the prospect of bad behaviour was one of the main reasons i didn't take up blogging when jonny baker started - i still remember the conversation with him outside a coffee shop in london. the virtual community is quite different in culture to what we normally experience in the flesh and blood.
there is a theological challenge for the church to engage with virtual culture, and the incarnation brings a good critique. below is something i wrote a few years ago when at college that i offer to put into the pot:
Virtual culture, virtual community, virtual humans: ergo, virtual God?
Is it possible to have a virtual society with virtual humans who create a virtual culture? Almost ten years ago, a thesis was produced by Tim North, which looked at these issues in the wider context of an anthropological study of the Internet and its users. Underlying his thesis was the primary research question of whether the users of the Internet and Usenet global computer networks form a society that has a distinct culture of its own. After discussing whether it is possible for a society to have more than one culture, North concludes that, ‘It seems reasonable…to assume that the members of a particular society all share the same culture.’ However, he goes on to argue that the nature of the Internet is such that it spans the globe, and that if it were to conform to the classical anthropological understandings of society and culture then its users would need to be from the one society. This obviously cannot be the case, and so he resolves the issue by creating a new term for the Internet’s societal structure, which he calls the pan-societal superstructure. So, a new way of thinking about society is created with the Internet. This pan-societal superstructure frees the Internet from some of the responsibilities of ordinary society such as providing food and shelter for its inhabitants, because its members are also members of societies that already provide those things.
This new way of thinking about society, virtual community and culture, (which sounds like an oxymoron) has nevertheless been taken seriously by the private sector as it engages with globalisation. For example, Sandia, a major research and development agency in USA is doing work in conjunction with BT in this country in developing virtual culture in cyberspace so that Internet communication becomes more like a ‘real’ place. One of Sandia’s developers, Elaine Raybourn says, ‘Designers of collaborative virtual communities now have the opportunity and responsibility to consider the impact of the underlying dynamics of culture and intercultural interactions such as identity, negotiation, conflict, power, equity, and trust on virtual spaces and collaborative communities.’
Some of the work they are doing incorporates the use of ‘avatars’ – human-shaped figures that can be generically representative, or fairly sophisticated 3D representations of an individual which include skin texture, hair and eye colour, all faithfully reproduced on the screen. Raybourn says, ‘The avatar is you in cyberspace… your avatar might ‘walk’ on the computer screen and ‘sit down’ at a table with others in virtual meeting space. It’s your persona on the Internet.’ Essentially, it’s a more sophisticated form of a ‘chat room’.
So, to some extent, a virtual human exists in cyberspace. But what effect does cyberspace have on valuing a human being? And where does cyberspace’s valuing of human beings lead in the discussion about humanity’s relationship to, and valuing by, God?
We do not live alone as individuals in the Universe. Historically, we are creatures of community. The social sciences are in general agreement that we are products of the shaping of our communities, and that we in turn shape others who encounter us. So if a person’s community is predominantly virtual (e.g. being an only child of absentee parents, who is brought up with massive TV and computer input, lacking in social skills, who is home-tutored for schooling, who gets a job as a computer operator working from home), will that person’s self-image correspond to a virtual self-image, and only be able to conceive of a virtual God?
Embodying the Trinity in the Incarnation
From a Christian perspective, it seems quite weird to think of humanity being able to be valued if it is ‘disembodied’ in cyberspace. There is no biblical understanding of humans existing without being body and soul. The apostle Paul also sees no separation of being, either physical or spiritual, as he talks about the body being the temple of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor 6:19-20). At an essence level, we cannot be who or what we are not. Later in that letter, he speaks of the resurrection of Christ, the dead, and our resurrection bodies. Paul insists that what will be for us will be as it was for Christ: transformed bodies for a transformed existence. But the reality of that eschatological transformation is not reserved for that ‘pie-in-the-sky-when-you-die’ sense, rather, it provides the Christian with a hope that must also be grounded and lived out in the real world in the present (1 Cor 15:58).
Of course, Paul’s context was very different to our current context from a technological perspective. But does that necessarily mean the hermeneutic for valuing human beings will need to be wildly different? In the words of that great old song, ‘…it ain’t necessarily so’.
One of the basic tenets of social Trinitarianism is that human beings are only fully human in their imaging of God when they are in living relationship with one another. Their individuality is only ever fully realised as they encounter the ‘other’. This is because God is a ‘community’ of three persons who are fully individual only in their relationship with one another. This ‘relationality’ has been a great insight from post-modernity about identity formation, and the nature of the Trinity. So perhaps the hermeneutical critique of relationality needs to be brought to the new context of cyberspace.
So, let us try to put these thoughts together. God is love in the fellowship of the Trinity. The Trinity is something we cannot see (and so could be loosely argued that it itself is in some kind of analogy to cyberspace). If the Trinity is something we think of as being encounter-able when we die and are resurrected, but we also bring Paul’s critique of the eschatological transformation of our bodies which means something very real to us in the present, then we cannot escape the obvious implication of the invisible (disembodied?) God taking physical human form in the Incarnation of Jesus of Nazareth. So if the Ultimate Reality of the God of the Universe finds it necessary to show Ultimate Love and Value to humanity and the rest of creation in physical human form, then anything less is also bound to be something less than fully human, and subject to being treated in ways that are less than how we have been treated by the Trinitarian, Incarnational love of God.
Cyberspace needs the critique of the Trinity and the Incarnation if it is to be a place where humanity can be truly valued as we enter the new world before us.
As humanity finds itself in a shifting, transforming context through post-modernity and has to learn to live with itself and the world in new ways, it seems to me that the valuing of humanity is not something to be done in abstraction, or any disconnection from real flesh and blood interaction.
I think there are many implications that will need to be grasped and interacted with by the Church if it is to meaningfully engage with the rapidly changing context of western civilisation. Some of these implications could be:
1.If missiological anthropologists tell us that God speaks to us in ways we can understand, then how does God speak into a virtual world inhabited by virtual humans who are participating in life in hitherto unknown ways?
2. How do we create moral virtual communities?
3. How will the Church be a foretaste of the new humanity in relationship with God as expressed in cyberspace?
4. How will eschatology and incarnation need to be addressed in cyberspace?
5. If only a small, but very powerful minority of the world have access to this form of virtual reality, will that minority exercise its power over the rest of humanity by insisting that virtual reality has precedence over normal reality?
6. How will the various humanities express their love to each other, and how will they value one another’s humanity?
The Church must take up the issue in this new millennium.
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3 comments:
I know very little about 'virtual' communities but understand less the need to worry. Surely the only difference between communicating in this way as opposed to sending a letter or making a phone call is speed. Speed does, of course, make a difference in the development of more intimate relationship across the world but the world 'virtual' does to me still have strong links to the word 'illusion'. There may be danger within the illusion of connecting with a person who can very easily be hiding or changing their true personality but can reality ever truly be at risk?
...besides, God has as much place on the internet as a discussion point or personal influence as he does in telephone conversations. I'm sure there has been concern over the use of photographs - capturing a person's physical appearance so well with no possible vision as to their soul. Does God not exist in photographs?
good points 'anonymous'. it might be worth you having a chat with some youth workers about their reflections on how kids use the virtual worlds of chat rooms and texting and how that connects with issues of personal responsibility when they can pretend to be whoever they want.
on speed of communication, i'm reminded of archbishop of canterbury, rowan williams' thoughts when he said he doesn't like email because it demands a quick response rather than a considered one. i think there's something in that.
i'm not pretending to be expert on this stuff by any stretch, and am grateful for your insights.
and neither is the irony of your anonymity lost....
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