|
A speech held by
Douglas at Magdelene
College Cambridge, September 1998
This was originally billed as
a debate only because I was a bit anxious coming here. I
didn’t think I was going to have time to prepare anything
and also, in a room full of such luminaries, I thought
‘what could I, as an amateur, possibly have to say’? So
I thought I would settle for a debate. But after having been
here for a couple of days, I realised you’re just a bunch
of guys! It’s been rife with ideas and I’ve had so many
myself through talking with and listening to people that
I’d thought what I’d do was stand up and have an
argument and debate with myself. I’ll talk for a while and
hope sufficiently to provoke and inflame opinion that
there’ll be an outburst of chair- throwing at the end.
Before I
embark on what I want to try and tackle, may I warn you that
things may get a little bit lost from time to time, because
there’s a lot of stuff that’s just come in from what
we’ve been hearing today, so if I occasionally sort of
go… I was telling somebody earlier today that I have a
four-year-old daughter and was very, very interested
watching her face when she was in her first 2 or 3 weeks of
life and suddenly realising what nobody would have realised
in previous ages—she was rebooting!
I just
want to mention one thing, which is completely meaningless,
but I am terribly proud of—I was born in Cambridge in 1952
and my initials are D N A!
The
topic I want to introduce to you this evening, the subject
of the debate that we are about to sort of not have, is a
slightly facetious one (you’ll be surprised to hear, but
we’ll see where we go with it)—“Is there an
Artificial God?” I’m sure most of the people in this
room will share the same view, but even as an out-and-out
atheist one can’t help noticing that the rôle of a god
has had an enormously profound impact on human history over
many, many centuries. It’s very interesting to figure out
where this came from and what, in the modern scientific
world we sometimes hope against hope that we live in, it
actually means.
I was
thinking about this earlier today when Larry Yaeger was
talking about ‘what is life?’ and mentioned at the end
something I didn’t know, about a special field of
handwriting recognition. The following strange thought went
through my mind: that trying to figure out what is life and
what isn’t and where the boundary is has an interesting
relationship with how you recognise handwriting. We all
know, when presented with any particular entity, whether
it’s a bit of mould from the fridge or whatever; we
instinctively know when something is an example of life and
when it isn’t. But it turns out to be tremendously hard
exactly to define it. I remember once, a long time ago,
needing a definition of life for a speech I was giving.
Assuming there was a simple one and looking around the
Internet, I was astonished at how diverse the definitions
were and how very, very detailed each one had to be in order
to include ‘this’ but not include ‘that’. If you
think about it, a collection that includes a fruit fly and
Richard Dawkins and the Great Barrier Reef is an awkward set
of objects to try and compare. When we try and figure out
what the rules are that we are looking for, trying to find a
rule that’s self-evidently true, that turns out to be
very, very hard.
Compare
this with the business of recognising whether something is
an A or a B or a C. It’s a similar kind of process, but
it’s also a very, very different process, because you may
say of something that you’re ‘not quite certain whether
it counts as life or not life, it’s kind of there on the
edge isn’t it, it’s probably a very low example of what
you might call life, it’s maybe just about alive or maybe
it isn’t’. Or maybe you might say about something
that’s an example of Digital life, ‘does that count as
being alive?’ Is it something, to coin someone’s earlier
phrase, that’ll go squish if you step on it? Think about
the controversial Gaia hypothesis; people say ‘is the
planet alive?’, ‘is the ecosphere alive or not?’ In
the end it depends on how you define such things.
Compare
that with handwriting recognition. In the end you are trying
to say “is this an A or is it a B?” People write As and
Bs in many different ways; floridly, sloppily or whatever.
It’s no good saying ‘well, it’s sort of A-ish but
there’s a bit of B in there’, because you can’t write
the word ‘apple’ with such a thing. It is either an A or
a B. How do you judge? If you’re doing handwriting
recognition, what you are trying to do is not to assess the
relative degrees of A-ness or B-ness of the letter, but
trying to define the intention of the person who wrote it.
It’s very clear in the end—is it an A or a B?—ah!
it’s an A, because the person writing it was writing the
word apple and that’s clearly what it means. So, in the
end, in the absence of an intentional creator, you cannot
say what life is, because it simply depends on what set of
definitions you include in your overall definition. Without
a god, life is only a matter of opinion.
