Towards a Third Culture or Working in Between
Towards a Third Culture or Working in Between
Victoria Vesna
Practice must always be founded on sound theory.
-Leonardo Da Vinci (Kleine, 1977, pp157-158)
Artists working with computer and other technologies that are a product of the scientific world are also
informed and inspired by the exciting innovations and discoveries taking place in science. We are
keenly interested in what the cultural critics and commentators from the humanities have to say on the
meaning and impact these discoveries and innovations have on culture and society. Scientists can
relate and understand our work easier primarily because we use the same tools-computers. Because
our work and tools are in constant flux, we are forced to articulate the reasoning and meaning
informing the art produced, which has traditionally been the role of art critics and historians. This
creates room for an active dialogue with both humanists and scientists. Thus we are placed in between
these "Two Cultures," which creates a triangle and promises to an emergence of a Third Culture. This
is a privileged and dangerous position, at least in this transitional stage. Therefore it is important to
take a look at the background and current status of these Two Cultures.
The Ghost of CP Snow persists
Much of the discussion concerning the triangle of art, science, and technology can be traced back to
CP Snow's famous annual Rede lecture at Cambridge on May 7th, 1959. The phrase 'Two Cultures'
entered into a cultural controversy and debate that has endured remarkably long. The title of Lord
Snow's lecture was "The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution." He identified the two cultures as
the literary intellectuals and the natural sciences, and he pointed to the curricula of schools and
universities as the source of the problem. In the Introduction to Snow's book, Stephan Collini gives a
historical perspective to this divide by locating its beginning in the Romantic Period, at the end of the
eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries. (Snow, 1964, pg. xii) He traces the British
genealogy of 'Two Cultures' anxiety in the linguistic peculiarity by which the term 'science' came to be
used in a narrowed sense to refer to just the 'physical' or 'natural' sciences.
The compilers of the Oxford English Dictionary recognised that this was a fairly recent development,
with no example given before the 1860's: "We shall . . . use the word "science" in the sense which the
Englishmen so commonly give it; as expressing physical and experimental science, to the exclusion of
theological and metaphysical." (Snow, 1964 pg. xi) William Whewell, a philosopher and historian of
science who used 'science' in his Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences of 1840, is credited with
establishing this term. The first time it was recorded as an idea, however, was at the Association for
the Advanced Science in the early 1830's when it was proposed as an analogy to the term 'artist.' Yet,
the two cultures refer to the divide between the literary humanities and frequently exclude what was
originally the analogy to science-art.
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The idea of 'Two Cultures' was a great source of fame for Snow in the 1960's. He received twenty
honorary degrees in the course of the decade and, following the Labour Party's election in October
1964, accepted Harold Wilson's invitation to become the second-in-command at the newly established
Ministry of Technology, becoming the government spokesman on Technology in the House of the
Lords. From 1966 until his death in 1980, much like Fuller, Snow travelled the world as a lecturer,
adviser, and public sage.
In the second edition of The Two Cultures, in 1963, Snow added a new essay, "The Two Cultures: A
Second Look." In that essay he suggested that a new "Third Culture" would emerge and close the gap
between literary intellectuals and scientists. (Snow, 1963, pg. 53) It is significant to note that Snow
originally named his lecture "The Rich and the Poor" and intended this to be the centre of his
argument: "Before I wrote the lecture I thought of calling it 'The Rich and the Poor,' and I rather wish I
hadn't changed my mind." (Snow, 1964, pg. 79) He remained dissatisfied with the Two Culture concept
and had on several occasions tried to refine the claim. In his last public statement he makes clear that
the larger global and economic issues remain central and urgent: "Peace. Food. No more people than
the Earth can take. That is the cause." (Snow, 1968, pg. 220)
Art, Science and Technology : Building the Triangular Bridge
Scientist-artists originally conceived and designed
bridges. The power-structure-behind-the-king, seeing
great exploitability of the bridge for their own
advantaging, accredited workers and materials to build
bridges. (Fuller, 1981, pg. 27)
But it seems that there is still much work to be done in building the bridge between the humanities and
the sciences. John Brockman, editor of a book of essays entitled The Third Culture, negates Snow's
optimistic prediction that a day will come when literary intellectuals will communicate effectively with
scientists. Instead he makes the claim that the contemporary scientists are the third culture and alludes
that there is no need for trying to establish communication between scientists and literary intellectuals,
who he calls the "middlemen." (Brockman, 1995, pg. 18) Although the choice of people in his book is
significant, [1] the mere fact that it is comprised almost completely of Western white men, with the
exception of Lynn Margolis with her essay "Gaia is a tough Bitch" makes it impossible to take his
proposition seriously. But it does point to the continuing gap between the humanities and sciences and
clearly shows that the bridge being constructed is still very fragile.
