Limited, Inc.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
The Murder of Fred Hampton: lessons for the ICE age
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
Two errors in the reading of Marx
Nothing reminds me so much of Swift’s Tale of the Tub as the disputes between different schools of Marxism.
Friday, June 06, 2025
between the influencing machine and the public toilet
The recent revelation, obliquely nudged into the limelight by Trump, that Biden was executed by unknown persons and replaced with a robot double should make the old Freudians among us ponder the old old story of a classic paper by Victor Tausk, one of Freud’s rebellious disciples: On the Origins of the Influencing Machine in Schizophrenia. His paper first appeared in the International Journal of Medical Psychoanalysis in 1919. It has since had an interesting history, in tandem with the often disputed facts in the Tausk case.
Sunday, June 01, 2025
The death of the ass: the equilibrium point and you
Buridan’s ass would doubtless have hated the internet. The same old blues, he’d think, multiplied infinitely. Or perhaps, and this is the bet every Internet marketer and Google stockholder makes, he would have loved it, as craving becomes an addiction to choice. We begin by looking for the cheapest price, and we end by spending hours looking at Airbnb pictures and commenting on how they could possibly thought that photographing a corner of the bathroom was of any interest to the curious renter.
This is, at least, my experience. I become more asslike as I realize that possible worlds are unfolding before me in cosmic vistas, that one of my childhood dreams – invisibly entering a house – is being realized on a frightening scale, and I have merely to put the cursor on another link to send another shot to whatever part of my brain that is dedicated to invidious comparisons. However, there’s a point, a sad point, in which the whole expedition upon which I have embarked – to find, say, a cheap Airbnb in X – begins to lose its purpose, in which the best price, or the best looking rental, or the best location, or the best references, loses its practical side, because nothing, it turns out, is exactly, every jot and tittle, what I want, even if, before I began the expedition, my desires were of a vagueness… It becomes, instead, an indicator of more – of the “there must be more” that so often besets the poor commoditized consumer, in fatal foreplay with his own want-y self.
John Buridan, like any medieval worth his tomes, left behind a considerable amount of text. However, there is no textual anchor in that corpus for the ass story, although there are plenty other paradoxes. The story goes like this: an ass is driven to stand between two exactly similar bales of hay. If we suppose that the ass simply acts on a calculation that serves to maximize his desire, he would find no reason to prefer one to the other. Thus, he would continually stand there, calculating, until he starved to death.
Buridan apparently used this parable orally, when teaching his students, and it was passed down after he died so that it was known to Spinoza, who is one of the first to mention the story.
Crucially, the ass is between two parity products. Two bales of hay that are composed of just the kind of saliva inducing stuff that donkey’s crave. The donkey has found a strange spot in the human universe, an equilibrium spot, where there is no more reason to chose bale “a” then to chose “b”. Being a mule calculator, an asinus economicus, the mule has obviously read up on ranked preferences and is way ahead of Kenneth Arrow on the impossibility of the three candidate rank ordering, at least if we are to satisfy certain classical criteria, such as Pareto optimality.
Buridan’s ass has spawned, as such things do, a whole subliterature in philosophy. Many return to Spinoza’s analysis in Ethics II, 49:
“I am quite ready to admit, that a man placed in the equilibrium described (namely, as perceiving nothing but hunger and thirst, a certain food and a certain drink, each equally distant from him) would die of hunger and thirst. If I am asked, whether such an one should not rather be considered an ass than a man; I answer, that I do not know, neither do I know how a man should be considered, who hangs himself, or how we should consider children, fools, madmen, etc.”
Spinoza’s suggestion that the equilibrium state is kin to such extra-rational states as childhood or madness could be seen as a throwing up of his hands – a narrowing of the anthropological interest, of the human all too human. But I take it as something other than a philosophical defeat; to me, this signals a moment in the history of philosophy: a transformation of what used to the whole goal and morality of the sage’s exercise in refusing to want, in ascesis.
Spinoza and the tradition after him has tended to treat Buridan’s paradox as a problem to be solved, rather than a counterfactual about the natural history of reason. In fact, no ass has starved to death in front of two exactly similar hay bales. No human being has died of thirt confronted with two bottles of coke. There are no corpses at the equilibrium point. So the question, to my mind, should be about the reasons that reason does not lock up here. The lack of corpses at the equilibrium point suggests that calculative reason has a broader sense of its place in the world than we, who want to have division of cognitive labor first, recognize as philosophers. It is a point Vico later makes against what he calls the geometrical method in philosophy, which ignores natural history and the fact that understanding and conceptual analysis are, in fact, accompanied by the imagination, which is not controlled by, but rather precedes, calculation.
