science in action and not ready made
    science or technology to do so, we either arrive
    before the facts and machines are blackboxed or
    we follow the controversies that reopen them.
    (Introduction)
  • To determine the objectivity or subjectivity of
    a claim, the efficiency or perfection of a
    mechanism, we do not look for their intrinsic
    qualities but at all the transformations they
    undergo later in the hands of others.
    (Chapter 1)

7
latours first principle
  • The fate of facts and machines is in later
    users hands their qualities are thus a
    consequence, not a cause, of collective action.
    (Chapter 1)

8
black box a first, rough definition
  • ...black box is used by cyberneticians whenever
    a piece of machinery or a set of commands is too
    complex. In its place they draw a little box
    about which they need to know nothing but its
    input and output. (pp. 2-3)
  • in latours description a black box can take at
    least two forms and can be either
  • a fact, or
  • a machine
  • this definition will be refined as we progress

9
latours first rule of method
  • We study science in action and not ready made
    science or technology to do so, we either arrive
    before the facts and machines are blackboxed or
    we follow the controversies that reopen them.
    (Introduction)
  • So, what does it mean to arrive before the facts
    and machines are blackboxed?

10
first rule of method the comic strip
11
an explanation of the first rule of method
  • ...picture the previous comic strip we start
    with a technical sentence which is devoid of any
    trace of fabrication, construction or ownership
    we then put it in quotation marks, add to this
    speaking character another character to whom it
    is speaking then we place all of them in a
    specific situation, somewhere in time and space,
    surrounded by equipment, machines colleagues
    then when the controversy heats up a bit we look
    at where the disputing people go and what sort of
    new elements they fetch, recruit or seduce in
    order to convince their colleagues then, we see
    how the people being convinced stop discussing
    with one another situations, localizations, even
    people start being slowly erased on the last
    picture we see a new sentence, without any
    quotation marks, written in a text book or
    technical manual or piece of software etc.
    similar to the one we started with in the first
    picture. (p. 15)

12
compare latour to winograd and flores
  • note that the conversations and discussions that
    latour describes are arguments and controversies
    latour is interested in storytelling and rhetoric
    -- the art of persuasion
  • note that the conversations for action
    described by winograd and flores are not
    controversies but requests, actions and
    negotiations it is assumed that no one gets mad
    or emotional winograd and flores are interested
    in what is classically called dialectic -- the
    art of dialogue and a means to resolve conflict
  • but, sometimes dialectic rhetoric storytelling

13
on modalities and the blackboxing of facts
  • New Soviet missiles aimed against Minutemen silos
    are accurate to 100 meters.
  • Positive Modality Since new Soviet missiles are
    accurate with 100 meters this means that
    Minutemen are not safe any more, and this is the
    main reason why the MX weapon system is
    necessary.
  • Negative Modality Advocates of the MX in the
    Pentagon cleverly leaked information contending
    that new Soviet missiles are accurate within 100
    meters. (p. 22)

14
another negative modality
  • The undercover agent 009 in Novosibirsk whispered
    to the household maid before dying that he had
    heard in bars that some officers thought that
    some of their missiles in ideal test conditions
    might have an accuracy somewhere between 100
    and 1000 meters or this is at least how the
    report came to Washington.

15
negative modalities a definition
  • We will call negative modalities those sentences
    that lead a statement in the other direction
    towards its conditions of production and that
    explain in detail why it is solid or weak instead
    of using it to render some other consequences
    more necessary. (p. 23)

16
positive modalities a definition
  • We will call positive modalities those sentences
    that lead a statement away from its conditions of
    production, making it solid enough to render some
    other consequences necessary. (p. 23)

17
the form of a fact or black box
  • A fact is stated, and a black box is used, in a
    form that is devoid of any trace of ownership,
    construction, time and place.
  • Consider a fact, like water is a molecule of
    hydrogen and oxygen. We can just write H2O
    without stating that this was Lavoisiers
    discovery.
  • Similarly, to use a computer as a black box, does
    one need to know the writings of Turing?

18
fact an etymology
  • Latin factum, from neuter of factus, past
    participle of facere
  • facere act, do, make, perform
  • Latours first rule of method allows us to see
    how facts are acted, done, made or performed

19
fact a definition
  • ...a fact is what is collectively stabilized
    from the midst of controversies when the activity
    of later papers does not consist only of
    criticism or deformation but also of
    confirmation. (p. 42)

20
how are facts made?
  • Facts are made collectively isolated people
    build claims, not facts cf., Latours first
    principle
  • The fate of facts and machines is in later
    users hands their qualities are thus a
    consequence, not a cause, of collective action.
    (Chapter 1)

21
where are facts made?
  • look for the controversies ...when we approach
    the places where facts and machines are made we
    get into the midst of controversies (p. 30)
  • but, what does a scientific controversy look
    like? ...when controversies flare up the
    literature becomes technical (p. 30)
  • so, the most controversial literature is the most
    technical!

