<< I know you not, I know your produce >>


“Full Many a Flower Is Born to Blush Unseen” (Gray 1751)

“Maybe it’s the language that is off-putting. Gray created a heightened diction based in part on classical poetry. Today, formality and artifice strike many as insincere, as though something that’s not colloquial is necessarily suspect. We’re still suffering under an ersatz Romanticism that gives value to the spontaneous and devalues the polished and restrained.“ (La Belle 1994)

I wonder, in the spirit of obsessive innovation, is taking note of dusting off and revisiting acts classified as ‘romantic,’ and yet as easily classifiable as pragmatic contextualization of the incessant “new?” Is it ripping off a style, is it an ode to generating the past generations, is it lacking ingenuity, is it contextualising innovation? Is it, it is all and then some.

Some recent technologies have added a new word into the mix: ‘generative‘ which does sound different from ‘to generate.’ Being ‘generative,‘ to generate, is a form of “creation,” to create, across the generations of human produce. Is a machine that is generative in some (perverting) sense a hyper-romantic dusting of styles of bygone eras, where era might be a time period in a style of yesterday’s meme? Across the polemics of whatever is generated, created or imagined, many a produce are increasingly designated to be democratized on the graveyards of human creation as “Full Many a Flower,” “Born to Blush Unseen.” (Gray 1751)

That brings this writing to further mimicratic note-taking and referencing [*1]: As rays shining brightness on our market-made cultures, there is Samuel W. Franklin with the “Cult of Creativity”(2023). His writing might be unthreading the web of “imagination,” “interpretation” versus “creation,” “production,” (tooled, mechanical, digital or other), and “generation” from an age not too far into the recent past. Creativity –if one could be accepting of a simplified interpretation of the above author’s recent publication– is then possibly a democratization of the output-sell-buy-move-on lineage.

Do I know you or do I know your produce?

There is no “or” through the communal lenses. This might be a subtext symbolized through the passionate, yet society-defining tensions between New York’s Jane Jacobs and Robert Moses.

Both could be equalized as peddling lanes for produce, and yet only one upheld community, relation, and reference to that individual human in the smallness, yet persistence of being, among the vastly architectured physical or digital cityscaping.

When city planning supremo Robert Moses proposed a road through Greenwich Village in 1955, he met opposition from one particularly feisty local resident: Jane Jacobs. It was the start of a decades-long struggle for swaths of New York.” (Palleta 2016)

The acts of cutting through human creativity-over-time (and that with roads or other and possibly less tangible means) tends to meet with some resistance. Though, is this a romantically fading notion, erased by the statistical structuring and channeling of our produce and fruits of our laboring? In the pragmatics of communal resistance we can take (agency over) produce to proverbial multi-vectored meta-levels.

In that humanly —and at times dehumanizingly— yet created, anthropomorphic environment, have you lately taken a whole day, from before the sun rose until it set, to “unproductively” observe, take note of, one petal —there placed “Between the Commonplace and the Sublime”? (Franklin 2023)

Or, are you predestined to peddle stock in styles appropriated from hushed bygone times to be forgotten the moment you set foot on the (digital) subway, swaying you back to your nightly stead?

Please note, as I too am a peddler, and yet as you can assign time to read this: no counter argument could be that some must, unwaveringly, innovate their produce for a sustainable living. After all, as you observe –as or not as judgement of– lack of beauty “observation can tell more about the observer than about the environment being observed.” (Goldsmith & Lynne 2010)

There is that place between the Franklinses, the Grayses, the Jacobses, the Moseses or the digital versions of Le Corbusierses of our times.

There is non-romanticist beauty in unnoticed smallnesses, you see. In those moments there are no big names, no genius. There is you.

There is the vulnerable yet persistent petal. There is your human-made environment. There are producing generations of cohabitation. And that especially in the solitudes of creative observations.

Epilogue

I was touched by these words by Dr. Tim Williams as a reply to the above writing.

