Digital Aesthetics: The Discrete and the Continuous

Theory, Culture and Society 36 (1):3-26 (2019)
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Abstract

Aesthetic investigations of computation are stuck in an impasse, caused by the difficulty of accounting for the ontological discrepancy between the continuity of sensation and the discreteness of digital technology. This article proposes a theoretical position intended to overcome that deadlock. It highlights how an ontological focus on continuity has entered media studies via readings of Deleuze, which attempt to build a ‘digital aisthesis’ (that is, a theory of digital sensation) by ascribing a ‘virtuality’ to computation. This underpins, in part, the affective turn in digital theory. In contrast to such positions, this article argues for a reconceptualization of formal abstraction in computation, in order to find, within the discreteness of computational formalisms (and not via the coupling of the latter with virtual sensation), an indeterminacy that would make computing aesthetic qua inherently generative. This indeterminacy, it is argued here, can be found by reconsidering, philosophically, Turing’s notion of ‘incomputability’.

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M. Beatrice Fazi
University of Sussex

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References found in this work

Intelligence without representation.Rodney A. Brooks - 1991 - Artificial Intelligence 47 (1--3):139-159.
Finite combinatory processes—formulation.Emil L. Post - 1936 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 1 (3):103-105.
Computers and the Superfold.Alexander R. Galloway - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (4):513-528.
Chapter 11 Like a Prosthesis: Critical Performance à Digital Deleuze.Timothy Murray - 2009 - In Laura Cull (ed.), Deleuze and performance. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 203-220.

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