I want
to pick up on a few other things that came around today. I
was fascinated by Larry (again), talking about tautology,
because there’s an argument that I remember being stumped
by once, to which I couldn’t come up with a reply, because
I was so puzzled by the challenge and couldn’t quite
figure it out. A guy said to me, ‘yes, but the whole
theory of evolution is based on a tautology: that which
survives, survives’ This is tautological, therefore it
doesn’t mean anything. I thought about that for a while
and it finally occurred to me that a tautology is something
that if it means nothing, not only that no information has
gone into it but that no consequence has come out of it. So,
we may have accidentally stumbled upon the ultimate answer;
it’s the only thing, the only force, arguably the most
powerful of which we are aware, which requires no other
input, no other support from any other place, is self
evident, hence tautological, but nevertheless astonishingly
powerful in its effects. It’s hard to find anything that
corresponds to that and I therefore put it at the beginning
of one of my books. I reduced it to what I thought were the
bare essentials, which are very similar to the ones you came
up with earlier, which were “anything that happens
happens, anything that in happening causes something else to
happen causes something else to happen and anything that in
happening causes itself to happen again, happens again”.
In fact you don’t even need the second two because they
flow from the first one, which is self-evident and there’s
nothing else you need to say; everything else flows from
that. So, I think we have in our grasp here a fundamental,
ultimate truth, against which there is no gain-saying. It
was spotted by the guy who said this is a tautology. Yes, it
is, but it’s a unique tautology in that it requires no
information to go in but an infinite amount of information
comes out of it. So I think that it is arguably therefore
the prime cause of everything in the Universe. Big claim,
but I feel I’m talking to a sympathetic audience.
Where does the idea of God
come from? Well, I think we have a very skewed point of view
on an awful lot of things, but let’s try and see where our
point of view comes from. Imagine early man. Early man is,
like everything else, an evolved creature and he finds
himself in a world that he’s begun to take a little charge
of; he’s begun to be a tool-maker, a changer of his
environment with the tools that he’s made and he makes
tools, when he does, in order to make changes in his
environment. To give an example of the way man operates
compared to other animals, consider speciation, which, as we
know, tends to occur when a small group of animals gets
separated from the rest of the herd by some geological
upheaval, population pressure, food shortage or whatever and
finds itself in a new environment with maybe something
different going on. Take a very simple example; maybe a
bunch of animals suddenly finds itself in a place where the
weather is rather colder. We know that in a few generations
those genes which favour a thicker coat will have come to
the fore and we’ll come and we’ll find that the animals
have now got thicker coats. Early man, who’s a tool maker,
doesn’t have to do this: he can inhabit an extraordinarily
wide range of habitats on earth, from tundra to the Gobi
Desert—he even manages to live in New York for heaven’s
sake—and the reason is that when he arrives in a new
environment he doesn’t have to wait for several
generations; if he arrives in a colder environment and sees
an animal that has those genes which favour a thicker
coat, he says “I’ll have it off him”. Tools have
enabled us to think intentionally, to make things and to do
things to create a world that fits us better. Now imagine an
early man surveying his surroundings at the end of a happy
day’s tool making. He looks around and he sees a world
which pleases him mightily: behind him are mountains with
caves in—mountains are great because you can go and hide
in the caves and you are out of the rain and the bears
can’t get you; in front of him there’s the
forest—it’s got nuts and berries and delicious food;
there's a stream going by, which is full of
water—water’s delicious to drink, you can float your
boats in it and do all sorts of stuff with it; here’s
cousin Ug and he’s caught a mammoth—mammoth’s are
great, you can eat them, you can wear their coats, you can
use their bones to create weapons to catch other mammoths. I
mean this is a great world, it’s fantastic. But our
early man has a moment to reflect and he thinks to himself,
‘well, this is an interesting world that I find
myself in’ and then he asks himself a very treacherous
question, a question which is totally meaningless and
fallacious, but only comes about because of the nature of
the sort of person he is, the sort of person he has evolved
into and the sort of person who has thrived because he
thinks this particular way. Man the maker looks at his world
and says ‘So who made this then?’ Who made this? — you
can see why it’s a treacherous question. Early man thinks,
‘Well, because there’s only one sort of being I know
about who makes things, whoever made all this must
therefore be a much bigger, much more powerful and
necessarily invisible, one of me and because I tend to be
the strong one who does all the stuff, he’s probably
male’. And so we have the idea of a god. Then, because
when we make things we do it with the intention of doing
something with them, early man asks himself , ‘If he made
it, what did he make it for?’ Now the real trap
springs, because early man is thinking, ‘This world fits
me very well. Here are all these things that support me and
feed me and look after me; yes, this world fits me nicely’
and he reaches the inescapable conclusion that whoever made
it, made it for him.