I wish to cherish them here:

When I read the article, I sensed the tensions of what elements should be included in genuine generative, creative production. And thus, this led to subtle definitions to differentiate between concepts. As such, I felt that each was bringing to light an important nuance; each having its own emphasis on something important. Romanticism with its revolt against the rigid rationalism, reminding us that there are other features beyond what is in the nous; there is the entire phenomena to be considered. But then it too frequently morphs into the abstract and then without purpose (art for art’s sake). And then there is the industrialization of production with its utilitarian focus, almost to the point of killing creativity. And so, I thought a holistic approach looks upon all of these facets — the teleological, the epistemological, and aesthetic perspectives. The entirety of man in all that man is — a being that creates from who he is, limited but profound as that might be.”

Williams, T. (2023, May). “Holistic approach to being really generative.” Online: LinkedIn. Last retrieved 21st May, 2023 from a Dr. Williams comment on a LinkedIn post of the above writing. Thank you, sir.

Attributions, References & Footnote

Header photo: Christopher Michel, CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Retrieved from https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Generations_%284120355763%29.jpg

[*1] “mimicratic” as from Rampage376·11/22/2020mimicratic reflexes (copies moves, techniques and fighting styles like he trained for years)” https://powerlisting.fandom.com/f/p/4400000000000249793 IN: JokuSSJ. (2020, 21 November). If you lived in an Anime World, what would be your life and powers? Online: Superpower wiki.

Franklin, S.W. (2023). “Cult of Creativity.” London: The University of Chicago Press.

Goldsmith, S. A., & Elizabeth, L. (Eds.). (2010). What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs. NYU Press. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt21pxmnw

Gratz, R. B. (2010). The Battle for Gotham: New York in the Shadow of Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs

Gray, Thomas. (1751). Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard. Last retrieved May 18, 2023 from https://poetryarchive.org/poem/elegy-written-country-church-yard/

Jacobs, J. (1961). The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Vintage Books. 

La Belle, J. (1994). Full Many a Flower Is Born to Blush Unseen’ : The echoes of a classic poem about the democracy of death still resonate in our language and literature. Online: The LA Times. Last retrieved on May 15, 2023 from https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-02-16-me-23414-story.html 

Palleta, A. (2016, 28 April). The story of cities Cities Story of cities #32: Jane Jacobs v Robert Moses, battle of New York’s urban titans. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2016/apr/28/story-cities-32-new-york-jane-jacobs-robert-moses

<< 1 >>

One will take or harvest what One will. One will create what One will. One will manipulate what One will. One will invest in what One will. One will impose, share or scale what One will. One will let go of what One will. One wills the number lacking debate. One wills half too. And, then, One also wants critics two remain silent at all times


–animasuri’23

Accountable. Accountability. Accountability (GDPR).


While sharing some attributes, ‘accountability’ is not to be confused with ‘responsibility.’

Accountability’ is an allocation of measurement or evaluation (of blame or award)  after a given event, as its outcome is measured or perceived.Following the finalization or interruption of processes that created an event and its results, an individual is held accountable. One then has an obligation to report, to explain, or to justify the effect, the outcome and how these affect or impact.    Accountability relates to one’s commitment, to one’s response and to one taking ownership, with clarity, of the output or result of a given process and its (undesirable or desirable) consequences. It relates to the goodness of the result, and of its consequences. Often accountability is allocated to a single individual (if not, a blame-game could follow). One has accountability, and one is held accountable. An accountable individual, or organzation, is one that is transparent about its decision-making processes, and is willing to explain and justify its actions to others. The measurement of accountability can be done by oversight, by investigating compliance, by analysis of reporting, and by allowing enforcement of reprimands, sanctions or legal steps where judged necessary.

One could distinguish that having the ownership over a task, that must be done, is ‘responsibility.’ Responsibility implies duty of one, or more than one individual, as a team. It relates to the rightness of taking action in completing a task.  One takes responsibility, and one is responsible for doing a task.

