Transvision 2003
Panel
Sunday June 29, 2003
10:45-12:15pm
Linsly-Chittenden Hall, 62 High St., New Haven
CT
The Missing
Word
Filmmaker: Alfredo
Colunga
ALFREDO COLUNGA is a scriptswriter and coordinator
of projects in modern media and audiovisual languages. Among his
most recent work, carried out in conjunction with the production
company Mana Visual Audio, is the development of the Tesseract
platform (an anti-postmodern audiovisual machine) and the
audiovisual series “Philosophical stories for the 21st century” (the
first of which, titled “The missing word”, was shown during the
Transvision Conference 2003). He also directed and coordinated the
expanded cinema project afterall.tv (www.afterall.tv), presented in
the international art biennial in Turin 2002, and the
video-sculpture “Tumulus for the last homo sapiens”, which will be
presented at the modern art fair ARCO 2004, in Madrid. He holds a
degree in Technical Industrial Engineering from the University of
Oviedo, in Spain. In that same university he also went on to study
Philosophy and History, subsequently specializing in media and
audiovisual languages. He has written and made more than 60
audiovisuals for scientific divulgation, for which he has received
numerous prizes and awards.
“THE PRINT”
(A transhumanist tale)
Author: Alfredo González Colunga © C/Río San Pedro
4-4-d 33001 OVIEDO - SPAIN Tel.: +34 985-29-63-84 / +34 620-36-40-82
E-mail: alfredocolunga@manavisualaudio.com
On one occasion, Mr G was invited to an important
meeting. Feeling obliged to prepare a few words to entertain his
illustrious audience, this is what he said:
Let us imagine – Mr G started, without further ado –
that human beings grow and expand, transcending their current form
and even, finally, conquering and dominating the universe. A
universe which, if it is as we currently conceive it, came out of a
big bang and is destined to either expand eternally, to cold and
entropy, or to close in on itself symmetrically in a big crash.
If the first option is correct –continued Mr G–,
with the end of the universe we would have effectively arrived at
The End of History (Mr G here alluded to the title of a famous book
that annoyed him especially. The title, not the book, which Mr G had
not read). However, supposing that the second option were correct
and a great crash were waiting behind the end of all time, human
beings, by that time superhuman, would then be faced a concern which
we know well, because in fact, although not always consciously, it
is also our great concern: transcendence. Those superhuman beings
would have calculated that “after” the big crash would come a new
big bang. Mr G pronounced the word “after” with a special
intonation. Trying in that way to insinuate that, given the
limitations in available language, he saw himself forced to use a
word with temporal connotations which were obviously inappropriate –
And not just that: due to their knowledge far beyond our
comprehension, those beings would have achieved, unable to move
themselves, to send to that new universe, skirting the known limits
of physics, a “print” or mark, a key which would finally lead, from
among all the possible subsequent universes, to a specific one
which, certain limits between chaos and order prevailing, were able,
following a reduced number of rules, to develop and sustain itself
in a manner similar to its predecessor. All of this with an
objective: this universe, after eons of laborious development, would
bring forth, finally, a sign, a proof that before, in another
universe, other intelligent beings had existed. Naturally – added Mr
G – this print would also be designed to be transmitted
indefinitely, from universe to universe.
While speaking these words, Mr G was somewhat
concerned, since –I haven’t mentioned it before - the invitation
took him to a country far from his own, whose language, in which he
was trying to express himself, he had only a passing acquaintance
with. Mr G, nevertheless, knew that his audience acknowledged his
efforts, and he carried on. – The question is – he went on to say –
Where to leave that print? Or, more specifically: Where to make it
appear, manifest itself, to be sure that, when the time came, the
emerging intelligence in the new universe would find it without
fail, thereby comprehending the inheritance it had received?
Mr G enjoyed asking that question, as it is known
that sometimes a good question can be more satisfying than the
answer. But, not wanting to try his audience’s patience, he carried
on. - I will attempt to set forth an answer: the ideal place to
leave that proof so that it would be discovered, without a doubt, by
the first beings with sufficient intelligence arising in the new
universe, the place where, in fact, those intelligent beings, sooner
or later, would look for it, would be, naturally... incrusted in the
deepest part of the genetic code.
Let us then propose geneticists to search and search
well, as it is possible that, in among all the genes, they will find
a slightly unusual one, a gene that is just slightly different,
showing a small, probably minimal, subtle and unexpected difference
from its fellow genes. Take a good look, because it will not be a
gene like all the others, but it will be – and here Mr G placed
special emphasis on his words - the treasure box. Then let us find
the key and, if we can, let us open the box and examine it, because
inside we will find, may be, the answer to all our questions, past,
present and future.
Although, it can also occur– Mr G hurriedly added,
not wishing to create expectations in excess - that after searching
and searching, the geneticists finally give up and, disheartened,
admit that the special gene does not exist. At that point we would
have to accept one of two options: the first is that that secret
message does not exist. We will have to conclude then that, either
our universe is the first able to attain such a high level of
complexity, or that universes are condemned to disintegration
without trace.
Although there is also a second option, more
reassuring: we must not rush if, in spite of our searching, we do
not locate that sign in our genes. It may be still too early to take
it out and look for it and, perhaps, the message is written in an
even more basic, more fundamental code, and its discovery and
interpretation require tools and a language which are still not yet
within our grasp.
