Date: Fri, 22 Oct 1999 13:48:58 -0500 From: Ian Robert Douglas <Ian_Robert_Douglas-AT-Brown.edu> Subject: VIRTUALY2K | A conference | How digital technologies are ** apologies for cross-listing ** please forward to others who may be interested _____ //.VirtualY2K. A conference on how digitized and networked technologies are changing our lives and the world. -AT- brown.edu 11.5.99 - 11.7.99 The Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University will host a three-day conference-VIRTUALY2K-from Friday to Sunday, November 5-7, 1999. The conference will explore how digitized and networked technologies are transforming the world and our lives. As distances collapse under globalization, as societies become ever more media-intensive, as the new velocity of virtual networks transforms warfare, diplomacy and politics, VY2K will bring scholars, writers, practitioners and critics from many parts of the world to interrogate the nature and future of virtual worlds. What is at stake? Has modernity been overtaken by a "virtual condition"? If so, what are the technical, political, ethical and immediate implications? Definitions of the virtual are not easy to come by. Long before microchips were imagined, theologians and philosophers were debating the elusive power of the virtual, of immaterial forces that could exert an influence at a distance, from the holy spirit to the rays of the sun. Now, thanks to the viral spread of networked computers, the virtual is not so much elusive as pervasive. Even so, like the puzzle of the philosophers, this contemporary virtuality produces effects and results that blur our usual ways of seeing things. We find new worlds emerge which though real are less than physical. We find spaces emerge which though extensive are immediate and not at all distant. In short, as the virtual becomes ever more actualized in our daily lives, many of the familiar ways in which we've looked at the world are being redrawn, if not turned upside down. In the meantime, global politics is being transformed. Battlesites and websites converge. PCs and TVs meld. Electronic eyes replace human eyes as global surveillance, media interventions, and invisible sanctions afford "action-at-a-distance". Think-tanks and peace institutes promote "virtual diplomacy" as the means to avoid actual insurgency. As data equals power, infowar becomes not only possible but an accepted, and seemingly acceptable reality. Indeed, the virtual touches every aspect of our lives: identity, economy, environments, people. As the century ends and a millennium begins, VY2K will open a debate about what is surely becoming one of the most important political, social and philosophical questions of human development: the power and opportunity, dangers and politics of virtuality. VIRTUALY2K is sponsored by the Watson Institute for International Studies, and made possible by a grant from the Ford Foundation and with the support of the Malcolm S. Forbes Center for Research in Culture and Media Studies. VIRTUALY2K is free and open to the public. Confirmed participants: * Adam ASHFORTH, Institute for Advanced Study * John Perry BARLOW, Electronic Frontier Foundation * Thomas P.M. BARNETT, U.S. Naval War College * Thomas J. BIERSTEKER, Watson Institute * Manuel DE LANDA, independent writer * James DER DERIAN, Watson Institute * Ron DEIBERT, University of Toronto * Mary Ann DOANE, MCM, Brown University * Ricardo DOMINGUEZ, thing.net & Electronic Disturbance Theatre * Ian Robert DOUGLAS, the power foundation * Jean Bethke ELSHTAIN, University of Chicago * Miguel ENCARNACAO, Fraunhofer Center for Research in Computer Graphics * Yaron EZRAHI, Hebrew University * Samuel FULCOMER, Brown University * Abbott GLEASON, Watson Institute * Jonathan GRATCH, Virtual Helicopter Pilots, University of Southern California * N. Katherine HAYLES, UCLA * Wendy HUI KYONG CHUN, Brown University * Michael IGNATIEFF, writer, New Yorker * Mary KALDOR, London School of Economics * Carmin KARASIC, thing.net & Electronic Disturbance Theatre * Jon KATZ, writer, slashdot.org & Rolling Stone * Thomas KEENAN, Bard College * Laura KURGAN, Princeton University * George LANDOW, Brown University * Jaron LANIER, Tele-Immersion * Thomas LEVIN, Princeton University * Robert MACE, TOPSCENE, Naval Air Systems Command * Michael MACEDONIA, STRICOM, US Army * Ira MAGAZINER, SJS, Inc. * General William NASH (Ret.), National Democratic Institute for International Affairs * Mark PESCE, University of Southern California * John Phillip SANTOS, Ford Foundation * Marcus THIEBAUX, Virtual Helicopter Pilots, University of Southern California * Andries VAN DAM, Brown University * Stefan WRAY, thing.net & Electronic Disturbance Theatre * Michael ZYDA, Naval Postgraduate School Key questions: * Is there a distinction worth defending between the real and the virtual, or is there a reality intrinsic to the virtual? * Can an 'ethics of virtuality' be