Accountability “implies an ethical, moral, or other expectation (e.g., as set out in management practices or codes of conduct) that guides individuals’ or organisations’ actions or conduct and allows them to explain reasons for which decisions and actions were taken. In the case of a negative outcome, it also implies taking action to ensure a better outcome in the future…  In this context, “accountability” refers to the expectation that organisations or individuals will ensure the proper functioning, throughout their lifecycle, of the AI systems that they design, develop, operate or deploy, in accordance with their roles and applicable regulatory frameworks, and for demonstrating this through their actions and decision-making process (for example, by providing documentation on key decisions throughout the AI system lifecycle or conducting or allowing auditing where justified.” (OECD)

References

https://oecd.ai/en/dashboards/ai-principles/P9

European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS). (n.d.). Accountability. Online. Last retrieved on April, 10 2023 fromhttps://edps.europa.eu/data-protection/our-work/subjects/accountability_en

Pentland, Alex, and Thomas Hardjono. “10. Towards an Ecosystem of Trusted Data and AI.” Works in Progress, n.d., 13. Last retrieved on 26 July 2022 from https://assets.pubpub.org/72uday26/19e47ad0-9cae-4dbf-b2cb-b38cd38d9434.pdf

Access. Accessible. Accessibility. Right of Access (GDPR).


Through a technological lens, mapped with efficiency and with AI, ‘accessible’ could refer to the ease with which data, applications, and services can be accessed and used by machines, without human intervention. This could imply the absence of a ‘human-in-the-loop.’

Such a system is one that could be optimized for efficiency and that could perform tasks quickly, accurately, and reliably.

From an interface design, mapped with consequentialist ethical perspectives, an accessible AI system could suggest that users, with empowering considerations of their abilities, vulnerabilities or disabilities, could access and use the system with ease or with means nuanced to their specific needs.

It could also refer to the degree to which a product, service, or technology is available, affordable, and designed to meet the needs of all individuals, including those from marginalized or otherwise disenfranchised  communities.

Degrees of accessibility implies that access could not be or be less constraint due to demographics, background, abilities, or socioeconomic status. This definition of accessibility could imply some of the following concepts which could improve due to accessibility, and that to some degree: agency, autonomy, plurality, diversity and diversification, equity, personalization, inclusivity, fairness, mindfulness, and compassion. Through such perspective this could be considered a ‘good’ system design. This could then lead one to consider concepts such as ‘ethical-by-design,’

An accessible AI  system could then also be one that is transparent (the lack of transparency implies a lack of access, even if it is access to the possibility of understanding the inner workings of the AI system), and thus of concepts such as, explainable, and accountable, ensuring that the decisions made by the AI system are fair, unbiased, and aligned with ethical principles.

The Right of Access (GDPR)’ is one of the 8 rights of the individual user (also referred to as “data subjects”) as defined within the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). It is article 15 in the GDPR: “The data subject shall have the right to obtain from the controller confirmation as to whether or not personal data concerning him or her are being processed, and, where that is the case, access to the personal data…” and access to a number of categories of information as further defined in this article.

This policy item aims “to empower individuals and give them control over their personal data.” The 8 rights are “the right of access, the right to rectification, the right to erasure, the right to restrict processing, the right to data portability, the right to object and the right not to be subject to a decision based solely on automated processing.

References

European Data Protection Supervisor. ( ). Rights of the Individual. Online: (an official EU website). Last retrieved on April 10, 2023 fromhttps://edps.europa.eu/data-protection/our-work/subjects/rights-individual_en

Art. 15 GDPR Right of access by the data subject: https://gdpr-info.eu/art-15-gdpr/

Page, Matthew J, David Moher, Patrick M Bossuyt, Isabelle Boutron, Tammy C Hoffmann, Cynthia D Mulrow, Larissa Shamseer, et al. “PRISMA 2020 Explanation and Elaboration: Updated Guidance and Exemplars for Reporting Systematic Reviews.” BMJ, March 29, 2021, n160. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n160

https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-data-protection/guide-to-the-general-data-protection-regulation-gdpr/?template=pdf&patch=17#

https://ethics-of-ai.mooc.fi/chapter-5/3-examples-of-human-rights

<< Glean >>


Pincer picking leftover facts

pinched with eyes as sheers
tense and pale we peer at the broken soil
almost all out of dust and fall-out

we share a basket, you and I
woven in stories of ancestral techniques
we share a hunger, you and I

wielding a collection of crumbs and threads
following a harvesting of the gross
kneeling on eagerness and foraging for the best

we journeyed on to the neighboring field,
we stay close ’n’ won’t journey out too much
weaving green then yellow golden

and then turned within the pale
our ignorance, that is,
we know of you and I

we glean the grains of our ignorance
it is pure it is spotless, as clean as unknown
we glean there

And we hope for, and heaps more

                            —animasuri’23 
animasuri’23 << Glean >>

<< The Ambiguating Languages of Stat, Status, Statistic >>


To love automation is to love statistics; unwavering, unquestioned, unambiguously and as purely wholesome?

