Automation

Given our advancements in technology are we evolving or devolving?

“We’re on the cusp of an age of algorithmically derived art and ideas. Machines are increasingly suggesting the most popular topics for human inquiry, and humans are increasingly obeying. Instead of experimentation and novelty, data is leading the way, propelling us toward formula.” — Franklin Foer, World Without Mind

The world is changing. And it’s changing fast. For 70,000 years or so humans have changed little despite the ability to walk upright on two legs and carry that rather enlarged brain. Even with tool/weapon in hand, man was still just a mumbling social primate that sat in the middle of the hierarchy of power and dominance. 10,000 years ago, civilization happened and we got smarter, created systems of economics, social structure, and the arts. In the last 200 years or so the industrial revolution and machines happened. Less than 30 years ago, computers and the internet went mainstream. Now artificial intelligence, robotics and biotechnology will drive us towards the next wave of evolution faster and more dramatically than ever before. WE ALL KNOW THIS. But are we prepared for it?

As the brilliant historian Yuval Noah Hariri writes in his books Homo Deus and 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, the global society as a whole, including the governments who act as our stewards, is woefully prepared for this challenge. It’s not surprising; we’ve done a pretty poor job of handling issues like economic inequality and the welfare of the environment despite all of our technological advancements and unprecedented wealth creation. Perhaps as a species we’re just not up to the task. After all, there’s already been a heck of a lot of change in a short period of time and most of it just kinda happened. Hariri noted for example, that the internet’s sudden envelopment of our society happened without any political discourse or societal awareness. Right now, the general consensus among experts is that this upcoming mass change will occur within the next 20-30 years as technological growth tends toward the exponential — beginning slowly then advancing very very quickly, much like human evolution has.

“Ordinary people may not understand artificial intelligence and biotechnology, but they can sense that the future is passing them by.” — Yuval Noah Hariri, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century

One of the concerns is whether we even have the mental-emotional capacity (or stability) to adapt to such immeasurable and unpredictable change. What will happen if we continue to give up our privacy and personal rights to Silicon Valley monopolies who dictate the way data is used influencing heavily how we think and how we behave? What happens to journalism and political discourse? And what happens when so many people, perhaps up to 70% of the world’s population, become economically obsolete as they lose their jobs to A.I. and robots who will be faster, smarter and stronger? Can the environment continue to withstand the growing assault that our neo-liberal form of capitalism has put on it? Hariri’s book is a proposal to think seriously about such issues.

“Historically, corporations were not the ideal vehicle for leading social and political change.” — Yuval Noah Hariri, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century

Scientists almost unanimously agree that human activity in its drive for economic growth and profit has created an environmental doomsday clock for our planet, one whose timeline some say might be at the end of this very century.

These are HUGELY IMPORTANT and CRITICAL issues that every man and woman on this plant should be talking about while we can still do something about it. But it’s tempting to avoid the issue. It’s ALWAYS easier to be apathetic and passive, and by doing so, we, too, are complicit. The automation of things makes it all too easy and likely that we remain so. The lure of comfort, convenience and cheaper prices are nearly irresistible even for the intelligent or strong-willed. We’re all too caught up being busy, tired or distracted.

“It takes surprisingly little in terms of uncontrollable unpleasantness to make humans give up and become helpless in a generalized way.” ― Robert M. Sapolsky, Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers

But this is an art site, so why discuss this here? Because we’re all part of the human race. And because artists, too, are feeling the impacts of technology. And if you have any inclinations or hopes that A.I., robotics or biotech will spare you or your profession, think again.

No human endeavor has resisted automation, so why should creative endeavors be any different? — Franklin Foer, World Without Mind

This trailer, for the movie Morgan, was made (edited) completely by IBM’s Artificially Intelligent computing system Watson.

Whether one is a fine artist, musician or an animator, the tools that we use to create and/or distribute our art has already undergone complete change. There’s no way to avoid the digital world. The hand-crafted, hand-drawn world is rapidly disappearing. Architects and animators alike rarely experience the joy emanating from the fibrous touch of a wooden pencil. The digital world is not just the end product, but has now taken over the process. And because it’s quicker, easier and faster, it meets the techno-corporate criteria of efficiency and lower costs. Using higher tech requires less skill and training. And with constantly improving algorithms, human skill and decision-making will be less and less a requirement for creating the standard products and entertainment demanded by a less and less sophisticated public that’s easily swayed by propaganda (advertising and less-than-scrupulous media). Nicholas Carr, author of the Glass Cage, is one of the foremost thinkers in this area. He expressed clearly the concerns of outsourcing work to machines:

“The danger looming over the creative trades is that designers and artists, dazzled by the computer’s superhuman speed, precision, and efficiency, will eventually take for granted that the automated way is the best way.”

