Terence Mckenna wrote:The only difference between a computer and a drug is that one is too big to swallow.
…And our best people are working on that!
It’s been some years since I’ve delved into the Mckenna tapes, so please to forgive the lapses in memory.
In one rap or another he emphasized how the technological revolution was in the hands of the heads. That all these megacorps and their button up businessmen drones were effectively completely dependent on the long haired freak in the IT department to keep their business operational as we entered the information age. The hackers were heads and these heady hackers had the visionary perspective to ride this new frontier right off the cutting edge out past the event horizon.
Tim Leary once dubbed the personal computer “the LSD of the 1980’s”. Universal direct access to computing technology was (and is) every bit as much of a disruptive agent to the social order as was (and is) old Doc Hofmann’s magical elixir. At the beginning of the 1990’s the rise of the internet inherently held the promise of an ever improving future. Moore’s law was in full effect, technology was only going to get smaller, cheaper, and more powerful. The unprecedented connectivity and unlimited access to information was going to level the playing field and usher humanity into the digital utopia.
If you are interested in the history of the computing and what role psychedelics and counter cultural ideas played in it’s development, I can suggest a couple good books on the subject:
What the Dormouse Said: How the Sixties Counterculture Shaped the Personal Computer Industry From Counterculture to Cyberculture: Stewart Brand, the Whole Earth Network, and the Rise of Digital UtopianismTerence’s big rap was always to find the others, and in that regard, the internet has absolutely delivered on his promise, in spades, both for good and for ill. From social media echo chambers to open source development projects; from alt dot newsgroups to reddit; from forums to facebook. No matter how obscure, no matter how niche, no matter how occult, the others are out there to be found amidst the tangles of the www.
Now to my favorite one. The gist of the rap is thus: As we build out cyberspace, and specifically virtual reality spaces, into completely immersive, fully featured environments that are nearly indistinguishable from the physical, they will effectively become a landing zone for “the other”, the transcendental object. The eschaton itself will infuse the virtual world and hyperspace will merge with cyberspace dissolving all boundaries, freeing us from the shackles of the monkey body and allowing us to live as gods eternally surfing cyberdelic space happily ever after...
Or something to that effect.
I said it before and I’ll say it again. The internet is more than the top dozen applications that 98% of the traffic flows through. They’ll never stop peer to peer file sharing, they’ll never interrupt the bitcoin protocol, they’ll never censor the deepweb. Despite the theatrics of making the internet look co-opted, centralized, and controlled, the truth is, it’s just as much of a disruptive element now as it ever was. Those heady hackers will always find a workaround and yar har, fiddle di dee, those pirates really are free. 🏴☠️
P.S. - While I’m up here on my soapbox, please remember to share and support the projects that really do make the internet great: archive.org, libgen, sci-hub, github, eff, wikipedia, project gutenberg, librivox, tpb, etc.
and I just want to echo this one again because you really did nail it.
ControlledChaos wrote:Of course, the internet story isn't over yet, and neither is the story of humanity. More and more people are discovering the other side so to speak and it is spreading slowly but surely. But we must remember that those spreading the opposite are there too and more numerous and powerful. Therefore, to best utilize the internet I offer to you all a simple suggestion - You must shine so brightly that your light infects others and they can shine and spread the light too.