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Theory, Culture & Society

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Knowledge as an Ecology
Susantha Goonatilake
Theory Culture Society 2006; 23; 170
DOI: 10.1177/026327640602300227

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170 Theory, Culture & Society 23(23)

Knowledge as an Ecology
Susantha Goonatilake

the Aryan invaders of the northwest Indian


Keywords biotechnology, Buddhism, co-
subcontinent, as well as the intervening Persian
evolution, epistemology, knowledge and infor-
Empire, had a common source. There are thus
mation lineages, ontology, process, South Asia
interesting similarities between the gods of the
ancient Greeks and the Vedic gods, as well as simi-
larities between the societies depicted in the epic

K
nowledge and, in its lesser form, infor- poems of the Homeric and Vedic traditions. Greek
mation, can be considered as an ecology, a historian Herodotus wrote that Darius 1 (521486
many-splendoured jungle brought about by BC) would frequently call Greeks and Indians
evolution. Such knowledge can decode or read together for counsel and discussion. Later, Aristox-
reality as in science. It can create new reality(ies) enes (350300 BC) mentions a dialogue on human
through technology, that is, through the appli- life between Socrates and an Indian philosopher
cation of science. Or it can create reality(ies) as in (Chowdhury, 1988). Possibly because of these
stories, art, etc. Or it can transform reality(ies) as links, some of the ideas prevalent on the subcon-
in some mind, body and non-human technologies. tinent from 700 to 500 BC which are found in
Knowledge, and in its lesser form, information, the later Vedic hymns, the Upanishads, and in the
is historically delivered to us in the present with philosophies of the Buddhists and the Jains
knowledge and information lineages stretching appear in later Greek thought. For example, the
back millennia or centuries or shorter periods search for one reality in the Upanishads is echoed
depending on the nature of the knowledge/infor- by Xenophanes, Parmenides and Zeno, the
mation transmission lines, whether they be oral, founders of Greek mathematics who sought the
the hand-written word, the printed word or the One Reality. Pythagoras, one of the founders of
digital form. These knowledge/information trans- Orphism, is alleged to have travelled widely and
mission lines change, responding to their physical been influenced by the Egyptians, Assyrians and
and cultural environments, creating new knowl- Indians. Almost all of the religious, philosophical
edge/information and excising old knowledge/ and mathematical theories taught by the
information. Each such lineage possesses built-in Pythagoreans were known in India in the sixth
ontologies, epistemologies as well as the resultant century BC (Rawlinson in Goonatilake, 1998).
concrete knowledge/information. Ontologies and Thus, Pythagoreans, like the Jains and Buddhists,
epistemologies could often be implicit and not refrained from destroying life and eating meat.
formally expressed in the knowledge/information. The concept of karma, representing the cycles
But in regions where there have been formal of necessity, was also central to the philosophy of
discussions and proper organizations for such Plato, for whom rebirth is due to the hand of
discussions formal ontologies and epistemologies necessity, men being reborn as animals or again as
have emerged. They have emerged for instance in men, a belief common to all major South Asian
Greece and South Asia. One sees a wider variety religious systems. Vitsaxis (1977) has shown that
of formal thinking on ontologies and epistemolo- in structure and method, general approach, and
gies in South Asian thought. The core civilizations the growth of parallel lines of thought on
of the world with their formal apparatuses for specific points, the two traditions show common
discussion and onward transmission in the form of features.
the written word allowed different regional Empedocles (490430 BC), a disciple of
lineages of knowledge/information to emerge. Pythagoras, propounded the four-element theory of
There was cross influences across regions, yet matter, consisting of earth, water, air and fire, and
there was a distinct regional flavour to the differ- the four-humour theory of disease, later followed
ent knowledge trees that emerged. by Hippocrates. This has parallels with the earlier
One of the civilizations that influenced the pancha bhuta concept of prthvi, ap, tejas, vayu and
making of Europe, through Greece, was Sumer, a akasa earth, water, heat, air and emptiness (ether)
civilization with close connections to the Indus and with the tridhatu of the earlier Rig Veda and
culture that was contemporary with it. Archaeo- the tridosha of Ayurveda. One could note that the
logical finds indicate that close trading connections pneumatic system in the Hippocratic treatise On
and other contacts were maintained between the Breath is theorized in the same manner in the
two regions. The language of both the Greeks and Indian concept of Vayu or Prana.
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Problematizing Global Knowledge Science/Alternative Science 171

