Flusser and Bec 2012

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Flusser, Vilem and Louis Bec. Vampyroteuthis Infernalis. Trans. by Valentine A. Pakis. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2012.

Octopoda

"We are pieces of the same game" (6) -- "We and the vampyroteuthis harbor some of the same deeply ingrained memories, and we are therefore able to recognize in it something of ourselves." (6)

earthworms; bees, ants, distributed colony animals as highest form; vampyroteuthis turned away from this track

comprehending "the basic structure of vampyroteuthic Dasein" (9)

"Certain aspects of human Dasein are evident in this structure, and certain others appear in it utterly distorted. Perhaps then a game can be built out of distorting mirrors that would enable us to recognize the basic structure, distorted and from afar, of our own Dasein. By playing a 'reflective' game of this sort, we should hope to gain a new perspective of ourselves that, though distanced, is not 'transcendent.' It will not be transcendent, that is, because its standpoint will differ from that of science, which would adopt an 'objective' position by floating above the world and looking down upon mankind. On the contrary, our analysis of humans will be made from the perspective of the vampyroteuthis, which coexists with us in the world. It is our co-being (Mit-Sein). What will be presented here is, accordingly, not a scientific treatise but a fable. The human and its vertebrate Dasein are to be criticiezd from the perspective of a mollusk. Like most fables, this one is ostensibly concerned with animals. De te fabular narratur." (9-10)

Genealogy

disgust -- hierarchy of disgust reflects the nature of life (12)

mollusks; "They are ek-centric animals whose bodies incline toward coiling both as a whole and in all their details. Their elan vital, this self-winding achieves dizzying heights in cephalopods, whose bodies coil around themselves to such an extent that head fuses with foot and mouth devours tail." (14)

"Cybernetically speaking, the nervous system of mollusks represents the highest organization of life." (14)

man is in the world -- how can he speak about it?

"Cephalopods are interesting insofar as we recognize ourselives in them, insofar as they are a part of the same stream of life that sweeps us away as well. And science as a whole is interesting insofar as it is an attempt to orient ourselves in the world. It is a mammalian function or, to be mroe precise, a human function much like digestion. The most 'objective' science becomes, the more inhuman. It does not become 'pure' but rather a mania, a distraction away from ourselves. The time has come for us to set aside scientific objectivity in favor of new methods of inquiry. This can be done without, necessarily, having to disclaim the 'objective' knowledge that has already been gained." (17)
"The merging of the head and foot, to repeat, brought about a ninety-degree shift in the symmetrical axis, so that what was once ahead is now below, and what was once behind is now above. The direction of this shift is therefore opposite to that which our own bodies undertook when, leaving the treetops behind for the tundra, we began to walk upright. Our directional shift led to the freeing of our hands and to the opening of our eyes to the horizons. As for cephalopods, their sensory and tactile organs migrated downward. Cephalopods are, then, our antipodes: elevated intelligent abdomens, unelevated brains. Their brain, however, is more complex than ours." (18)

clouds of ink that can "be shaped into sculptures by the 'arms' of the animal" (19); "galdns on the surface of the skin that emit light and others that allow the animal to change color. In short, the digestive system serves purposes far beyond digestion." (19)

