Chapter Outline

From Fabulous Loop de Loop

The Fabulous Loop de Loop

A cybernetic discourse as read through seven feedback machines


Samuel Butler’s Darwin Among the Machines (1863) anticipates a now familiar science fiction narrative.

Butler supposed that in the near future machines would evolve to the point where humans would be enslaved by their superior machine-masters. In the text Butler recognised that the discourse of evolution and the discourse of the self-correcting steam engine (regulated by the governor) were inextricably bound.

The principle which affords the self-correction of a species within an environment, and the self-correction of the governor within a “vapour engine” were the same, Butler realised.

The Fabulous Loop de Loop examines how Butler's premise extends into the twentieth century.

In the cybernetic era, the principle regulating both biological and machine organisation would be understood as negative entropy. The understanding that the entropic forces of the universe are frequently (locally) stalled or reversed, called for a re-evaluation of a number of disciplines across the natural and social sciences.


THE CHAPTERS

THE GOVERNOR

The Vapour Engine

Samuel Butler understood that when the "vapour engine" regulated by a governor, arrived there was suddenly a new way to understand evolution. This brought the discourse of the machine and the discourse of the organism together. Gregory Bateson (a keen reader of Butler) understood this to be the instrument that would bring the natural and social sciences into the same epistemological space. Butler further recognised that the machine-organism debate demanded scrutiny of two issues:

(a) the relation between organism and machine centred on the issue of design and purpose. Butler held that conscious purpose itself evolved from a series on non-conscious actions that came into consciousness. The key concern of Butler, which is evident across the texts we will discuss in this chapter, is the evolution of consciousness. In opposition to the idealism of the time, Butler argued, mind and matter are indivisible
(b) the transmission of information down generations affords adaptation and consolidates order.

Vibrations

Samuel Butler’s proto-cybernetic speculation provided a model for “the father of modern genetics” William Bateson. William Bateson sought to navigate energetic problematics by allowing that genetic information is cycled through an organism ¬– consolidating order within a larger system. In Problems of Genetics (1913) William Bateson attempts to account for variation without an adequately theorised notion of negative entropy. William’s son, the polymath Gregory Bateson, extended the ideas of the elder Bateson (and re-purposed the writings of Samuel Butler) to develop an ecology of mind which was wholly cybernetic. The chapter will also compare William Bateson's conception of evolution to that of his contemporary, Henri Bergson, whose Creative Evolution (1911) also struggled with the nineteenth-century energy crisis.

A (Proto) Cybernetic Explanation

The war-time technologies of scanning devices and predictive servomechanisms, when added to the repertoire of neurophysiological experimentation, afforded the production of new models of the machine-organism. These included the “thinking machines” discussed throughout this text: William Ross Ashby’s Homeostat, William Grey Walter’s Tortoise, Norbert Wiener’s Moth-Bedbug and Claude Shannon & David Hagelbarger’s SEquence Extrapolating Robot (SEER).

Central to this conception of organic order was a new definition of purpose, in which information cycles within a system to consolidate order and afford greater adaptation (negative entropy, or negentropy).

Neurophysiology – as practiced by a number of cyberneticians including Grey Walter, Edward Craik, Ross Ashby, Warren McCulloch – is central to the discourse of cybernetics. The argument that mind is constituted through a series of iterative, non-conscious actions was far advanced within the research cultures of experimental psychology long before it established an alliance with the burgeoning discipline of control and communications. A well-established “experimental epistemology” (to use Warren McCulloch’s term) had been practiced in the fields of neurological and brain research from the turn of the century. The meeting of the discourse of neurophysiology and that of war-time research involving servo-mechanisms produced a new formal theory of feedback and control technologies – cybernetics.

Edward Craik was a British experimental psychologist who died in 1945 at the age of 32 (just on the cusp of “the cybernetic moment”). Craik, in The Nature of Explanation (1943), argues for an anti-cartesian, non-vitalistic “hylozoism” – which is to say that mind is a function of matter rather than an essence opposing matter. For Craik, consciousness is delimited by the material constraints of the nervous system. Central to Craik’s thought is the idea of the mind modelling reality, which works “in the same way as the process it parallels”; thought, in the action of modelling reality, does not copy reality because “our internal model of reality can predict events which have not occurred” This predictive ability is “down hill” all the way. It is negentropic, because it saves energy which can be used to consolidate order within the system as the information cycles within an iterative circuit.