This is
rather as if you imagine a puddle waking up one morning and
thinking, ‘This is an interesting world I find myself
in—an interesting hole I find myself in—fits me
rather neatly, doesn’t it? In fact it fits me staggeringly
well, must have been made to have me in it!’ This is such
a powerful idea that as the sun rises in the sky and the air
heats up and as, gradually, the puddle gets smaller and
smaller, it’s still frantically hanging on to the notion
that everything’s going to be alright, because this world
was meant to have him in it, was built to have
him in it; so the moment he disappears catches him rather by
surprise. I think this may be something we need to be on the
watch out for. We all know that at some point in the future
the Universe will come to an end and at some other point,
considerably in advance from that but still not immediately
pressing, the sun will explode. We feel there’s plenty of
time to worry about that, but on the other hand that’s a
very dangerous thing to say. Look at what’s supposed to be
going to happen on the 1st of January 2000—let’s not
pretend that we didn’t have a warning that the century was
going to end! I think that we need to take a larger
perspective on who we are and what we are doing here if we
are going to survive in the long term.
There
are some oddities in the perspective with which we see the
world. The fact that we live at the bottom of a deep gravity
well, on the surface of a gas covered planet going around a
nuclear fireball 90 million miles away and think this to be
normal is obviously some indication of how skewed our
perspective tends to be, but we have done various things
over intellectual history to slowly correct some of our
misapprehensions. Curiously enough, quite a lot of these
have come from sand, so let’s talk about the four ages of
sand.
From
sand we make glass, from glass we make lenses and from
lenses we make telescopes. When the great early astronomers,
Copernicus, Gallileo and others turned their telescopes on
the heavens and discovered that the Universe was an
astonishingly different place than we expected and that, far
from the world being most of the Universe, with just a few
little bright lights going around it, it turned out—and
this took a long, long, long time to sink in—that it is
just one tiny little speck going round a little nuclear
fireball, which is one of millions and millions and millions
that make up this particular galaxy and our galaxy is one of
millions or billions that make up the Universe and that then
we are also faced with the possibility that there may be
billions of universes, that applied a little bit of a
corrective to the perspective that the Universe was ours.
I rather
love that notion and, as I was discussing with someone
earlier today, there’s a book I thoroughly enjoyed
recently by David Deutsch, who is an advocate of the
multiple universe view of the Universe, called ‘The
Fabric of Reality’, in which he explores the notion of
a quantum multiple universe view of the Universe. This came
from the famous wave particle dichotomy about the behaviour
of light—that you couldn’t measure it as a wave when it
behaves as a wave, or as a particle when it behaves as a
particle. How does this come to be? David Deutsch points out
that if you imagine that our Universe is simply one layer
and that there is an infinite multiplicity of universes
spreading out on either side, not only does it solve the
problem, but the problem simply goes away. This is exactly
how you expect light to behave under those circumstances.
Quantum mechanics has claims to be predicated on the notion
that the Universe behaves as if there was a multiplicity of
universes, but it rather strains our credulity to think that
there actually would be.
This
goes straight back to Gallileo and the Vatican. In fact,
what the Vatican said to Gallileo was, “We don’t dispute
your readings, we just dispute the explanation you put on
them. It’s all very well for you to say that the planets
sort of do that as they go round and it is as if we were a
planet and those planets were all going round the sun;
it’s alright to say it’s as if that were
happening, but you’re not allowed to say that’s what
is happening, because we have a total lockhold on
universal truth and also it simply strains our personal
credulity”. Just so, I think that the idea that there are
multiple universes currently strains our credulity but it
may well be that it’s simply one more strain that we have
to learn to live with, just as we’ve had to learn to live
with a whole bunch of them in the past.
The
other thing that comes out of that vision of the Universe is
that it turns out to be composed almost entirely and rather
worryingly, of nothing. Wherever you look there is nothing,
with occasional tiny, tiny little specks of rock or light.
But nevertheless, by watching the way these tiny little
specks behave in the vast nothingness, we begin to divine
certain principles, certain laws, like gravity and so forth.
So that was, if you like, the macroscopic view of the
universe, which came from the first age of sand.
The next
age of sand is the microscopic one. We put glass lenses into
microscopes and started to look down at the microscopic view
of the Universe. Then we began to understand that when we
get down to the sub-atomic level, the solid world we live in
also consists, again rather worryingly, of almost nothing
and that wherever we do find something it turns out not to
be actually something, but only the probability that there
may be something there.
One way
or another, this is a deeply misleading Universe. Wherever
we look it’s beginning to be extremely alarming and
extremely upsetting to our sense of who we are—great,
strapping, physical people living in a Universe that exists
almost entirely for us—that it just isn’t the case. At
this point we are still divining from this all sorts of
fundamental principles, recognising the way that gravity
works, the way that strong and weak nuclear forces work,
recognising the nature of matter, the nature of particles
and so on, but having got those fundamentals, we’re still
not very good at figuring out how it works, because the
maths is really rather tricky. So, we tend to come up with
almost a clockwork view of the way it all works, because
that’s the best our maths can manage. I don’t mean in
any way to disparage Newton, because I guess he was the
first person who saw that there were principles at work that
were different from anything we actually saw around us. His
first law of motion—that something will remain in its
position of either rest or motion until some other force
works on it—is something that none of us, living in a
gravity well, in a gas envelope, had ever seen, because
everything we move comes to a halt. It was only through
very, very careful watching and observing and measuring and
divining the principles underlying what we could all see
happening that he came up with the principles that we all
know and recognise as being the laws of motion, but
nevertheless it is by modern terms, still a somewhat
clockwork view of the Universe. As I say, I don’t mean
that to sound disparaging in any way at all, because his
achievements, as we all know, were absolutely monumental,
but it still kind of doesn’t make sense to us.
