DAWN Angels as messengers. The angels of the monothest tradition (lewish, Christian and capable of becoming visible. They appear and then disappear. it is said that they move through space at the speed of their own thoughts. Tobias 12:15-21: 'I am Raphael, one of the seven who are sways in the presence of the Lord... it is time for me to return to Him who has sent me.... With these words he disappeared from before them, and they beheld him no longer.' Rembrandt (1606-69), The Angel Leaving Tobias and his Family, 1637. Musée du Louvre, Paris, France. The artist portrays the departure of the archangel after he had guided the young man on his journey. A supersonic messenger: Conxorde ANGELS Out of the blue, Pia asks: "Do you believe in angels?" "Can't say that I've ever met one. Never met any- one who has, either," Pantope replies, with a chuckle. "At school we used to giggle over whether angels were sexed or not. Personally, I find the whole notion rather bizarre." They're at the Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, with the air crew off the incoming plane, standing by the baggage reclaim for the Osaka flight and waiting for his bags to come down. She's come to meet him, as she often does, and she saw him materialize out of the flow of passengers at just the same moment as he caught her eye among the crowds of friends and relations jostling around the arrivals gate. ㅗ Aircraft carry letters, telephones, agents, representatives and the we Use the term communication to cover air transport as well as post. When people, aircraft and electronic signals are transmitted through the air, they are all effectively messages and messengers "Still the same old dreamer," he says to himself. "Thanks for your postcards and phone calls while you were going round Asia…. and the faxes and the e-mails... And now here we are, you and me, large as life and talking face to face." He's a traveling inspector for Air France; he's per- manently on the move. She's a doctor at the airport medical center; she stays in one place while everything else moves around her. Her job is to see to the medical needs of people in transit. She'd met him some time back when he'd come for a yellow fever jab. While Pan- tope travels the world, on his own, Pia has the traveling world flowing around her: between the two of them a whole universe flows. "That's a curious sort of welcome!" he thinks. "For ages, all I've had from you has been words and messages; but now here you are, I've shaken your hand, and you've finally arrived." "At last!" "Airmail letters and electronic messages over the ether-and then you arrive in person. From letters to a presence-what a difference!" "Any particular reason why you're talking like this?" "I think it's rather important. Unlike you I see some- thing in all that 'transmission' of things. I see angels- which, incidentally, in case you didn't know, comes from the ancient Greek word for messengers. Take a good look around. Air hostesses and pilots; radio mes- sages; all the air crew just flown in from Tokyo and just about to leave for Rio; those dozen aircraft neatly lined up, wing to wing on the runway, as they wait to take off; yellow postal vans delivering parcels, packets and tele- grams; staff calls over the tannoy; all these bags passing in front of us on the conveyor, endless announcements for Mr X or Miss Y recently arrived from Stockholm or Helsinki; boarding announcements for Berlin and Rome, Sydney and Durban; passengers crossing paths with each other and hurrying for taxis and shuttles while escalators move silently and endlessly up and down.. like the ladder in Jacob's dream... Don't you see-what we have here is angels of steel, carrying angels of flesh and blood, who in turn send angel sig- nais across angel air waves...." "Crazy," he thinks, "completely crazy, why don't I just tell her so, straight out?" Then, out loud, with a touch of irony: "And what about all these people crowding round and pushing and shoving so that we can't even see our bags?" "Take a closer look. The same thing applies. They represent the worlds of business, government, media, management, science... They're all messengers, every one of them.." "Even these immigrant workers?" "They're carrying messages too. SOS messages to the rich." He falls silent, momentarily at a loss for words. "But," she continues, as if musing to herself, "the job of angels is only to bring messages. "So?" "...bringers of the Word, waiting for the mediator, until, in the end, here he is, finally arrived, in the flesh." "Eh..?" "Don't you see ...? All we really are is intermedi- aries, eternally passing among others who are also intermediaries? But the question is, where is it all lead- ing? Because I spend my life here, in this never-ending flow of passengers, communications, conveyors, mes- sengers, announcers and agents, because my work is at this intersecting point of a multitude of networks all connected to the universe... I hear the sounds of these clouds of angels..." "In a manner of speaking..!" "...but without ever seeing their final destination." "As for me, I'm here today and gone tomorrow," he replies, a touch morosely. She returns to Pantope's reply to her first question: "Angels are legendary beings. I don't know whether I believe in them or not. But how else are we to read and understand these sounds, in this hurly-burly world where nobody actually lives and everyone's just speed- ing through?" "T've an idea that you're using the word legend' like the legend' that mapmakers put under maps-the key that you have to study in order to read them. Am I right?" "Yes." "So you're talking about legends' in the sense A focal point of messages in transit. The main Paris airport, wthere Pantope has arrived and where Pia works, provides the stage setting for our dialog on angels and messengers. In this place of partings and reunions, the architecture echoes the ways In which messages transit and circulate in space; it has diagonals traversing a circular intersection, in the shape of transparent tunnels, travelators and baggage conveyors. Automated messengers. While it mimics the circular form of the world and the universe, this miniature model also seems aircraft which the passengers are waiting to board. It could be read as a layout for the story whik? we are about to tell. DAWN not only of mythical stories, but also that of maps?" She smiles approvingly. And then continues, with hardly a pause for thought: "What is the news that these angels are bringing? Who are they waiting for? ... What are we looking for?" "Power, perhaps. money..?" "... which are also transient. in circulation…" "...and which, in addition, speed up all this move- ment even more--where's the point to it all?" "Who or what are you looking for when you travel round the world, Pantope?" "Who or what are you waiting for when you're working in your sick bay, Pia?™ She stops, as if suddenly roused out of her reverie: "Well at least I knew who I was waiting for.... I'm so glad you're back!" "So do me a favor, why don't you just come down to earth again?" says Pantope, just a shade too abruptly. 'That's funny, coming from you, seeing you're the one who's just landed." They laugh. A hit, a palpable hit! What's more, like any common-or-garden male, he feels vaguely flat- tered: first the phone call to tell her he was coming, then his arrival from afar, and now here she is, extending this curious kind of welcome. As if he was the Messiah! "I guess I'd better humor her," he thinks. So he plays along for a while: "Oh, I'm sorry, I was forgetting..... In the original Bible scene it was the Archangel who did the Annunciation, not the woman….. Excuse me..." He bows slightly: "Hail Pia, thou that art highly favored, the Lord is with thee: blessed art thou among women." She too bows slightly, looks slightly taken aback, and half raises a timid hand. The perfect message: the Minneson to the viroin Mary transforens the Word into a flesh that is living. thinking and divine. On its own, language is a chattering noise, hollow and empty, it means nothing until it is embodied, made flesh. The perfect messenger. the archangel Gabriel enacts the Annunciation, announcing to the Virgin that she is about to become the mother of God. His word exists doubly, as both word and act. it is this perfect dual embodiment that has made the scene of the anne tron one on the no, frequently represented-and perhaps the most beautiful--in all Van Eyck brothers (1666-1426; 1385-1440), The Ghent Altar-Piece, The Annunciation, 1426-32. Detail, upper left panel when closed. Belgium. SUNRISE As a message bearer from the nito dos rountnwatdtdwh "udenteetoust fundamental time and existence which history lessons in our country have never taught. More Wet doek one he Wratn the absolutely destitute of the eorth risk seting even the seeds of humanity destroved in them and around them by the horror of this assault. Can we say that the only true man is the man who chooses to stand up and confront the risk of the destruction AN ARCHANGEL calls him the archangel, in the sense of the original meaning of arche-crigin, beginnings. We are all born from poverty, and to it we Moawteorn Lo wtat eatrenes of éestitution must we be driven for our soubs to become visibly apparent on our hands, our faces, our eyes, in our oureordour suoumared bodies-as if emanating from every part of our bodies? "euoneioelsiaheno Holding a Soul, Museo Civico, Padua, Italy. There's a staff announcement over the tannoy: a nurse is needed at the first aid center. .. Could the airport doctor...? With a look of concern, and moving lightly, she leaves him. As if swimming through the crowd. Its compact mass is hard to penetrate. When she arrives at the airport medical center, she's met by the sight of a man on a trolley. He appears to be unconscious. Ageless— probably between forty and fifty. The smell of the man hits you from several yards away. A dirty black beard and tangled, matted hair. His feet are wrapped in ragged bandages tied on with string. He wears a tattered old raincoat. His hands are red and swollen, marked with the pale scars of chilblains. 