The bridge is triangulated and made into a more stable structure with the work of artists who are
utilising new technologies and are in active dialogue with both sides. Artists using technology are
uniquely positioned in the middle of the scientific and literary/philosophical communities, and we are
allowed "poetic license," which gives us the freedom to reinforce the delicate bridge and indeed
contribute to the creation of a new mutant third culture. By utilising tools familiar to scientists and
collaborating with the scientific community, we are getting closer to an atmosphere of collaboration and
mutual respect.
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This road, however, is not without dangers of which to be wary. It is a delicate mission to be in
between disciplines that are themselves in a tenuous relationship. Perhaps the greatest danger is for
artists to look to the literary, philosophical, and theoretical circles for interpretations of scientific data
and then further reinterpret their versions without checking back with the scientists. Much postmodern
writing borders on linguistic play with mathematics and scientific terminology that serves to alienate the
scientific community, which has used precise methods to arrive at those theories. [2] This is not to say
that one should blindly accept all products of the scientific community, but simply to suggest that any
working relationship needs to be based on mutual respect and dialogue. The other danger that faces
those 'in between' working on creating 'something else' is the general attitude of theory being above
practice, prevalent in both humanities and sciences. At this stage, it is in the practice of art that the
freedom lies to make assertions that are beyond the rational and beyond necessary methodology of
proving a thesis. Practice informed by theory, utilising a methodology which makes it accessible to
both worlds, is the key. Or, conversely, theory informed by practice.
Currently, much of this bridge-building work takes place in universities for more reason than one. First,
at this point, with no market in place, it is impossible to make a living outside of academia and industry.
Between the two, academia is generally friendlier to someone searching for a yet-to-be-defined path
than industry, with its pressures to produce. Second, academia is a natural environment in which one
can have access to good bandwidth and updated equipment. Third, and perhaps most important,
academia allows artists contact with scholars from many disciplines. In order to function and
communicate effectively in this context, one must learn the etiquette and language of various
disciplines. The challenge, then, is to do this without losing the intuitive, 'wild' aspect, the practice, that
taps into the silent, the unknown, the mysterious.
Our work depends largely on an active dialogue with scientists and humanists while performing an
important function of being bridge builders. And as any engineer knows, we have to know the territory
on both sides and be very precise in how we negotiate the space 'in between.' Negotiating the gap
between the canon of rationality and the fluid poetic is ultimately the goal of artists who work with
communication technologies.
Creative Process of Artists and Scientists -- Discovery of Strangeness
Any definition of complexity is necessarily contextdependent, even subjective. (Gell-Mann, 1994, pg. 33)
One of the most important scientists who has commented on the similarities between artists' and
scientists' creative process is physicist Werner Heisenberg (1958). He believed artists' creativity arose
out of the interplay between the spirit of the time and the individual. For McLuhan, artistic inspiration is
the process of subliminally sniffing out environmental change: "It's always been the artist who
perceives that alterations in man caused by a new medium, who recognises that the future is the
present, and uses his work to prepare ground for it." (Norden, 1969) In fact both artist and scientist are
involved in the work of intuiting change of perception and materialising it for other to experience, see
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and ultimately change.
Science and Something Else
Gell-Mann is the founder of the Santa Fe Institute where Kauffamn, Bak, Penrose, and others have
worked on the possibility that there might be a still-undiscovered law of nature that explains why the
universe has generated so much order in spite of the supposedly universal drift towards disorder
decreed by the second law of thermodynamics [3]. This something else as Gell-Mann refers to it
(Horgan, 1996, pg. 214) would be located beyond the horizon of current science-something that can
explain better the mystery of life and of human consciousness and of existence itself. To Gell-Mann
this indicated a certain tendency towards obscurantism and mystification.
One of the most profound goals of chaoplexity pursued by Kauffman, Per Bak, John Holland, and
others is the elucidation of a new law, or set of principles, or unified theory, or something that will make
it possible to predict the behaviour of a variety of dissimilar complex systems. A closely related
proposal is that the universe harbours a complexity-generating force that counteracts the second law
of thermodynamics and creates galaxies, life, and even life intelligent enough to contemplate itself.
How could one not then summon the ancient texts of the Vedas, Buddhism, and much of eastern
mysticism? Although Gell-Mann was playing when he referred to the eightfold way and to Finnegan's
Wake, he did touch on that something else many disciplines are struggling to define.
