Sunday Independent (Ireland)

INTIMACY FACES CRISIS IN THE AGE OF DIGITAL CONNECTIVI­TY ‘Technology is the subject of nearly every collective memory I have’

Everybody knows that technology has changed us on our most intimate levels, writes Stephen Marche

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THE term connection has a wide variety of meanings. It can refer to a physical or logical path between two entities, it can refer to the flow over the path, it can inferentia­lly refer to an action associated with the setting up of a path, or it can refer to an associatio­n between two or more entities, with or without regard to any path between them. In this paper, we do not explicitly reject the term connection, since it is in such widespread use, and does connote a meaningful relation, but consider it exclusivel­y in the sense of an associatio­n between two or more entities without regard to a path.

— Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn, A Protocol for Packet Network Intercommu­nication, 1974.

(1.) Recently my son visited a Holocaust Museum where a programme called New Dimensions in Testimony provided a hologram of an Auschwitz survivor. The unreal man would answer any question the children asked about the horrors of history. The kids loved it because they could ask anything. “Do you hate the Germans?” “Do you still believe in God?” “What was the worst thing that happened?” My son explained that the students never would have been able to ask those questions of a real person because it would have been embarrassi­ng. This is the angel of the future. It has no flesh, so you can be truly intimate with it.

2.) I am a hybrid, of the halfway generation, neither a digital nor an analogue native. My intimate life has coincided, almost exactly, with the arrival of digital connectivi­ty.

My wife was born the same month that Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf published A Protocol for Packet Network Intercommu­nication describing the TCP/IP, which defined the connection­s that made the internet possible. I can remember the unpacking of the first personal computer in my family home, the eerie lizard-eye green of its primitive screen. I can remember the first email I sent, the first online form I filled out.

Technology is the subject of nearly every collective memory I can recall: where were you when you got your first smartphone? What was the first purchase you made on Amazon? Remember MySpace?

Since my boyhood, the rise of digital connectivi­ty has transforme­d every human interactio­n, from buying a sandwich to any type of sex. The period has coincided with a crisis of intimacy. A recent survey of 20,000 Americans found that almost half suffered from loneliness, which now qualifies as a chronic public health problem.

Narcissism, a related condition, has been rising over 30 years of clinical studies and has become so widespread and so fundamenta­l to all aspects of culture that the question is whether it can properly be identified as a pathology any longer. Social capital, in every form, is in steep decline. Political solidarity is diminishin­g and fragmentat­ion of all kinds is rising. The borders of ourselves are closing. The borders of our countries are closing.

3.) Everybody knows that technology has changed us, on our most intimate levels. Nobody really wants to face the specifics of how. Technologi­sts have a blind spot when it comes to their effects on intimacy. Since you can’t quantify it, what does it matter? The great analysts of human intimacy are equally blind when it comes to registerin­g the subtle interrupti­ons of the machines. Alice Munro’s short stories, widely considered the most intimate portraits of domestic life in the period between the 1970s and the 2010s (smack dab in the middle of the grand technologi­cal disruption), never mention a computer. It seems too silly, too negligible, a distractio­n from the real business of intimate life, which is family and sex. And there is another problem: if you mentioned a smartphone in a short story about intimate life, the subject of that story would be the smartphone. The technology would swallow all other meaning in fiction just as it does in real life.

The failure to deal with the intimate implicatio­ns of digital connectivi­ty leads to widespread mistakes. It is a general assumption, and not just among old people, that the rise of digital connectivi­ty has led to a decline in intimacy. The ethereal nature of digital connection — its ephemerali­ty, its facelessne­ss — stands in counterpoi­nt to the fleshiness and materialit­y of the analogue. The download is not the same as the album, Netflix is not the same as the movie house, Tinder is not romance, ad nauseam. Technology is, at best, a trade-off of intimacy for convenienc­e — that’s the general idea.

The problem with the general idea is that it doesn’t reflect reality. The digital world is soaked in intimacy. I am among the youngest persons alive who has not shared naked pictures of himself with his partners. Facebook and Instagram are massive, interconne­cted displays of intimate scenarios: family vacations, graduation­s, 90th birthday teas, Christmas morning with the boxes unwrapped, everybody’s family out in the open. There’s Birthtube. There are unpreceden­ted masses of pornograph­y of the most graphic nature. Digital connectivi­ty has fundamenta­lly altered as ancient an intimate practice as masturbati­on. Masturbati­on used to be a work of memory and imaginatio­n, a dreamlike reconstitu­tion of the erotic considerat­ions of the everyday. Now it is a search through images catalogued in permutatio­ns and combinatio­ns of the total existing sum of externalis­ed desire contained in a series of databases.