In 1749 the “Summarisk Tabell” or the first  “systematic collection of statistics” was architectured by the Swedish government and its “Tabellverket” which means ‘tabular work.’ In this context  it became to mean their office for tabulation and was entitled Statistiska centralbyrån’ or the Swedish Central Bureau of Statistics (The Joy of Stats 2010: 12:10)

Spiegelhalter rationally reminds us that statistics used to be called “political arithmetic”. (Ibid: 14:24).

Statistics is etymologically related to the Latin word “status.” In turn, this directly links to the concept of “political state”. The statista, or statesmen, were/are probably more skilled in affairs of state, unveiling and organizing resources for they who were controlling and running the state, than skilled in the measurement or probability via numerical accuracy. They were skilled toward the industrialization of the resources of the state. “In what way is the status ‘a’ changin’?,” might here then be a concern in favor of status rather than too much in favor of change and too many outliers. Is then (social) innovation at all times looked upon with eagerness?

This historical awareness is allowing one possible dimension in continuing processes of (mis)understanding of what was then a drive for increased control and perceived decrease of misunderstanding of (their) populations.

It is however not history alone. Similar centers of power are at play today. They might be nation states. They might be transnational. They might be known as corporate entities or (private) financial institutions. Please note, one does not need to loose track into any conspiracy theorizing to identify these. By the way, the latter I sense as a conspiracy-of-the-self against the self, by using hyperambiguating narratives (aka conspiracies) as a blindfold of what is (is as “realities”) versus what is-imagined. The real(s) is(are) “fantastical” enough (to me).

Returning back to the above referenced video —hosted by the delightful, energetic and sadly late Professor Rosling— it continues in unveiling the 19th century popular excitement for statistical (visualized) facts. Today, with a popular engrossment with distrust as a proverbial spoon, excitement is stirring up and thinning down statistical fact. We could note that by questioning our present-day versions of feudal masters we might also be deconstructing our own tools to enable us to question the same (a “conspiracy of the “self” serving the “self”?). The false linear dichotomy is as disenfranchising as any side of this faux-2D plastic coin: “Ambiguate all and thy shall be ruled through your fog. Disambiguate all and they shall be hammered and tyrannized.

As with statistics, automation too could be controlling and enabling, rational and mesmerizing. Logos and pathos. Enlightening and clouding. liberating and enshackling; …ad infinitum and gone immediately. While ethos might have been sulking in the corner.

In light of enablement and increasing both awareness and voice, W.E.B Du Bois’ work, for instance, is still an awe-inspiring and humbling exemplar, especially to the statistically-privileged and exnominated samples within the larger and diverse human population.


Automation could be interpreted as an applied extension of statistical control and narrowing of understanding by means of repurposing, appropriating and regurgitating the statistical styles of the most likely/ed (resources).

Automation, as statistics, was initially not invested into with the aim of democratization. It was a matter of control, understanding, and increase of efficiencies toward a more desired return for those who initiated and enabled the creation, architecturing and implementation.

The needed “ambiguation” (here meaning: pluralization, nuancing, modding and jailbreaking of meaning, relation, intent, application, usage, etc.) of initial intent by diversification and decentralization of intent(s), could best be seen as a process rather than an opposition against a more popular idea of a fixed denotation of language (this latter which I would prefer not subscribing to too rigidly either).