From Schizmogenesis to Feedback

Gregory Bateson was able to reformulate his earlier theory of schismogenesis (1935) after his introduction to cybernetics in the 1940s. After this point Bateson diagnosed the conflicts and divisions that occur in social groups, which he termed schismogenesis, in terms of positive and negative feedback. From this point Bateson is able to frame past thought in terms informed by cybernetics. This included a reassessment of Samuel Butler, Korzybski’s general semantics and his father’s insights into genetics. At this point in Bateson’s career negative entropy becomes the organising principle which regulates a number of social, ecological and cultural systems, a post-cybernetic epistemology.

Cybernetics - Dynamic Psychology

In the early 1950s Gregory Bateson considered the implications of the epistemological shift occasioned by cybernetics to the field of psychiatry and psychoanalysis. His book Communication: The Social Matrix of Psychiatry (1951) (co-authored with psychiatrist Jurgen Ruesch) gives an account of this. In the tradition of Butler and Craik, Bateson presented a conception of the human subject in which mind is co-extensive with system. Bateson presents an anti-Cartesian, hylozoist, view in which mind and matter are indivisible. This conception of psychiatry and psychoanalysis allowed Bateson to mount a critique of Freudian psychoanalysis on the basis of Freud’s outdated understanding of the distribution of energy within the psychic field, which for Fraud followed a thermodynamic pattern (psychodynamics). I will bring into the argument two texts by cyberneticians who contributed to the discourse of psychodynamics in relation to emerging concepts of information. Warren S. McCulloch’s “The Past of a Delusion” (1951) represents the assassination of Freud’s energetics, from the perspective of a pioneer in both neurophysiology and the emerging cybernetic epistemology. The second paper is a more nuanced assessment of Freudian dynamics. Lawrence S. Kubie’s “The Fallacious Use of Quantitative Concepts in Dynamic Psychology” (1947) cautions against understanding Freudian psychodynamics as anything more than a loose metaphor – and as an increasingly less helpful metaphor as the age of cybernetics progressed.

M. SPECULARIX (The Cybernetic Tortoise)

The Body in Pieces

Following the advice of Edward Craik, Gray Walter builds a servo-machine (the cybernetic tortoise) which combines the scansion of a WWII anti-fire system and the principles of experimental neurophysiology. The way in which the cybernetic tortoise orientates its environment is recursive, an action is dependent on cycling information which influences subsequent action. The machine does this by scanning, which orders the organism’s relation to space and time. Such behaviour is an expression of negative entropy “What the nervous system receives from the sense organs is information about difference – about ratios between stimuli” wrote Walter.[1]

The Tortoise and Homeostasis

A little after the publication of Gregory Bateson & Jurgen Ruesch’s Communication: The Social Matrix of Society – as the cybernetic critique of Freudian dynamic psychology was developed – Jacques Lacan conducted his own re-evaluation of Freudian dynamic psychology. In line with those in the mainstream of cybernetics (and resonating with Samuel Butler’s own discourse analysis) Lacan identifies a shift from the discourse of knowledge to the discourse of the machine. This re-evaluation has its origins in a renewed understanding of homeostasis in relation to new theories of information and control. Indeed, Seminar II can be read as the scrutiny of an emerging discourse network, as a dominant set of technical standards are transformed. Lacan outlines the dialectic as follows:

(a) the discourse of knowledge (characterised by the era of Hegel) is superseded by the discourse of the machine at the point where the discourse of entropy comes into being – this is embodied in the technical apparatus of the steam engine.
(b) the discourse of negative entropy, in the era of cybernetics, in turn challenges a number of models based on heat transference and displacement (such as Freud’s dynamic psychology) – this is embodied in the technical apparatus of the servomechanism (such as Grey Walter's Tortoise).
(c) at this point the discourse of the machine takes its place at the centre of human subjectivity. Man is spoken by language, which moves in a circuit of communication exterior to the subject – this is the language of the machine. For Lacan (as with Bateson) a new understanding of entropy allows for a new conception of self in relation to system. The differences and similarities of approach are discussed in the following two chapters.

Bateson’s Negentropic Discourse Matrix

We return to Bateson’s Communication: and the Social Matrix of Psychiatry (1951) and consider Bateson’s “epistemological graph” which charts the shift following the advent of cybernetics toward

(a) “greater gestalten”,
(b) a move to understanding problems in human understanding as predicated on recently coined communication and information theories and
(c) a more complex understanding of order and system which replaces the Newtonian epistemology of cause and effect. Although Bateson advocates new approaches he is again reliant on established practices which anticipated the implications of negentropy.