프 "Where did you find him?" she asks the two male orderlies. "At the boarding gate for the Boston flight." "Airlines don't usually carry this kind of passen- ger," says the second orderly, laughing. Pia checks him over quickly: no sign of accidental injury, visible sickness or shock. Pantope arrives, case in hand, and pokes his head through the open door. "What's the matter with him? Is it serious?" He enters. "More dangerous than sickness, my friend: poverty, abject poverty, destitution." She turns to one of the orderlies: "Did you say he had his ticket for Boston?" "Yes, doctor, he was holding it when we put him on the stretcher." So saying, he hands her the ticket: "The authorities in big cities sometimes hand out railway tickets to their homeless-one-way tickets, needless to say. The idea is to send them off to other From Rio to Osaka, from Paris to Brazzaville, in all the countries of the world, rich and poor alike, there are men and women with no nomes, no nearths, no roots over their heads. Abandoned, and with nowhere to live. The ancient Grock cynic philosopher Diogenes lived in a barrel on the street; St Francis traveler; and Jesus himself roamed the highways--the Gospels don't suggest that he actusily had an address. Homeless person, Rome, Italy. cities and dump them on someone else's doorstep. Do you think they've decided to start sending them abroad too?" "They get thrown out of their houses, out of their jobs. No kind of shelter, no place to eat. Now they're even driving them out of their own towns and coun tries.." Pantope: "Do you often get scenes like this?" Pia: "Airports are built on the outskirts of cities, in the suburbs, what we call the ban-lieue: a place of ban- ishment. Excluded and pushed to the margins, the down-and-outs end up here. It's almost a law of nature. When they arrive, they're amazed to discover that they can actually sleep here, in the dry, on benches, like ordinary travelers. And isn't that just what we all are?" "Do the police send them back?" "Of course. They spot them by the fact that they re not wearing socks. But their movement is like the movement of passengers arriving and departing—it never ceases. They stay for a while and then move on, like everyone else." "So you're the ones permanently in residence, and they come to stay?" "Sometimes we get to know them by their first names." As Pantope is about to leave again, one of the male orderlies comments: "Is there a human group any- where in the world existing without poor people?" "If rich people only ever lived with rich people," Pia observes, "how would they ever get to know humanity?" SUNRISE "They'd spend all their lives in the same way that they do at the airport, sheltered from life's problems, waited on hand and foot … chatting.." "While waiting for the boarding ment.. "In order to go where?" At that moment, as if he's just heard someone ordering him to move on, the tramp opens his eyes and tries to sit up. "How are you feeling?" The reply comes back in a muffled groan. "Are you hungry?" she asks. In his silent, lucid eyes she reads an extraordinary calmness of spirit. Pia realizes that this man is about to die, and that he possesses something which the world does not: peace. Various thoughts cross her mind, although she says nothing: I've always known that love has knowledge far above any science; you now show me that absolute destitution brings a knowledge even higher than that of love, but which has never found language-except, perhaps, the language of revelation. "He's dying." Pantope cries, dropping his bag. "Quick, an injection. The orderly busies himself; Pia fetches a syringe from the pharmacy, with gestures that are swift, precise, measured and calm; she kneels down and pulls up the man's sleeve to bare his forearm. "What's your name?" A trace of blood trickles from his right nostril; she imagines that she hears him say: "Gabriel." "He's stopped breathing; his heart's stopped..." The wretched of the carth are messengers of an extraordinary state which is unknown to us. They roam the streets, they keep a low profile, they don't say much, they reen bar stairstr disappear... and then suddenty re appeur on a surcet corner. ihey are phenoms der they are o the sense that they pierce through our sendes Homeless person, Rome, Italy. She leans over him: "Goodbye, Gabriel." At this moment, the fetid smell which had previ- ously filled the room suddenly gives way to a sweet perfume the like of which Pia has never smelt. "It's strange, you sometimes find that," she muses. Pantope, standing, and Pia, on her knees, look at each other, with the dead body between them. "As I asked before, who are you waiting for?" "Him?" Still on her knees, as if in a dream: "Poor hungry wretches suddenly set in front of a banquet... thirsty travelers discovering a spring in the desert... lovers who are cruelly rejected and then at last welcomed back... Sometimes I've seen them liter- ally faint with happiness... Would we faint in the same way, faced with paradise?" She pauses for a long moment, and then adds, emo- tionally: "Unless it's the other way round. Maybe natural death only finally occurs when we suddenly glimpse, in an instant of supreme insight, the supernatural beauty of that other world.. the promised world … "... the same world as here?" The archangels of the biblical tradition: St Michael, in his armor, on the left. carries a sword to accomoany and protect the guiding angel Raphael, the young Tobias, and Gabriel, who is portrayed as the bringer of the good tidings at the origins of both Christianity and islam. Having thus been announced, life incarnate begins, in the shape of this youth, who walks, accompanied by his guardian angel, towards his death and the blade that awaits him. Francesco Botticini (1446-98), The Three Archangels with Tobias. Uffizi, Florence, Italy, In the most ancient traditions, messenger-anges don t necessary take on only human form; they may pass by in a breeze or a ruffling of the water, or in the heat and light of sun and stars-in short, in any of the elementary flukes and movements that make up our Earth. When angels breathe out, by so doing they reveal their message twike: what they produce, and what they are. Here the breath of angels waits over the scene of the birth of Aphrodite: Nature, doubly presented, as both physical and human, breathes into the emergence of life and love. Sandro Botticelli (1447-1515). The Birth of Venus, 1485, detail, top lett Until, Horence, Kam When a tree moves in a gust of wind, physical attributes of beat and cold, as well as living elements, monumene on tar-rechine messages is it recehing and traromitting in this exchange of fluxes? FLUXES Roissy. A storm. They watch through the window as the red and white wind-sock swings horizontally in the air, taut on its axis, indicating the direction for aircraft to land. The wind is roaring and rattling the windows. Pia, stubbornly: "In this down-to-earth world to which you are so partial, are you aware that angels don't always take on auman form, but may conceal themselves in the fluxe f nature: water currents, rays of light... and wind? Pantope, ironically: "That's strange hiding themselves in things that are transparent!" SUNRISE Pia, stubbornly, again: "It makes me shiver, but I can't do without it; my skin loves to feel it, but sometimes experiences it as agony; it's delightful and agonizing at one and the same time; for me, wind is life. "Without waming it may turn suddenly from a gentie breeze to an icy blast; it may be friendly, bringing and giving; like a mother, it may warm and caress; sen- sually, it may please, seduce, stir and inspire... But as a wicked stepmother it deprives us of rest; and as a demon unleashed it violates, lashes, plunders, freezes, pushes, disheartens, and leaves us with our nerves jan- gling. "One minute it gives us the good life, and the next it steals it away. When and how does it make the transi- tion from giving to attacking, from angel to devil?™ Pantope, gently mocking: "That depends on the health and constitution of the person who decides to venture out in it." She feigns naivety: "Where does the wind come from? Where is it going?" He is eager to share his knowledge: *It derives from the fact that the Earth rotates, and from geographical differences in the distribution of heat and cold…. It blows regularly along the equator, in the form of the trade winds, the monsoon, the simoon, the scirocco, the mistral and the tramontana, leaving pockets of calm or what they call doldrums... In the old days sailing ships always used to travel in the same direction round the Earth, so as to keep the wind behind them." "When there's a wind, whether it's a breeze or a tor- nado, what does it bring? What does it take away? Is it stealing or giving? What is it bringing? Support for air- craft taking off? Clouds of pollen and the lascivious call of spring? The destructive power of typhoons? "Just to please you, I'll call them intermediaries or messengers... No system without things being trans- mitted. "Ah! So no world without wind?" "No world without all the fluxes interacting!" Pia, with an air of sensuality: "I love swimming in rivers; the caress of a gentle breeze; gentle sunshine; and the feeling of fluid earth in a mud-bath: the four elements in movement." Pantope, with a professorial air: "Could we perhaps use one word to describe all these bearers? Winds creates flows of air in the atmo- sphere; rivers make flows of water across land; glaciers make solid rivers, cutting their way across mountain and valley; rain, snow and hail are flows of water through the air; marine currents are flows of water within water; volcanoes are vertical flows of fire, from Earth into the air, or into the sea; lava flows and mud flows are liquid earth, respectively hot and cold, mov- ing across land; and drifting continents are moving car- pets of land floating on fire; right at the heart of the Earth, scientists have identified flows of fire within this subterranean fire … and up in the atmosphere and out in space fluxes of heat and light. "One element passes through others, and they, con- versely, pass through it. it supports or it transports. These reciprocating fluidities create such a perfect mix- ing or kneading that few places lack at least some knowledge of the state of others. They receive this knowledge by means of messages. Also, the act of kneading dough makes it homogeneous. The universe A message or messenger coming from the Atlantic. A piture of a storm approaching the north-west unpredictable intermingling of air, heat and humidity, turbulence and core the swine need atmospheric disturbance provido The dinner wind certain such movements, the excesses of cold at the poles and heat at the know it. Thus fluxes which are apparently disordered serve to Crownre the oorthor necessary to life imman Granted do the arutal photograpns taxen by sate ne FLUXES is made of these bridgings which extend out over space." "But what do these currents bring?" "The Gulf Stream warms Brittany; Etna scorches Sicily; the White and Black