… when we automate cognitive tasks like problem solving, we hamper the mind’s ability to translate information into knowledge and knowledge into know-how. — Nicholas Carr, The Glass Cage

Remember the stick shift? I do — all my cars were stick shift until now. Involving more skill, it offered greater power, control and made driving fun. Now it’s a boring task begging to be replaced.

The price we pay for automation is huge. Although it’s debatable whether the end product is better or worse — for example, is 3D animation better than 2D animation that it replaced? — what’s certain is the entire process has become less interesting and less human. More and more, software is “improving” to the point of requiring less of our ability to think, see and do. As we outsource the challenges of doing our craft, so too, disappears the knowledge and fulfillment that comes from building the skills and accomplishing our tasks the “hard way.” (Think motion-capture in animation or AutoCAD for Architects.) We mustn’t forget that learning and getting good at something has benefits that aren’t always apparent or measurable but are incredibly rewarding. Taking the time and effort matters — going thru the various phases of work is what leads to mastery.

“The effortless absorption experienced by the practiced artist at work on a difficult project always is premised upon earlier mastery of a complex body of skills.” — Mihaly Csikzentmihalyi, Flow

What’s frightening is not just the loss of the way of doing things, but the loss of challenge and physical-emotional joy that comes from tackling the problems that emerge. It’s not just jobs being taken away, but the meaningfulness of our jobs and ultimately, of our lives that disappears with it. If artists, like architects or doctors who are also susceptible to replacement by automation, become mere monitors of computer or robot activity — present only to act on standby or as backup options to machine failure — then our fates will be that of pilots, who today are responsible for less than 95% of the flight activity on any airplane. Those remaining in the profession have lost not only the joy of flying, the skill, and compensation (pilots’ salaries have decreased significantly since algorithms have taken over) but also meaning and respect (which correlates tightly with the loss of contributory value) according to Carr’s book.

There’s very little evidence that people with regular lives become happier when you replace challenges with ease. We know this because people don’t seem to embrace ease when you give them a choice. — Adam Atler, Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked

Human beings need challenge. We like work, even if we don’t like to admit it. We like to solve problems. We are designed for it. And work is good for us even when it’s far from ideal. Despite centuries of inequality and suboptimal conditions, humans have always found solace in productive, formative activity that made a difference, no matter how small. Farmers, like my dad, most certainly did. And artists, of all people, should be most aware of this; money is hardly the reason to pursue the arts. We do our craft because it’s that one thing that gives us purpose to fill the day with. And if we take that away? What becomes of us? What becomes of our craft? And what becomes of personal expression when the individual no longer matters, when machines formulate solutions for individuals and masses alike? Are we to become mere passive human herds like those presented in dystopian fictions like Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, or William Nolan and George Johnson’s Logan’s Run? Do we just leave the past behind and accept the new, just because it’s new?

The real sentimental fallacy is the assumption that the new thing is always better suited to our purposes and intentions than the old thing. that’s the view of a child, naive and pliable. What makes one tool superior to another has nothing to do with how new it is. What matters is how it enlarges us or diminishes us, how it shapes our experience of nature and culture and one another. — Nicholas Carr, The Glass Cage

James Cameron’s Terminator is a great film. But its premise of a world where robots gain self-consciousness is not what we should be fearing.

Now, some might argue that this talk is mere technophobia, and that there’s really nothing to be concerned about; new jobs will replace old jobs, machine-learning will solve our medical problems both physical and psychological, greater internet connectivity and customized algorithms will better our relationships and bring greater prosperity and personal success. Some of that will certainly become true — at least for some people. But the proponents of technology are also quick to say that the growth of inorganic industry poses limited damage to the environment and that its advancement will ultimately free us from monotonous work, thus enabling us to do art or participate in leisure all day long. But what we must ask is this: when in history have those in power been willing to take less profit? (which is clearly necessary to protect nature and diminish wealth disparity) Who will pay for its implementation? History has shown time and time again, that those who benefit from change and those who pay for it are seldom the same people. And, if a work-free utopia is to be founded? What will become of human activity in a machine-driven auto-correct, mistake-free world? We all know that joy comes from struggling with and overcoming difficulty. And will leisure still be leisure when it’s not in relief of or acting as a reward for hard work? Can we possibly trust the monopolistic/oligarchical leaders of the technological and financial industries or even our current governments that are supposed to regulate them? It might be wise to be cautious or even suspicious.