SEER (SEquence Extrapolating Robot)


Play Like an Idiot

The SEER (SEquence Extrapolating Robot) was developed by Claude Shannon & David Hagelbarger at the Bell Labs in the early 1950s. Its aim was to outplay a human in the game of matching pennies (aka, ones and twos / odds and evens). Lacan’s understanding of finite state automata (such as SEER) allowed him to theorize that simple information machines were structured similarly to simple languages with limited functions (recording their activities with a series of pluses and minuses); that the syntax of a finite-state automata was descriptive of the symbolic order.

Here we revisit the ideas of McCulloch and Pitts whose concept of neural feedback systems which links the biological function of thinking with the function of mechanical computation.

Odd or Even?

Lacan, in his analysis of Edgar Allan Poe’s The Tale of the Purloined Letter, and in his lecture on Cybernetics and the Unconscious, discussed Von Neumann & Morgenstern's Game Theory and Economic Behaviour; the game of odds & evens (which is discussed in both Poe’s story and in Von Neumann & Morgenstern's book). Lacan also described the relation of both of these things to a “second guessing” finite state automata (similar to Shannon & Hagelbarger’s SEER) in order to outline the tendency of symbolic apparatus to produce patterns which are independent of human thought and which are nevertheless able to enter the symbolic order.

Poe's Purloined Letter

In Seminar II, Lacan analyses Edgar Allan Poe’s The Purloined Letter, in which the game of ones and twos features: “The human subject doesn't foment this game" Lacan states, "he takes his place in it, and plays the role of the little pluses and minuses in it. He is himself an element in this chain which, as soon as it is unwound, organises itself in accordance with laws. Hence the subject is always on several levels, caught up in crisscrossing networks.”[2]

Lacan Builds a Circuit

Three elements of Lacan’s cybernetic discourse emerge in this chapter:

(a) that the introduction of the symbolic into the domain of the real produces a circuit between signs, things and subjects
(b) Lacan stresses the centrality of probability; the precedents for this, the “conjectural sciences” of the 1600s which studied ratios of difference and
(c) simple choice establishes a difference which establishes and consolidates order.

The chapter concludes with a comparison between Lacan and Bateson's approach to psychoanalysis. Lacan sought to rehabilitate Freud in the cybernetic era whilst Bateson sought to dismiss Freudianism and other “introspective”, “epistemologically outmoded” methods of psychoanalysis. But, in their approach to psychoanalysis and psychiatry via cybernetics Bateson and Lacan also share a lot in common. Both attempt to bring the psychic apparatus in line with the technical standards of the day; both recognise Freud’s model of the human psyche as conditioned by a nineteenth-century emphasis on entropy (the postponement and inhibition of discharge); both recognise that language is exterior to and constitutive of the subject; both recognise regulation of system relies on the cycling of information through the circuit; that the subject is constituted within the threshold of restraints; both see organism and servomechanism as having a homological relation to each other – they have the same structure, they organise in the same way. Their respective ideas of the “subject” are also remarkably similar.

THE STRUCTURAL DIFFERENTIAL (The Anthropometre)

Why “The Map is NOT the Territory”

Korzybski’s Structural Differential (Anthropometre) (1924) is a “plastic diagram” and thought experiment which, in Korzybski’s theory of General Semantics, modelled the relation between an object-event and the human nervous system. The core ideas developed by Polish mathematician Count Alfred Korzybski were used by Gregory Bateson and William S. Burroughs to articulate their own theories of communication. As readers of Korzybski, Burroughs and Bateson grappled with the implications of Korzybski’s time binding theory and the implications of confusing different levels of abstraction. While Burroughs sought to scramble and willfully hack the mechanisms of time binding, Bateson adopted aspects of the theory to conduct his own assault on the “errors of occidental epistemology”.

Bateson adapted Korzybski’s term “the map is not the territory” to illustrate his own theory of communication and ecology. Both Korzybski and Bateson held that the distortions arising from category confusion was at the root of a general epistemological crisis.

THE ELECTROPSYCOMETER (The E-Meter)

Time-Binding and Time-Scrambling

The E-Meter (Electropsycometer) was used in scientology auditing sessions. The E-Meter was ostensibly a polygraph which registers a subject’s reaction to a series of questions; the galvanic charge produced by each response is picked up by two metal cans held by the subject. The occult narrative of scientology sits in isomorphic relation to Burroughs’ text Electronic Revolution. In this chapter I establish a relation between the E-meter, the Structural Differential and the tape recorder. When it was first developed, The Structural Differential used a Pavlovian technique of stimulus-response to help people diagnosed as schizophrenic understand different levels of abstraction. In Electronic Revolution Burroughs advocates the use of the tape recorder as a form of radical software which confuses levels of abstraction, as a means of unbinding the subject from time. As a piece of tactical media Electronic Revolution flings Dianetics and General Semantics into an unexpected alliance.