"Thus the whole animal amounts to a centripetal and enclosed whirlpool, a vacuum within its environment that is released as a jet of water to propel it backward. Cephalopods are spiral vortices, and their very breath enhances their mobility." (19)
"If only we could grasp the world with a penis." (20)
"These discolorations are not only reactions to outside stimuli but also expressions of what is taking place within the body, and the meaning of these chromatic expressions is understood by others. The discoloration of the skin is an intraspecific code: Cephalopods 'speak' by changing the color of their skin. Moreover, gelatinous secretions allow the sender of these chromatic messages to become 'invisible' to their receiver, a method of communication that calls to mind aspects of our current media." (21)
"Celphalopods, in short, are screw-like animals that wind themselves around a spiral axis, and several evolutionary 'recapitulations' support this assessment. This is not their essence,' however. Rather, they are animals inclined to coil themselves up only to burst out of their spirality; they are springs that want to e straight lines. This tendency lends them a deflectionary dynamism -- in engineering terms -- that manifests itself as violence and bloodlust. With every step of its evolution, the goal of which has been to straighten out, its focus has shifted further toward the ocean floor and further toward the head, a head that, among higher species, accommodates an unusually complex upper brain." (21)
"For them, coitus is a drama that consists of several acts. These acts involve, among other things, choreographed dances, light shows, chemical orchestrations, and exhibitions of color." (22)
"The animals are predisposed to suicide and cannibalism. If captive in aquaria, they will devour their own tentacles, and they will do so despite being surrounded by crabs and other food. They can live to be eighty years old." (23)
"The vampyroteuthis has forsaken the protection of a shell and can hold itself upright thanks only to the pressuer at the bottom of the sea. The price that humans had to pay is the protection bestowed by the ground, by the floor; its price is banishment into the abyss, to be pressed against the deepest floor of all. We are estranged from the earth, and it from the sky. Analogous alienations." (23)
"We are both banished from much of life's domain: it into the abyss, we onto the surfaces of the continents. We have both lost our original home, the beach, and we both live in constrained situations. We 'ek-sist. As two exposed and threatened pseudopods of life, we are both forced to think -- it as a voracious belly, we as something else. But as what? Perhaps this is for it to answer." (25)
"Both of us resist our exile, our 'constraints,' and yet we are both bilateria. When we oppose something, we do so dialectically: We deny one side from the position of the other. in that we deny our biological condition from opposed sides, we deny one another, and therein lies our correspondence. we encounter one another as mirrors of that which we have denied." (26)

The Vampyroteuthic World

"Organisms are accumulations of suppressed drives, and psychology is the analysis of organisms. This is an extraordinarily rich idea." (27)
"An organism is a stratified memory constructed of superimposed suppressions, somewhat like geological formations. An analysis of these layers -- think of a tree trunk and its rings -- can yield a reconstruction of the phylogenesis and ontogenesis of an organism. The surface layers that envelop an organism accumulate the external and internal influences that have suppressed the organism over the course of tis life, and these layers form what is called character armor. Among humans, these influences are largely cultural and they are sublimated into our musculature. What is known as 'personality' is therefore a matter of muscle creamping and individual posture. The more tense the cramp, the stronger the personality, and the release of a cramp -- be it coincidental or by means of a deliberate massage ('individual psychoanalysis') -- can thus lead to the release and dissolution of one's personality." (27-8)
"An organism, then, is a phenotypic manifestation of these genotypic suppressions. It is a bomb, laden with potential energy, in which the sum of pressures, accumulated over the course of one life and over the course of the entire development of life, has been stored. An organism is a ball of bioenergetic force that explodes when the cramp -- which is life itself -- is released. Reich refers to this explosion as 'orgasm' and to the energy in question as 'orgone'." (28)
"It represents to us an inaccessible and repugnant model and we represent, to it, a model that is broken and obsolete." (30)
"Both the environment and the organism are abstract extrapolations from the actuality of their entwined relations. An organism mirrors its environment; an environment mirros its organisms; and if the arena of their relations is altered in some way, neither the environment nor the organism will be left unchanged." (31)
"Quantitatively and qualitatively, then, the ocean is the seat of life on earth." (32)
"Earth is an aqueous and flowing planet, the only one in the solar system, and it is for this reason that is is able to support life." (33)
"Essentially, life can be regarded as drops of specialized seawater that eventually dissipate into unspecialized seawater." (33)
"The eternal night reverberates with an incessant noise that would be deafening to us." (34)

ocean is 3-dimensional, "without surfaces" (34)

"To converse with the vampyroteuthis is to plunge into the uncustomary, and it is precisely into the uncustomary that one must dive in order to apprehend anything of the customary. Custom is a shroud that conceals everything. Not without first encountering the uncustomary will we be able to recognize what is customary and, more importantly, to change it. Such is the impulse behind our conversation with the vampyroteuthis." (35-6)
"Reality is neither the organism nor the environment, neither the subject nor the object, neither the ego nor the nonego, but rather the concurrennce of both. It is absurd to envisage an objectless subject or a subjectless object, a world without me and a me without the world. Da-Sein means 'being in the world. If things were to change, it would not be because I have changed myself or because the world has changed itself but quite the contrary: the concrete 'ego-world' relationship has changed, and this change has revealed itself phenomenally as changes both within myself and in the world outside. This will have to be kept in mind if we want to come closer to vampyroteuthic Dasein." (36)
"The evolutionary act of walking upright, that is, could be responsible not only for our epistemology but also for our ethics and aesthetics." (37)
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