“The problem is that when we outsource thinking to machines, we are really outsourcing thinking to the organizations that run the machines.” — Franklin Foer, World Without Mind

Thirty-one years ago, I bought my first computer. Before that day, I, like everyone else, spent most of my time dealing and engaging with tangible things. We didn’t just see things but acknowledged their presence. We talked to people face-to-face, we moved about freely, and we could smell and feel the tangible heft or energy of things. Now we live and engage in a more and more intangible digital world, a stationary one made of numbers and data, one which you can neither touch, taste or smell. Nor is it one that we can truly really see either — for a flat photographic representation of something is still only a duplication or re-transmission of the real thing. An automated world is a virtual world. If we continue to mistake it for the real one, not only might we lose our art, we might lose ourselves. Any disconnect between our minds and bodies or disengagement from our physical environment is a scary thing. It’s not good to live in fear, but in this case, the alarm is being sounded because the challenges we face are legitimately scary. Humanity has never faced such individually life-altering or global level of change. Ever. Let’s demand that technology be aligned towards assisting humanity rather than replacing it.

“No experience should be confined to a virtual world that was designed to mimic reality.” — Adam Atler, Irresistible: The Rise of Addictive Technology and the Business of Keeping Us Hooked


Favorite Films: Unusual

“Art must take reality by surprise.” — Francoise Sagan, Playwright

It’s hard to find films that offer something new. Hollywood is big business, and like all corporate businesses, many decisions are based on risk. New things are risky and making movies is one of the riskiest. But as with everything driven mostly by the pursuit of profit and efficiency, there’s always a hefty price to pay. The sacrifices made usually reveal themselves in the quality of the end product but also in the process of making films (i.e. the work). The greatest worry, of course, is that the craft itself could be damaged, as viewers lose the ability to make the distinction between good and bad filmmaking.

But there’s always hope, for artists are forever finding new ways to work around obstacles. The following movies in this segment of my continuing series of Favorite Films give evidence of that. All of them are fairly new and offer surprises to the audience both in plot and visceral experience. They give us something to look forward to in a time when new movies feel more dated – more tired and worn out — than older ones. These are exceptions to the rule of stale formulas and mindless sequels so common in the movie industry today.

The Handmaiden (directed by Chan Wook Park)

Chan Wook Park’s latest film The Handmaiden is a stunner. Astounding costumes, set designs and cinematography all enhance the atmosphere that delights the palette. The film is buoyed by two excellent performances from actresses Kim Tae-Ri and Cho Jin-Woong, who play mistress-servant roles that gets all tangled up in an elaborate and deceitful game of seduction. Based loosely on Sarah Water’s novel Fingersmith, the film is set in the 1930’s and captures the sumptuous Victorian designs and influence in Japanese-occupied Korea. In a world of secrecy and privilege, we witness a young girl’s nocturnal adventures — much of the film takes place in the dark — as she takes on the job as the handmaiden to a wealthy heir, the beautifully young yet lonely Lady Hideko. Since I wish not to give anything away, Park’s film sums up to a beautiful yet thrilling erotic experience — a deep character study thrusted into a period piece with stunning literary allusions. Already acclaimed for his magnificent and shocking thrillers such as Old Boy and Sympathy For Mr. Vengeance, The Handmaiden is by far his most deviously-intelligent and visually stunning film, one filled with surprises at every turn.

Isle of Dogs (directed by Wes Anderson)

I love Wes Anderson’s “fantasy” films (such as The Grand Budapest Hotel and The Fantastic Mr. Fox). They manage to portray with more sincerity and freshness the truths of human (or in this case, canine) life than most “serious” dramas. Using simple caricatures and one-point perspective camera compositions, Anderson intrigues the audience constantly with his visual and narrative choices; you never quite know where he’s going but you can’t help but follow. In Isle of Dogs he takes it to another level. Set in Japan, it’s a story about a 12-year old boy named Atari who sets off alone in search of his bodyguard dog Spots whom he believes may have been sent to a garbage dump called Trash island. There, numerous canines have been exiled by government decree due to an outbreak blamed on the popular four-legged companions. Featuring voices by Anderson regulars like Bill Murray, Jeff Goldblum and Edward Norton, it also introduces new contributions by Bryan Cranston and Scarlet Johansson, who together play a bunch of misfit canines who help the young human protagonist navigate the land to find his dog. The film is, in many ways, mentally challenging to the audience. Anderson stays true to Japanese culture while also leaving much of the language expressed in its native tongue. This makes it difficult to follow at times. But it’s not only worth it, it’s part of the experience of venturing into the unknown, just like in real life. At its heart Isle of Dogs is a novel adventure that emphasizes without preaching the value of friendship, loyalty and is an ode to our love of dogs.