End of Art, End of Science?
I have discovered that the discussion of whether we are reaching the 'end of art' is not limited to the
field of art. Apparently this is an ongoing and lively discussion in the world of science as well. John
Horgan, who spent years profiling major names in the world of science for Scientific American, asks
this question in The End of Science: Facing the Limits of Knowledge in the Twilight of the Scientific
Age (1996). He lists a number of disciplines and questions major personalities in their fields about
whether they are reaching their limits: philosophy, physics, cosmology, evolutionary biology,
chaoplexity, limitology, scientific theology, and machine science. One could easily compile a list of
disciplines in the humanities asking this same question, with the difference of having a bit more
representation of women and minority opinion. Horgan's book does not list one woman or minority as a
major authority, which could be a good sign if he is announcing the end of the world as we know it.
Nevertheless, his premise is intriguing in the world of science and did not go unnoticed. It was publicly
denounced by President Clinton's science advisor, the administrator of NASA, a dozen or so Nobel
Laureates, and scores of critics. (Horgan, pg. 267) The simple point Horgan misses is that every end
constitutes a new beginning, and by stating doubt that there will be anymore Einstein's or Bohr's in the
future, he does not take into account the possible emergence of a group genius and endless mutations
of disciplines that truly do result in something new. Reaching limits in science or any other discipline for
that matter really means being on the threshold of the inevitable something else.
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Reacting against "Something Else"
Transgressing disciplinary boundaries... [is] a subversive
undertaking since it is likely to violate the sanctuaries of
accepted ways of perceiving. Among the most fortified
boundaries have been those between the natural
sciences and the humanities. (Greenberg, 1990)
Contemporary art practice, particularly utilising digital technology, is loaded with references to science,
and this trend has taken root in cultural theory as well. In fact, an entire new field has been formed in
the humanities: "Science Studies." One would think that this would allow for better communication
between the sciences and humanities, but in general this does not appear to be the case at the
present time. Some of the work coming out of science philosophy and theoreticians commenting on the
scientific process has infuriated some scientists and actually deepened the gap of the "Two Cultures."
The most famous recent case, and in my opinion relevant to consider, is the Sokal Incident. In 1996
Alan Sokal published an article in the American cultural-studies journal Social Text, a parody article
entitled "Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity."
The article is crammed with 'non-sensical quotations about physics and mathematics' by prominent
French and American intellectuals such as Lyotard, Derrida, Irigaray, and Lacan. The text is full of
references to scientists such as Heisenberg, Kuhn, Bohr, Harding, Bell, and Godel and is indeed as
difficult to read as any postmodern theory text can be. The references cited are all real, and all quotes
are rigorously accurate; however, having been taken out of their cultural contexts and reframed, they
do assume questionable meanings. According to Sokal it was meant as an experiment to test whether
the bold assertion claiming that physical reality is at the bottom of social and linguistic construct
(without evidence or argument) would raise eyebrows among the editors. It did not. The editors trusted
that the information in the essay, written by established scientists, would be an honest contribution and
did not read carefully the erroneous information in the text. The debates sparked by Sokal's hoax have
come to encompass a wide range of tenuously related issues concerning not only the conceptual
status of scientific knowledge or the merits of French postructuralism, but also the social role of
science and technology, multiculturalism, and 'political correctness,' the academic left versus the
academic right, and the cultural left versus the economic left.
The text was followed by an entire book, Intellectual Impostors, which Sokal co-wrote with Jean
Bricmont. In the book they exhibit incredible zeal and thoroughness in their effort to de-mystify these
very famous authors. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of this hoax article turned into event and
book is how much rigour the thesis is delivered. One wonders if they actually had to put aside their
own scientific research to write this book, which would indicate that this is much more than a hoax but
something they felt was very important to deliver to the scientific community and the public at large.