Glaciers of the Oisans cool the pastures of Madame Carl; at Baikonur, the rain evaporates before it touches ground; and when the tri- angle of India met the mass of Asia, the Himalayas thrust up their eternal frozen heights to where they now tower over the world." "What a let-down! If winds, glaciers and torrents derive simply from differences in temperature, and just distribute heat and cold around the place, where's the excitement in that?" "We're talking global distribution here! If the scorching heat in the Central Australian desert changes, it affects the winds at the equator. All of a sudden the Nino may blow up, and this plays a role in creating the Planet Earth is solid but viscous; its structure is created by the movement of tectonik plates; woman curtis swine depths of our oceans; the atmosphere derives its stability or instability from the corresponding stability of the winds. More or less slowly, fluxes of every kind Carrorm and consere the universal order of elements Might we think of our planet do an immeroe interconnecting switem of messaces? A chart of the winds over the Facilk, on september 14, 1978 based on data supplied by satellite. The arrows indicate their direction, and colors show their speed. Blue, 0-14 km per hour; ourple and oink 15-43 km per hour; orange, 44-72 km per hour. These soeeds increase in storma occurring in the southern roaring forties and towards the climate of Peru, as well as helping in the formation of cyclones in the Caribbean, which in turn affect the Gulf Stream, which then goes on to influence the weather in Western Europe. "Working through a combination of fire, air and water, these flows bring the news of Alice Springs to Sein or Origny; I admit that the coded message isn't exactly easy to decipher, but we're beginning to crack it. As the wind hits Cape Jobourg, it informs the first French person it meets about events that are happening in Florida and Australia." "Come to think of it, less of a let-down. I can already see angels there." "Oh?" "Wind is a messenger that may be good or bad, a giver or a stealer, chubby putti or devils incarnate..... Thanks to the wind, any of those places that you just mentioned echo with the totality of space.... One breeze bears and announces the whole universe." He continues, as if he hasn't been listening: "Each flux breaks down into myriad single parti- cles, but they all go to make up the world. Each of them bears little bits which, when put together, make the larger whole." She translates this, instantly: "At any given moment of the day, the breeze plays on your cheek, and since it carries codes from every- where, it's telling you about the state of the body of the world. If it is able to construct a universe in this way, it follows, conversely, that a universal reason blows in tiny particles, in legions of angels as numer- ous as the multinational crowds passing through our airports. "Don't forget that in Latin the words spiritus and anima refer to wind, the breath of life, as well as to the soul." He's taken aback: "You're trying to jumble up the human sciences with the science of things. That's all we need!" She admits: "That's because I find the science of things rather lacking, Pantope. But by the time we've finished the two of us will understand the world!" "When, though?" "So, can we say that currents create the universe?" "It seems so .. "In the same way, do Angels-as workers or opera- tors of the universe construct God in his Oneness? Like your fluxes, they move, they run, they fly, in a flurry of wings, music and good news, to announce the glory of the One. "And in this way huge message-bearing systems are created. Systems which are characterized by a circu- lation of messengers- bearers of messages which can be understood. "There we have the constructed networks in which we live, and all the various forms of circulation; there we have the world of physical fluxes of which you just described the possible unity; and, finally, there we also have my divine legends: is it possible that there exists one single language which is capable of reconnecting these three levels which we have kept separate for so long?" While Pantope hesitates, she continues: "If winds, currents, glaciers, volcanoes etc., carry subtle messages that are so difficult to read that it takes us absolutely ages trying to decipher them, wouldn't it be appropriate to call them intelligent? What human could ever presume to speak a language that was so precise, refined and exquisitely coded? "Don't you think it's rather arrogant of us to assume that we're the only intelligent beings in this world, when the River Garonne and the south wind carry with them and express more things than I would ever be able to write-and express them better? They read instantaneously the messages of other fluxes, filter them, make their choice, combine them with their own, Here elements and flures join and mix: a liquid flow in which igneous solids. water, air, land and fire fuse in one sinole cruc ble What information is being distributed by means of this extraordinare coney exchanger? translate them, and write them on land or water. They conserve them for a long time. They express themselves through explosions, roarings, noise and murmurings, tinkling and lapping. The movements of these fluxes need nothing to inspire them, because they are the inspiration! "How would it be if it turned out that we were only the slowest and least intelligent beings in the world? Tradition says that above us there are the angels.... UAES The word breeze connects with uWonewriorerAsune breeze is broken up, it divides into smaller particies. The words have wwaie orlein sne toreeetr same experience, because, as we see wrom the suntace of the sed, each wave is edged with a multiplicity of smaller waves. When a ssror says that treres a tres wind blowing, he is, usually without realizing it, using a word that relates to tractions, tractures arxtredoue trocuethus "fresh' doesn't mean "cold", but broken down into increasingly mire we monsorsordeeuixe these waves, with their smaller wavelets. Supposing we were to go along with tradition, and say that we also run a poor second to rivers and winds? "Breaths of air are rather like life. Without a breeze to bring it to life, the sea lies cold, flat and indifferent. It needs the wind to write on it, to stir it up, to make waves. Sailors and boats travel by means of wind more than by the water itself. It is in choppy seas that little putti are to be found in their greatest numbers. Wind is what constructs the universe, life, human spirit... "I find that the process of thought is rather like a large, unitary, fortuitous moment of being carried away, which is broken down into little squalls and flurries which have no particular relation to each other but which all come together in a greater overriding move- ment. At a level above the myriad angels, puffing away with their chubby cheeks and creating chaos and confu- sion, a great archangel advances, flying with the wind behind him, and it is his will that pushes me in the direction in which I wish to go. "T'm rather alarmed at the idea that thinking might end up being like the destructive seizure that had St Paul falling off his horse. In the same way that a sudden gust of wind and the pitching of a boat can send us sprawling across the deck. A slap in the face, a sharp, heavy blow, exactly applied, which makes the body unsettled, makes it lose its balance, and draws our attention to the proximity of death." "And at that point something other begins." "What's that?" "They say that deep down in oceanic gulleys there are volcanic craters where fire still mixes with water. Here, in the absence of air and light, igneous earth mixes with the dark, black waters, and scientists have apparently discovered here the formation of large molecules of the kind that originally gave rise to pri- mordial life. "That's wonderful! These stirrings, these knead- ings, these interminglings, have the effect not only of constructing a single unified system, but also, in this primordial soup, of enabling the emergence of some- thing new.. of life, of good tidings... First came the angels, next came Christmas!" Pantope, who is partial to a neat idea, waxes lyrical: "We scribblers, troubadours, scientific explorers, composers of romances, go naked to the sea. We stand with nothing save a surf-board, sometimes alone, sometimes in serried ranks, before all the oceans of the world. The biggest seas you can imagine. In Hawaii, perhaps, or Australia.... We stand before vertiginous walls of crashing waves that have been created by the wind out on the ocean. Meanwhile poor people have not much more than mediocre lapping. We get up early, come rain or shine, and put ourselves through our paces, without ever leaving the beach. Slaves. As if moonstruck. "Every work of art or science, however large or small, consists in catching the wave just right, and fol- lowing it all the way down the line, for as long as possi- ble, riding the crest, surfing, until we come to the inevitable final fall. If inspiration is in short supply, we fall straight away, or don't even get moving in the first place; but a masterpiece travels fast, moving but immo- bile, in a long horizontal plane, just slightly off-balance, on invisible lines of force that are etched imperceptibly on the wall of water. "One might say that it is the act of creation that invents them, but true discoverers see the little wrinkles written on the liquid— in the brief moments before they In many languages, the words signifying spirit, soul and God breath and light: perceirable fluxes whose message-bearing circulation transforms and reorganizes bodies She their iron Are there angels blowing through this chapter, in the same way as the wind passing through the agitated branches of these trees with the onset of spring? disappear—and then spend all their life forces and their efforts in tuning-in their eye, their bodies and the pitch of their surf-boards in pursuit of this poised equilib- rium that will carry them speeding ahead, surfing, on a line that will end only with death. "What flux or current is it that draws out or follows a successful musical score and provides it with contin- ued uplift? The delicate, fine tuning of the surf-board to the curling wave is what enables the surf artist to main- tain his equilibrium and surf on it, and to follow the flux. "A work of creativity glides and planes along a fluid roller; and it writes on the wave, as its perilous roarings transform themselves into music, and the breaking of its wave will become volume uncoiled." Pia opposes a breath of air to Pantope's flux: "One day, a day lost in ancient memory, but from which all our history has subsequently developed, the more intelligent of our desert-dwelling ancestors became tired of having to carry the heavy statues of their myriad gods around in the desert-the golden calves, the hollow plaster goats.... They decided to drop these pieces of marble and metal which obliged them to pursue the localized life-styles of sedentary populations. They decided to travel light. "Their bodies were suddenly freed of shackles; they had free hands, unladen shoulders, and all at once it seemed to them as if they were flying: across the plain, beneath the vast empty spaces of sky-which their newly-raised heads could now see for the first time— and they sang, because all they had left was words and music: "the gentle breeze which makes the moving wall of the tent quiver in the desert; "the fresh wind that drives a sailing ship on the high sea; "that transparency of air which can lift you above the summits of transcendental mountains; "the smallest of elements, flake, smoke, vapor, atom, bubble, tiny flux, minute turbulence; the tiniest inclination, invisible, intangible, barely audible, infinitely weak and fragile, faded, ethereal, airy-—a liv- ing breath, a genesis, which sows with its absence the totality of the universe, light issued from light, the only God, the true God." The wind is making their eyes water, and intelligence shines from those tears. 