Riding yet another vector: statistics applications could be cannibalizing statistics. This could be seen as one type of ambiguation. Clear information through the lens of statistics is undone by automated diffusing statistical probabilities, possibly waging siege (with mal-, mis- and dis-information as arsenals) against initiatives aiming to unveil the incorrect and (almost) unconscious, biased “stats” we impose, as people, onto ourselves (and others). This latter too can be seen as yet another type of ambiguation. Herewith might come to mind such initiatives as Gapminder (see Rosling), Our World in Data, The Deep, etc. These are initiatives in counterattack against conspiracies, scaled bias, systemic mis-, mal- and dis-informing/conception (…and yet, brittle these aforementioned initiatives are as well).

Automation and statistics are not inherently, nor complacently, democratizing, freeing, nor enlightening. There is nothing inherently socio-historically linear nor monolithic about these. They can be and have been historically invented and applied as such though. They are/should neither (be) a fait accompli to defining your acts, relations nor realities. There must be vigilant, at times incessant, work and a labor of citizen love.

It might be felt as a real-time theater play with the actors Ambiguous and Disambiguous, in the starring roles portraying luscious eroticism between fact and fuzz, creating worlds as stages for realities re-re-formed.

References

animasuri’23. (2022). Data in, fear and euphoria out. (Blog). https://www.animasuri.com/iOi/?p=3480

animasuri’23. (2023). Learning is Relational Entertainment; … (blog).  https://www.animasuri.com/iOi/?p=4442

Aschenwall, Gottfried. (1748). Vorbereitung zur Staatswissenschaft der heutigen fürnehmsten europäischen Reiche und Staaten.

Battle-Baptiste, W., Du Bois, W.E. B., Rusert, B. (2018). W.E.B Du Bois’s data portraits. visualizing Black America. Princeton Architectural Press.

Dehbozorgi, Alireza. (2023). LinkedIn post: “”Language is an instrument of political and social domination. From ancient China to Europe, the number of words and languages one mastered were signs of belonging to an elite. Artificial intelligence is reshaping the linguistic landscape. An interview with linguist Stefanie Ullmann, machine learning specialist Omolabake Adenle, and philosopher Marc Crepon.” from: ARTE.tv Documentary. (2023). AI and Language

Gapminder  https://ourworldindata.org/

Rosling, H. (2010). IN: Hillman, D, et al. (2010). The Joy of Stats with Professor Hans Rosling.  (Video) BBC & Wingspan Production via Gapminder  last retrieved on May 8, 2023 from https://vimeo.com/18477762

Rosling, H., Rosling Ronnlund, A. (2018). Factfulness: Ten Reasons We’re Wrong About the World–and Why Things Are Better Than You Think. Flatiron Books; Later prt. editio

Our World in Data. https://ourworldindata.org/

Sustainable Development Goals Tracker (https://sdg-tracker.org/

The Deep: http://thedeep.io/

van Bergen, Emille. (20223). quoting Marc Crepon “…we basically need to maintain a relationship with language that resists anything aiming to format it, calculate it or program it…” via Dehbozorgi, Alireza. (2023). LinkedIn post

<< Part-time Humanist >>


I am your part-time activist
on call, on retainer,
dependent on your news cycle

I am your part-time care-giver
on watch, on duty,
dependent on your schedule

I am your part-time human
turned-on, copped out, washed clean
dependent on the mainframe

                             —animasuri’23 

<< Morning! Melody >>


As Sun lights through the architectures: cornered;
there is a tree

Have you noticed translucence: that being in motion;
there in a leaf

Asphalt does away with the chaotic will: of grain;
there is a puddle

Have you disrupted the gathering of wind: circling angles;
there is a bag

Big strides, big names, babble: an opening opus;
there was a passing

snaps the twig, snaps the wet foot, snaps the plastic, snaps the voice: denouement

it all snaps together
unapologetic, finding itself

                                                       

                      -—animasuri’23 

some of the triggers:

Bumbry, Beethoven, the number 9

Bumbry, Beethoven-haus

Patterns of the lifeworld

Patterns of passing

<< Greyed•out >>


Grey is a nice metaphor
metaphors mixed are gray
grey beards its way to
senescence catching
quiddity of passing

from e to a

electrons accelerating
into ten to the minus eighteen
all antiquietus
all but a hairy deal
and all but cheesy free radicals

                             —-animasuri’23 

opening line by Dr. WSA