Business as Unusual: Financial Crisis, Computing and Money Machines

Business as Unusual: Financial Crisis, Computing and Money Machines

Date: 
04.02.2012 11:30
Edition: 
2012
Format: 
Conference
Location: 
HKW
Auditorium
confrontaal.org/PW
confrontaal.org/PW

in/compatible systems: Das globale Finanzsystem ist außer Kontrolle, das öffentliche Forum wurde von immerfort arbeitenden, maschinellen Berechnungen ersetzt und der geschwächte Nationalstaat zerbricht unter dem unaufhörlichen Fluss des virtuellen Kapitals. Hier sprechen Experten aus der Wirtschaft, Philosophie, New Media Studies und der Wissenschaftsgeschichte über die Widersprüche, Zusammenbrüche und Inkompatibilitäten unserer Finanzsysteme in der beklagenswerten Zeit des Spätkapitalismus.

in/compatible systems

 

Panel with Orit Halpern (us), Georgios Papadopoulos (gr), Stefan Heidenreich (de) and Ralph Heidenreich (de)
Moderated by Christopher Salter (ca/de)

 

Der Euro ist im Keller, die Staatsverschuldung der USA schraubt sich immer weiter hoch. Die Banken stecken in der Krise, aber der Verkauf von Luxusgütern steigt noch immer! Das globale Finanzsystem ist außer Kontrolle geraten, das öffentliche Forum wurde von immerfort arbeitenden, maschinellen Berechnungen ersetzt und der geschwächte Nationalstaat zerbricht unter dem unaufhörlichen Fluss des virtuellen Kapitals. Welche Wirkung verkörpern die neuen Medien in dieser Zeit der Finanzturbulenzen im Hinblick auf die Erschaffung eines neuartig verwobenen Systems aus Monstern und Mutanten mit Namen wie Quant, Ponzi-Spiel, Derivat und „too big to fail“-Rettungsmaßnamen? In dem Panel Business as Unusual sprechen Experten aus der Wirtschaft, Philosophie, New Media Studies und der Wissenschaftsgeschichte über die Widersprüche, Zusammenbrüche und Inkompatibilitäten unserer Geld- und Finanzsysteme in der beklagenswerten Zeit des Spätkapitalismus.

 

Individual Presentation Descriptions

 

Stefan Heidenreich (de) & Ralph Heidenreich (de)

the money machine.

 

incompatibilities of money creation, trading schemes and network power

without computing and digital media, the financial sphere could never  have become the monster it is. The effects of new media set in at three  points. the creation of money is by itself a simple routine of book-keeping. but  thanks to so-called financial innovations the banks extended it to a  ponzi-scheme of enormous size.
there are estimates that computers and algorithms account for more than  50% of trading. reliable data are difficult to achieve, as conventional  market places have diversified into high-frequency casinos and so called  dark pools.
and last but not least, we witness in fornt of our eyes, how the smaller  institution of the state surrenders itself to the bigger network of the  banks. the transition of sovereignty is marked by the phrase "too big to  fail" which applies to almost all globally active banks.

all these schemes amount to the core incompatibility of how to  snythesize the virtual profits required to keep the money machine alive.

 

Georgios Papadopoulos (gr)

Money Deterritorialized

 

Money is no longer an instrument of national sovereignty. The global financial architecture has liberated circulation from geographical borders and made government control problematic. Crises become universal, but the same does not apply for growth, where voids, in/ compatibilities and blockages in the financial architecture maintain unequal exchange and unfairness in the global division of labour and wealth. How can we understand, criticize and debunk the control of money in this juncture?

 

Dr. Orit Halpern (us)

Paranoid Formations: Rationality and Crisis in Cybernetics

 

This paper historicizes our current discourses of “crisis” by examining how discourses of rationality and paranoia replaced those of crisis to define systemic failure in cybernetics and its related social, cognitive, and communication sciences.

 

While the immediate relationship between “crisis”, computation, and rationality might not be evident, a closer examination reveals otherwise. I demonstrate how, after the War, rationality came to be redefined in game theory and cybernetics as algorithmic, rule bound, and logically representable in a manner that had little to do with reason, consciousness, or autonomous choice, but everything to do with rethinking humans, machines, and systems in terms of communication, control, and information.

 

Counter, however, to our commonly held assumptions, rationality, even in game theory, was often defined as paranoid, dissociated from consciousness, and pathological. Early computer programs demonstrated that only the profiles of paranoid schizophrenics could be programmed, and cybernetically informed psychology studies found rational people the most likely to be brainwashed and become violent. Rationality, then, was a blessing and a curse—a technological opportunity and a self-destructive tactic. Could rationality be affective and logical, paranoid and reasonable, centralized and networked? All at the same time? Designers, social scientists, and engineers all recognized that the more successful you were at building a science of control and communication the greater the risk that systems would internally generate chaotic and self-destructive behavior. Reconciling these dialectics became a fantastical imperative for re-engineering everything from machines to minds; a technical mandate that has fundamentally changed what crisis is, and what the discourse can do.

 

(Image: confrontaal.org/PW)

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