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Work and Machine Languages

15 oct 2015 13:50 - 16 oct 2015 13:50
ENSAD
Amphithéâtre Rodin
31, rue d’Ulm
75005 Paris
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Intervention dans le cadre du colloque international "L'organogenèse. Pour un nouveau paradigme de recherche en art et design", à l'université de recherche Paris Sciences et Lettres.


Abstract

The artisan – like the artist and the designer of today – was frequently figured as a taciturn intuitive worker able to operate and practice but unable to articulate or interrogate machines, instruments, processes of production and manufacture.  In the “Preliminary Discourse” to the Encyclopedia, philosopher Denis Diderot wrote “Most of those who engage in the mechanical arts have embraced them only by necessity and work only by instinct. Hardly a dozen among a thousand can be found who are in a position to express themselves with some clarity upon the instrument they use and the things they manufacture. We have seen some workers who have worked for forty years without knowing anything about their machines.”  And yet, Diderot – the son of an artisan – reported that “[w]e approached the most capable of them in Paris and in the realm. We took the trouble of going into their shops, of questioning them, of writing at their dictation, of developing their thoughts and of drawing therefrom the terms peculiar to their professions, of setting up tables of these terms and of working out definitions for them…”  He summarizes saying “With [the artisans], it was necessary to exercise the function in which Socrates gloried, the painful and delicate function of being midwife of the mind,…” In this paper I will argue that Diderot midwifed the birth of a language to describe artisans’ work and their machines: the root of what we know today as programming languages.  By printing as text what the artisans usually just spoke in the workshop, the Encyclopediaists paired the mechanical arts and the liberal arts and so birthed what is the ancestor of computation and the articulation of what computer scientist Herbert Simon has argued is the “science of design.”

Plus d'informations (vidéo de présentation du colloque et de ses enjeux)

 

 

 

 

The Software Arts
01 September 2015 - 31 December 2015
31 December 2015
518
16 Oct 2015 13:50
Warren Sack
No
2655
Talks and lectures
Paris
Contemporary period (1789-…)
Western Europe
Digital humanities