imagined? * When everything arrives, we no longer have to leave. Does 'virtuality' portend a new world-wide freedom - or a new carceral, albeit in the name of participation and communication? * What will the robot historians of the 22nd century write about the beginnings of the 21st? * Virtual technologies collapse distances, distort time, blur fact and fiction, fundamentally transforming the world of appearances. Are we witness to a 'de-realization', or a complexification of our perception of the real? * 'Cybernetics' originally denoted the 'arts of governing'. Is 'virtuality' also a means of governing people? * Can virtuality or virtual worlds allow for the free expression of difference, or do they disallow it through a standardization of real lives via universal code? * The Berlin wall falls, the web takes off. Pure coincidence? * What does it mean to wage a 'virtual war'? * Is 'virtual war' a form of just war? If it kills fewer people but attacks the 'reality principle' is it still justifiable? * Can virtual communities be real? * What can we understand by the merging of information, warring and entertainment? Is virtuality merely preparing society for new forms of war? * Can interventions in virtual environments be real? * Does virtuality alter how we think of mortality? * Every new technology brings with it a specific accident. What would a 'virtual accident' look like? * Is virtualization the "real" force behind globalization? Is it the harbinger of a new world order, or a brave new world? Location: The Salomon Centre for Teaching Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA Dates: November 5-7, 1999 Webpage: http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Watson_Institute/ Email: virtualy2k-AT-brown.edu General information (including information on travel, accommodation, location, etc.): http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Watson_Institute/programs/gs/VirtualY2K/info.ht ml VIRTUALY2K is organized by James Der Derian and Ian Douglas, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University. ______________________________________________ Ian R. Douglas | Watson Institute for International Studies Brown University, Box 1831, Providence, RI 02912 USA fax: 401 863-2192 " .. the virtual is not opposed to the real; it posesses a full reality by itself. It is on the basis of its reality that existence is produced .. " - Gilles Deleuze http://www.powerfoundation.org <fontfamily><param>Geneva</param>** apologies for cross-listing ** please forward to others who may be interested _____ //.VirtualY2K. A conference on how digitized and networked technologies are changing our lives and the world. -AT- brown.edu 11.5.99 - 11.7.99 The Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown University will host a three-day conference-<bold>VIRTUALY2K</bold>-from Friday to Sunday, November 5-7, 1999. The conference will explore how digitized and networked technologies are transforming the world and our lives. As distances collapse under globalization, as societies become ever more media-intensive, as the new velocity of virtual networks transforms warfare, diplomacy and politics, <bold>VY2K </bold>will bring scholars, writers, practitioners and critics from many parts of the world to interrogate the nature and future of virtual worlds. What is at stake? Has modernity been overtaken by a "virtual condition"? If so, what are the technical, political, ethical and immediate implications? Definitions of the virtual are not easy to come by. Long before microchips were imagined, theologians and philosophers were debating the elusive power of the virtual, of immaterial forces that could exert an influence at a distance, from the holy spirit to the rays of the sun. Now, thanks to the viral spread of networked computers, the virtual is not so much elusive as pervasive. Even so, like the puzzle of the philosophers, this contemporary virtuality produces effects and results that blur our usual ways of seeing things. We find new worlds emerge which though real are less than physical. We find spaces emerge which though extensive are immediate and not at all distant. In short, as the virtual becomes ever more actualized in our daily lives, many of the familiar ways in which we've looked at the world are being redrawn, if not turned upside down. In the meantime, global politics is being transformed. Battlesites and websites converge. PCs and TVs meld. Electronic eyes replace human eyes as global surveillance, media interventions, and invisible sanctions afford "action-at-a-distance". Think-tanks and peace institutes promote "virtual diplomacy" as the means to avoid actual insurgency. As data equals power, infowar becomes not only possible but an accepted, and seemingly acceptable reality. Indeed, the virtual touches every aspect of our lives: identity, economy, environments, people. As the century ends and a millennium