Getting Nowhere Fast: A Teleological Conception of Socio-Technical Acceleration
Getting Nowhere Fast: A Teleological Conception of Socio-Technical Acceleration
Getting Nowhere Fast: A Teleological Conception of Socio-Technical Acceleration
Thomas Sutherland
The University of Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
It has been frequently recognized that the perceived acceleration of life that has
been experienced from the Industrial Revolution onward is engendered, at least
in part, by an understanding of speed as an end in itself. There is no equilibrium
to be reached no perfect speed and as such, social processes are increasingly
driven not by rational ends, but by an indeterminate demand for acceleration
that both defines and restricts the decisional possibilities of actors. In
Aristotelian terms, this is a final cause i.e. a teleology of speed: it is not a
defined end-point, but rather, a purposive aim that predicates the emergence of
possibilities. By tracing this notion of telos from its beginnings in ancient Greece,
through the ur-empiricism of Francis Bacon, and then to our present epoch, this
paper seeks to tentatively examine the way in which such a teleology can be
theoretically divorced from the idea of historical progress, arguing that the
former is premised upon an untenable ontological privileging of becoming.
Keywords
becoming, mediation, progress, speed, teleology
More than a hundred years before it was fully manifest, observes Walter
Benjamin (1999: 394), the colossal acceleration of the tempo of living was
heralded in the tempo of production. And, indeed, in the form of the
machine. Benjamin, who perceives in his study of the increasingly decrepit
Corresponding author:
Thomas Sutherland, School of Culture and Communication, John Medley Building, The University of
Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia.
Email: thomas.sutherland@unimelb.edu.au
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arcades of Paris a gradual compression of space and time that could only be
understood as a symptom of the process of modernization, was one of the
rst to detect a phenomenon now widely recognized: that time appears to be
accelerating. Just as importantly, he views this acceleration as a product of
the increasingly mechanical technicity of the industrial era. In our present
epoch, however, it is not so much industrial machinery as the digital processing and transmission of information that informs our temporal
rhythms.
What I wish to argue in this paper is that in order to understand this
acceleration, as well as posit alternatives to it, we must think it in teleological terms. That is, rather than viewing speed as a goal in itself, it must be
viewed as a nal cause that determines our understanding of such goals.
Speed is not the end of a process, but is the ground upon which that process
is predicated. What this means is that progress being the aiming for specic, calculated goals can be divorced from the blind acceleration that we
presently experience. In order to avoid naturalizing the blurring of perception caused by acceleration (Virilio, 2008: 116), it is imperative that we are
able to argue that progress and acceleration are not synonymous, and
I believe that this can best be achieved through a teleological understanding
of this demand for speed.
Aristotelian teleology
In the Phaedo (2010: 142145), Plato launches a rather stringent attack
upon one of his predecessors, Anaxagoras, who was the earliest of the
Athenian philosophers. He initially commends Anaxagoras for developing
a cosmology involving a divine intelligence, designated Nous, that controls
all beings. Yet Plato goes on to criticize him for not properly following such
an argument through to its conclusion. For Anaxagoras is, despite initial
appearances, a fundamentally mechanistic, rather than teleological philosopher. The Nous sets the wheels of creation in motion, producing the initial
motion from which all subsequent causality is formed, but otherwise
remains an entirely external, transcendent force. As such, Plato (2010:
143) views this as a missed opportunity to explain not only the reason for
the existence of the kosmos, but also, the reason why it had to be like that.
As he goes on to argue:
It seemed to me that his position was very much as if someone started by
saying Everything Socrates does, he does mindfully, and then, when he set
out to give the reasons for all the various things I do, he said rst of all that
the reason Im sitting here now is that my body is composed of bones and
sinews, and that the bones are hard and separated from each other by joints,
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while the sinews along with the eshy parts, and the skin that holds everything together cover the bones, and have the capacity to tighten and slacken;
so, with the bones suspended in their sockets, the sinews slacken and
tighten and somehow make me able to bend to bend my legs as Im doing
now and thats the reason why Im sitting here with my legs bent as they are.
(2010: 144)
This belief, that the world is constituted not only on the basis of necessity,
but also for the purpose of fullling a particular end, is what Aristotle
(2001b: 665) terms the nal cause, that for the sake of which a thing
exists. This, along with the formal, material and ecient causes, makes
up one quarter of Aristotles fourfold conception of causality, through
which he seeks to understand the genesis of all objects.