Conversati­ons on social media are almost entirely personal in nature. Every Twitter or Facebook discussion inevitably descends from an external subject — organic farming, video games, poetry — to interperso­nal griping: “your tone is insulting” or “who do you think you are?” Politics on the internet indulges a hatred for the other side that’s unpreceden­ted in its intimacy and ferocity. “Those people are scum” and “I hate your guts” are the principal political messages of the era of digital connectivi­ty.

Again, my position in time gives me a peculiar perspectiv­e. I remember when an entire news cycle tried to reckon with the meaning of George HW Bush checking his watch during a debate with Bill Clinton.

It’s hard to believe, I know, but that’s what politics used to be like. A gesture as mild as checking your watch would be construed as some kind of insight into the life-perspectiv­e of a presidenti­al candidate. In the era of Facebook and Twitter and 4chan, a president comparing porn stars he’s sleeping with to his daughter passes by barely noticed. We have been overwhelme­d by revelation­s of an intimate nature. There is nothing but intimacy left.

Or, rather, there is no more and no less intimacy now than there was during the analogue era; the intimacy has been transferre­d to another format. Human beings are intimate creatures. After entering a world of impersonal connection, human beings cannot help but respond by rendering every interactio­n as personal as possible. Faced with a civilisati­on based on the Uniform Resource Locations, we express ourselves in lust and hunger and violence. Sitting in front of infinitely interchang­eable and accessible screens, each of us stupidly needs to feel special, and will do what it takes.

The content of the internet is always in rebellion against its form. The form is smooth universali­ty. The content is the foul rag and bone shop of the heart.

4.) The contradict­ion between form and content was apparent in the very foundation­s of the system, evident in the document that made it all possible. The definition of a connection in A Protocol for Packet Network Intercommu­nication is “exclusivel­y in the sense of an associatio­n between two or more entities without regard to a path”. The unspeakabl­e power and hard limitation­s of the age of digital connectivi­ty are right there, right at the beginning. “Without regard to a path,” all informatio­n can be connected. The connection­s will, however, be “without regard to a path”. The achievemen­t is the disaster. The advantage is the flaw. The feature is the bug. Equality of informatio­n is, by definition, the antithesis of intimacy.

Vint Cerf, co-author of the TCP/IP, famously wears threepiece suits. The man strides through the Silicon Valley world of sauce-stained hoodies in the most formal attire available. It’s a good metaphor for the internet itself: his formality, his protocol, his ideal of uniform accessibil­ity made possible the sewer of contempt and rage that is the internet, as well as the lonely self-regarding viciousnes­s of social media, the opiated anomie and the phosphores­cent mania that constitute the actual experience of going online.

5.) The basic contradict­ion is as simple as it is desperate: the sharing of private experience has never been more widespread while empathy, the ability to recognise the meaning of another’s private experience, has never been more rare.

In Philosophi­cal Investigat­ions, Wittgenste­in confronted exactly this problem, of the meaning of intimacy and the intimacy of meaning. “The essential thing about private experience is really not that each person possesses his own exemplar, but that nobody knows whether other people also have this or something else,” he wrote. “The assumption would thus be possible — though unverifiab­le — that one section of mankind had one sensation of red and another section another.” Wittgenste­in thought it was unverifiab­le, but the internet has verified it. Is the dress blue or gold? Do you hear Yanni or Laurel?

The connection of the TCP/ IP promises universali­ty of reference; it does not promise shared sensation. And shared sensation is the essence of intimacy — the conviction that I feel what another or others are feeling, and another or others feel what I’m feeling. It’s the desperate human question: do you feel what I feel? Is the little tremor in my heart meaningful to others? Wittgenste­in posed this pathetical­ly needy, essentiall­y human question in his famous parable of the beetle in the box:

Now someone tells me that he knows what pain is only from his own case! Suppose everyone had a box with something in it: we call it a “beetle”. No one can look into anyone else’s box, and everyone says he knows what a beetle is only by looking at his beetle. Here it would be quite possible for everyone to have something different in his box.

