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334                               Bert Olivier

                              ‘Rei’s only reality is the realm of ongoing serial creation,’ Rez said. ‘Entirely
                          process; infinitely more than the combined sum of her various selves. The platforms
                          sink beneath her, one after another, as she grows denser and more complex…’

                          And the idoru’s “agent/creator”, Kuwayama, tells Laney (1996: 238):

                              ‘Do you know that our [Japanese] word for ‘nature’ is of quite recent coinage? It
                          is  scarcely  a  hundred  years  old.  We  have  never  developed  a  sinister  view  of
                          technology, Mr Laney. It is an aspect of the natural, of oneness. Through our efforts,
                          oneness  perfects  itself.’ Kuwayama  smiled.  ‘And  popular  culture,’  he  said, ‘is  the
                          testbed of our futurity’.

                          Such a notion of technology is right up the alley of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari
                       (1983; 1987). The latter two philosophers regarded all of reality as being fundamentally
                       process, as did Henri Bergson before them. Furthermore, Gibson writes in an idiom that
                       resonates  with their  ontology  of  “desiring  machines”  constituted  by  “flows  of desire”,
                       where  Kuwayama  (presumably  alluding  to  the  idoru)  says  something  to  Rez  about
                       (Gibson 1996: 178):

                          ‘…  the  result  of  an  array  of  elaborate  constructs  that  we  refer  to  as  ‘desiring
                       machines’ … [N]ot in any literal sense … but please envision aggregates of subjective
                       desire. It was decided that the modular array would ideally constitute an architecture of
                       articulated longing …’

                          Gibson’s description of the ‘artificially intelligent’ idoru as the ‘musically narrative’
                       manifestation of prodigious masses of information resonates with the biological theory of
                       Rupert Sheldrake (1994: 129), known as “morphic resonance”, which might lead one to
                       posit  a  similarity  between  living  things  (including,  pertinently,  humans)  and  artificial
                       intelligence. In Sheldrake’s theory organisms that learn something during their lifetimes
                       ‘pass  on’  this  knowledge  through  the  mediation  of  some  kind  of  ‘collective  memory’
                       (which he compares to Jung’s theory of the ‘collective unconscious’) to others of their
                       kind, even if there has never been any contact between them and those that come after
                       them. This happens through the process of ‘morphic resonance’, which means that a kind
                       of  ‘memory  field’  is  created  by  the  experiences  of  organisms,  in  which  subsequent
                       generations of such organisms (for example chickens) share. This displays a similarity
                       with what we learn about the idoru in Gibson’s novel, insofar as she is the expression of
                       colossal amounts of ‘information’, or, for that matter, ‘memory’. She could be described
                       as a vast field of memory, and if this is the case, there seems to be grounds for claiming
                       that,  at  least  in  these  terms,  there  is  no  crucial  difference  between  living  beings  like
                       humans and this particular form of artificial intelligence. After all, the idoru manifests as
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