Somewhat counter-intuitively, Aristotle (2001c: 644) suggests that that
cause is the rst which we call the nal one. This is because for him,
every object, whether man-made or natural, contains a telos that, from the
very beginning, is instrumental in its genesis. It is perhaps as a result of
such confusing terminology that this notion is so frequently misunderstood: telos literally means end, in the sense of a purpose, and it is for
this reason that Aristotle refers to a nal cause the term represents the
reason for existence that is imbued in each object. At the same time,
however, this does not simply make the nal cause a goal that is to be
reached, but rather, it implicates nal cause at every point of the objects
existence. Thus, ecient, material and formal cause all presuppose this
initial teleological cause.
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of physical causes hath bred a vastness and solitude in that tract. (Bacon,
2002: 198199)
In other words, Bacon views teleological assumptions as inhibitory to scientic discoveries, because they place arbitrary restrictions upon the nitude of human reason, assuming that by establishing the ends for the sake
of which an object exists, they can come to know all of the causal characteristics of that object. The implication of this that human perception can
exhaust the potentiality of an object seemed antithetical to the Baconian
form of inquiry.
Such an attitude was not conned to this one gure, however, but
became a commonplace amongst Enlightenment philosophers. Rene
Descartes (2003: 122123) proposes that we banish completely from our
philosophy the search for nal causes, for the reason that we should not be
so arrogant as to believe that we can know Gods purposes. His follower
Benedict de Spinoza (1955: 75, 77) likewise suggests that it is due to a
confused and fragmentary understanding of ecient causes that people
come to assume that all things in nature acts as men themselves act,
namely, with an end in view, contending that nature has no particular
goal in view, and that nal causes are mere human gments. John Locke
(2004: 97) argues that it presumes a little too much condence in our own
wisdom to say, I think it best and therefore God hath made it so. Finally,
David Hume, who is of course best known for his scepticism regarding the
capacity for humans to apprehend causality at all, contends:
that all causes are of the same kind, and that in particular there is no foundation for that distinction, which we sometimes make betwixt ecient causes
and causes sine qua non; or betwixt ecient causes, and formal, and material,
and exemplary, and nal causes. (2011: 153)
For these varied thinkers, nal causes are either replaced by, or are seen as
synonymous with what Marshall McLuhan (2011: 22) describes as a uniform time and uniform continuous space in which cause is ecient and
sequential, and things move and happen on single planes and in successive
order.
Yet, it must be noted, not all philosophers of this time opposed teleology
in such a fashion (and in addition, in spite of the quote above, Locke did in
fact support the teleological argument that is, the argument by design
for the existence of God). Bishop George Berkeley (2003: 9293) suggests
that considering the whole creation is the workmanship of a wise and good
Agent, it should seem to become to philosophers to employ their thoughts
(contrary to what some hold) about the nal causes of things. Likewise,
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GW Leibniz (2005: 56) proposes that through God has been obtained the
greatest possible perfection, as He always selects the best possible world.
Yet I would contend that, in spite of these dierences, Enlightenment
philosophy as a whole (with the possible exception of Spinoza) was always
thoroughly teleological, even if it did not always recognize itself as such.
Bacon writes:
let no man upon a weak conceit of sobriety or an ill-applied moderation think
or maintain that a man can search too far, or be too well studied in the
book of Gods word, or in the book of Gods works, divinity or philosophy; but rather let men endeavour an endless progress or procience in both.
(2002: 126)
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Speed as telos
Sunlight was, thinking in broad terms, the very rst medium: not only did it
allow humans to behold the environment they were situated within, but,
without it the Earth would most likely remain a frozen, uninhabitable rock.
From Plato (1993: 244) who observes that in the visible realm, goodness
is the progenitor of light and of the source of light onward, this light has
represented the most universal medium; the unveiling of the very possibility
of truth as a transmittable form. Hegel (1977: 419), for instance, takes light
as being synonymous with Spirit the absolute of Being and the movements of its own externalization, its creations in the unresisting element of
its otherness. Likewise, Martin Heidegger (1962: 51) argues that the
ain0"na or phenomena are the totality of what lies in the light of
day or can be brought to the light, positioning truth explicitly as something
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not dened by ignorance, because we are all aware of its existence; instead,
what we exhibit is a demoralized, hyperaware consciousness that is aicted
with the compulsion to put up with preestablished relations that it nds
dubious, to accommodate itself to them, and nally even to carry out their
business. As Slavoj Zizek (1989: 26) puts it: one knows the falsehood very
well, one is well aware of a particular interest hidden behind an ideological
universality, but still one does not renounce it.
