
A MANIFESTO FOR AN INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION ARS  INDUSTRIALIS FOR THE PROMOTION OF AN INDUSTRIAL POLITICS OF  SPIRIT
 
Motifs and motives in the creation of Ars Industrialis
 
- Our age is facing the worldwide threat that the "life of the mind" (to cite  the title of Hannah Arendt's last work, a title which in German and French can  also be translated and understood as "the life of the spirit"), will be entirely  subjected to the demands and requirements of the market, to the law of rapid  profits for firms exploiting the technologies of what have come to be known as  the culture industries, program industries, media, telecommunications, and  lastly the technologies of knowledge, or cognitive technologies.  All of these  sectors, in the expansion made possible by digitisation, tend to integrate into  what was referred to a decade ago already as the convergence of the audiovisual  sector, telecommunications and information technologies.  This expanding,  converging sector is that of what we will call the technologies of spirit.  If  the process of integration leading to this convergence has hitherto essentially  and brutally intensified the possibilities for the control of mind and spirit,  we affirm that the technologies of spirit can and must become a new age of  spirit, that they can spark a renewal of spirit and issue in a new "life of the  mind".
 
- Now, such an industrial politics must also be an industrial ecology of  spirit.  The submission of technologies of spirit to sole market criteria forces  them to remain in a control function, in the service of "societies of control"  (to use an expression forged by William Burroughs and later picked up by Gilles  Deleuze).   This function would systematise the development of applications and  uses of methods of calculation, communication and consumption to favor  short-term financial investments and large profits in industrial enterprises.   This function blocks access to these technologies for any other finality, and in  particular, it systematically forbids and impedes the development of new and  original social practices which these technologies not encourage but call for as  an essential requirement -- that is our thesis: these technologies could become  the base of a new epoch of civilisation and could conduct the neutralisation of  the imminent threat of chaos everyone senses.
 
- These technologies of the "soul" and of "consciousness" on which are being  grafted technologies of the body and other "living" technologies, aim today at  the hegemonic control and shaping of individual and collective modes of  existence at every stage on life's way.  Now, this control of existence, which  is a control and a manipulation of the desires of individuals and groups, leads  to the destruction, for these individuals and groups, of the very possibilities  of their existence, for to exist can only mean to exist as a singularity.  More  precisely, this control destroys the desire of individuals and groups, what  since Freud we call their libidinal energy.  Capitalism, in the 20th century,  has marshaled libido as its main energy source, an energy that, channelled into  commodities, allows excess industrial production to be absorbed, by means of the  capture of libido, of desires shaped to conform to the requirements of  profitable investment.  Today, however, this capture of libido has ended up  destroying it, and this incontrovertible fact represents a huge threat for  industrial civilisation: it leads, inevitably, to an unprecedented global  crisis.
 
- This threat to desire threatens humanity as a whole: the ruin of desire is  also the ruin of possibilities of sublimation and of the constitution of a  super-ego, and it consequently produces, above and beyond the economic  disturbances brought on by a model casting production and consumption as  opposites, extremely alarming geopolitical, political, social and psychic  disorders.  These dysfunctions, veritable plagues for humanity, represent the  most recent manifestations of problems that an industrial ecology of spirit and  desire must solve.
 
- Desire is constituted in symbolic practices sustained by symbolic techniques  or technologies.  The objects of desire are instrinsically singular, and as  such, are capable of intensifying the singularity of the desiring subject.  Now,  the industrial fabrication of desire, which is made possible by information and  communication technologies, consists in the categorisation of singularities,  i.e., in rendering calculable that which, being incomparable (the singular is by  defintion that for which there can be no comparison) is irreducibly  incalculable.  For all that, singularities are in no respect to be seen as at a  safe remove from technics or from calculation, but on the contrary, as founded  in practices of techniques, technologies and calculations aiming to intensify  the irreducible element in all calculation.  This is immediately brought forth  in all forms of art, as in this from Claudel: "there must be in the poem  a number that averts counting".  The fact is, however, that information  and communication technologies are, precisely, spiritual technologies, and that  also means that they are situated in the field of hypomnémata, whose  sense Foucault pinpointed as that of a "technique of the writing of self."  This  was also the major question of Plato's philosophy with its definition of writing  as hypomnesis i.e., as technical memory.  Inasmuch as they are  mnemo-technologies, the industrial technologies of spirit are a new form of  hypomnémata.  And as was the case for the hypomnémata in Greece and  Rome, and particularly in the Stoic and Epicurean schools, and also in ancient  Roman Christianity, the industrial technologies of spirit conjure new practices,  that is., in the final analysis, new social orgnaisations.  For the relations of  mankind to these technologies can in no case continue to be limited to uses and  usages as set out in user's manuals are marketing campaigns, which tend to  guarantee nothing other than immediat profit for share-holders who, according to  reports, want "two-digit rates of return" on their investments, and where  possible, never below 15%.
 
