The book is printed handsomely, and I would buy others in this series, particularly the volume of Derrida's.
Further, Virilio offers genuine insight into the dangers of a hyper-connected global economy. He should be perhaps be read as an anti-technocracy/pro-regulation thinker of merit.
That's as far as my attempt at positivity re Paul Virilio goes.
Like Baudrillard, but without that writer's incontestable eloquence, Virilio charges confidently and glibly into and beyond the horizons of various contemporary techniques.
Yet when it comes to futurism, to network theories, to medicine, to pure science, to technoscience, to his misreading and/or wholesale appropriation of Stiegler, to style, to weight, to arc...
When it comes to all that makes a book of theory either deeply challenging but deeply rewarding in detailed analysis that leads to gestalt theory (Stiegler, Derrida, Deleuze, Negarestani, Serres) or zany and discipline-jumping but surprisingly tight in logic and rewarding in novel insight into the human condition (Bataille, Baudrillard, Foucault, Latour)...
Here, exactly and always where it counts, Virilio comes up short.
My overall response is that we must *stop acting as if techno-science is reversible, or as if we should even desire its reverse*.
Every aspect of human life is moving faster, and we can't go back. Do I hate and fear this? Or do I, like Bataille during World War II, follow Nietzche and refuse to be constrained by the simplicity of what-has-come-before? (Though knowing, via Stiegler [via Heidegger], that all we are is built of what came before?)
Science is faster now, and it is beholden to, funded by, and defined by technological innovation. Coupled together, pure science and technological innovation produce cures for terrible diseases, cleaner fuels, and so forth--not only a parade of bombs. These are truisms even a young child can understand, but Virilio, in his haste (*haste*, in a book lambasting speed!) to destroy the bombs, forgets.
His may be a noble impulse, I don't know; it's deeply conservative, whatever it is: He bashes sexuality, all technological progress, and all global inter-connectivity.
But I'm straying too far from the text. Here are just a few choice lowlights from Virilio's attempt to scare us out of the future:
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First chapter: Virilio bashes something he terms "extreme science." But I'm not sure that the first computer-assisted suicide is in the least confusing, unethical, or extreme. A similar man in the Iron Age would have used a sword, I supposed, or waited for cancer to consume him, horribly. A man in the Magdelenian would have thrust himself before the goring antlers of the reindeer or the horn of the rhino. He would have died, if he aimed to. His will, via whatever technique was available to him in his technical milieu, would have triumphed. (This "extreme science" suicide is one of the only examples given in the entire book of a genuine consequence of globalization/technoscientific acceleration/generalized "extreme"-ness.)
P 54: What characterizes a "genuine discovery," and what distinguishes this type of scientific result from other (disingenuous?) discoveries?
P 8: Virilio borrows heavily from Stiegler: Loss of time intervals, endless feedback... Is the ultimate fear of a technoscientific complex always arriving too early, before anything's actually happened?--I'm talking about genetics: We are afraid of *cancer cures* we haven't made yet!
P 34: *Who* is the mysterious geneticist whom Virilio attacks? Why not name him? I don't think it's very relevant or useful to cite a string of science fictions, Hiroshima, and assisted suicide (which I believe has been convincingly argued for) and conclude that mankind is screwed. Stiegler very rigorously engages with the entire phenomenological tradition, with raw data about Internet usage and television ownership, with fact and theory. He concludes that mankind is potentially screwed, and he sets forth specific educational steps to help us get un-fucked. Stiegler never resorts to fearmongering. He engages with other thinkers and doesn't claim to have a comprehensive understanding of biotechnology or information science (though he certainly must have the latter).
P 26: What does Virilio mean when he says we are pressured to "like" the Internet? We are not pressured; we do like it! It's a useful set of tools. Old people like it. Kids like it. Like the set of tools we call the motor car, it is both good and bad, expeditious and dangerous. Attention spans are shortening as we are becoming smarter in the quasi-autistic sense, at compiling vividly and efficiently raw sets of data, through cyber-interaction. Virilio has nothing new or useful to add here.
P 32: Is Virilio serious in his attack on human cloning, on a nonexistent industry, on a technique used for medical science--in short, on the promise of tissue regeneration and organ growth? Which would drive the terrible organ harvesters out of business? Is he serious? He can't be serious...
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And that's where I stopped bothering to type up my disgust.
In conclusion, Virilio's represents the most dangerous and disingenuous type of science communication, which is faux- or pseudo-communication. He knows just enough to throw doomsday together with some borrowed verve. He is no Baudrillard, who dreamed much bigger and in brighter colors.
In some ways, perhaps Virilio is the Right-wing doppelgänger of critic Mark Dery, who backs up his essays on tech-related, often specifically American fears with data and logic, and who, most importantly--like Nietzche and Bataille and Baudrillard and the other good futurists before him--writes with a grim but recognizable sense of humor, always.
We cannot know the future. But we can at least laugh, at our ignorance and our continually hope, like Charlie Brown teeing up to kick the football out of Lucy's tergiversating hands...