쓰 MORNING The labor processes of what we aolcondwotantn wer wean tooorah Iivestock rearing, agriculture MnowsthePromeheonsooette which in turn were the mothers of our own. Here we have an early kesoodsweeed blacksmith, using a hammer and aril to beat out iron that hao furnace. Nowadays we are employed principally in Krenniitine wusee Hercules, with his club, and Atlax the bearer of the heavens, as well as Prometheus who gave fire to mankind, give way to messenger-angels. Peter-Paul Rubers (1577-1640). Vultan, 1636-70, Museo del Prado, Wonorstnin MESSAGE SYSTEMS Cray X-HP/48 computer installed "une Cehcontdlm Geneva: the Latest stage in the development of human tools and Cnaloew At this hour of the morning, the crowds of men and women who work at the airport mingle with the crowds of passengers arriving on flights or about to leave. Pia is one of the former; Pantope is one of the latter. "How can I tell whether I'm leaving for work or returning from work?" asks Pantope, with a chuckle. "My work's coming towards me. What about yours?" "I travel from country to country, collecting infor- mation on the cost of living in each locality. This helps us to maintain identical standards for our employees all over the world, adjusted to take account of local prices I put all this information together, sift the figures, add MORNING up, multiply and divide, analyze them, draw conclu- sions, travel the world endlessly, and report back to HQ." "Do you work, Pantope?" "See for yourself, Pia. A lot." "On the contrary, I see nothing of the sort. My grandfather was a peasant, and he used to have to carry sacks of flour, branches of trees and bundles of wood. My uncle was a blacksmith, hammering out red-hot iron on his anvil. This is one of my early childhood memories-seeing them sitting down to get their breath back, or stopping for a drink because they were sweating. "Do we really work, in comparison? We sit down indoors, in the shade... we go to meetings... we talk …..we watch the countryside roll by..." "But we do get physically tired!" "The history of our families provides a whole line- up of historical figures. Do you remember the name for the figures who used to carry temples?" "The caryatids?" "Correct. Men and women. Atlas and Telamon. I could imagine my grandfather as one of them-strong, muscular and patient. They bore things, in the same way that they bore what life had to give!" "Porterage in the ancient style: the holding-up of unmoving forms!" "No. There was more to it than that. Take Hercules, striding across the countries of the Mediterranean with his club over his shoulder. His work consisted of hitting things with his club and, I would imagine, using it as a lever to open the Straits of Gibraltar. "It's even said that he enlisted the help of the per- son who held up the sky, to help him row when he set off in his boat for the Garden of the Hesperides. It is said that Hercules rowed between Atlas and Telamon." "Just like us, then, setting off on their travels." "Except that they had to sweat to watch the coun tryside roll by ….!" "Why is it you're only talking in images, and about heroes and gods?" "I'm just looking out for keys to help us decipher our maps better. "When the Industrial Revolution came, my uncle was in a good position with his forge. His stock in trade was the transformation of things: iron ore became ingots, and these in turn became the machines which now people the world." "All right, then. Allow me to add another ancient god to your gods-namely Prometheus, the giver of Porterage Ar the end of the gigantomachy, or War Agalrat the Gods, the mountain collapses and buries the giants alive. As punishment for his part in the battle, Zeus sentences Atlas to carry up the heavens on his shoulders. Giulio Romano (1499-1546), the whole tanYalere del Te, Mantua, Italy; detail from the Giants' Wall. The wall was built between 1525 and 1535, for the Duke of Gonzaga, Frederick Il, on the basis of sketches by Romano. The classkal Labors of Hercules: Greek mythology tells that when he also stole the 'cup' which the his expedition to steal the oxen of Geryon, he set up two columns on either side of the Strait which divides the rock of Ceuta (formerly Abyla) from that of Gibraltar (Calpe), which thereafter came to be known as the Pillars of Hercules in ofor to toutn home. had reached the ocean in the West, to travel back to his palace in the tax. This photograph, taken by produced in the Mediterranean by the teethe neit trase curved, message oconne waves propagate and generate fire. And also a modern demon-the great particle sep- arator which Maxwell invented in the nineteenth oen- tury to demonstrate that heat and cold could not of their own accord be separated. "According to those definitions, neither you nor I actually work!" "But nonetheless, when we talk about work, we still use the same word, 'form', which has remained identical throughout history. Once we go beyond the simple porterage of these forms, after their transforma- tion comes information: communication, interference, transmissions, translation, distribution, interception and atmospherics….. Transmissions and messengers." "So we work in the same way as angels, an image which is at once ancient and modern. Look at this MORNI NG crowd in front of us. Not many Prometheuses there, let alone a Hercules or an Atlas, but many, many angels, all setting off on their travels, all bearers of messages. "We no longer work on the same raw materials. Earlier forms of work consisted in holding up forms that were solid and unchanging; later forms trans- formed things by liquefying them; whereas our world, which is fluid, fluent, even fluctuating, is becoming increasingly volatile." Pia says, laughing: "Volatilis is the Latin word for things that have wings. Volatile is also used of a substance capable of changing very rapidly from one state to another. It can also be used for something which appears and then suddenly disappears. And I believe that I'm right in saying that these are three attributes of angels. "Why do you find it scandalous to talk about angels in the era of information and flying money, whereas you were happy to refer to Maxwell as a 'demon' in the era of the forge, or of Atlas, previously?" Pantope, seriously: "Perhaps if we want to act and think nowadays, this is what we have to do. We have to pull together the static, statuesque, solid, well-founded stable-formed systems-ie. Hercules and Atlas; then we add transformation or genesis via the power of fire, which is where Prometheus comes in, surrounded by devils old and new; and finally the world of informa- tion, which is complex and volatile, and the fabric of which is woven by message-bearing systems-of which Hermes was the forerunner, and which is now crowned by your angelic hosts. Is that right?" "Skeleton plus metabolism plus nervous system: and there you have life!" says Pia, happy to have her position confirmed. " MES EM S The beginning of the Age of wesownwelnethetor messenger god, the forerunner of the angels. With his winged neodewrne dxcoltonese charlot in which stands Aphrodite, the goddess of Love, together with fros, and Pryche, the soul, The wheel flles over the ground. Love also flies, with wings outspread. yent te oo, onlowemo o transmitting signals from her extended right hand. The souf and nsouowneoolust hermaphroditic alliance....tn short, the human persona flies, a wer wonmes.oeh Terracotta relief from Locri, Bruttium, in present-day Calabria, suuetlw.t44w "And, if we want to write history, we have to pull together at least three kinds of time: the reversible time of clocks and mechanics, all to do with cogs and levers; then the irreversible time of thermodynamics, born of fire; and finally the time of what is called 'negative entropy, which is what gives rise to singularities. "History no longer flows in the way we once thought." "A small world history of work in three acts, three times, three figures or actors, three states of matter, and three words which are in fact only one, by Pia, the fly- ing doctor!" An angel passes... A long-exposure photograph of the constellation Orion as it moves across the sky: three blue stars form the famous hunter's belt: the red super-giant above the beit is Betelgeuse (meaning shoulder or armpit in Arabic, beneath the belt. Rigel (foot, also in Arabic) shines, white and steely-blue; not far from the sword, the nebulous patch; and finally the pink center. The constellation of Orion, situated close to the celestial equator, can be seen from almost everywhere in the world MESSAGE SYSTEMS "A pert observation, but pertinent!" "Pardon the impertinence." "The final time, that of the Annunciation, trans- forms the world, whereas Atlas, Hercules and Prometheus bring nothing new, is that it?" "I would say so." "The angels bring the good news... Maybe one of them passed over.." "Our ancestors stayed put in one place." "That's true of Atlas and the caryatids, as porters. It's less true for Hercules and Ulysses, who were travel- ers to unknown lands. It's also true for Maxwell's demons, little gods of local technologies, keeping