Whiplash (directed by Damien Chazelle)

Director Damien Chazelle, who also wrote the screenplay, has made a small but electric gem with Whiplash. Featuring a magnificently intelligent and physical performance from J.K. Simmons who plays demanding music instructor Terence Fletcher, the film literally whips you back and forth just as he does to its main character Andrew Neiman played by Miles Teller. It’s a simple story of a young jazz musician whose ambitions to become one of the “greats” lead him to push all things in his life out of the way, including his sleep, his relationships, his mental-emotional health and, perhaps, even his own dignity. Neiman does all of this willingly. Seeing his potential, Fletcher invites the freshman drummer into his elite music conservatory, a group of artists who compete just as harshly against each other as with themselves just to be there. But Fletcher is a mean, ruthless and abusive mentor even if he’s one who’s self-aware; his hope is to force just one of these young musicians to reach their full potential and he makes no apologies for how he does it. True to his passions, Neiman delivers an intensity and drive that matches his teacher but things twist and turn as quickly as Fletcher’s temper. I loved every minute of this movie and it culminates into a final scene that’s emotionally breathtaking for every passionate artist who’s out there watching.

Nobody from Nowhere (directed by Matthieu Delaporte)

French writer/director Mattheiu Delaporte has created a surprisingly suspenseful film. It’s never easy making mysteries and this one is original and highly unpredictable. Starring Mathieu Kassovitz as the meticulous yet bored real-estate agent Sebastien Nicolas, the film leads off with a strange yet sombre opening — Sebastien makes a final phone call just before he commits suicide by blowing up his entire apartment. What follows is the mystery as to what makes a man do what he does, and it is in this journey that we learn about Sebastien Nicolas, a man who leads a double life by impersonating strangers whom he has just met. After following his insane adventures — which reveal the skill and meticulous preparations as well as the risks he takes — we find our protagonist at a crossroads. After nearly getting exposed for his latest shenanigans, Sebastien decides to call it quits. That is, until he meets a reclusive violin virtuoso, Henri de Montalte (also played by Kassovitz) who presents to him his most challenging role yet. But in impersonating the retired musician he gets sucked in deeper than ever in the double life as he engages de Montalte’s ex-lover and her child. What plays out is not what’s expected and both Delaporte’s direction and Kossovitz’s incredibly seamless and chameleon-like performance is perfect — we are so convinced by the character’s behaviour we forget who is being fooled here. This is a modern mystery that brilliantly makes us wonder about how we see the world as well as how we see ourselves including the various parts and identities we play in life.

The Lunchbox (directed by Ritesh Batra)

Romance movies are some of the most predictable films made, not just in Hollywood, but everywhere on this planet. But here, in Ritesh Batra’s beautiful little film The Lunchbox, the tale is told in a fresh and often surprisingly whimsical manner. The premise is simple; lonely young housewife Ila (Nimrat Kuar) decides to re-ignite the romance in her marriage by making a special lunch for her husband but due to a rare mistake by the food delivery company — a very popular service in India — the lunchbox ends going to another man, Sajaan Fernandez (Irrfan Khan). The swapping of lunchboxes ends up creating the most unexpected of situations as her magnificent lunch delights the palette of the stranger while her neglectful husband gets even more turned off by the standard fare that was ordered by Fernandez. For some reason the lunchboxes continue to get mis-delivered but Ila doesn’t even bother to question it anymore as her marriage continues to fade just as she begins to develop this unusual relationship with Sajaan, a dutiful yet prickly accountant who’s about to retire. The chemistry between the two actors feels magical even though they never share a screen together. Irrfan Khan’s performance is as sublime as always, underplayed and lasting with depth and intelligence. Kuar’s Ila is beautiful and, in her confusion with both her newfound relationship with Sajaan and the overarching purpose of her life, she reveals a vulnerablity that invites empathy. Batra’s The Lunchbox is a film that reveals the beauty of strangeness — the kind of wondrous peculiarity that’s on the brink of extinction in a world dominated by modern living — and it’s beautifully expressed here by the metaphorical exchange of hand-written letters.

To see more Favorite Films go here.