In thinking about the ways that value is created (including literary value, or imaginary ideas like money) I arrived at some thoughts about the ways people pay attention to each other on the Internet. If you want to pay attention to someone on the Internet, thanks to social software and blogging and rss and things like Twitter and wikis, there's a lot of ways to do that, to navigate attention & identity individually and collectively, and to let that be seen in varying degrees. In fact, paying attention to people with people can be done with amazing artistry and skill.
People need complex systems so that they can pay attention to each other indirectly and obliquely through all being attentive to something else they have in common. That thing has to be complicated enough to be worth attention. It might be social justice or the good life or gossip or religion or who is the most popular celebrity and why or who wins the Superbowl and how; or seduction or courtly etiquette or art criticism. Functionally and socially those things are all equivalent. Paying attention is better, the better the quality of the synthesis achieved. Software making is heady as any collective endeavor is because it's about people paying enough attention to the same thing to make the thing happen and a creation of any sort is a logical synthesis of ideas & their practice (it is maybe a result of synthesis on one level but on another it is the synthesis.)
I come to this idea also as I think about how much I want to teach my college composition students about the pleasures of thought that arrives at synthesis. I've also gotten here because my partner just laughed at me and shook his head with disgust when I squeaked "Oooo, I've just reached twitterlibrium!"
Also because it's late at night, I had an overstimulating and hyperproductive day, and can't stop thinking to the point where I fool myself into thinking I'm Barthes or something and can write things like "Praxis is synthesis! Art is the collective attention stream!" and feel profound... without any acid.
Technorati Tags: blogging, communities, complexity, social networks
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