Now
there are all sorts of entities we are also aware of, as
well as particles, forces, tables, chairs, rocks and so on,
that are almost invisible to science; almost invisible,
because science has almost nothing to say about them
whatsoever. I’m talking about dogs and cats and cows and
each other. We living things are, so far, beyond the purview
of anything science can actually say, almost beyond even
recognising ourselves as things that science might be
expected to have something to say about.
I can
imagine Newton sitting down and working out his laws of
motion and figuring out the way the Universe works and with
him, a cat wandering around. The reason we had no idea how
cats worked was because, since Newton, we had proceeded by
the very simple principle that essentially, to see how
things work, we took them apart. If you try and take a cat
apart to see how it works, the first thing you have in your
hands is a non-working cat. Life is a level of complexity
that almost lies outside our vision; is so far beyond
anything we have any means of understanding that we just
think of it as a different class of object, a different
class of matter; ‘life’, something that had a mysterious
essence about it, was god given—and that’s the only
explanation we had. The bombshell comes in 1859 when Darwin
publishes ‘On the Origin of Species’. It takes a
long time before we really get to grips with this and begin
to understand it, because not only does it seem incredible
and thoroughly demeaning to us, but it’s yet another shock
to our system to discover that not only are we not the
centre of the Universe and we’re not made of anything, but
we started out as some kind of slime and got to where we are
via being a monkey. It just doesn’t read well. But also,
we have no opportunity to see this stuff at work. In a sense
Darwin was like Newton, in that he was the first person to
see underlying principles, that really were not at all
obvious, from the everyday world in which he lived. We had
to think very hard to understand the nature of what was
happening around us and we had no clear, obvious everyday
examples of evolution to point to. Even today that persists
as a slightly tricky problem if you’re trying to persuade
somebody who doesn’t believe in all this evolution stuff
and wants you to show him an example—they are hard to find
in terms of everyday observation.
So we
come to the third age of sand. In the third age of sand we
discover something else we can make out of sand—silicon.
We make the silicon chip—and suddenly, what opens up to us
is a Universe not of fundamental particles and fundamental
forces, but of the things that were missing in that picture
that told us how they work; what the silicon chip revealed
to us was the process. The silicon chip enables us to
do mathematics tremendously fast, to model the, as it turns
out, very very simple processes that are analogous to life
in terms of their simplicity; iteration, looping, branching,
the feedback loop which lies at the heart of everything you
do on a computer and at the heart of everything that happens
in evolution—that is, the output stage of one generation
becomes the input stage of the next. Suddenly we have a
working model, not for a while because early machines are
terribly slow and clunky, but gradually we accumulate a
working model of this thing that previously we could only
guess at or deduce—and you had to be a pretty sharp and a
pretty clear thinker even to divine it happening when it was
far from obvious and indeed counter-intuitive, particularly
to as proud a species as we.
The computer forms a third
age of perspective, because suddenly it enables us to see
how life works. Now that is an extraordinarily important
point because it becomes self-evident that life, that all
forms of complexity, do not flow downwards, they flow
upwards and there’s a whole grammar that anybody who is
used to using computers is now familiar with, which means
that evolution is no longer a particular thing, because
anybody who’s ever looked at the way a computer program
works, knows that very, very simple iterative pieces
of code, each line of which is tremendously straightforward,
give rise to enormously complex phenomena in a
computer—and by enormously complex phenomena, I mean a
word processing program just as much as I mean Tierra or
Creatures.
I can
remember the first time I ever read a programming manual,
many many years ago. I’d first started to encounter
computers about 1983 and I wanted to know a little bit more
about them, so I decided to learn something about
programming. I bought a C manual and I read through the
first two or three chapters, which took me about a week. At
the end it said ‘Congratulations, you have now written the
letter A on the screen!’ I thought, ‘Well, I must have
misunderstood something here, because it was a huge, huge
amount of work to do that, so what if I now want to write a
B?’ The process of programming, the speed and the means by
which enormous simplicity gives rise to enormously complex
results, was not part of my mental grammar at that point. It
is now—and it is increasingly part of all our mental
grammars, because we are used to the way computers work.