Similarly, atomic theories occur in the two is just a stream of physical and psychological
systems, appearing earlier in South Asia than in phenomena that is always perishing. One analyses
Democritus, taught by Katyayana, an older oneself, knows oneself only to realize that there is
contemporary of the Buddha. And Heraclituss no self in the first place. In Buddhism, this elimi-
belief that everything is in a state of flux is nation of the sense of self sets one free. The real-
preceded in more sophisticated language by the ization that the self is a process means that the
anicca and anatta discussions of the Buddhists. future becomes open-ended. In the Buddhist
The influence of South Asia on Greek thought is analysis, unsatisfactoriness and anxiety become
firmly expressed by Clement of Alexandria in the essential to the I because these are the Is
second century AD when he says that the Greeks response to its own groundlessness.
stole their philosophy from the barbarians This is the phenomenology of flow for human
(Halbfass in Goonatilake, 1998: 30). thought, and we could extrapolate this perspective
From the end of the 16th and beginning of the to the other two lineages. The Buddhist analysis
17th centuries, with the exponential growth of also suggests a moral compass for the future of
science in Europe and its spread across the world, merged knowledge streams; such a perspective
one sees a tendency for regional civilizations to includes a profound moral code of altruism, and it
come under one hegemonic whole, a process accel- is not entirely farfetched to think that these prin-
erated through the present globalization. But the ciples could also apply to future scenarios.
present is also characterized by a shift to Asia A study which evokes some of the same philo-
whereby regional elements can enter the dominant sophical approaches in charting the future tech-
knowledge system aided by Asians working in nology is Varela et al.s (1993) The Embodied
science and technology pursuits in both the West Mind. They propose a bridge between the mind as
and Asia. conceptualized in science and the mind of
But the knowledge/information field is not everyday experience, through a dialogue between
limited to that of human culture. There are Buddhist meditative practice and cognitive
historically derived lineages in biology (3.5-billion- science. The approach was applied to a variety of
year-old genetic system) and extra-somatic themes in neuroscience and cognitive psychology,
computer-based knowledge/information trees artificial intelligence and evolutionary biology. In
(say, 60 years old) with, respectively, their own doing so, they approach what we considered as the
knowledge/information trees. These three systems three lineages, namely the internal flow of our
the cultural, the genetic and the artefactual are thoughts (the culture within the minds), the flow
in the expanding world of biotechnology and of genes (evolutionary biology) and the flow of
advanced information technology beginning to artificial thoughts (artificial intelligence). Varela
merge and exchange information across the three and his colleagues evoke the flow patterns that one
lineages and their respective knowledge/infor- observes internally through Buddhist meditation
mation jungles. With massive computer storage and find here the key to tackling the other two
and processing of cultural information through realms. They tackle the problems of non-self and
information technology (IT), and the bringing in of of everflowing streams, and describe the dynamics
biological processes into IT as well as new biologi- of the three lineages. Their discussions are located
cal developments which transform our very human in specific debates with the research communities
modes of apprehending the world, the merging of in these three areas. They reject the subjectobject
cultural, biological and IT knowledge/information dichotomy that arises in different forms in all the
has profound implications. three lineages.
If in the future we will be constructed and They consider that the inside and outside of
reconstructed from biology, culture and artefact the lineages jointly move forth, enacted by the
what should be our epistemological, philosophi- subject and the external object. A process of co-
cal, ethical, and subjectively felt guiding prin- evolution results because the environment is not
ciples? If we would then be cyborgs and hybrids, given but is enacted and brought into being though
what should the interiority of robots, of a process of coupling. The world is not taken as a
constructed hybrids be as they navigate reality and given, with the organism representing or adapting
tunnel through time in our lineages? to it. Their Buddhist approach transcends this
The person is not a what but a process, a duality, the outcome being co-determined by both
thought in line with Buddhisms view that the the inside and the outside. This position would be
universes components are in a state of imperma- the same, whether ones perspective is human-
nence, of ceaseless movement; nothing is durable cultural or that based on artificial intelligence. One
or static. Being is only a snapshot in the process of would act as the environment for the other, and
becoming, lasting only the length of one thought. together they would enact an unfolding future.
There is no stable substratum of the self; the self Tackling the problems of the future requires