In reecting upon human nature, Cicero (2000: 6), the Roman stoic
philosopher, statesman and orator, writes:
Our starting-point is that all species of living creatures are endowed by nature
with the capacity to protect their lives and their persons, to avoid things likely
to harm them, and to seek out and procure all lifes necessities such as food,
hidden lairs, and the like.
Spinoza (1951: 293) follows and expands this maxim, taking it as axiomatic
that every being strives to preserve its own existence. Unlike for Cicero,
however, this does not appear to be a psychological claim, but instead,
applies to all beings it is simply a reection of his argument that the
essence of an object lies in its power to act (Deleuze, 1988: 127). If a
being did not strive to preserve itself, it would cease to exist, and since he
argues that nothing can be destroyed, except by a cause external to itself
(Spinoza, 1955: 136), this would be an absurdity; likewise, the striving does
not indicate an absence, but rather, is a productive act that allows a being to
exist within a maelstrom of external forces.
This striving, or conatus, must be clearly distinguished from Spinozas
conception of desire. In one of his more abstruse passages, he denes desire
as the actual essence of man, in so far as it is conceived, as determined to a
particular activity by some given modication of itself (Spinoza, 1955:
173). To put this more simply, desire is a human individuals conception
of their own conatus, as modied by the mediation of their environment: it
represents the nitude of such striving. If there were to exist a truly rational
person, their desires would perfectly correspond to their conatus, and as
such, they would presumably live eternally. Unfortunately, our understanding of causality is always limited, and as such, our desires are not always
particularly advantageous. In the case of the network society, the possibility
we must face is that the productive force of our desire no longer exists as the
bastion of human autonomy at the heart of a hostile, silent nature
(Bataille, 1992: 46), but, on the contrary, nds itself harnessed by the
very automated processes that it rst set in motion; the desire for speed is
human, and yet the cause of this desire reaches far beyond the narrow
window of human control.
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Hence the ultimate premise that I wish to put forward: what we see is a
return, or perhaps an amplication, of nal cause: a belief that we, and the
technical objects with which we interact, exist for the purpose of increasingly ecient production. This is not necessarily a conscious belief, and yet,
it is one that is constantly reected in our quotidian interactions. Our restlessness is never sated: as Nietzsche (1996: 374) argues, it is precisely he
who is becoming who cannot endure the state of becoming: he is too impatient for it. This return of teleology is both produced by and entrenches the
logic of network time: the linear chains of cause-and-eect that allow one to
measure ecient causality are increasingly outpaced by the sheer calculative
speed of digital media. This is not to suggest that such ecient causality
no longer exists; it simply recognizes the inability of the human intellect to
apprehend the processes that drive our networked environment.
As a result, the teleology of speed is more than just a metanarrative of
progress; it is a telos of indeterminacy or contingency the utopian future
that drove Enlightenment philosophers is replaced by a distant horizon; one
that only retreats further the faster we get. Speed becomes an end in itself: it
is not a means to a better future, it is a nal cause that infects almost every
element of our mediative environment, built upon a narrative of technological development that has long forgotten the rationale that is, the
terminus of its own existence. This is a teleological nihilism, in which
the violence of speed cannot any longer even promise a better world, all
it can do is oer itself as a means of acceleration towards a future about
which we know little, and hope even less.
In his early work on cybernetics, Norbert Wiener (1954: 4647) argues
that it seems almost as if progress itself and our ght against the increase of
entropy intrinsically must end in the downhill path from which we are
trying to escape. The more we seek to control our environment, he
argues, the more dependent we become upon factors that actually lie outside of our ability to control them. The teleology of speed that I seek to
identify is more than this however: it cannot be understood as progress
because it represents the point at which progress in the sense of humandirected action becomes entirely external to itself. The term cybernetics is
derived from the Greek word "
(steersman), and, in our present
age, what we are losing is the belief that we as humans steer our own
destiny: whereas our distant ancestors found themselves at the mercy of a
hostile, and ultimately uncaring natural environment, we now nd ourselves
working as components within a homeostatic feedback loop that would
increasingly appear to exclude us from its calculative processes.