That is why – insisted Mr G – if we are not able to
find it, if that special gene isn’t visible to our eyes, we must not
worry: we will just have to wait until we have more and better
technical resources, until the message, finally, becomes visible and
can be read by our successors.
But let’s suppose for a minute– continued Mr G – let
us suppose, I say, for a minute that our gifted geneticists,
generously financed and putting all of their considerable talent and
energy to work, not only find that different gene, that treasure
box, but that, in addition, they also find, and most important, the
key that would open that box. Well... things, certainly, would get
interesting... the time would then have come to ask ourselves the
big question... What could we expect to find inside that box? What
could we hope to find inside it? What is the greatest secret that,
from our knowledge and expectations, we could imagine finding? - Mr
G once again paused, very briefly this time, to gather strength, and
went on. - Naturally, it couldn’t be anything physical,
voluminous... but rather, a series of instructions.
Mr G thought that maybe at that point some members
of the audience would be, somehow, disappointed... Instructions!,
some would think... I never! Tell us, if you can, what instructions,
and if not be quiet! But Mr G hadn’t come to talk about those
instructions and, for his purposes, no greater specification was
required in this respect. In any case, he admitted, he wouldn’t have
been able to be more specific.
Derived from a technology far superior to ours – he
continued – we would not know exactly what those instructions would
consist of, or what they would mean, or even why they took that
form. We would not know what they were but, as usual, we would soon
find out what they were for... Pleased, proud of our ability to
unfold the mystery (and scarcely grateful, truth be told, to our
predecessors), we would rapidly understand that those instructions
enclosed... the secret of constructing universes. Before we realized
it, we would have engendered hundreds, thousands, millions of
universes subject to all the possible laws that we were able to
imagine.
Mr G then, for a few moments, allowed his audience
to ponder a marvelously fertile period in humanity, in which humans
would produce without stop innumerable universes: flat or
teradimensional universes, ephemeral or almost never ending, languid
or poetic, empty or slow, and many other universes that Mr G felt
incapable of describing, but which, he was sure, those who were
listening to him were be able to dream: clean, beautiful universes,
but also universes that would contain the worst nightmares ever
dreamed, universes , all of them, that would grow and age, each
carrying the inherited print, each an inseminator, in its own right,
of multiple universes...
But – Mr G suddenly remembered – even after seeing
the birth and death of them all, humans would still not really know
what the box held. We would still not know what was, exactly, the
greatest treasure in the world.
Naturally, by that time speculations of all sorts
would have been developed, and, consequently, attitudes: some,
asserting that it would never be known, because those who
constructed it were superior to us, would consider appropriate to
give up trying to understand what was inside and merely express our
gratitude for its existence. Others, simply, would give up trying to
understand and, with no further fuss, would enjoy the privilege
granted. Some would even deny that those beings had ever existed,
and would affirm that the box, in reality, was completely empty, and
that all the universes emerging around were sheer illusion.
But let´s talk here about two specific universes in
which they believed an answer to be found...
In the first of these universes they decided to take
on the problem directly. To that end, an experts panel was named,
and they held a great contest, in which the greatest minds on the
planet took part. After examining trillions of answers, one was
selected. And, in spite of certain initial reticence, everyone
finally considered that answer could not be improved upon:
The greatest treasure box ever imagined – the entry
stated -, was, naturally, brimming… with keys to the boxes with the
greatest treasures ever imagined.
This answer, they agreed, not only responded to the
question posed in the contest, but also served to close a long road,
a long treasure hunt that had begun centuries earlier, with stories
of complex cryptograms and buried treasures. Which continued later
explaining in a thousand different ways that the gold in those
treasures was, in reality, nothing more than a symbol behind which
our passions were hidden, passions that in turn were progressively
revealed as our search for options in the fight for survival. And
which ended now by showing, very wisely, that survival was not only
the beginning but also the end: eternal multiplication beyond which
nothing can be hoped.
Accepted this answer, in the first world everyone
felt a bit more intelligent although, truth be told, somewhat sadder
too.
-In the second world things were approached
differently- he finished. There they decided that, if they did not
yet know what was in the box, they would not rush conclusions and
would work towards finding it out.
So, after taking care, in the first place, of their
own survival, they started to study what was in their surroundings.
They observed that the sign was found, in identical form, not only
in every man, but in every cell of every living being around them,
thereby linking all the species: each plant, each bird, each insect
or lichen. And they concluded from this fact that, in the same way
that the sign had appeared before their eyes, it could have done so
before any other species which had developed to a sufficient degree.
From this they deduced, in turn, two things about themselves: that
their appearance was fruit of a tendency which, in one way or
another, had been expressed, and that the form which their species
adopted was purely contingent, an accident: one among many
possibilities.
They also observed that any modification, small as
it may be, to the conditions in which their universe had been
formed, to the rules of the game, would have impeded that the sign,
or they themselves, existed. This encouraged them to think that both
the sign and they themselves had a natural tendency to appear in the
same universes.
They also observed finally that the treasure had
appeared to them just when they were beginning to understand life as
knowledge itself, to germinate them with their own hands. A powerful
tool that, they presumed, would soon give them abilities that they
could hardly imagine.
They needed no more. It was easy for them to deduce
that there was no treasure in the treasure box: the instructions did
not hide a message, but rather they were the message.
And they felt peaceful – concluded Mr G.- because
they understood they were, precisely, the ones who had sent it.