begins, <bold>VY2K </bold>will open a debate about what is surely becoming one of the most important political, social and philosophical questions of human development: the power and opportunity, dangers and politics of virtuality. <bold>VIRTUALY2K </bold>is sponsored by the Watson Institute for International Studies, and made possible by a grant from the Ford =46oundation and with the support of the Malcolm S. Forbes Center for Research in Culture and Media Studies. <bold>VIRTUALY2K </bold>is free and open to the public. Confirmed participants: * Adam ASHFORTH, Institute for Advanced Study * John Perry BARLOW, Electronic Frontier Foundation * Thomas P.M. BARNETT, U.S. Naval War College * Thomas J. BIERSTEKER, Watson Institute * Manuel DE LANDA, independent writer * James DER DERIAN, Watson Institute * Ron DEIBERT, University of Toronto * Mary Ann DOANE, MCM, Brown University * Ricardo DOMINGUEZ, thing.net & Electronic Disturbance Theatre * Ian Robert DOUGLAS, the power foundation * Jean Bethke ELSHTAIN, University of Chicago * Miguel ENCARNACAO, Fraunhofer Center for Research in Computer Graphics * Yaron EZRAHI, Hebrew University * Samuel FULCOMER, Brown University * Abbott GLEASON, Watson Institute * Jonathan GRATCH, Virtual Helicopter Pilots, University of Southern California * N. Katherine HAYLES, UCLA * Wendy HUI KYONG CHUN, Brown University * Michael IGNATIEFF, writer, New Yorker * Mary KALDOR, London School of Economics * Carmin KARASIC, thing.net & Electronic Disturbance Theatre * Jon KATZ, writer, slashdot.org & Rolling Stone * Thomas KEENAN, Bard College * Laura KURGAN, Princeton University * George LANDOW, Brown University * Jaron LANIER, Tele-Immersion * Thomas LEVIN, Princeton University * Robert MACE, TOPSCENE, Naval Air Systems Command * Michael MACEDONIA, STRICOM, US Army * Ira MAGAZINER, SJS, Inc. * General William NASH (Ret.), National Democratic Institute for International Affairs * Mark PESCE, University of Southern California * John Phillip SANTOS, Ford Foundation * Marcus THIEBAUX, Virtual Helicopter Pilots, University of Southern California * Andries VAN DAM, Brown University * Stefan WRAY, thing.net & Electronic Disturbance Theatre * Michael ZYDA, Naval Postgraduate School Key questions: * Is there a distinction worth defending between the real and the virtual, or is there a reality intrinsic to the virtual? * Can an 'ethics of virtuality' be imagined? * When everything arrives, we no longer have to leave. Does 'virtuality' portend a new world-wide freedom - or a new carceral, albeit in the name of participation and communication? * What will the robot historians of the 22nd century write about the beginnings of the 21st? * Virtual technologies collapse distances, distort time, blur fact and fiction, fundamentally transforming the world of appearances. Are we witness to a 'de-realization', or a complexification of our perception of the real? * 'Cybernetics' originally denoted the 'arts of governing'. Is 'virtuality' also a means of governing people? * Can virtuality or virtual worlds allow for the free expression of difference, or do they disallow it through a standardization of real lives via universal code? * The Berlin wall falls, the web takes off. Pure coincidence? * What does it mean to wage a 'virtual war'? * Is 'virtual war' a form of just war? If it kills fewer people but attacks the 'reality principle' is it still justifiable? * Can virtual communities be real? * What can we understand by the merging of information, warring and entertainment? Is virtuality merely preparing society for new forms of war? * Can interventions in virtual environments be real? * Does virtuality alter how we think of mortality? * Every new technology brings with it a specific accident. What would a 'virtual accident' look like? * Is virtualization the "real" force behind globalization? Is it the harbinger of a new world order, or a brave new world? Location: The Salomon Centre for Teaching Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA Dates: November 5-7, 1999 Webpage: http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Watson_Institute/ Email: virtualy2k-AT-brown.edu General information (including information on travel, accommodation, location, etc.): http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Watson_Institute/programs/gs/VirtualY2K/info.html <bold>VIRTUALY2K </bold>is organized by James Der Derian and Ian Douglas, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University. </fontfamily> ______________________________________________ Ian R. Douglas | Watson Institute for International Studies Brown University, Box 1831, Providence, RI 02912 USA fax: 401 863-2192 " .. the virtual is not opposed to the real; it posesses a full reality by itself. It is on the basis of its reality that existence is produced .. " - Gilles Deleuze http://www.powerfoundation.org
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