There is no question that the authors have done their homework and that their work has had a definite
impact on The Two Cultures. Some of the fallout is positive in that it brought to surface and activated a
dialogue that was simmering under the surface. The negative aspects are that the dialogue was
coloured by controversy and was mostly argumentative, thus endangering the very fragile bridge
between the humanities and sciences. Why was Sokal not flattered that science has a such a strong
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influence on contemporary philosophers, as Einstein was when he read Fuller's interpretation of the
Theory of Relativity?The text was followed by an entire book, Intellectual Impostors, which Sokal cowrote with Jean Bricmont. In the book they exhibit incredible zeal and thoroughness in their effort to demystify these very famous authors. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of this hoax article turned into
event and book is how much rigour the thesis is delivered. One wonders if they actually had to put
aside their own scientific research to write this book, which would indicate that this is much more than
a hoax but something they felt was very important to deliver to the scientific community and the public
at large. There is no question that the authors have done their homework and that their work has had a
definite impact on The Two Cultures. Some of the fallout is positive in that it brought to surface and
activated a dialogue that was simmering under the surface. The negative aspects are that the dialogue
was coloured by controversy and was mostly argumentative, thus endangering the very fragile bridge
between the humanities and sciences. Why was Sokal not flattered that science has a such a strong
influence on contemporary philosophers, as Einstein was when he read Fuller's interpretation of the
Theory of Relativity?
The philosophers Sokal and Bricmont attack are those working in theory of psychoanalysis, semiotics,
or sociology and whose work is subject to innumerable analysis, seminars, and doctoral theses. It is
important to note that there are no authors mentioned who are principally literary or poetic. Sokal and
Bricmont do make a valid point when saying that the scientific terminology and fact were rather abused
and consequently serving as a way to spread false information to the readers. Sokal assembled a list
of quotations that showed this kind of handling of the natural sciences and circulated it to his scientific
colleagues whose reaction were "a mixture of hilarity and dismay. They could hardly believe that
anyone-much less renowned intellectuals- could write such nonsense." When the texts were shown to
non-scientists, they needed to explain in lay terms why the said passages were "meaningless." One
can only imagine the reaction of scientists when they read a quote from Lacan, who refers to the
structure of the neutronic subject as exactly the torus (it is no less a reality itself. pg. 19), or from a
passage by Kristeva, who states that poetic language can be theorised in terms of the cardinality of the
continuum (pg. 38); or Baudrillard, who writes that modern war takes place in non-Euclidean space
(pg. 137). We do get a clue that there is more at stake in Final Theory by Steven Weinberg:
These radical critics of science seem to be having little or
no effect on scientists themselves. I do not know of any
working scientist who takes them seriously. The danger
they present to science comes from their possible
influence on those who have not shared in the work of
science but on whom we depend, especially those in
charge of funding science and on new generation of
scientists. (Weinberg, 1992)
Using the Poetic License as a Tool
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No doubt the first act of the calculus consists of
'depotetentialisation' of the equation (for example, instead
of 2ax - x2 = y2 we have dy/dx = (a - x/yu). However, the
analogue may be found in the two preceding figures
where the disappearance of quantum and the quantitas
was the condition for the appearance of the element of
quantitability. . . . (Deleuze, 1994, pp. 174-5) (Sokal pg.
213)
What is important to note however, is that Sokal and Bricmont are much more tolerant with use of
scientific terminology in context of art or science fiction:
If a poet uses the words like 'black hole' or 'degree of
freedom' out of context and without really understanding
their scientific meaning, it doesn't bother us. Likewise, if a
science fiction writer uses secret passageways in spacetime in order to send her characters back to the era of the
Crusades, it is purely a question of taste whether one
likes or dislikes the technique. (Sokal, 1997, pg. 8)
Clearly this points to a semi-favourable position for artists in relation to the sciences, particularly those
working with technology. What complicates matters, however, is that many artists are inspired and
interpret the very philosophers that are under attack from the scientific community. [4] What Sokal and
Bricmont fail to notice is that absolutely all authors that comprise their book have become staple
philosophers for artists working with media, particularly Deleuze and Guattari, to whom they dedicate
an entire chapter analysing their misuse of scientific and mathematical terms. On the one hand one
could argue that Deleuze and Guattari utilise these scientific and mathematical terms in a distinctly
metaphorical or philosophical senses, which would explain their vague or tenuous relationship to 'hard'
scientific fact; this argument is lost, however, when one points to direct quotes and references out of a
book on the theory of differential equations that uses terms such as 'singularity' and 'singular point' in a
distinctly technical and mathematical sense. The terms are then used in their literal senses without any
distinguishing between their use as such rather than in a metaphorical context, nor is there offered an
explanation of how we might understand the relationship between literality and figuratation as such.
(Sokal, 1997, pg. 216) (Deleuze,1990, pp. 50, 54, 339-40n) Although I very much sympathise with
Deleuze and Guattari's approach and can relate to their writings in many ways, I feel that Sokal and
Bricmont are flashing an important red light to artists who are inspired by scientific innovation and
discovery and are interested in working closely with the scientific community.