an eye on the counter." "While information constructs the universe, by means of networks." "Our artificial message systems encompass the world; and the world in turn is constructed by mes- sage-bearing systems: currents of wind and water transmit information far and wide." "You see: my angel-messengers pop up all over the place," Pia insists, doggedly. So we have three classes of workers parading before us: first the Atlantic, headed by Atlas, which is sometimes also Herculean; then the Promethean.." ":. and finally the angelic, whose job it is to con- nect the local to the global." "T was coming to that." "Yes, on angel's wings. And there you have the new Universe, its strange time, and its epic unfolded." Pantope doesn't give in so easily. "I can go along with applying the name angels to message bearers: travelers, messengers, announcers of various sorts, all that I can understand…... Even, if you insist, the world's flows and waves ... but aircraft!" "Do you believe that humanity are the only ones who have the ability to emit or transmit?" "Humans are the only beings that communicate with language!" "That's rather arrogant! Dolphins and bees commu- nicate, and so do ants, and winds, and currents in the sea. Living things and inert things bounce off each other unceasingly; there would be no world without this inter- linking web of relations, a billion times interwoven." "But it's not capable of meaning." "Narcissistic vanity! For the Ancients, who were wise people, certain angels, the ones who were messen- gers or couriers, looked like men; but others resembled waves, winds, the sparkling of light, or twinkling con- stellations. To this we add the wonders of our technol- ogy." "You mean follies." "I mean reason." "No and no again! Science says that there is a dis- tinction between the subject, which is thinking and active, and the object, which is passive and thought of." "That displays total ignorance of the act of know- ing! Objects know in a different way to us, that's all." "That's untenable." She points towards the window. "Look at those children out there, playing ball. The clumsy ones are playing with the ball as if it was an object, while the more skilful ones handle it as if it were playing with them: they move and change position according to how the ball moves and bounces. As we see it, the ball is being manipulated by human subjects; this is a mistake-the ball is creating the relationships between them. It is in following its trajectory that their MORNING team is created, knows itself and represents itself. Yes, the ball is active. It is the ball that is playing." "That has nothing to do with knowledge." "Yes it has. The spindle of the sundial, using the sun, but acting on its own, marks the hour of the equinox and the position of the given location; memory is found, dormant, in libraries, in museums, behind the screen of my computer, and in language, both written and spoken; this memory is awakened and brought to life when the power is switched on; imagination lights up, goes out or fades on our television screens... a pan- pipe warbles, a clarinet sings, a violin weeps, a bassoon sobs, the sensitivity of brass, strings and wood..... No, we are not so very exceptional. What old books used to call our faculties are to be found here, outside of us, scattered about the universe, both the inert and the man-made." "Images! Fancy words!" "Do you really think that machines and technolo- gies would be able to construct groups and change his- tory if they were merely passive objects?" "They're technical objects, and that's all!" "That's like saying a white blackbird-it's a contra- diction in terms. These biros, writing desks, tables, books, diskettes, consoles, memories... produce the group that thinks, that remembers, that expresses itself and, sometimes, invents. Maybe you're right, maybe we can't call these objects subjects. However, maybe we could call them technical quasi-subjects..." "As if they were endowed with the same qualities as us?" "Almost! To consider them purely as objects derives from the basic contempt that we still have for human labor-the abiding error of those who, because they've An admirable synthesis of an angel in human form together with the flux of light from the sky. The sundial is usually seen as a clock designed to measure the passing of the day, but this is only a comparatively recent usage. In its carliest days, in classical Greck and Babylonian times, It was used as an instrument of scientific research, and particularly of astronomical observation. Specialists used it in order to read equinoxes, solstices and the latitudes of places. Bya suitable inclination of its spindle ce gnomon, which was arrived at by rigorous calculation, the signais which it received from the sun provided the necessary information. It was partly with the help of the sundial that the Greeks were able to construct a geometric model of the world. Chartres Cathedral, France (1174-1260). 쓰 40403 10291 116. 0S 2 R216: OOU: 1 000 J14 .4220.7 200000 207a, THT szU 900900yg1 C128 2128 80 R215 *--)R217 F216 اللومن R239 0203 0212 * R237 -9 R289 C483 482 _ J34 R484 Beeces 16406 200000d: become so used to having servants, think that there have to be people between the tools and them!" "Artificial intelligence has only just been invented." "Not at all! We've always been artificial for nine- tenths of our intelligence. Certain objects in this world write and think; we take them and make others so that they can think for us, with us, among us, and by means of which, or even within which, we think. The artificial intelligence revolution dates from at least as far back as neolithic times. "To call these marvelous things simply objects B220 • 그래 -470 カイト 6872 a list 1204 R253 3-1R261 R252 R236 2113 لوم R238 卒、 Two products and preconditions of the message age: our message- bearing systems function by means of machines which, by themselves connect up and interlink as message-bearing networks. The simple, ancient labors based on to labor processes of great derives from the term 'plex, as do sojectives such as douore, triple, all of which refer both to large numbers and to loems which are characterized by nodes and networks that are extremely "complex". From the least complex to the host Comply eleanor Tom Wedo enter ont right, micrography of the surface of a microprocessor or integrated seems to me as idiotic and unfair as saying that slaves and women have no souls, that servants have no needs, and that children don't need freedom. In other words, giving no rights to the world ... all from the arrogance of seeing ourselves as the only ones who matter." "So you're saying that we're not the only subjects in the world?" "Like laws and legal rights, intelligence is also shared, as are memory and consciousness... I'm not saying that contemporary technologies have pene- trated the universe of thought all by themselves, but MORNING throughout the ages they have occupied a space which was close to that of subject: the stone axe, the anvil, the hoe ... work for us actively; they are not merely exten- sions of our hands and arms. The violin draws the artist forward, my pencil writes for me, my language moves ahead of me." "So why bring angels into it now?" "In the oldest traditions, angels do not necessarily take on human appearance; they may also inhabit the universe of things, whether natural or artificial." "So you see angels everywhere….?" "Their lot, with all the august title of subject! The light that comes from the sun and stars brings mes- sages, which are decoded by optical or astrophysical instruments; a radio aerial emits, transmits and receives; humans do not need to intervene here. As they say, when something's working, leave well alone." Pantope continues, as determinedly as Pia: "If we become angels, will we still work?" "Probably never again in the same way as yester- day, when our forefathers were out there toiling on the land, or laboring over a piece of iron, forming it, reforming it, transforming it with their hands, using tools and machines." "We exchange information with objects that appear more as relations, tokens, codes and transmitters." "What's more," says Pia, seriously, "in this new world of increasing interconnectedness, the old kinds of work are fast becoming counter-productive. They pollute, they produce crises and unemployment for the societies organized around them; they are allowed to outlive their usefulness, and become dangerous, waste- ful. As a core activity, they enlist and mobilize the whole of society in the same way that religion once did, The modern ervironmental consequences of cartier kinds of work. The greenhouse effect, one of the possible results of polluting the atmosphere with its high-temperature gassy exhausts, traditional society threatens a global warming of the dimate. The general conditions for biological survival thus become endangered. A sinister photomontage shows planet Earth offering itself up as vicum to the noxious outpourings of a factory. or, more recently, war. Disasters always seem to derive from things which had an initial usefulness, but which, even though they have outlived their time, we then continue to operate, despite their enormous costs in terms of death and catastrophe." "The best becomes the worst!" "I remember the moment when I became aware that work had crossed from the realm of being a sacred value to the point where it had become a problem. Already we are really only working to repair the rav- ages wrought by that work!" "You're making me nervous! Do you mean that unemployment awaits us all?" "Certainly, and we're going to have to face up to it as cheerfully as we can." "Impossible!" "For hundreds of years science has been working at lessening the hardships of labor." "Would you say that it's succeeded?" "You'd have to be blind not to see it. Why work any more? So as to do something less well than a computer could do it? Why build a refining plant-wear out work- ers, destroy the environment, create crises and inequality of income, amass vast fortunes whose consequences leave the poor of the world hungry —when some micro- organism could actually do the refining process better, faster, cleaner and more economically than we can." "So building things gives way to computers? Amazing!" "Do you need something to tell the time with? Why make watches when nature is swarming with molecules, atoms and crystals with vibrations beating in exactly the rhythm that you want?" "Where do we find the dial, though, Pia?" "Everywhere: in the sky, in hunger, in tiredness.... It is an irreversible fact that our advanced