by foodforlife » Sun Aug 07, 2005 1:14 pm
It's one of the most tossed around and abused terms, but I think it can be very useful, simply on the level of understanding a "meme" as a unit of propaganda. I see it as pragmatically understood as a piece of information... err, a viral concept, basically. <br>Simplify- it's useful in implying through our language that there is in fact a "propaganda matrix," that ideas flow, that- listen, dude, you didn't come up with that one yourself; it's a *meme.*<br>I'm aware that there is a whole long history to the term, a history that has its dark side, if you will. I understand it came out of Richard Dawkins' book "The Selfish Gene," and, as such, meme was a semi-cyborgian term, i.e., yes... "they seem to follow the same rules of natural selection." Give me a break.<br>There was also a famous book "The Meme Machine" by one Susan Blackmore, which I skimmed last year, which comes from a similar AI type of perspective, when you boil it down.<br>Then there are people, such as author Ken Wilbur- recently mentioned on this forum- who peddle "meme" to signify color-coded societal groupings. Read his "The Theory of Everything," and you will learn about how the world's people can be grouped into color-coded "memes," from the green memers (ex-hippies) to the purple memers (new agers, for want of a better term), to the orange memers (achievers, scientists). This view effectively breaks up the world's people into categories of belief systems. It conveniently ignores social class. And it ignores the fact that these movements, or social groupings, are spread by the elites as a divide-and-conquer. Indeed, Mr. Wilbur admits to working with "advisors" to the likes of Clinton, Blair, and Bush Sr. I'd say- people are not memes, silly Wilbur; people pick up memes *that are fed to us.* Who controls the memes? Who controls?<br>Anyway, the color-coding represents another popular attempt to sieze this most coveted term. <br>Do words matter? They infinitely matter. So let's capture the meme flag. "9/11 truth" is a meme. "Parapolitics" is an emerging meme! "Another world is possible." ... Word memes. (In coffee shops around the country) everyone's talking about it! Meme- idea trend. Virus.<br>So never mind the pseudo-science, let's stay at the level of societal reality. Perhaps the late Terence Mckenna (to stay thematic and integrative, but not to implicitly endorse McKenna at all) was right- "the universe is made of language."<br>Huh, are we back to the Noam Chomsky conversation? :-)<br>Are you a good meme, or a bad meme? <p></p><i></i>