So much for the philosophical point. The broader point, here, is cultural: The older image of the sage, whose wisdom – a practical wisdom, since it was a method that applied to the way the sage lived – was about doing with less, diminishing the harsh claims of desire. This image of ascesis emerged in a world where the Malthusian constraints were harsh and inelastic. This was a world that was overwhelmingly agricultural, where the peasant was the vastly greater portion of the population. Spinoza’s text is an prefigures the lifting of those limits – the end, in the broad sense, of the ancien regime.
With the lifting of those limits (which we call modernization, even though the population of Europe and the U.S. was, until the beginning of the 20th century, still largely taken up with agriculture), with the era of the mass production of goods, the terms of choice changed. Never again such hay-bale innocence! In the new superstores, in Sears or in Zola’s Au Bonheur des Dames, the question of choice was radically, quantitatively changed – and with that change came an inalterable shift in the meaning and construction of the equilibrium point. The new Buridan question was about calculating over seemingly endless goods, such as had never been considered by ass nor human. These choices seemed, to the economist of the twentieth century, to signal a great change in the class-defined social structure – from Capital versus Labor we move smoothly to consumers, one and all. Of course, we who are on the ground floor, out there in the Dollar Store, know better. We can see the 75,000 dollar sports car in all its glory on TV, but we buy the used Honda. More than that – to fill our idle hours, we are flooded with oceans of tat, and with a deluge of images that makes attention itself a resource.
Which gets us to the internet, where all purchases seem, at a click, possible, and where the old foraging habit dies a squalid death in front of the omnipresent screen. It is in these new terms that the old equilibrium point has been transformed into something like a trance point. This is not just a matter of the internet – there’s an old phrase from the fifties, highway hypnosis (now known as Driving without Attention Mode, or DWAM), in which a certain automatism creeps over the subject as the subject racks up miles on a highway that has been designed to maximize uniformity. Oddly enough, the same result comes about from maximized non-uniformity – from the variety to which every internet site, every ad, strives. For there lurks, behind them, the same parity products, the same routine. And so the internet voyager of the cable tv mook becomes, at some point, immured in an equilibrium point that is as powerful as that mythically affecting Buridan’s ass. And so it is that the Walmart forager, the Amazon shopper, the Fandango moviegoer, the Youtuber, man and ass, feel, as they go through the routine, vaguely life-drained, exhausted from choices and yet somehow unable to resist looking for the next choice. On and on it goes, years and years it goes on. We have to stop, but we can’t stop.
Hee-haw.
Thursday, May 29, 2025
“How would I know?”
“How would I know?”
This is the question at the crossroads of method and
scepticism. To treat it as a question with the stress on the word “how” generates
one story; but stressing the whole phrase – putting in doubt its ordinary function
as a question – generates another story.
If we actually take that latter choice as the choice of scepticism,
the philosophical thing to do is to ignore its tone and attend simply to its substance
– the challenge to certainty. And all respect to that!
Yet to ignore its tone is to abandon too much that is
philosophically pertinent to simple “literature”, as though this were all a
naturally different field than philosophy, poetry and not proposition. Poetry,
too, is proposition. Obliquely, by hide and seek. Because this is a
challenge that takes the guise of a jeer. And that jeering tone is, I’d say,
the glory and the downfall of scepticism.
In the Oxford English dictionary, the etymology of the word
jeer is called uncertain, although there is a notion that it might come from gieren,
to bray, to shout. That is slender evidence to connect the jeer to the donkey,
but I am nothing if not a bold jumper.
The ass has long had a place in the philosopher’s gallery of
figures. Apuleius’s ass – the man transformed into a donkey; Bruno’s ass;
Nietzsche’s ass. An honorable dishonorable procession. The donkey’s bray is an
emblematic characteristic, and on the down low, the male donkey’s penis is
supposed to be an extraordinary instrument. The jeering tone of “how would I
know” leads us to an interesting down-low form of scepticism, in which the
assertion of knowledge is seen through as an assertion – that is, a performance
of privilege and authority. When Descartes saves the world by building on one
certainty, the sceptical donkey laughs at the idea of “saving” the world, and the
self-amplifying presupposition that the world is a thing that one can save. And
yet, there is a scepticism that goes farther and says: why not?
2.
The buffoon and the ass keep turning up together, as though
the deck of achetypes that lies, face down, under our electric
prestidigitator’s fingers were a crooked pack.