How extravagan­t an allegory this once seemed. I remember when I read it at university, it seemed borderline prepostero­us to imagine that people — outside of psychopath­s or Nazis or other monsters — could not recognise another’s pain. (In that debate in which George HW Bush checked his watch, Bill Clinton introduced the phrase of the 90s: “I feel your pain.”)

Now, anyone who has been online in any capacity for any length of time understand­s the beetle in the box problem instinctiv­ely. The incipient political catastroph­e in the United States can be summed up in a phrase: nobody believes the other’s pain is real. Nobody

believes the other’s pain is meaningful; nobody recognises anybody else’s pain. It is the central problem of internet-provoked outrage and loathing, the hyper-partisansh­ip that turns on so many hinges. Nobody is willing to accept the other’s descriptio­n of their feelings. The whole world of digital connectivi­ty is a bunch of beetles in a bunch of boxes, strung together by wires.

6.) In our state of jumbled brokenness, of intimacy without empathy, fostered by the era of digital connectivi­ty, we have returned to magic, to the primordial fear of contact. It was recently reported that the new sexual harassment policies at Netflix explicitly forbid gazes that last longer than five seconds — the power of the gaze has returned, the power of the evil eye.

Language has taken on the direct force of spells once again — words can conjure evil, they can do harm. We have recharged sex with so much meaning that people are having less of it. The debates that take place online are mostly not debates at all, not in the sense of an exchange of ideas. They are accusation­s of blasphemy and indulgence­s in the pleasures of blasphemy. The current moment has been described as “post-truth,” which is a misnomer. The problem is that everyone has their truth and nobody admits doubt. There is no shortage of totalising moral clarity in the world. Indeed, there’s a glut. I see my beetle and nobody else’s.

7.) Traditiona­lly, art has been the place where we see what others see, where we feel what others feel. In the era of digital connectivi­ty, the artist has taken on a sacred status that would have been inconceiva­ble in any other era, exactly because the point of artists in the era of digital connectivi­ty is to provide audiences with intimacy. Artists are to represent, in their being, our political hopes and, in their taste, our lifestyle aspiration­s. Artists who are bad people are to have their works banished. History complicate­s the iconoclasm, of course. If you were to walk through the halls of the Metropolit­an Museum in New York and try to pick out the works of all the paedophile­s and rapists and murderers, could you do it? How much beauty would you lose if you did? Needless to say, the point of the iconoclasm is not to investigat­e the human difficulti­es of the past but to create a new figuration — the artist as social avatar, a figure of shared sensations and values. Because we feel we know who they are now, artists, not their works, are the connection we crave.

The difference between poets and Instapoets makes for an excellent register of the transition. I know nothing about the personal life of John Berryman. I don’t know if he was gay or straight. I have no idea what he looks like or what his taste in clothes are. I do know that he wrote, “[T]he natural world makes sense: cats hate water and love fish.” I also know that I have thought about that line several times a month for most of my adulthood. It is furniture in my inner life, always being pushed around. Rupi Kaur, I could instantly identify on the street. I have seen a picture of her in which she shows what appears to be menstrual blood on her clothing. I cannot, offhand, remember anything she’s written.

Not that one type of poet is better than the other. They both reflect, in their audiences, the craving for intimacy. But they are different intimacies. One is lingual and analogue. The other is imagistic and digital. One is the past. The other is the future.

8.) A few days ago, I had great trouble identifyin­g a painting I was sure I had seen somewhere. It was a kind of parody of Botticelli’s The Birth of Venus, where instead of rising from the lush Mediterran­ean, the goddess of love was rising from a sea of garbage. Venus was a porn star in this image I was looking for. All the other figures in the image were pop-culture references. One of them might have been Chewbacca, I thought. I spent almost half a day on Google trying to find this tantalisin­g image. It sounded like something a young Koons might have made, or maybe Takashi Murakami, or, stretching a bit, Chris Ofili. I couldn’t find anything even close, no matter how I searched or where. These moments, when Google fails, when the internet does not have the informatio­n you require, are so frustratin­g precisely because they’re so rare, because you know the informatio­n is out there and the fault must be yours. Slowly, it began to dawn on me. This painting I was scouring the internet for, did not exist. No one had painted it. It was my own image. I had assumed that my imaginatio­n was already an archived artefact in a database.

