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CULTURE
The man who runs the
Since the mid-1960s, John Brockman has been at
the cutting edge of ideas. Here, John Naughton
introduces a passionate advocate of both science
and the arts, whose website, Edge, is a salon for
the world's finest minds. On the facing page they discuss
Marshall McLuhan, elitism and the future of the internet
. o say that John to Brockman that he read George to how it may appear. is not exclusive.
T
Brockman is a literary Gatnow's One. Two, Three... Infinity and Elitist, yes, but in the good sense ofan
agent is like saying The Mysterious Universe. Gerd Stem, open elite, based on meritocracy. The
that David Hockney co-founder of media collective USCG, way someone is added to the Edge
is a photographer. who performed in conjunction with list is when I receive a word from a
For while it's true talksby Marshall McLuhan, introduced Steven Pinker, a Brian Eno, a Martin
that Hockney has Brockman to several scientists and Rees or a Richard Dawkins. telling
indeed made astonishingly creative eventually arranged for him to meet me to do so. It's as simple as that and
use of photography, and Brockman is McLuhan and his colleagues. I don't recall ever saying no in such
indeed a successful literary agent who In cyberspace, Brockman is best circumstances?
represents all enviable stable of high- known for Edgeorg, a site he founded Ever since it appeared online,
profile scientists and communicators, as a continuation of what he describes F.dgeorg has consistently been one
in both cases the description rather as "a failed art experiment" by his of the most thought-provoking and
understates the reality. More accurate late friend. performance artist James interesting sites on the web. As I write.
ways of describing Brockman would be Lee Byars Byars believed, Brockman the front-page lead is an extraordinary
to say that he is a "cultural impresario" recalls, "that to arrive at a satisfactory piece by the evolutionary biologist
or, as his friend Stewart Brand puts it, plateau of knowledge it was pure folly Mark Pagel in which he argues that
an "intellectual enzyme". to gu to Widener Library at Harvard humans' capacity• for social learning
The first thing you notice about and read six million books. Instead, has made us less intelligent than we
Brockman, though, is the interesting he planned to gather the 100 most like to think we are. "If I'm living in a
way he bridges CP Snow's "IWo brilliant minds in the world in a room, population of people? he writes, "and 1
Cultures" - the parallel universes of the lock them in and have them ask one can observe those people, and see what
arts and the sciences. When profilers another the questions they'd been they're doing, seeing what innovations
ask him for pictures, one he often sends asking themselves. The expected result they're coming up with, 1can choose
shows him with Andy Warhol and Bob - in theory - was to be a synthesis of among the best of those ideas, without
Dylan, no less. But he's also one of the all thought." But it didn't work out that having to go through the process of
few people around who can phone way. Byars did identify his 100 most innovation myself. So, for example.
Nobel laureates in science with a good brilliant minds and phoned each of if I'm trying to make a better spear,
chance that they will take the call. them. The result: 70 hungup on him! I really have no idea how to make
Cynics might say that this has Byars died in 1997, but Brockman that better spear. But if I notice that
something to do with the fact that persisted with his idea or at any somebody else in my society has made
Brockman has a reputation as an agent rate with the notion that it might be a very good spear.] can simply copy
who can extract massive advances possible to do something analogous him without having to understand why.
from publishers. And he is indeed a using the Internet. And so Edge.org was "What this means is that social
hustler who spotted early on that there born as a kind of high-octane online learning may have set up a situation in
was a massive audience for writing salon with Brockman as its editor and humans where... we have been selected
about science. but there's more to host. Ile describes it as "a conversation. to be very, retyped at copying other
it than that. Brockman is genuinely We look for people whose creative people, rather than innovating on our
passionate about big ideas. He is work has expanded our notion of who own. We like to think we're a highly
fascinated, he told Wired magazine, and what we are. We encourage work inventive, innovative species. But social
"by people who can take the materials on the cutting edge of the culture and learning means that most of us can
of the culture in the arts, literature and make use of what other people do and
science and put them together in their not have to invest the time and energy
own way. We live in a mass-produced
culture where many people, even
Brockman can in innovation ourselves?