- Such a politics is suicidal: this capitalism is self-destructive.  By  affirming the possibility of an industrial politics of spirit, our association  intends to organise a struggle against this self-destructive tendency, by  contributing to the invention of practices of spiritual technologies that can  reconstitute objects of desire and experiences of singularity.  We believe that  the development of such practices is a fundamental condition for a peaceful  future in the global industrial society.
 
- The political-economic issue looming over our industrial future is, then,  one of giving a boost to desire, and not simply giving a boost to consumption,  as is frenetically and obstinately attempted in countless technocratic and  artificial measures and policies that only contribute, time and again, to the  aggravation of the evils they are designed to alleviate.  The industries of  spirit, which then already exist, but which are off-target and in a position to  destroy society instead of contributing to the foundation of a new epoch,  produce all sorts of ever-growing symbolic exchanges, whose development will  continue into the decades to come, as is the case today with wifi connections,  and as will be the case soon with the nano-technologies.  Now, these devices and  services cannot be allowed to increase to the detriment of the social fabric and  the general interest.  Insofar as the issue of general interest relates back to  the question of the symbolic, the defintion of an industrial politics of spirit  requires the invention of a new form of public power and agency, bringing  together skills and k nowledge of all types and from all horizons: economic  agents and public institutions, research foundations and associations,  economists, artists, scientists, philosophers, investors and partners in the  tasks of government at all echelons, etc.
 
- Our association is situated in Paris, France, but defines itself above all  as European.  We will seek to find interlocutors, partners and members  throughout Europe, and to organise activities outside of France as often as  possible.  This said, our association is not only European, but international in  scope and aim.  We wish to project our thinking in the above-mentioned areas to  the global level, which includes the areas of education, research, science, art,  the media, the organisation of radio and television services, cultural  industries and private program industries, as well as national and regional  development programs.
 
- Besides its partners and members in Europe and on other continents, Ars  Industrialis will develop in French cities a network of meeting places and  activities for and by its members and correspondants.
 
- The association will energise these networks through the use of all  available means of communication, and will thus have to seek the support and  sponsorship of public and private organisms and institutions.
 
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On the basis of these 10 motifs and motives, Ars  Industrialis, an internation association for an industrial politics of  spirit, will pursue the following objectives:
 
. to promote collective, international and trans-disciplinary  reflection by organising discussions, symposiums and work-groups,
. to publish the results of these undertakings in the press, in  publications and in books, on this Internet site, and in the form of motions to  be drawn up,
. to prepare preliminary studies and investigations in order to  submit propositions to be implemented, whenever possible, by interventions  and/or experiments,
. to defend the interests of its members against any prejudice  resulting from an attack on the common interests of the Association, which has a  vested interest in their defense.
 
In the meantime, Ars Industrialis will organise  meetings in Paris centered around the following themes:
. past and present European policies in the fields of the  industries of spirit.
. the Google initiative in the field of digital libraries and past  and future French and European policie on the subject.
. the issue of scientific research in the context of an industrial  politics of spirit.
the stakes involved in the UN International Summit on the  Societies of Information to be organised in Tunis in November 2005.
. the roles of marketing and publicity in industrial society,  past, present, and to come.
. the questions of art in industrial society, past, present, and  to come.
the question of European languages, and beyond that, of idomatic  difference in general.
. psychological disorders and the issues of public health from the  standpoint of an industrial ecology of spirit.
. the issues involved in industrial ownership and copyright.
. existing points of view in the USA, in Latin America, in China  and in Japn concerning the question of an industrial politics of spirit and a  new public power and agency, in particular at the international level.
 
 
 
 
George Collins, philosopher and art critic
Marc Crépon, philosopher
Catherine Perret, philosopher and art critic
Bernard Stiegler, philsopher and director of IRCAM
Caroline Stiegler, jurist