Whereas for Aristotle (2001a: 770), excellence is a completion, today,
excellence can only be expressed in terms of progress; nality is unthinkable. Having come to terms with the realization that Bacon was more
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indeterminate teleology we see today. As Nick Land (1992: 95) puts it:
[h]umans like to have two ends, and to keep them as distinct as possible;
blessing telos and cursing terminus.
What has become apparent is that the network society engenders a
pathological fear of stasis, and that this translates into a disappearance of
being itself behind the sensory ux of digital media. The belief in progress
has been gradually transformed into an eternal recurrence: as we appear to
creep closer and closer, at least within the sphere of technical production,
towards Nietzsches ideal of absolute becoming, our ability to gauge any
kind of progression is dulled. Rather than being an armation of the world,
and ones life within it, eternal recurrence is perversely transformed into a
fear of the future; a demand to remain within a timeless present. The
notion of eternal return, as Benjamin (1999: 117) percipiently observes,
appeared at a time when the bourgeoisie no longer dared count on the
impending development of the system of production which they had set
going. How can we remain attuned to shifts within our environment
when this change is so rapid that it becomes meaningless?
This is why I nd myself having to disagree with Benjamin Noys (2011:
49) when he argues that a critique of capitalism must begin, not only with
an identication of its contradictions, but with a precapitalist metaphysics
of time as ux, to free us from the stasis of the false image of perpetual
revolution represented by capital. The problem with Noys argument lies in
his assumption that a metaphysics of ux is inherently opposed to the perpetual stasis of capitalism, when one could equally argue that the very
existence of the latter is premised upon ux. As Wolfgang Ernst observes:
In the presence of discrete data, streaming is a metaphorical disguise. But
with accelerated data processing that is faster than what our optical and
acoustic senses can consciously follow, discrete operations have become
able to represent continuous ones, approaching the reality of physical signals
themselves. (2013: 246)
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(1999: 119), makes for an existence that never emerges from the auratic:
the eternal recurrence of the new is, by the very fact of its recurring nature,
not genuinely new; rather, it is the nihilism of a society that, by virtue of its
awareness of its own directionless (or more correctly, the inability to control
its direction), seeks reassurance in a novelty that reects nothing other than
the limited parameters of its own production. To suggest, as Noys does,
that we must return to a genuine metaphysics of ux is to normalize both
the premise that stasis is something to be feared, something inherently
opposed to progress, and the accelerating rhythm of life that is imposed
upon us by machines whose operation does not take into account the limitations of the human body and mind. Instead, perhaps what we need is to
recognize and utilize the stable being of recurrence that lies at the core of
the teleology of speed, and to begin to think the various ways in which we
may carve out sites of agency within this eld of potentiality.
If only McLuhan (1964: 12) had been correct when he stated that [w]ith
instant speed the causes of things began to emerge to awareness again it
would appear that, in fact, the opposite has occurred. The world has
blurred around us as the ecient causality that we have relied upon for
empirical observation from Bacon onward retreats into a realm of microprocessual timing (Ernst, 2013: 58). What we need to recognize, therefore,
is that subordinating being to becoming is nothing more than an expression
of temporal uncertainty: in Nietzsches case, as in ours, it is a misguided
attempt to arm an environment seeing rapid social and technological
acceleration. The primary site of temporal virtuality in the network society
has shifted from the human/world correlate to the contingent processual
relationships between technical objects. The interesting thing about this
deeply entrenched teleology of speed is that it cannot be understood as
simply an expression of human culture, but, instead, is in part the product
of a medial environment that increasingly operates without need for human
operation or intervention.
More accurately, the vectors of this teleology increasingly appear to
emerge from the technological environment within which we are embedded
they prey upon the tendency, so accurately identied by Spinoza, for
people to assume that all things happen for a reason. On the one hand, it
is completely reasonable to speak of the autonomous agency of technical
objects that is, their potential to surprise and dismay us (Bogost, 2012:
51). This is the problem, as Sean Cubitt (2008: 142) observes, with the early
theorizations of technology in Kant and Hegel: for these two philosophers
machines are distinguishable from living creatures because a living creature
is its own teleology, but a machines teleology is always something outside
it. The assumption contained here is that the output of a machine is always
determined by an external human force, and, as such, it ignores the way in
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which such technologies both restrict and enable human agency the
possibility that culture cannot be had without technology nor technology
without culture (Kittler, 2001: 51).