According to Frances Yates’ Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic
Tradition, Apuleius, the author of the Golden Ass (that book of transmutations
through which the transcendentally ludicrous is finally given shape and form by
Psyche’s quest for Cupid) was, by the fourth century A.D., credited with the
translation of the corpus of Hermes Trismegistus. These were the books that
were supposedly written before Moses was a pup, and they were wildly popular in
the Renaissance. Cosimo de Medici hired Ficino to translate the Greek Corpus
Hermeticum in 1462, as the manuscript containing it had turned up by way of a
traveling monk, Leonardo da Pistoia - instructing him to interrupt the
Plato translation project, as the Corpus Hermeticum was urgent. Cosimo wanted
to read the thing before he died. Such was its prestige, such is the greed for
‘secret’ knowledge. By the time of Bruno, a century later, the C.H. had lost
something of its allure, vis a vis the regular scholarly world, but had
continued to be central to the system of Renaissance magic, which operated in
the hidey holes, intersecting, as secret knowledge always seems to, with
intelligence agencies and diplomacy.
Bruno, of course, was interested in magic, as were members
of Raleigh’s School of Night that he made the acquaintance of in his London
sojourn. In the group picture of the founding fathers of the modern era, all
lined up like Dutch masters, we usually have Bacon, Galileo and Descartes
– Bruno is left out. And the reason that he is left out is that he was just too
damned interested in that f-fuckin magic. Yet in reality – that promiscuous
bitch, my darling - Bruno can’t be left out. In that grave company, Bruno was a
buffoon – a necessary joker, the philosopher-buffoon who keeps returning, in
some dark orbit according to some dark cycle of its own, to put into disarray
the white magic of Bacon, Galileo and Descartes. To play Rameau’s nephew to
Diderot, to play the neurotic bachelor Kierkegaard to Hegel’s monument to the
state to come. To throw a few boomerangs around, liven the joint up, and
raise, if possible, everybody’s level of anxiety and hope, the two intricately
counter-weighted against each other.
In Dorothy Waley
Singer’s life of Bruno there’s an anecdote about Bruno’s childhood that
reads as though some bit of Pyrrho’s life in Diogenes Laertes had waited until the
era of Rebirth to show itself again:
Bruno gives in his greatest Latin work, the De
immenso, [4] a description of an episode in childhood, which made a
deep impression on him. His home was in a hamlet just outside Nola, on the
lower slopes of Cicada, a foot-hill of the Appenines some twenty miles east of
Naples. [5] He tells with affectionate detail of the beauty and fertility of
the land around, overlooked from afar by the seemingly stern bare steeps of
Vesuvius. One day a suspicion of the deceptiveness of appearances dawned on the
boy. Mount Cicada, he tells us, assured him that "brother Vesuvius"
was no less beautiful and fertile. So, girding his loins, he climbed the
opposite mountain. "Look now," said Brother Vesuvius, "look at
Brother Cicada, dark and drear against the sky." The boy assured Vesuvius
that such also was his appearance viewed from Cicada. "Thus did his
parents [the two mountains] first teach the lad to doubt, and revealed to him
how distance changes the face of things." So in after-life he interprets
the experience and continues: "In whatever region of the globe I may be, I
shall realize that both time and place are similarly distant from me."
From how would I know to how would I know, we’ve rounded the
stresses, here, in this devotion without a real beginning or end.
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
Two sacks
Chekhov’s story, Gusev, gives us an account of the people in
the hold of a steamship heading from the Pacific Northeast of Russia home to,
most likely, the Black Sea. The people in the hold are very sick. The hold is a
stifling place, and they are coughing and lying around and playing cards and
dying. Gusev is one of them. Formerly an orderly for an officer, he is going back
to, optimally, rest and recuperate in his village.
But this happens to him:
“He dozed, and murmured in his sleep, and, worn out with
nightmares, his cough, and the stifling heat, towards morning he fell into a
sound sleep. He dreamed that they were just taking the bread out of the oven in
the barracks and he climbed into the stove and had a steam bath in it, lashing
himself with a bunch of birch twigs. He slept for two days, and at midday on
the third two sailors came down and carried him out.”
Normally in a story there are two forms of reporting. There
is the report from the outside of what happens, or there is the report from
some personality, some point of view, about what happens. In the former case the
hint of subjectivity can stem from what Pasolini, following the linguists,
called Free Indirect Discourse, where one feels that the objective report is
actually correspondent to some ruling subjectivity. But in Gusev, what happens,
in that sentence, is a sort of sweep between the two modes of reporting. An
astonishing shift. In that shift, the
story lights up the impossibility of using our ordinary dualism to account for
the real. The real is something other than both. The totality of our experience
must include the things we must have experienced and yet don’t experience. These
include birth and sleeping and death. And even dreams – for what and who is
experiencing the dream? We spill out.
And eventually we are carried out. Whether that is done by
orderlies in a hospital, sailors on a ship, or emaciated slaves in a
concentration camp, we are carried out. There’s always a crime scene and always
a crime – our deaths. Though death might be the law, it is also the crime.
