Title: Technology and Art: Hubris, Habitus and the Hybrid Imagination
1Technology and Art Hubris, Habitus and the
Hybrid Imagination
1. The View from History
2 Reading matter Today
Introduction and chapters 1-3 Tomorrow
Chapters 4-6
3The problem
- When we look at modern man, we have to face
the fact that modern man suffers from a kind of
poverty of the spirit which stands in glaring
contrast to his scientific and technological
abundance. Weve learned to fly the air like
birds, weve learned to swim the seas like fish,
but we havent learned to walk the earth like
brothers and sisters. -
- Martin Luther King, Jr
4An Underlying Tension Hubris...
-
- Hubris (overmod) impious disregard of the
limits governing human action in an orderly
universe. It is the sin to which the great and
gifted are most susceptible, and in Greek tragedy
it is usually the hero's tragic flaw. - Encyclopedia Britannica
-
-
5...and Habitus
- Habitus ...a set of dispositions which
generates practices and perceptions. The habitus
is the result of a long process of inculcation,
beginning in early childhood, which becomes a
second sense or a second nature. -
- Randal Johnson on Pierre Bourdieu,
- introduction in The Field of Cultural
Production
6...versus Hybrids
- Hybrids ...offspring of parents that differ in
genetically determined traits - Encyclopedia Britannica
- or, more colorfully
- By the late twentieth century, our time, a
mythic time, we are all chimeras, theorized and
fabricated hybrids of machine and organism... - Donna Haraway, A manifesto for cyborgs
7The Hybrid Imagination
- At the macro, or discursive level
- making connections, integrating concepts
- At the meso, or institutional level
- creating contexts of mediation, hybrid forums
- At the micro, or practical/personal level
- forging hybrid competencies and identities
8Hubris in History
- The myths of Icarus and Prometheus
- The scientific revolution New Atlantis
- Industrialization Prometheus Unbound
- Atomic energy Science - The Endless Frontier
- The arms race and the Apollo Mission
9Hybrids in History
- Medieval monks artificial people
- The renaissance men artists-engineers
- Experimental philosophers scholar-craftsmen
- Professional engineers theoretical technicians
- Environmentalists scientist-activists
10Artistic Appropriations of Technology
- Market-oriented, commercial, machine-made
- art for the masses, low-brow, vulgar (hubris)
- Artisan, exclusive, traditional, man-made
- art for arts sake, high-brow, luxurious
(habitus) - Hybrid, synthetic, intermediate,
co-constructed - popular art, making the mundane meaningful
11Different Ideas of Beauty
- The beauty of commerce
- attractive, appealing, desirable. exciting,
cool - The beauty of the artist
- elegant, sublime, authentic, classical, fine
- The beauty of the hybrid imagination
- functional, useful, tasteful, appropriate, neat
12A Brief History of Science
- Ancient, or Traditional science, up to about 1600
- philosophical, spritual knowledge, distinctive
regional modes - gap between theory (episteme) and practice
(techne) - Modern, or Western science, from about 1600 to
1970 - instrumental, rational, universal knowledge
- functional differentiation of theory and practice
- Global, or Technoscience, from about 1970
- situated, pluralist notion of knowledge sciences
- combinations of theory and practice
13The Making of Modern Science
From the Reformation to the
scientific revolution reform of society
reform of philosophy visionary,
utopian realistic, pragmatic decentralized
organization (central) academy technical
improvements scientific development informal
communication formal publication
14The Scientific Reformation as Cultural
Appropriation
- At the discursive level
- a discourse of useful knowledge
- a language of mathematics and mechanics
- At the institutional level
- academies of science
- professional norms and quality standards
- At the level of practice
- hybrid identities
- routines for technical applications
- procedures for experimentation
15At the discursive level...
- Francis Bacon,
- statesman-philosopher
- Human knowledge and human power meet in one
for where the cause is not known the effect
cannot be produced. Nature to be commanded must
be obeyed...
16At the institutional level...
Gresham College in London, where the Royal
Society first met in 1660 and where the first
scientific journal was published in 1666
17At the practical levelan experimental way of
life
...to Benjamin Franklin flying kites and looking
for electricity in the age of Enlightenment
From Robert Boyles air pump...
18Some cultural factors
- A supernatural God, religion of the book
- Monasticism and labor discipline
- Regulation of time and space
- Urbanization, cathedrals, and universities
- The Protestant Ethic (Weber)
19Some economic factors
- Agricultural improvements, food surplus
- Interurban trade and competition
- Mercantile expansion and exploration
- The Asian connection (compass, windmills)
- Invention of printing
20Modern Science as Hubris
- positivism, or scientific rationalism
- science as a new (secular) religion
-
- scientism, or (logical) empiricism
- science as superior to all other ways of knowing
- universalism, or cultural imperialism
- Western science as valid everywhere
21Hybrid Identities 1
- The Renaissance Men Leonardo and co.
- Artists and engineers in combination
- Inspired by magic and humanism
- Emphasis on describing and imagining
22Leonardo da Vinci The artist-engineer
23Hybrid Identities 2
- The scholar-craftsmen
- Paracelsus, Agricola,Tycho Brahe
- Inspired by Protestant Ethic
- Emphasis on observation and work-practice
24Tycho Brahe The scholar-craftsman
25Hybrid Identities 3
- The natural philosophers
- Galileo, Huygens, Newton
- Inspired by mathematics and machines
- Emphasis on instruments and experiments
26Galileo and his telescope
27Artistic Appropriations of Modern Science
- The market-oriented turning the vision into a
new technical reality - The artisan reaffirming traditional ideals
- The hybrid developing new kinds of art
28Agostino Ramelli (1588)
The market-oriented approach
Agostino Ramelli, 1588
29Robert Hooke, 1665
30The artisan Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)
Prometheus Bound, 1610-11
The Fall of Icarus, 1636
31Diego Valázquez
Las Meninas, 1656
32...and onto a new kind of art
Rembrandt van Rijn, 1606-69
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34Johannes Vermeer 1632-1675
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36Jacob von Rusdael, 1660
37...and then came Industrialization
- A political and economic revolution
- from agriculture to industry mechanization
-
- A process of social change
- from the country to the cities urbanization
- Cultural, or human transformations
- from community to society modernization
38A new kind of technological development...
Joseph Wright, 1760
39...and a new kind of society
from a painting by William Wyld(e), ca 1840
40...and a new kind of hybrid art the machine in
the garden
George Inness, 1851
George Inness, 1851