The Methodology of "Anything Goes": Embracing Paradox, Contradiction and Rhetorical
Excess
Much of epistemic relativism in philosophy is understood by the scientific community as violent attacks
on science. Frequently quoted in discussions about relativism is Paul Feyerabend, who is also
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analysed by Sokal and Bricmont. Although acknowledging his complex personality, they write,
"Nevertheless, Feyerabend's writings contain numerous ambiguous and confused statements, which
sometimes end in violent attacks on science: attacks which are simultaneously philosophical, historical
and political, and in which judgements of fact are mixed with judgement of value." (pg. 73). Indeed they
find his views, in some extreme cases, to have similar problems that they point to with all the other
philosophers they critique. His first and most famous book, Against Method (1975), translated into
sixteen languages, argued that philosophy cannot provide a methodology and rationale for science
since there is no rationale to explain. Particularly inflammatory was his famous "Anything Goes"
statement: "All Methodologies have their limitations and the only 'rule' that survives is 'anything
goes.' (Feyerabend, 1975, pg. 296). In a footnote, Feyerabend suggests that if we assume that
science and art share a problem solving attitude, the only significant difference between them would
disappear; therefore, we could speak of "styles and preferences for the former, and progress for the
latter." (1975, pg.197)
What is intriguing about Fereyabend is his embrace of paradox, contradiction, and rhetorical excess.
He is yet another complex persona who as a teenager studied opera and astronomy simultaneously
and envisioned himself working in both fields. Later he kept going back and forth between majoring in
physics and philosophy, eventually settling on the latter. Fereyabend studied under Popper at the
London School of Economics where he met Lakatos, who urged him to write Against Method. He then
moved to Berkeley, where he befriended Kuhn and strongly rejected science as being superior to other
modes of knowledge and as a result was labelled by many as an anti-scientist.
Sharing the Language: Collaboration
Perhaps the source of the communication problem can be traced to the fact that most of the
philosophers under attack in the scientific community do not work closely with scientists and that
scientists are equally isolated from the movements of philosophical thought and contemporary artistic
expression. As long as the work does not have a reason to be located in a few disciplines
simultaneously, room for misunderstandings will be ample. The work of artists working with technology
demands interaction with scholars from a wide variety of disciplines such as computer science, social
studies, philosophy, cultural studies. Bridging and synthesising many worlds while composing
'something else' becomes the art.
Notes
1. Representatives of the Third Culture according to Brockman are William C. Williams; Stephen Jay
Gould; Richard Dawkins; Brian Goodwin; Stev Jones; Niles Eldredge; Lynn Margulis; Marvin Minsky;
Roger Schank; Daniel C. Dennet, Nicholas Humphrey; Francisco Varela; Steven Pinker; Roger
Penrose; Martin Rees; Alan Guth; Lee Smolin; Paul Davies; Murray Gell-Mann; Stuat Kauffmann;
Christopher G. Langton; J. Doyne Farmer; W. Daniel Hillis. He first published a brief essay on the idea
of the emerging third culture in September, 1991 in his journal, the Edge. Now online, he continues to
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promote this idea: www.edge.org/3rd_culturees the art.
2. The term "postmodern" is being used as summarised by Barry Smart: Postmodernity remains a
contentious term, signifying for some analysts simply a "symptom of the current mood of Western
intelligentsia" (Callinicos,1989, pg. 9), whilst for others it describes important aspects of the social,
cultural, and political conditions to which we increasingly find ourselves subject. (Harvey, 1989;
Bauman, 1992) And of those analysts who regard the term as appropriate for describing contemporary
conditions some at least clearly consider the constituency affected, the 'we,' not to be confined to
either the 'first' world or the intelligentsia alone. (Rouse, 1991) The configuration of Western modernity
has been placed in question and challenged in a second, somewhat different manner by increasing
evidence that the economic and cultural momentum has swung away from both Europe and America
towards the Pacific rim and the modernising societies of the East. (Smart, B. 1993, pp.150-151)
3. The second law of thermodynamics is the law of nature which says that things wear out. One
expression of the second law of thermodynamics is that heat cannot flow from a cold object to a hotter
object of its own volition. For instance, if you leave your house unattended for a long time, it will
crumble away under the influence of wind and weather, whereas a pile of bricks will never
spontaneously form itself into an arrow of time. (Gribbin, J. 1998, pg. 359.)
4. See list of conferences that have been organised around discussions of the work of Deleuze and
Guattari; lists.village. http://virginia.edu/~spoons/d-g_html/d-g.html
For artists inspired by science: see Wellcome Trust's SCI~ART initiative, 1998 and Art and Science
Collaborations, Inc. : www.asci.org
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