22
scientific controversies and rhetoric
  • scientific controversies are conducted in a
    scientific and technical rhetoric that includes
    these forms
  • bringing friends in (i.e., arguing from
    authority), p. 31
  • referring to former texts (i.e., citing other
    texts), p. 33
  • being referred to by later texts (i.e., being
    cited by other texts), p. 38
  • see figures on pages 34, 38, 40 and 41

23
scientific rhetoric v. ordinary rhetoric
  • The difference ... between technical and
    non-technical literature is not that one is about
    fact and the other about fiction, but that the
    latter gathers only a few resources at hand, and
    the former a lot of resources, even from far away
    in time and space.

24
latours metaphors and analogies
  • sometimes latour is difficult to follow because
    he mixes metaphors and analogies
  • technoscience is war (e.g., gathering allies)
  • technoscience is sports (e.g., reading science
    is like watching tennis)
  • technoscience is storytelling (e.g., it has
    heroes, the heroes have trials)
  • technoscience is weaving (e.g., tying, untying
    and raveling claims
  • technoscience is construction (e.g., writing an
    article is like building a stone hut or like
    building a dam)
  • technoscience is like electronics (e.g., opening
    a black box, closing a black box, connecting
    elements, etc.)

25
reading versus writing technical texts
  • also note how latour moves back and forth from
    the perspective of the reader of a scientific
    text and the perspective of a writer of a
    scientific text

26
how are scientific papers constructed?
  • they are stratified The text is arranged in
    layers. Each claim is interrupted by references
    outside the texts or inside the texts to other
    parts, to figures, to columns, tables, legends,
    graphs. Each of these in turn may send you back
    to other parts of the same texts or to more
    outside references. (p. 48)
  • recall Engelbarts discussion of the construction
    of an argument (using index cards) and the idea
    of hypertext

27
how are scientific papers constructed?
  • their layers and elements (text, figures, graphs,
    etc.) are stacked How does one go from a few
    snippets of evidence to the largest and wildest
    claims? (see. figure 1.7 on p. 51)
  • stacking rules
  • never stack two layers exactly on top of one
    another
  • never go straight from the first to the last
    layer
  • prove as much as possible with as little as
    possible
  • (p. 51)

28
how are scientific papers constructed?
  • by staging and framing, the authors describe
    themselves, their intended readers, the heroes
    and trials of their described subjects (pp.
    52-54)
  • Latours point It is hard to popularize science
    because it is designed to force out most people
    in the first place. (p. 52)

29
how are scientific papers constructed?
  • captation the subtle control of the objectors
    moves How does one make it more difficult for
    the reader to go in all directions outwards, from
    the text? By carefully stacking more black
    boxes, less easily disputable arguments. The
    nature of the game is exactly like that of
    building a dam. (p. 57 see also figure 1.8 on
    p. 58)
  • When such a result is attained...a text is said
    to be logical. (p. 58)

30
latours second rule of method
  • To determine the objectivity or subjectivity of
    a claim, the efficiency or perfection of a
    mechanism, we do not look for their intrinsic
    qualities but at all the transformations they
    undergo later in the hands of others.

31
taking our bearings
  • our point of departure is science in the making
    and specifically a claim in dispute
  • look to see who is trying to make the claim more
    of a fact and who wants it to be less of a fact
  • check to see which direction the claim is pushed
    by the opposite actions of these two groups of
    people (up the ladder or down? see figure 1.6)
  • measure the distance (i.e., the drift) from the
    original claim and the new claim
  • thereby find the line of controversy (figure 1.9)

32
reading fact-writing versus fiction-writing
  • the reader is limited to three responses to
    fact-writing
  • give up
  • go along or,
  • re-enact everything the authors went through
  • (p. 61)

33
why is technoscience so uncomfortable to read?
  • ...the scientific text is chasing its readers
    away whether or not it is successful. Made for
    attack and defence, it is no more a place for a
    leisurely stay than a bastion or a bunker.
  • notice how the metaphors of war and constructed
    are blended together here in latours words

34
scientific (new) rhetoric v. old rhetoric
  • The difference between the old rhetoric and the
    new is not that the first makes use of external
    allies which the second refrains from using the
    difference is that the first uses only a few of
    them and the second very many. This distinction
    allows one to avoid a wrong way of interpreting
    this chapter which would be to say that we
    studied the rhetorical aspects of technical
    literature, as if the other spects could be left
    to reason, logic and technical details. (p. 61)

35
next time
  • actor-network theory machines
  • bring your book to class so that we can read some
    of the latour together
  • also, later this afternoon, a list of potential
    midterm questions can be found here
    dmedia.ucsc.edu/FDM20c/Spring2004/Midterm/possible
    -questions.rtf
  • midterm exam will be held one week from today,
    next tuesday
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