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172 Theory, Culture & Society 23(23)

radical reorientations, sometimes returning to very esting, while ignoring other information carriers
old observations. and their contents.
Encyclopaedias are universal compendia of
available information. Any new encyclopaedia References
must recognize the new non-Diderot world. This
is the re-emergence of non-European civilizations Chowdhury, Amiya Kumar Roy (1988) Man,
and the merging of biological and digital infor- Malady and Medicine History of Indian
mation with the cultural. The new encyclopaedia Medicine. Calcutta: Das Gupta & Co, Ltd.
must reflect this as well as the ontological and Goonatilake, Susantha (1998) Toward Global
epistemological bases on which the different Science. Mining Civilizational Knowledge.
turning points of the knowledge tree/jungle have Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
occurred. This would imply that ontology and Varela, Francisco, Evan Thompson and Eleanor
epistemology should be made overt in the ency- Rosch (1993) The Embodied Mind. Cognitive
clopaedia and not implied as universal. Such onto- Science and Human Experience. Cambridge,
logical and epistemological concerns would also be MA: MIT Press.
germane to the biological and digital aspects when Vitsaxis, Vissilis (1977) Plato and the
viewed from the point of view of evolutionary Upanishads. New Delhi: Arnold-Heinemann.
epistemology.
Moving around in this hybrid information Susantha Goonatilake is Fellow of the World
jungle evokes a comparison with exploring the Academy of Arts and Sciences and Senior Con-
jungle by the forest dwellers. The latter are sultant for the United Nations on science and
immersed in a tangle of information extruded by technology, and faculty member of the Vidyartha
thousands of plant and animal organisms that Center for Science and Society. Among his books
surround them. They would sniff around and are Toward a Global Science: Mining Civiliza-
explore only one or two, ignoring the bulk. So it tional Knowledge (Indiana University Press, 1998)
is in the emerging new jungle of information. The and Merged Evolution: Long-Term Implications
new encyclopaedia would help us hunt for new of Biotechnology and Information Technology
information that their histories suggest are inter- (Gordon and Breach, 1998).

Science, Technology and Society


Michael M.J. Fischer

be configured into broader, yet informed,


Keywords actually practiced technoscience;
approaches to living in a complex world. Unlike
collaborative ethnography; deliberative democ-
so-called policy studies which also take for granted
racy, power and accountability; epistemes and
the local political cultures in which they operate,
infrastructures; harmonization and local regu-
STS places such political cultures into comparative
lation; reflective arts
perspective to make assumptions more account-
able, especially in the disjunctions and differences
that inevitably arise in attempts at global har-

S
TS (Science, Technology and Society) has monizations (of clinical trials, of patent protection
become an increasingly vital emergent field and intellectual property rights, of precautionary
in the last quarter of the 20th century along versus riskbenefit approaches to regulatory
with the transformations of the technoscientific sciences).
infrastructures of the modern world. Unlike the While the intellectual lineages of STS are
older fields of history and philosophy of science varied, key are (1) the early 20th-century debates
which took as their interlocutors the idealized about the cultural constructions of rationalities
philosophical versions of how the universal truth (Max Webers notions of rationalizations of differ-
of science was claimed to be established, STS has ent cultural spheres, based on their own logics and
taken scientists and engineers as active collabora- differences between value- and instrumental
tors in understanding how the specialized rationalities; Ludwik Flecks Durkheimean
components of actually practiced science and engi- account of thought collectives and what would be
neering knowledge in their localized contexts can later called by Thomas Kuhn (1962) paradigm

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