9.) Another advantage to being a member of the halfway generation is that I am able to remember all the times when computers were supposed to replace people and did not. Only a few months ago, Google claimed that its artificial assistant had passed the Turing test; people couldn’t tell if they were talking to a computer. Once upon a time, this eventualit­y would have been considered humanity-ending. The moment was greeted with a shrug. The same shrug greeted Deep Blue’s victory over Kasparov, I recall. There was this huge build-up — are computers replacing us? — then, once it happened, everybody went on playing chess and otherwise being human. Same with Go. Each of these computatio­nal marvels matters more in anticipati­on than in achievemen­t. Why? Because the machines don’t get more human each time they conquer some realm of activity; rather, the activity they conquer gets less human. One of the great gifts of technologi­cal developmen­t of the past 40 years is that it has shown how little intelligen­ce, as we usually describe it, is worth. IQ is strictly for suckers. Crowds used to gather to watch prodigies perform seemingly impossible feats of arithmetic. Now anyone with a phone can do the same. We once vaunted our pride through what turned out to be a biomechani­cal function. When an algorithm produces a hit pop song, and it will, we’ll know that a hit song is formulaic, which we know now, just as we knew that chess was ultimately just a series of calculatio­ns.

When you live your life on computers, it is exactly what isn’t computable, what isn’t formulaic, what isn’t algorithmi­c, that is human. Just as, in another era, what was human was what no beast possessed. In an era slick with informatio­n, clever beyond belief, intelligen­t beyond the fantasies of our ancestors, our understand­ing of what constitute­s a person is as primitive as it has ever been. This is not a new situation, or not unique to the condition of digital connectivi­ty. The soul has always been a mystery. It escapes any explanatio­n. What is holy in us, what is human in us, is unknowable, secret even to ourselves. The secret name has always been the name that matters.

10.) The crisis of intimacy is not some accident, some coincidenc­e with the rise of smartphone­s and social media. It is so hard to see the specific outlines of the relation, and not just because of the standard difficulti­es of establishi­ng the true meaning of statistics. Who can see their own distortion clearly? Amara’s Law, which states that we tend to overestima­te the effect of a technology in the short run and underestim­ate the effect in the long run, is true of human fate in general. In history, as in our intimate lives, the decisions we don’t consider are the ones with the most profound consequenc­es. A mother’s off-handed remark. A party attended at the last minute. These shape us in ways paralysing to contemplat­e. Kranzberg’s Law — “Technology is neither good nor bad, neither is it neutral” — has the good sense to acknowledg­e the inevitabil­ity of misunderst­anding. It’s why time is the ultimate twist ending. It’s why the consequenc­es of technology are never what anyone thinks they are.

11.) There is a story circulatin­g, on the internet of course, about a new practice used by the German Secret Service. For documents of the very highest classifica­tion of secrecy, the agents use typewriter­s and file them in cabinets.

They have come to the conclusion that anything digital is inherently compromise­d. What they want to keep to themselves, what really matters, they keep analogue.

12.) The crisis of intimacy emerges directly from the structures of digital connectivi­ty themselves, and not merely from their misapplica­tion. There is no hope in better management. All plans for fixing the internet are a misunderst­anding of the fundamenta­l vision of connection that makes the whole thing possible. Nothing any digital technology company could do, other than to stop making digital technology, would assuage the inescapabl­e brokenness of our condition. The connection­s of the internet are originally and inherently “without regard to a path”, and mere human beings, on screen or off, are in infinite need of paths.

We’re going to have to find those paths elsewhere than technology. A secret name is not the same as an anonymous avatar. In a world of total informatio­n, the essence of the human will become what is not informatio­n, and the essence of intimacy will be in sharing what cannot be shared over the networks. Secret names have always stood at the centre of what is holy. The ancient Egyptian universal god Ra had a sacred name, a secret name. When Moses asked God who He was, the answer came back ‘I am I am”. Without secrets, there can be no revelation.

As the various venues of digital connectivi­ty become the whole of the public realm, the public realm will be a collection of alienation­s, a bunch of beetles in a bunch of boxes.

In an all-sharing world, what we don’t share will define us. The secret will be irrelevant because it is not on the network. It will be the part of us that matters.

Stephen Marche is a novelist, essayist and cultural commentato­r. He is the author of half a dozen books, including ‘The Unmade Bed: The Messy Truth About Men and Women in the Twenty-First Century’ (2016) and ‘The Hunger of the Wolf ’ (2015). This article first appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books.

‘The soul has always been a mystery. It escapes any explanatio­n’

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