This essay is a perfect illustration
many established cultural arbiters,
limit themselves to secondhand
phone Nobel of Brockman's idea of what Edge.org
should do' to serve as a forum for big,
ideas. Show me people who create
their own reality, who don't accept an
laureates with intriguing and/or disturbing ideas
advanced by intellectuals who have a
ersatz. appropriated reality. Show me
the empiricists - and not just in the
a good chance track record of major achievements in
their fields. Ile doesn't seem to have
sciences - who are out there doingit,
rather than talkingabout and analysing
that they will much time for the scholar who crawls
along the frontiers of knowledge with a
the people who are doing it."
Brockman's immersion in both sides
take the call magnifying glass.
This philosophy is also what drives
of the Teo Cultures runs deep. He did one of his annual rituals. Every year,
an MBA at Columbia in the early 1960s the investigation of ideas that have not on the anniversary of the launch of the
and started his own financial leasing been generally exposed." site, he poses a question and invites
company on Park Avenue. But a friend As of now•, the roll call of current and Edge participants to answer it.
introduced him to avant-garde theatre, deceased members of the Edge salon What kinds of question? "Questions
thereby launching him on the primrose runs to 660. They include many of that inspire answers we can't possibly
path into the arts. the usual suspects (Richard Dawkins, predict. My goal is to provoke people
He then got involved in the city's Craig Venter and Stewart Brand, for into thinking thoughts they normally
underground movie scene, becoming example). It's a predominately male might not have? In previous years, the
manager of the Film-Makers' crowd, with women accounting for questions have included:
Cinematheque, the home of only 16.5% of the members - which is
underground cinema, in 1965. where probably a reflection of the fact that What do you believe even though you
his mandate was to produce a festival science is still largely a male-dominated cannot prove it? (2005)
that expanded the form of cinema. business. There arc a lot of what one What is your dangerous idea? (2006)
He commissioned 30 performance might call the "digerati" - the Clay What areyou optimistic about?(2007)
pieces by world-class artists, dancers, Shirkys, Douglas Couplands and What will change everything!(2009)
poets, dramatists and musicians. The Howard Rheingolds of this world.
resulting festival made a big splash. Two generations of the Dyson clan In 2010, Brockman's question was:
"Intermedia", the term Brockman are represented - the great physicist "How is the Internet changing the way
coined and used as his logo, was Freeman and his two kids, Esther and you think?" He received 172 replies
suddenly hot. A number ofnotable George. Edge seems biased towards in the form of mini-essays of varying
art-world figures were immersed in the the Anglo-Saxon world; at any rate, length. These were published on the
genre, among them Les Levine, Robert there are surprisingly kw continental Edge site in the usual way, but 150 of
Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, several Europeans or Asians. Brits, on the other them have now been collected between
kinetic and "happenings" artists, avant- hand. figure prominently: names that hard covers under Brockman's
garde film-makers and dramatists, the stand out include those of Brian Cox, editorship. The result: a whopping
Velvet Underground, and composer Charlie Leadbeater, Colin Blakemore, hardback, How is the Internet Changing
John Cage. Karl Sabbagh, Martin Rees, Mark Pagel, the Way You Think? The Net's Impact
This immersion in New York's Lewis Wolpert. Patrick Bateson. Simon on Our Minds andFuture, published
arts scene also led todeep interest in Baron-Cohen. Ross Anderson, Tim last week by Atlantic Books.
science and technology. Many of the Demers-Lee and Helena Cronin. Readingit over Christmas, I was
pieces at the festival were informed by Asked how he had assembled this intrigued by the book and emailed
artists' interest in cybernetics. They intriguing posse of thinkers.Brockman John Brockman to discuss some of
were reading and discussing books by replied: "It's all based on word of the thoughts it evoked. What follows is
scientists. Rauschenberg suggested mouth and reputation. Edge, contrary an edited transcript of our exchanges.
12 THE NEW REVIEW 08.01.12 The Observer
EFTA_R1_02213056
EFTA02725544
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