tech ologies are producing unemployment in the old labe processes, whereas they should be busying themselves with giving us a life like that of the shepherd Aristaeus, who had his nourishment provided by the bees. The week which began in the neolithic era has now come to an end, and here we are, with weeks of Sundays and entire sabbatical years. "We have done enough in transforming and exploit- ing the world! The time has come to understand it!" "You're reversing the old slogans!" "Data is more of a known quantity, and when it's well chosen, it will do." "So what will we be left with, in terms of ordinary life?" MESSAGE SYSTEMS Work in tomorrow's word? Substances in nature sometimes recol more counte erodenis than the substances that can be produced by human labor. Instead of making things, will we one day be refing on natural suostances to make things for us? Nature produces certain liquid crystals when new in the curren maintain ordered structures, like solid crystals. They are light sensitive, changing with the light, and have rare optical qualities which we would find hard to reproduce by industrial processes. "Knowledge, culture, welfare, art, conversation. the life of angels." "An inconceivable Utopia!" "Our world-the world of communications—-has already grown old, and is giving birth, at this very moment, to a pedagogical society, that of our children, in which education will be carried on continuously throughout a lifetime, and the fact of having a job will become increasingly rare. "There will be open universities all over the place. Long-distance learning will take the place of campuses, which at present are closed ghettoes for the children of the well-to-do, concentration camps of knowledge. "After agrarian humanity came homo economicus, industrial man; now a new era is opening, the age of knowledge. We'll be living on knowledge and the cre- ation of connections, and we'll live a lot better than we did when we lived by transforming earth and objects (which, by the way, will continue by automated pro- cesses)." "Everybody is scared of this new world, Pia. But what's going to happen in the meantime?" "We're so keen on hanging on to old things, even when they're obviously obsolete or going badly wrong. ... As a result, before this new world can come to fruition (even though it is actually already here with us) there's going to be a lot of disaster and suffering-ali deriving from our tardiness in understanding the living present." "More of your Utopias!" "Do you know of any single important change in history which was not initially derided by some people as Utopian, while others saw it as a miracle for which they prayed?" "Well, my dear, I would say that we haven't got all day. Enough of the fantasies, let's get to work." The crowds swirl around in the vast interchange that is the airport. "We're a long way, now, from the lone field and the crowded workshop. Our message systems nowadays affect whole populations... All of humanity, virtually. There you have the heroine of today's tragedy: no more actor, no more choir, no more God, nor class.... The whole of humanity in a state of interconnectedness." "It's true to say that it is a state of communication, but what is it saying to itself? And, once again, why? And can you tell me how the plot's going to work out, and how it will end?" "We don't live in a theatre, or in the cinema!" The classical attributes of humar! labor are found again in the new. The Latin word pagus meant the field which the farmer ploughed: a term so ancient and venerable that religious and cultural terms such as organism, pagans, peasant and the French pays and paysage all derive from it. "neare on whiler reading-the oldest form of storing information that we know, and one of the first circuits- derives from the same word, Lines of writing seem to imitate the the microchip take the page and the pagus to a further stage of development, rendering them more complex? Raoul Ubc (1910-). Terne France. Today, urbanization is moving space and Inwading the entire space of the planet. It invades not only its surface-where cities are growing and increasingly merging into conurbations and megalopolises— but also vertical space, the province international purveyors of information operating by means of orbiting satellites. Like the cities of antiquity, this new, single, global city is divided- between the upper quarters, which are wealthy and well-appointed, and its nether zones of abysmal poverty. A vew of Rocinha, the largest shanty town in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. AJready by November 1987 its inhabitants numbered more than 200,000. An office block in the Défense area in the west of Paris. LOS ANGELES "Now, tell me about your trip." "The trouble is, everywhere's beginning to look the same," he replies, wearily. "No," she says, "everything is different. Earth is moving increasingly towards becoming one single city of interconnecting messages, but each local area within it defends its own distinctive identity." "All right, let's imagine that we're taking a trip to Newtown, an invisible city which has its center every- where and its circumference nowhere. We shall visit its upper reaches; in addition we shall also visit the nether regions of Oldtown." "Prepare for take-off," she says. "Fasten your seat-belt, my friend. At night, above 으 The city of angels, whose bright consteliations illuminate the face of the Earth: the whole of Western Europe, with the the North of Spain; the East coust of the United States; Japan; the wethe Western delecte mary other countries besides. The picture shows the present extent a nostalgia for earlier ages of darkness, when our ancestors could still enjoy the soothing benefits of darkness and shadow. A montage of night photographs taken from a satellite. our heads, you can barely see the stars, but when you look down at Earth it looks as if all the stars have ended up there, because by night the world's cities are all lit up. "The angelic hosts are coming in to land." "An appropriate comment, seeing that were dis- cussing angels from the point of view of humanity, work, towns, language, and transmissions of every kind." "You promise that later we'll get to talk about God and the Devil?" "For the moment, let's keep our feet on the ground, if you'll pardon the expression. Let's fly over Holland, or Honshu. Keep the map spread out on your knees. Can you make out the cities that are marked on the map? Amsterdam? Osaka? No, because all we can see on the ground below us is houses and factories, with hardly a break between them. The cities marked in our atlases no longer match up to the reality on the ground." "So, seeing that our cities are becoming one big urban sprawl and you can't tell one from the other, ! suppose we should redraw our atlases." "For instance, Holland could be the name for the urban sprawl that takes in Rotterdam, Haarlem and the Polders; Japan becomes the name for that single city that runs from one end of the island to the other. Urban- ization means that cities are now taking over from countries." "It would be good to see this from even higher!" "For sure! Let's suppose that on a fine June night a satellite passes over Strasburg in France. What does it see? The interlinking blocks of light of the super-giant megalopolis Europe, beginning in Milan, crossing the Alps via Switzerland, running up the Rhine through Germany and Benelux, going off at an angle through to England and crossing the Irish Sea to end up in Dublin. A great herd of creatures ranging from Geneva to Lon- don and beyond, from Italy to Ireland, as if congre- gated by the light, with Paris seeming to stand guard, like a shepherd, at a distance. This vast, dense, yellow sprawl of ever-increasing connectedness is reproduced in North America, along a line running from Baltimore to Montreal; it can also be seen in the Five Dragons of South-East Asia. Viewed from a satellite, it stands out clearly. Electricity has driven darkness out of the West." "In days gone by, people used to think that the stars were armies of angels. Now they've come down to ground level. Like I said before, we're living like angels." *They say that cities developed out of clearings in forests; now these 'clearings' appear like 'darklings' in between the cancerous growths of light from the city. The pale mass of Mont Blanc and the Alps become oblit- erated. "One single city per region or island, then one per continent, and finally one for the entire world. New- town, with its interlinking brilliances, tends to become one single entity. "This slow filling-in with light is increasingly encroaching on the remaining black patches of fields, mountains, lakes and forests. while at the same time remaining invisible for those who live in it, because its lattice-work supplies, invents and multiplies every kind of light, illumination, aerial views and science. Solitude, silence, calm, serenity.... overcrowded cities that oulse with the noise of motors, chainsaws, pneumatic drills, radios and loudsocakers. The onslaught of lighting in every available space. The proliteration of the written word. Strident advertaing Increasing speeds of journeys. The agitation of human intercourse. And the lightning passage of time.... Are we willing to lose peace and life, come what may? an anonymous cowice monk standing in the park of the Abbey of Camaldoli, Tuscany, Italy, 1992. "We now live in Newtown-under-Light. This city is new, will soon become the world's only city, and will have as much light as you can imagine ... it is like liv- ing in the center of some huge bright eye; being blinded by the light, we cannot see it." "Contrary to what the Scriptures describe, where the light shineth in darkness, here we have light exclud- ing darkness." "Caught in this web of light, we have no choice but to live in it, try as we may to take refuge in secluded valleys, or pack our ropes and go climbing up sheer rock-faces in the mountains." "Unlike the olden days, when prophets wailed in lamentation over the fate of cities that had been destroyed, today we weep for the loss and destruction of forests and deserts, of monasteries and places of retreat, of the silence and solitude which is so necessary for thought. The city of light penetrates the shadows, thrusts its disturbing presence into the midst of tran- quillity, violates the silences of nature with its written matter, eradicates species.... We can no longer hear the chanting of our new lamentations, because we are deprived of that ancient silent space which once lent itself to transporting the clamors of despair. MORNING "Our culture has never taught us the phrases to cry out against the death of the countryside, where it's strangled by the horizontal and vertical cancerous spread of this universal Newtown." "How has it suddenly become vertical?" "Has anyone ever calculated how many hundreds of aircraft there are, at any given moment-and here I'm talking about all the time—-hurtling round at two thousand meters above the earth?" "Millions of human beings— here are your angels, Pia-inhabit the upper reaches of this city, which remain absolutely stable, albeit moving at subsonic speeds. I too number among their legions! Do you want my address? A340; OSA-CDG; 14F. Decipher that, if you please!" "Type of aircraft; direction of flight; seat number." "The people change, but the airline remains the same." "What should we call this upper zone?" Pia asks. "Angeville, Agen, Angers...?" "No, I know..! Los Angeles!" They laugh. "An upper zone which is reproduced at an even higher level by rings of orbiting and stationary satel- lites, launched from the equatorial suburbs of Kourou, Baikonur and Cape Canaveral, and by a hundred net- works for the communication of electromagnetic mes- sages." "The new aristocracy live less and less in the lower zones, and increasingly inhabit these world-encom- passing zones of airline flights and airwaves." "They sleep there, and they eat there. Lo and behold, the biggest restaurant in this aptly-named aerial Los Angeles. In flight, day after day, it distributes hun- dreds of thousands of identical, insipid, sickly-sweet meals, which are eaten simultaneously by real neigh- bors, all strapped in, sitting at identical troughs and going through identical motions, as if by some predeter- mined harmony. Who can I say is my neighbor? While my neighbor is flying and drinking over Labrador, I'm lunching and sleeping over Spain or New Zealand. We're both close and distant at the same time." "The Universal Supper. How would you paint that, Leonardo? Who would ever have imagined that the banquet of angels could be so banal?" "We also have one identical auditorium, spread across a thousand mobile locations, reproducing one single video show which, whether in one's own home or elsewhere, whether up in the air or down below, only permits us to see the outside on condition that we stay inside. Soon, Angel-Newtown will produce only one single spectacle. Close the portholes against the Earth's splendid landscapes, so that we can drug ourselves on low-grade movies!" "Urban space is gradually taking over the world at the horizontal level, and now it's revolving too." "It's taking off and flying. Is it the rotation of the Earth that sets this ascendent sublimation of history in motion, by centrifugal force? Having taken over the world horizontally, Newtown is now taking off verti- cally." "The cities of earlier ages vied with each other in constructing pyramids, ziggurats, skyscrapers, cathe- dral towers and spires, reaching ever upwards as a way of affirming their mastery, their pride, their yearnings and their piety: a race to see who could get highest, using the weighty forms of stone, iron, glass and con- crete. Now, freed from substantiality and weightiness, 쓰 Will Newtown succeed where Babel failed? Gathering together every language in the world Wore construe ton of tu universal city ... that same city networks-cover the entire faxe of an Earth which may now be seen as one single entity, by virtue of its necessary interconnectedness. The present-osy counterpostion of the local and the global, of multiculturalism and scientific way, the story of the Tower of the building or the lower o Babel, sixteenth-century Flemish painting. Pinacoteca Nazionale, the inhabitants of Newtown have taken off and are reaching heights that are almost literally astronomical. "Are we now living at the top of the ladder of the angels?" "Let us go lower, to take a look at your ordinary, average traveling mortal: the carpet that leads from the side of his bed takes him downstairs into a hallway which leads to a garage, where he finds the car which will take him down the street, to connect with the motorway which takes him to the airport, and a flight to somewhere or other, during which he is able to phone anyone who may care to talk to him, or he may receive e-mail on his portable computer, via a link to the LOS ANGELES computer terminal that is sitting next to his bed. "Nobody leaves interiors any more: of the hotel, of the bus, of the station, of the aircraft … even of the her- meticism which protects messages. As was the case with the films, just now, so it is with Newtown. It has no "Newtown is organized around a single ribbon, the outside of which is indistinguishable from the inside, a road which goes from a pedestrian footpath to a wide boulevard, or, if you prefer-I click or zap-an airport runway, or, if I choose differently—I zap or click—to a fax line, a radio or a television... It interconnects with such diverse media— the body, one's car, wings and air- waves that one can say that it reproduces the curve which passes through all the points of the variety within which it develops, by penetrating through dif- ferent dimensions." "Isn't science amazing!" Pia cries, with mock ingen- uousness. "A path with a choice of options, which gives you Mobius Street, Von-Koch promenade (he was the Some places in the world resemble a holary, the books of which describe the world itself. To pile up separate sheets, portolanos, plans, maps and networks... one on op or the outsieh these intercommunikations? Since we are now beginning to have intercommunication, does this mean that from now on we than getting them to communicate an astortment of kattered among themselves. However, countries? A slate quarry in Alta, Norway. inventor of the graph that passes through all points) and Macintosh Avenue all rolled into one. "By means of this single highway, the intersections of which are constructed out of our multiple choices, Newtown creates linkages between all spaces, whether concrete or abstract, of this world and of any other: it creates links between towns, houses and othoes, women and men, science and information, ideas and notions... But also, and more particularly, between cities and men, women and emotions, offices and ideas.…." "That's exactly what I've been looking for, Pantope. Why is it that angels can pass everywhere? Because they have the facility of this single universal highway. You'll soon end up talking like me." "Present-day communications break down every obstacle: we now know how to join together things that are very different — dots to words, spaces to discourses, things to signs." "So now we have the abstract mixed in with the concrete, down to the tiniest of fragments! The word has indeed become flesh!" "The transport systems of previous ages were rec- ognizable by the flatness of their networks. They con- nected positions which were of the same nature and within the same dimension: a map of Roman roads, for instance, or the locations served by an airline company. ... These layouts were almost naturalistic, comparable perhaps to rivers on a map— in fact one used to take the coach in the same way that today one takes the plane, and in other instances people took boats on rivers. Cities as we have known them thus far, as ensembles of streets, form one such independent grid. "The new media traverse spaces of an entirely different nature: physical space, yes, stones, peo- ple, languages, the encyclopedia of knowledge .. and they have us moving from the worldly to the spiritual, from the earth to the alphabet, or vice "Yesterday's media formed a mille-feuille, in which the various different sheets, piled one on top of the other, remained separate, isolated in their own dimen- sion, while today's interconnectedness pierces verti- cally through the stack, or punches through between varieties, thus enabling them to intercommunicate." "Pantope, what we have here is a pantopia taking the place of Utopia. Imaginary travelers used to describe the islands of Utopia-from the Greek ou topas-which meant 'Nowhere'. But our angelic city is to be found cvnneicre" He is pleased to have his position confirmed. He laughs. "In the old days, when we left the countryside, the square of the village where we lived or the yard where The new city of angels bears a striking resemblance to the symbolic heavenly Jerusalem of antiquity, our problems are similar to the ones that exercized the mind on the Mie doo which Dante addressed in his Divina Commedia: where, today, wthin ches gloeal ey, are we to find hell, purgatory and paradise? The anawers to this question are moment, painful, obvious and crying out to be recognized. tweifth-century fresco from the ceiling of the Church of Saint-Theudère, Saint-Chef near Bourgoin-Jallicu, Isère, Franxe. we worked, we were always tied to a particular net- work of transport. But now we have the ability to travel from any one point to any other. "It is as if there exists everywhere an interchange which is stable, universal and mobile, whose nodal points connect things which, previously, were not related tinct realities." "This invisible Newtown conceals at least two dis- "An earthly city? Certainly, since, moving beyond localized patches of terrain, it is invading the Earth as a whole sea, continents, mountains and the very atmo- sphere-in short, the entire planet, and not just the humus from which we get our designation as 'humans'. "A heavenly city? Yes, that too, because it is invad- ing the upper regions of the stratosphere and reaching out into the suburbs of interplanetary space, to Mars, Venus and Jupiter. But above all because it is pursuing a new vocation that is abstract, scientific and informa- tional. This tree-a Tree of Knowledge, perhaps-had its roots in a lowly, wretched shanty town; then it grew, straight and upright, to soar above the city. its sparse foliage the wealthy upper city. it is emblematic for a rescing of this chapter, and for a reading of the world as it is today. LOS ANGELES "In short, and interchanger or intermediary city. A purgatory or transitional space between the hot hell of old-style labor processes and the speculative paradise of new technologies. "Is this twin-reality Newtown constructing the House of Angels? "Should we rewrite Dante and St Augustine? "The philosophers of classical antiquity made a dis- tinction between things and signs. This separation is an obstacle if we're looking to understand the world as it is today. "Newtown industrializes signs, manufactures things with information, constructs the universe with wind, does not remain