Experimental Theory and Radical Thought
The SCA's will be in New York City on Saturday May 4, 2019, to be part of a one-day symposium at the on sci-fi, fabulation, and the "radical uselessness of thought," organized by (Director of the Center for Transformative Media at The New School, and Associate Professor at Parsons The New School for Design). Presenting with Priest and Keller will be Mandy Suzanne-Wong, Simon O'Sullivan, Otto Von Busch, Nancy Gillespie, Marc Couroux, Ania Malinowska, Sanem Guvenc-Salgirli, Dominic Pettman. and Merritt Symes. Here's the full agenda:
In his book Steven Shaviro writes that sci-fi can be understood as a 鈥渢hought experiment, a way of entertaining odd ideas, and of asking off-the-wall what if? questions鈥 that embody its issues by telling stories. This, says Shaviro, makes sci-fi鈥檚 methods 鈥渆motional and situational, rather than rational and universalizing.鈥 As such, sci-fi can be said to describe a manner of thinking whose assertions are fabulated rather than grounded or proved.
But what does it mean to say that assertions are fabulated? Proof and grounding are self-serving affairs that, in a sense, are question begging. Yet fabulation seems to have no concern about its status apart from its simply working, from its role as a condition of making things imaginable. There鈥檚 something pragmatic and speculative, then, to fabulation that at its most playful makes it approach the condition Harry Frankfurt called 鈥渂ullshit,鈥 a highly effective activity utterly indifferent to how things really are, or are not. This suggests that perhaps the fabulated assertions of sci-fi鈥檚 鈥渙ff the wall what if questions鈥 are less about leading thought to entertain 鈥渘ew lines of inquiry that analytic reasoning and inductive generalization would never stumble upon,鈥 than disabusing thinking of its identity as an agent of 鈥渢ruth鈥 or executor of the real.
For this one-day symposium we鈥檇 like to follow Shaviro鈥檚 proposition that sci-fi is an embodied thought experiment but we鈥檇 like to linger a little on the possibility that what it achieves in addition to an alternative imaginary is a form of bullshit that approaches what Jean Baudrillard called the 鈥渞adical uselessness of thought.鈥 We鈥檙e interested in lingering on thought鈥檚 inutility for two reasons: One, while sensitive to the role of fabulation in its production, so-called 鈥渢heory-fiction鈥 as it鈥檚 been practiced in recent years often puts thought to work in a way that continues to burden it with things like knowledge and information. As such we鈥檇 like to consider how a theory-fiction might actually realize its uselessness by treating its thought experiments in the way bullshit does truth. Second, if thought really can be absolved of its responsibility to know or to understand, then we need to ask not what it鈥檚 good for but for what鈥檚 good for it.
Klein Conference Room, Room 510 鈥 The New School, 66 West 12th Street, New York, NY.