Sunday, January 24, 2010

Susan Blackmore on memes and "temes" | Video on TED.com

Susan Blackmore on memes and "temes" | Video on TED.com

"We take our point of departure from the objective fact that human acts have consequences upon others, that some of these consequence are perceived, and that their perception leads to subsequent effort to control action so as to secure some consequences and avoid others"(Dewey, 1927).

"The moment we utter the words 'The State,' a score of intellectual ghosts rise to obscure our vision. Without our intention and without our notice, the notion of the "The State" draws us imperceptibly into consideration of the logical relationship of various ideas to one another, and away from facts of human activity" (Dewey, 1927).

Pragmatism seems to be beyond both a priori and a posteriori reasoning, though it also seems to be the next logical step from the Scottish and English Enlightenment, which influenced American Modernism and valued empirical reasoning. This seems to be why John Dewey is so focused on finding the public by moving from consequence to cause. His idea is that all social action has a cause. Find that cause and we will find the public. It is empirical and inductive reasoning. Record the most observable object and trace it to its natural origin.

I wonder though what Dewey say of the public, community, the social, and the state in a User-Generated World. Dewey suggests that ideas filter through the public and influence the meta structure of the community. Its metadata if you will. These ideas become instituionalized and determine action. For instance, red means stop. These ideas that become part of our metadata are often referred as memes. These our ideas that become part of genetic community. Memes is ofcourse a play on the work genes. The video above refers to something called temes. Temes are memes but with technology infused. Some refer to them as internet memes.

1 comment:

  1. You are on to something in at least two senses. Yes, Dewey like most pragmatists, is an empiricist, which meant something a bit different then than it does now (you get this in making connections to Scottish modernist thinking). But Dewey also believed in shared symbols, and so memes might very well be powerful in community building ...

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