In so far that there is social control, something or someone must arbitrate it. — thewonder
I question the mechanical metaphor.
Consider a river that has a course, and we see that the course changes by the oxbow lakes and so on, but the course is stable over a lifetime, most of the time. But there is a day of revolution when the bank is breached and the meander is short-circuited. There is no who and no apparatus either. The river operates on itself, and the river is the water and the course. A river is never broken.
Machinations are appropriate to political thought because thought is mechanical; but life is not. — unenlightened
The machine teaches you how to generate the rhythm, though. — thewonder
Yeah, well, tell that to Foucault and the likes. Apparently, the apparatus is in all of our lives. — Caldwell
The analogy to a physical machine is apt, though. As you noted, machines breakdown, and so do political structures. Machines can function like well-oiled, and so can societal systems. After a while, it is self-regulated.But if one lives in a machine and according to the machine, one lives a mechanical life - an oxymoronic non-life. But for all its potent impotence, it remains an anological construction and human relations are not mechanical relations except by performance. The scientific urge is to understand and control the world in mechanical terms, but there is nothing mechanical about understanding. The mechanical analogy is so pervasive, it sounds rather 'woo' to question it. But there is no evidence - gotta love the science-speak - that the world operates mechanically; on the contrary, there is much evidence that even machines do not: they breakdown precisely because they lack the caring relation to the world, as does thought. — unenlightened
So, human interactions can be designed, controlled, and maintained such that the apparatus is not felt, or known. — Caldwell
But this conversation is out of control, because there are no statistics about who will convince whom of what, or what novel idea will perhaps be born of our interaction. — unenlightened
And again, you are exhibiting the perfect subject syndrome. You are acting exactly how the structures are designed. — Caldwell
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