In line with Lacan and Bateson, it is at the level of syntax that the bedrock of consciousness is formed. For Burroughs the control system of language can be subverted, in the first instance, by media tactics which scramble the code of language that anchors humans to permanent identity.

THE HOMEOSTAT

Steps Towards a (Media) Ecology

We will consider various ecological models and consider how Gregory Bateson’s cybernetic ecology is best suited to translation into the philosophy of emergent media ecologies.

THE PORTAPAK: SONY VIDEOROVER DV-2400 (1967)

The Fabulous Loop de Loop

Video artist Roy Skodnick: “Anyone who happened to get hold of a portable video system at the time immediately overloaded on circuits, playback, feedback and fabulous loop de loop”

The title of this chapter The Fabulous Loop-de-Loop, is a phrase attributed to the video artist Frank Gillette. The term is used to describe the the environment produced by the combination of people and a portable video unit. In the late 1960s, such systems encouraged participants to understand that they are part of a larger cybernetic system (an ecology). Use of portable video equipment coincided with the emergence of an aesthetic movement which incorporated a number of technologies (lights, video, film, drugs) to produce an immersive environment. At the same time, and within the same culture, the portable video unit was also used as a tool for therapy and self-enhancement.

The term ‘media ecology’ was developed in the pages of Radical Software in the early 1970s. Gregory Bateson's ideas were seminal to the development of the discourse of video art and video activism in the late 1960s and early 1970s. When artistic practice and discourse adopted ideas of self-reflexivity and radical mediality the influence Bateson was apparent. The magazine Radical Software provided a forum for discussion, the decimation of information and the formulation of media theory as well as a platform for established writers and theorists. At the same time these groups adopted technologies which proposed new systems of social organisation and new approaches to self understanding through video therapy.

As a therapeutic tool the Portapak can be understood as an extension of earlier therapeutic technologies, such as Korzybski’ s Structural Differential [3] Like the Portapak, the Structural Differential afforded a high degree of reflexivity and required the user to consider their place within a larger system. The Structural Differential had the specific function of helping the user realise that human communication involves the management of different levels of abstraction (a method derived from Russell-Whitehead’s theory of logical types). The theory of types also provided the basis for Gregory Bateson and the Palo Alto research group who developed double-bind theory from 1954.

Double Bind to Video Therapy

Three significant issues arose from the work of Bateson’s Palo Alto research group which have a bearing on the development of the video culture of the late 1960s and early 1970s.

  1. The development of family therapy (which seeks to identify cyclical patterns of family interaction through group work)
  2. The development of double-bind theory (which has its origins in the conflict of levels of abstraction) and
  3. The use of film and video in the execution and analysis of family therapy sessions – which allows for the generalisation of video therapy (it can be used by anyone as a therapeutic tool).

Video therapy followed a tradition of self-reflexive therapy and breaks the duality between self and environment. Such cybernetic bio-feedback devices, as used by tactical media pioneers TVTV, Ant Farm and Radical Software, propose new social-technical-media ecologies. Feedback technologies including the Porta Pak and closed-circuit TV – which promised new forms of social organisation as well as new forms of therapy – can be seen in direct relation to the post-Freudian, cybernetic theories of Bateson and Lacan and the reflexive therapies of Korzybski and Stack-Sullivan.

Double Bind's Double life

This chapter will consider how the ideas of Gregory Bateson interweave different strands through the culture of the late 1960s

  1. In the field of therapy – an emphasis on group therapy and the double bind
  2. In the field of aesthetics – an emphasis on self-reflexivity, process and context specific forms of art
  3. Within the counterculture – proposing a cybernetic epistemology and [media] ecology.

A brief analysis of R.D. Laing's application of the double bind and Frank Gillette's consideration of different levels of abstraction closes the fabulous loop de loop.

To conclude… such practices promised something beyond the divided or decentred self of post-Freudian post-cybernetic psychoanalysis and psychiatry. Through realigning feedback technologies with media-ecological feedback systems it offered a reunion with the continuity of nature. It offers a “place” within a wholistic ecology in which the lines between media, psychic and biological ecologies can no longer be drawn.

  1. Grey Walter
  2. Lacan Seminar II
  3. and the Galvometer (which was used in the psychoanalysis of Jung).