obtusely materialist within mat- ter, but goes beyond and carries materialism into soft- ware." "Here the word becomes flesh—in other words glass, steel, concrete, machinery, world. In techno- logies the techno comes to be replaced by the logos." "The population of Newtown no longer goes to work—to the factory, or to the office-as you might think, but to school. From the moment the day starts, the teaching never stops, not even at lunchtime or at night. Television, radio, mass media and telecommuni- cations, never cease their endless chatter..." "As a pedagogical society, Newtown only obeys bosses and politicians if they become teachers." "The industrial revolution has encroached on the realm of the spirit, and is transforming this global city into an intellectual cloister." "Thus, once words come to dominate and occupy flesh and matter, which were previously innocent, all we have left is to dream of the paradisaical times in which the body was free, and could run and enjoy sen- sations at leisure. If a revolt is to come, it will have to come from the five senses!" "So Newtown is an unimaginable mediator, invisi- ble and all-embracing, informatic, pedagogic, stable in its rapid intercommunications- cars, aircraft, satellites, transmissions and messages may circulate as fast as they like, but there still remains in movement a more or less equivalent number, which makes the city and with which it hums-realizing intimate proximities across immense distances. I never leave the woman who waits for me, and whose voice I hear all the time wherever I go, and whose face I see likewise, in image: invariant albeit varying, moving but not moving-Newtown has its center everywhere and its circumference nowhere. "We have built a world city." "Given that it's relentlessly invading space, does this mean that it loses the possibility of history, which previously progressed by means of exploration of unknown territories? Does the end of extensivity mark the end of our adventures? Have you noticed how nobody has time any more?" "It's not as simple as that. These spatial dimensions presuppose violent movement; they presuppose enor- mous forces at work, reserves of power to produce them, as well as reserves of knowledge to liberate them. Nowadays we live not so much in houses as in our sci- ences: in mechanics since the classical era; in thermody- namics since the nineteenth century; and in information theory in our own century." "Begotten by writing, scientific and technological knowledge construct this new city, and at the same time the city destroys anything of antiquity that remains within it. Just take a look: industrial suburbs taking over more and more of the countryside, to the point of MORNINO suffocation, and the aggressive hell of commercial advertising-violent, gaudy and howling with ugli- ness." "You're exaggerating, Pia." "Once, not so long ago," she says, "we placed our hopes in the City of God, because we recognized that human constructions were potentially so evil that one day they might end up destroying themselves, or destroying each other. Now here we have something new in our history: this new city is a single, indestruc- tible, universal entity which allows us to place our hopes only in itself and in its achievements. Further- more, people can only enter it if they know how to access it everywhere. But, in former times, paradise was only conceived and imagined as the elsewhere of inac- cessible hope. "Neither the great religious traditions, nor the genius of Dante ever foresaw that one day we would be able to communicate instantaneously all across the world, by technologies resembling the Golden Bough. "Once upon a time men were mobile, errant adven- turers, heroes, half-gods or born of men; and in those days they traveled through dangerous lands and rivers, through meadows of asphodel and the fire of God. By strength or ingenuity they would overcome a thousand obstacles, or span in an instant the distances between Earth and heaven. In any event, they were required either to defy death or to seek salvation by pursuing a life of charity. "Nowadays the city even works for everyone. This Newtown is a vertical city, a new purgatory, which comes close to paradise, but in the process produces hell." "No!" What value do we we set on these flying angels, these gods, these highest inhabitants of the hypertechniel verdest city, Astronauts in a state of weightlessness. "Yes! Its sciences and technologies, its movements and its motive forces-animal power, muscle power, coal, oil, electricity, atomic energy-bring it to the point of occupying all space on Earth, whereupon it then reaches up, instantly, into the sky, as high as it can. It develops by means of savage competition, rivalry, dispute, emulation, fighting, assaults, wars and never-ending internecine conflicts. The flames of all this feed and fuel its incessant rise, while at the same time ejecting downwards, by way of exhaust, the debris and dross of increasing numbers of spaces and men-obsolete, beaten, overtaken, defeated, con- victed of errors, faults and crimes, and reduced to ignorance, to miserable poverty, to disease and death. "This intermediary Newtown, firing off into the heavens like a comet, produces a heaven that is avail- able for fewer and fewer people, and an increasingly extensive and substantive hell. And it leaves human cities destroyed in its wake. Is it the bottom of the lad- der, or the denouement of the action?" She continues, warming to her theme: "Our cultures contain no text, either literary or reli- gious, to enable me to sing the modern lamentation that I'm wanting to put into song: they're in their death throes, about to die, crushed under the weight of their growing population; how many towns and villages of Africa are suffer- ing the horrors of famine and the nightmare of epi- demics; how many cities of the Americas are laboring under the pressure of huge shanty towns, exponential growth and the prostituted delinquency of millions of children; cities in Asia with no refuse disposal services, invaded by rats and threatened by plague; cities in Bangladesh, drowned under biblical rain- storms because they have no flood defences; a hundred unnamed communities living with the threat of Aids… ...and Newtown itself, penetrated, breached and ... Compared to the value of these dead humans lying next to each other, in the horizontal, flooded-out city down below? After the monsoon, near the village of Balvadar-Palli, Bengal, todia, November 19, 1977. invaded by the Third World in the form of the Fourth World: unemployment, drugs, poverty, destitution, indigence, migration, dirt, delinquency, dereliction. Here we see it, before our very eyes-Oldtown of the Archangels. It too is one single city today, embodying, summarizing and incorporating the destroyed cities of earlier phases of our culture and our memories. It is vaster in extent even than Newtown itself, and is inte grally linked with it, except that it cannot hope to rise so high towards the stars. They reappear before us— new and ancient Troys, destroyed; Jerusalem, demol- ished; Rome, conquered, sacked and ravaged; Con- stantinople, burned; Hiroshima, bombed ….. as lowly A NI E L E S old quarters of Newtown. Here, most particularly, we have our most ancient history, unmoving now, as if strung out in extensivity, for a general repetition, deso- late witnesses of the era in which, being subjected to the empire of old necessity, we did not produce our misfortunes by means of science. "The time of history now appears frozen, as if immobile in space, like some Dantean scale of degrees. "In this ancient city, our first parents are dying. Our originary, religious founding culture is dying of famine, dirt, disease and dereliction among the actual and pri- mal chaos which Newtown carries within it and pro- duces by its rising. "There's an answer to the question, my friend: what are we talking about, across the networks which form the universe? "Of this primordial death, the node of the tragedy." "A city of the most ferocious inequality?" he asks. "Yes," she says, "a ladder of injustice." The Trojan Wars, the sack of Kome, the dekructions ot Aiba. Jerusalem and Athens, the fire of Alexandris, the taking of Constantinople... In history and was terreineohcurooew built on the ruins and destruction of these primitive cities.... The nolaKeinurtohhtreon London, the sun of Hiroshima… Is this history being perpetuated? Which America was the basis for the disappesrance of the primitive CwrcooewenuYant Over what ruins does the new and universal city now fly? Undecorated royal houses, close to the prison quarters, woenu ticen.2e thertn high up in the Andes, Peru. Jacob took of the stones of that place, and put them for his pillows, And he dreamed, and beholda ladder set on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven: and behold the anges of god sscending and ord stood above it, and said, i am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of isaac." (Genesis, 28:11-13) Iacob's Ladder, Avignon School, Musée du Petit-Palais, Avignon, LADDERS The messages carried by our voices are made up of various components: a basis consisting of background noise; then a musicality of sounds accompanied by phonemes, varying according to the language that is being spoken; and finally meaning. For what realia ton die michae message-bearing ensemble of these scales or ladders unceasingly Ha nade ternaton dos commu our world-fashioned as it is by the word-our writings and our words. A spestrogram of the human voice. Pia says: "My brother Jacques is arriving from Rome; do you want to come with me to meet him? He's traveling with his daughter; she'll be missing school.... We could make up for it." "No, I'm going to get some sleep to catch up with my jet lag. I'll meet you for lunch." She gives him the key to a room at the hotel. Jacques materializes out of the crowd, and as he tells her about his trip Pia holds the little girl in her arms and asks if she saw any angels on the way. "Oh, lots," she says, snuggling up half asleep on her aunt's shoulder. Hermes, the messenger god of Classical antiouty, hes shattered on Tr tioor uh ththies troor painted on a ceiling): we recoonize him by his statt and his winged helmet. The Christian medistor takes his plce on the pedestal. soth Meercuty and Chnist are at the point of death, their limbs wracked and their bodies torn. Messengers cioappese in célation to then understanding their death agonies Teiocawhane hett Chabeeee, der Kne tcirenine of this book, Gabriel, the traveler and passenger, dies similarly. He bears within him the