So,
suddenly, evolution ceases to be such a real problem to get
hold of. It’s rather like this: imagine, if you will, the
following scenario. One Tuesday, a person is spotted in a
street in London, doing something criminal. Two detectives
are investigating, trying to work out what happened. One of
them is a 20th Century detective and the other, by the
marvels of science fiction, is a 19th Century detective. The
problem is this: the person who was clearly seen and
identified on the street in London on Tuesday was seen by
someone else, an equally reliable witness, on the street in
Santa Fe on the same Tuesday—how could that possibly be?
The 19th Century detective could only think it was by some
sort of magical intervention. Now the 20th Century detective
may not be able to say, “He took BA flight this and then
United flight that”—he may not be able to figure out
exactly which way he did it, or by which route he travelled,
but it’s not a problem. It doesn’t bother him; he just
says, ‘He got there by plane. I don’t know which plane
and it may be a little tricky to find out, but there’s no
essential mystery.’ We’re used to the idea of jet
travel. We don’t know whether the criminal flew BA 178, or
UA270, or whatever, but we know roughly how it was done. I
suspect that as we become more and more conversant with the
role a computer plays and the way in which the computer
models the process of enormously simple elements giving rise
to enormously complex results, then the idea of life being
an emergent phenomenon will become easier and easier to
swallow. We may never know precisely what steps life took in
the very early stages of this planet, but it’s not a
mystery.
So what
we have arrived at here—and although the first shock wave
of this arrival was in 1859, it’s really the arrival of
the computer that demonstrates it unarguably to us—is
‘Is there really a Universe that is not designed from the
top downwards but from the bottom upwards? Can complexity
emerge from lower levels of simplicity?’ It has always
struck me as being bizarre that the idea of God as a creator
was considered sufficient explanation for the complexity we
see around us, because it simply doesn’t explain where he
came from. If we imagine a designer, that implies a design
and that therefore each thing he designs or causes to be
designed is a level simpler than him or her, then you have
to ask ‘What is the level above the designer?’ There is
one peculiar model of the Universe that has turtles all the
way down, but here we have gods all the way up. It really
isn’t a very good answer, but a bottom-up solution, on the
other hand, which rests on the incredibly powerful tautology
of anything that happens, happens, clearly gives you a very
simple and powerful answer that needs no other explanation
whatsoever.
But
here’s the interesting thing. I said I wanted to ask ‘Is
there an artificial god?’ and this is where I want to
address the question of why the idea of a god is so
persuasive. I’ve already explained where I feel this kind
of illusion comes from in the first place; it comes from a
falseness in our perspective, because we are not taking into
account that we are evolved beings, beings who have evolved
into a particular landscape, into a particular environment
with a particular set of skills and views of the world that
have enabled us to survive and thrive rather successfully.
But there seems to be an even more powerful idea than that,
and this is the idea I want to propose, which is that the
spot at the top of the pyramid that we previously said was
whence everything flowed, may not actually be vacant just
because we say the flow doesn’t go that way.
Let me explain what I mean
by this. We have created in the world in which we live all
kinds of things; we have changed our world in all kinds of
ways. That’s very very clear. We have built the room
we’re in and we’ve built all sorts of complex stuff,
like computers and so on, but we’ve also constructed all
kinds of fictitious entities that are enormously powerful.
So do we say, ‘That’s a bad idea; it’s stupid—we
should simply get rid of it?’ Well, here’s another
fictitious entity—money. Money is a completely fictitious
entity, but it’s very powerful in our world; we each have
wallets, which have got notes in them, but what can those
notes do? You can’t breed them, you can’t stir fry them,
you can’t live in them, there’s absolutely nothing you
can do with them that’s any use, other than exchange them
with each other—and as soon as we exchange them with each
other all sots of powerful things happen, because it’s a
fiction that we’ve all subscribed to. We don’t think
this is wrong or right, good or bad; but the thing is that
if money vanished the entire co-operative structure that we
have would implode, but if we were all to vanish, money
would simply vanish too. Money has no meaning outside
ourselves, it is something that we have created that has a
powerful shaping effect on the world, because its something
we all subscribe to.
I would
like somebody to write an evolutionary history of religion,
because the way in which it has developed seems to me to
show all kinds of evolutionary strategies. Think of the arms
races that go on between one or two animals living the same
environment. For example the race between the Amazonian
manatee and a particular type of reed that it eats. The more
of the reed the manatee eats, the more the reed develops
silica in its cells to attack the teeth of the manatee and
the more silica in the reed, the more manatee’s teeth get
bigger and stronger. One side does one thing and the other
counters it. As we know, throughout evolution and history
arms races are something that drive evolution in the most
powerful ways and in the world of ideas you can see similar
kinds of things happening.