On the other hand, until the possibility of genuine articial intelligence
emerges, these technical objects cannot really be said to have self-dened
ends to suggest otherwise would be to imbue them with an unjustied
capacity for independent reason. Gilbert Simondon notes:
No cultivated man would allow himself speak of things or persons painted on
a canvas as veritable realities with an interior life and a will, good or bad.
Despite this, the cultivated man does allow himself to speak of machines
which threaten mankind, as if he were attributing to these objects a soul
and a separate and autonomous existence which grants them the possession
of feelings and of intentions towards mankind. (1980: 3)
We like to imagine that, since we have created them ourselves, the machines
that we produce and the software that we program work towards human
ends, and yet, these machines operate under a logic that lies entirely outside
the grasp of human intelligence. It is a rational irrationality machines
have no concern for ends, they operate solely on the logic of means. It is
the inherent manipulability of human desire that gives rise to the teleology
of speed: we attribute ends to these technical objects, and, in doing so, we
come to understand the world through a nal cause that is imposed upon us
by machines that have no possibility of conceiving of such a notion.
We view this system in teleological terms because we no longer believe
that we have the ability to control it. Beck (2009: 9) denes risk as the
anticipation of the catastrophe is it any wonder that in an era that oers
us little opportunity to slow down and really think about the decisions we
make, that we would end up having little ability to anticipate anything but
catastrophe? Perhaps the value of Zizeks (1994: 1) contention that it seems
easier to imagine the end of the world than a far more modest change in
the mode of production comes not just from its neat encapsulation of the
intractability of post-Cold War capitalism, but also in its representation of
a society in which the future is thinkable only in terms of destruction. It is as
if the utopian teleology of the Enlightenment has been reversed: today, we
look to the future with fear and uncertainty, rather than hope.
In this context, the indeterminate horizon that forms such a teleology can
be seen as a kind of mythological regression: where the Stoics sought, in the
face of a chaotic environment over which they felt no control, to put faith in
the ultimate telos of providence, today our inability to perceive an end point
leads to the eternally deferred eschatological messianism of speed. Writing
and archiving are concrete discursive practices and are fatal to truth
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To be or to become?
Kittler (2010: 36) argues that [t]here are media because man is (according
to Nietzsche) an animal whose properties are not yet xed: that is, the
process of mediation, at least when specically talking in terms of the
human/world correlate, relies upon the ability of the human body to be
extended by other technologies. This notion, which has its origins in
McLuhans (1964: 51) argument that man in the normal use of technology
(or his variously extended body) is perpetually modied by it, perceives the
body as being a site of eectively limitless potentiality, restricted only by the
technical standards of the technologies that it has at its disposal.
I would not seek to contest this point, nor do I believe it useful to do so.
The antidote to technological determinism, if in fact we need one, does not
lie in a return to essentialism, but rather, in a renewed understanding of the
nitude of the human mind and body in relation to an increasingly dense
technical milieu. To put it simply: just because we can do something, does
not mean that we should do it: the teleology of speed which not only has
its roots in Baconian empiricism, but is woven deeply into the fabric of
post-Platonic metaphysics, with its emphasis upon the acquisition of pure
knowledge appears to have led to a situation in which, as Paul Virilio
(2000: 1) puts it, technological development has developed solely with a
view to the pursuit of limit-performances, to the determent of any eort to
discover a coherent truth useful to humanity. In the face of this, I believe
that we would do well in following Catherine Malabous (2008: 13) contention that securing a true plasticity of the brain means insisting on knowing
what it can do and not simply what it can tolerate.
In distinctly ontological terms, what I see as lacking is an understanding
of immanence between being and becoming: rather than seeking stability in
the privileging of one of these terms, I wonder whether we need to embrace
the aporetic tension between them. In this way, I follow Heideggers (1979:
20) reading of Nietzsche, when he states that [t]hinking Being, will to
power, as eternal return, thinking the most dicult thought of philosophy,
means thinking Being as Time. The lesson of Heraclitus, he goes on to
argue (1979: 22), is that there is not necessarily a contradiction between the
two statements Being is Becoming and Becoming is Being. In viewing
time as the necessary horizon for any investigation into the nature of Being,
Heidegger does not seek to sublate being into becoming, as Hegel (2010: 20)
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