To me, the death of Gusev seems more frightening in its
matter of factness than the death of Ivan Ilyich. Gusev was written in 1890,
and Tolstoy’s novella was published in 1888. In the novella, the death itself
begins like this:
“For all three days, in the course of which there was no
time for him, he was thrashing about in that black sack into which an
invisible, invincible force was pushing him.”
And here’s the end:
"So that's it!" he suddenly said aloud. "What
joy!" For him all this happened in an instant and the significance of that
instant never changed. For those present, his agony went on for . two more
hours. Something- gurgled in his chest; his emaciated body kept twitching. Then
the gurgling and wheezing gradually subsided. "It's finished!"
someone said over him. He heard those words and repeated them in his soul.
"Death is finished," he said to himself. "It is no more."
He drew in air, stopped at midbreath, stretched out, and died.”
There is a sack in Chekhov’s story too.
“He was sewn up in sailcloth and to make him heavier they
put with him two iron weights. Sewn up in the sailcloth he looked like a carrot
or a radish: broad at the head and narrow at the feet.”
The story of the story is that Chekhov, on the ship back
from Sakhalin Island, had seen some sailors buried at sea. He wrote about that
in a letter – Chekhov is one of the great letter writers – and thus the details
of the burial were, as it were, at hand. Yet something else happens to Gusev,
in as much as we identify the corpse with Gusev. Tossed with iron weights into
the sea, the package sinks. Until this happens.
“Then he was met by a shoal of the fish called harbour
pilots. Seeing the dark body the fish stopped as though petrified, and suddenly
turned round and disappeared. In less than a minute they flew back swift as an
arrow to Gusev, and began zig-zagging round him in the water.
After that another dark body appeared. It was a shark. It
swam under Gusev with dignity and no show of interest, as though it did not
notice him, and sank down upon its back, then it turned belly upwards, basking
in the warm, transparent water and languidly opened its jaws with two rows of
teeth. The harbour pilots are delighted, they stop to see what will come next.
After playing a little with the body the shark nonchalantly puts its jaws under
it, cautiously touches it with its teeth, and the sailcloth is rent its full
length from head to foot; one of the weights falls out and frightens the
harbour pilots, and striking the shark on the ribs goes rapidly to the bottom.”
It seems to be a cliché in Chekhov criticism that Chekhov’s
long story, A Dreary Story, was written as a sort of response to The Death of
Ivan Ilyich. But one cat can leap on a ball of yarn in a number of ways – and a
writer can bang on a motif and make a different sound with each thump.
Myself, I am interested in the difference between the two
sacks. I think it is noteworthy. Ivan Ilyich has, during his life, surely seen
sacks. But given his position, these were surely sacks toted by servants and peasants
He is not of the sack toting class.
The sailor’s sheet in which Gusev is wrapped, on the other
hand, would have seemed familiar to the experience of Gusev alive, who as a
lowly soldier would have toted many sacks. There was labor in the sack Gusev
ends up in. The black sack into which Ivan Ilyich is being pushed, in contrast,
was not something that responded to his muscle memory.
The sailor’s sheet into which Gusev is sewn has all the
fragility of the products of hasty human labor. The shark rips it effortlessly,
and the iron weights inside go vainly plunging down into the depths. It was not
simply invisible forces that had stuck Gusev in that sack, it was two sailors,
and it is not invisible forces that release him, but a hungry shark. Yet the
sack, however misshapen and mistreated, is ultimately the product of a symbolic
social process. Although the emaciated corpse of Gusev could have simply been tossed
overboard, it got, instead, a proper funeral. Not a glorious one, but at least
the effort was made. The sack, due to this, has a certain pathos.
Pathos is what is aimed for in Tolstoy’s phrase: “For him
all this happens in an instant and the significance of that instant never changed.”
I am not trying to hold up Chekhov as a better artist to
criticize Tolstoy. I merely want to point out that in the move from the mindforged
black sack of Tolstoy to the sailors sheet into which Gusev’s remains were
entrusted, we are moving between two distinct visions of mortality. The sacred,
in the end, was always an aspiration and an abstraction of Tolstoy, while for Chekhov,
there is an irreducible aura around the detail. And that is a form of the
sacred that I am much more inclined to trust.
Tuesday, May 27, 2025
the catastrophe of the American party system
Obama once said, “my policies are so mainstream that if I said them in the 1980s, I’d be considered a moderate Republican.”
The Murder of Fred Hampton: lessons for the ICE age
I saw the Stanley Nelson's The Black Panthers: vanguard of the revolution documentary last night, and thus have the police death squads ...

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You can skip this boring part ... LI has not been able to keep up with Chabert in her multi-entry assault on Derrida. As in a proper duel, t...
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LI feels like a little note on politics is called for. The comments thread following the dialectics of diddling post made me realize that, ...
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In messing around in the vaults – the vaults under the surface of history and literature, as per the posts of last week - LI recently came...