Now, the
invention of the scientific method and science is, I’m
sure we’ll all agree, the most powerful intellectual idea,
the most powerful framework for thinking and investigating
and understanding and challenging the world around us that
there is, and that it rests on the premise that any idea is
there to be attacked and if it withstands the attack then it
lives to fight another day and if it doesn’t withstand the
attack then down it goes. Religion doesn’t seem to work
like that; it has certain ideas at the heart of it which we
call sacred or holy or whatever. That’s an idea we’re so
familiar with, whether we subscribe to it or not, that
it’s kind of odd to think what it actually means, because
really what it means is ‘Here is an idea or a notion that
you’re not allowed to say anything bad about; you’re
just not. Why not? — because you’re not!’ If somebody
votes for a party that you don’t agree with, you’re free
to argue about it as much as you like; everybody will have
an argument but nobody feels aggrieved by it. If somebody
thinks taxes should go up or down you are free to have an
argument about it, but on the other hand if somebody says
‘I mustn’t move a light switch on a Saturday’, you
say, ‘Fine, I respect that’. The odd thing is, even as I
am saying that I am thinking ‘Is there an Orthodox Jew
here who is going to be offended by the fact that I just
said that?’ but I wouldn’t have thought ‘Maybe
there’s somebody from the left wing or somebody from the
right wing or somebody who subscribes to this view or the
other in economics’ when I was making the other points. I
just think ‘Fine, we have different opinions’. But, the
moment I say something that has something to do with
somebody’s (I’m going to stick my neck out here and say
irrational) beliefs, then we all become terribly protective
and terribly defensive and say ‘No, we don’t attack
that; that’s an irrational belief but no, we respect
it’.
It’s
rather like, if you think back in terms of animal evolution,
an animal that’s grown an incredible carapace around it,
such as a tortoise—that’s a great survival strategy
because nothing can get through it; or maybe like a
poisonous fish that nothing will come close to, which
therefore thrives by keeping away any challenges to what it
is it is. In the case of an idea, if we think ‘Here is an
idea that is protected by holiness or sanctity’, what does
it mean? Why should it be that it’s perfectly legitimate
to support the Labour party or the Conservative party,
Republicans or Democrats, this model of economics versus
that, Macintosh instead of Windows, but to have an opinion
about how the Universe began, about who created the
Universe, no, that’s holy? What does that mean? Why do we
ring-fence that for any other reason other than that we’ve
just got used to doing so? There’s no other reason at all,
it’s just one of those things that crept into being and
once that loop gets going it’s very, very powerful. So, we
are used to not challenging religious ideas but it’s very
interesting how much of a furore Richard creates when he
does it! Everybody gets absolutely frantic about it because
you’re not allowed to say these things. Yet when you look
at it rationally there is no reason why those ideas
shouldn’t be as open to debate as any other, except that
we have agreed somehow between us that they shouldn’t be.
There’s a very
interesting book—I don’t know if anybody here’s read
it—called ‘Man on Earth’ by an anthropologist who use
to be at Cambridge, called John Reader, in which he
describes the way that… I’m going to back up a little
bit and tell you about the whole book. It’s a series of
studies of different cultures in the world that have
developed within somewhat isolated circumstances, either on
islands or in a mountain valley or wherever, so it's
possible to treat them to a certain extent as a test-tube
case. You see therefore exactly the degree to which their
environment and their immediate circumstances has affected
the way in which their culture has arisen. It’s a
fascinating series of studies. The one I have in mind at the
moment is one that describes the culture and economy of
Bali, which is a small, very crowded island that subsists on
rice. Now, rice is an incredibly efficient food and you can
grow an awful lot in a relatively small space, but it’s
hugely labour intensive and requires a lot of very, very
precise co-operation amongst the people there, particularly
when you have a large population on a small island needing
to bring its harvest in. People now looking at the way in
which rice agriculture works in Bali are rather puzzled by
it because it is intensely religious. The society of Bali is
such that religion permeates every single aspect of it and
everybody in that culture is very, very carefully defined in
terms of who they are, what their status is and what their
role in life is. It’s all defined by the church; they have
very peculiar calendars and a very peculiar set of customs
and rituals, which are precisely defined and, oddly enough,
they are fantastically good at being very, very productive
with their rice harvest. In the 70s, people came in and
noticed that the rice harvest was determined by the temple
calendar. It seemed to be totally nonsensical, so they said,
‘Get rid of all this, we can help you make your rice
harvest much, much more productive than even you’re, very
successfully, doing at the moment. Use these pesticides, use
this calendar, do this, that and the other’. So they
started and for two or three years the rice production went
up enormously, but the whole predator/prey/pest balance went
completely out of kilter. Very shortly, the rice harvest
plummeted again and the Balinese said, ‘Screw it, we’re
going back to the temple calendar!’ and they reinstated
what was there before and it all worked again absolutely
perfectly. It’s all very well to say that basing the rice
harvest on something as irrational and meaningless as a
religion is stupid—they should be able to work it out more
logically than that, but they might just as well say to us,
‘Your culture and society works on the basis of money and
that’s a fiction, so why don’t you get rid of it and
just co-operate with each other’—we know it’s not
going to work!
So,
there is a sense in which we build meta-systems above
ourselves to fill in the space that we previously populated
with an entity that was supposed to be the intentional
designer, the creator (even though there isn’t one) and
because we—I don’t necessarily mean we in this room, but
we as a species—design and create one and then allow
ourselves to behave as if there was one, all sorts of
things begin to happen that otherwise wouldn’t happen.
Let me
try and illustrate what I mean by something else. This is
very speculative; I’m really going out on a limb here,
because it’s something I know nothing about whatsoever, so
think of this more as a thought experiment than a real
explanation of something. I want to talk about Feng Shui,
which is something I know very little about, but there’s
been a lot of talk about it recently in terms of figuring
out how a building should be designed, built, situated,
decorated and so on. Apparently, we need to think about the
building being inhabited by dragons and look at it in terms
of how a dragon would move around it. So, if a dragon
wouldn’t be happy in the house, you have to put a red fish
bowl here or a window there. This sounds like complete and
utter nonsense, because anything involving dragons must be
nonsense—there aren’t any dragons, so any theory based
on how dragons behave is nonsense. What are these silly
people doing, imagining that dragons can tell you how to
build your house? Nevertheless, it occurs to me if you
disregard for a moment the explanation that’s actually
offered for it, it may be there is something interesting
going on that goes like this: we all know from buildings
that we’ve lived in, worked in, been in or stayed in, that
some are more comfortable, more pleasant and more agreeable
to live in than others. We haven’t had a real way of
quantifying this, but in this century we’ve had an awful
lot of architects who think they know how to do it, so
we’ve had the horrible idea of the house as a machine for
living in, we’ve had Mies van der Roe and others putting
up glass stumps and strangely shaped things that are
supposed to form some theory or other. It’s all carefully
engineered, but nonetheless, their buildings are not
actually very nice to live in. An awful lot of theory has
been poured into this, but if you sit and work with an
architect (and I’ve been through that stressful time, as
I’m sure a lot of people have) then when you are trying to
figure out how a room should work you’re trying to
integrate all kinds of things about lighting, about angles,
about how people move and how people live—and an awful lot
of other things you don’t know about that get left out.
You don’t know what importance to attach to one thing or
another; you’re trying to, very consciously, figure out
something when you haven’t really got much of a clue, but
there’s this theory and that theory, this bit of
engineering practice and that bit of architectural practice;
you don’t really know what to make of them. Compare that
to somebody who tosses a cricket ball at you. You can sit
and watch it and say, ‘It’s going at 17 degrees’;
start to work it out on paper, do some calculus, etc. and
about a week after the ball’s whizzed past you, you may
have figured out where it’s going to be and how to catch
it. On the other hand, you can simply put your hand out and
let the ball drop into it, because we have all kinds of
faculties built into us, just below the conscious level,
able to do all kinds of complex integrations of all kinds of
complex phenomena which therefore enables us to say, ‘Oh
look, there’s a ball coming; catch it!’
What
I’m suggesting is that Feng Shui and an awful lot of other
things are precisely of that kind of problem. There are all
sorts of things we know how to do, but don’t
necessarily know what we do, we just do them. Go back
to the issue of how you figure out how a room or a house
should be designed and instead of going through all the
business of trying to work out the angles and trying to
digest which genuine architectural principles you may want
to take out of what may be a passing architectural fad, just
ask yourself, ‘how would a dragon live here?’ We are
used to thinking in terms of organic creatures; an organic
creature may consist of an enormous complexity of all sorts
of different variables that are beyond our ability to
resolve but we know how organic creatures live.
We’ve never seen a dragon but we’ve all got an idea of
what a dragon is like, so we can say, ‘Well if a dragon
went through here, he’d get stuck just here and a little
bit cross over there because he couldn’t see that and
he’d wave his tail and knock that vase over’. You figure
out how the dragon’s going to be happy here and lo and
behold! you’ve suddenly got a place that makes sense for
other organic creatures, such as ourselves, to live in.
So, my
argument is that as we become more and more scientifically
literate, it’s worth remembering that the fictions with
which we previously populated our world may have some
function that it’s worth trying to understand and preserve
the essential components of, rather than throwing out the
baby with the bath water; because even though we may not
accept the reasons given for them being here in the first
place, it may well be that there are good practical reasons
for them, or something like them, to be there. I suspect
that as we move further and further into the field of
digital or artificial life we will find more and more
unexpected properties begin to emerge out of what we see
happening and that this is a precise parallel to the
entities we create around ourselves to inform and shape our
lives and enable us to work and live together. Therefore, I
would argue that though there isn’t an actual god
there is an artificial god and we should probably
bear that in mind. That is my debating point and you are now
free to start hurling the chairs around!
Q –
What is the fourth age of sand?
Let me back up for a minute
and talk about the way we communicate. Traditionally, we
have a bunch of different ways in which we communicate with
each other. One way is one-to-one; we talk to each other,
have a conversation. Another is one-to-many, which I’m
doing at the moment, or someone could stand up and sing a
song, or announce we’ve got to go to war. Then we have
many-to-one communication; we have a pretty patchy, clunky,
not-really-working version we call democracy, but in a more
primitive state I would stand up and say, ‘OK, we’re
going to go to war’ and some may shout back ‘No we’re
not!’—and then we have many-to-many communication in the
argument that breaks out afterwards!
In this
century (and the previous century) we modelled one-to-one
communications in the telephone, which I assume we are all
familiar with. We have one-to-many communication—boy do we
have an awful lot of that; broadcasting, publishing,
journalism, etc.—we get information poured at us from all
over the place and it’s completely indiscriminate as to
where it might land. It’s curious, but we don’t have to
go very far back in our history until we find that all the
information that reached us was relevant to us and therefore
anything that happened, any news, whether it was about
something that’s actually happened to us, in the next
house, or in the next village, within the boundary or within
our horizon, it happened in our world and if we reacted to
it the world reacted back. It was all relevant to us, so for
example, if somebody had a terrible accident we could crowd
round and really help. Nowadays, because of the plethora of
one-to-many communication we have, if a plane crashes in
India we may get terribly anxious about it but our anxiety
doesn’t have any impact. We’re not very well able to
distinguish between a terrible emergency that’s happened
to somebody a world away and something that’s happened to
someone round the corner. We can’t really distinguish
between them any more, which is why we get terribly upset by
something that has happened to somebody in a soap opera that
comes out of Hollywood and maybe less concerned when it’s
happened to our sister. We’ve all become twisted and
disconnected and it’s not surprising that we feel very
stressed and alienated in the world because the world
impacts on us but we don’t impact the world. Then
there’s many-to-one; we have that, but not very well yet
and there’s not much of it about. Essentially, our
democratic systems are a model of that and though they’re
not very good, they will improve dramatically.
But the fourth, the
many-to-many, we didn’t have at all before the coming of
the Internet, which, of course, runs on fibre-optics. It’s
communication between us that forms the fourth age of sand.
Take what I said earlier about the world not reacting to us
when we react to it; I remember the first moment, a few
years ago, at which I began to take the Internet seriously.
It was a very, very silly thing. There was a guy, a computer
research student at Carnegie Mellon, who liked to drink Dr
Pepper Light. There was a drinks machine a couple of storeys
away from him, where he used to regularly go and get his Dr
Pepper, but the machine was often out of stock, so he had
quite a few wasted journeys. Eventually he figured out,
‘Hang on, there’s a chip in there and I’m on a
computer and there’s a network running around the
building, so why don’t I just put the drinks machine on
the network, then I can poll it from my terminal whenever I
want and tell if I’m going to have a wasted journey or
not?’ So he connected the machine to the local network,
but the local net was part of the Internet—so suddenly
anyone in the world could see what was happening with this
drinks machine. Now that may not be vital information but it
turned out to be curiously fascinating; everyone started to
know what was happening with the drinks machine. It began to
develop, because in the chip in the machine didn’t just
say, ‘The slot which has Dr Pepper Light is empty’ but
had all sorts of information; it said, ‘There are 7 Cokes
and 3 Diet Cokes, the temperature they are stored at is this
and the last time they were loaded was that’. There was a
lot of information in there, and there was one really
fabulous piece of information: it turned out that if someone
had put their 50 cents in and not pressed the button, i.e.
if the machine was pregnant, then you could, from your
computer terminal wherever you were in the world, log on to
the drinks machine and drop that can! Somebody could be
walking down the corridor when suddenly, ‘bang!’ —
there was a Coca-Cola can! What caused that? — well obviously
somebody 5,000 miles away! Now that was a very, very
silly, but fascinating, story and what it said to me
was that this was the first time that we could reach back
into the world. It may not be terribly important that from
5,000 miles away you can reach into a University corridor
and drop a Coca-Cola can but it’s the first shot in the
war of bringing to us a whole new way of communicating. So
that, I think, is the fourth age of sand.
|