Ranganaut

Ranganaut

Share this post

Ranganaut
Ranganaut
M12: The Metaverse and its critics; Winter 2022 edition
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
User's avatar
Discover more from Ranganaut
Planetary Thought: How our lives are intertwined with the lives of other beings on this planet, our only home.
Already have an account? Sign in

M12: The Metaverse and its critics; Winter 2022 edition

Data + Money + Cities = World

Rajesh Kasturirangan's avatar
Rajesh Kasturirangan
Jan 18, 2022
1

Share this post

Ranganaut
Ranganaut
M12: The Metaverse and its critics; Winter 2022 edition
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Share

Happy new year everyone and to the first post of 2022. I will continue writing about the metaverse; a project that I started in the fall of 2022 with this post 👇🏾

Ranganaut
M1: The Mauhaus Project
Note: this is a long letter written after a long hiatus so forgive me if it’s a grab bag of ideas. I will parcel them out in more coherent chunks in the future. Everything is Connected I am of the age at which that supreme idiot, Don Quixote de la Mancha…
Read more
4 years ago · 1 like · Rajesh Kasturirangan

If you know someone who’ll appreciate these essays, forward it to them!

This post is public so feel free to share it.

Share


City → Planet. Writing → Code

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times;" so started Dickens' 'A Tale of Two Cities.' Dickens wrote those lines in 1859, but the sentiment remains the same in 2022, except that the city straddles the world.

Ranganaut
M5: The Interverse
The Interverse In his prescient essay that prefigured much of the modern internet, Vannevar Bush wrote: Consider a future device … in which an individual stores all his books, records, and communications, and which is mechanized so that it may be consulted with exceeding speed and flexibility. It is an enlarged intimate supplement to his memory…
Read more
4 years ago · Rajesh Kasturirangan

The Metaverse (or as I am calling it: the Interverse 👆🏾) demonstrates the best and worst of humanity in abundance, for there has never been a technology more capable of bringing us together or tearing us apart. I believe the interverse is the culmination of the two biggest technologies for organizing human collectives in recorded history: cities and writing, with the city → planet (see planetary urbanization) and writing → code. The ongoing pandemic (as of Jan 2022) illustrates the interverse in a nutshell: a global city affected by a global pandemic decoded by a global scientific collective.

As always, the underlying puzzle remains 'what is the human condition in the anthropocene?'

Recap

I started my exploration of the interverse with a series on identity and how it's being reconfigured.

Ranganaut
M7: Formalizing Identity Part I
A general note, since I don't know where else to put this: if we look back at the history of technology over the last five hundred years, the two big themes are: media and machines. Books are media, steam engines are machines. The computer marries the two: it’s both medium and mechanism at once…
Read more
4 years ago · Rajesh Kasturirangan
Ranganaut
M8: Formalizing Identity II
Counting Problems Counting is central to the modern era: from the census to voting preferences to marketing surveys, we are counted and classified as members of one group or the other. These counting methods lead to thin forms of identity. For many years, I was roll number 88193 for the purposes of examinations, grading and class assignment. But that num…
Read more
4 years ago · Rajesh Kasturirangan
Ranganaut
M9: Formalizing Identity III
Note: last essay of the year so extra long…
Read more
4 years ago · Rajesh Kasturirangan

If identity is being molded, who is doing the molding? And how & where? That's a question for the next few months. TLDR;

Identity is being molded by flows of data and value (AI, money and other Web3 developments) and digitally enhanced physical locations (the city)

Themes for 2022
Themes for 2022

Writing for Reading

What can you expect?

I will be 'writing for reading,' i.e., writing posts as a way of summarizing what I am reading on data/cities/money etc. Here are a few books (in no particular order) that I am reading to get a grip on the interverse:

  1. The Future of Money — Eswar S. Prasad

  2. A City Is Not a Computer — Shannon Mattern.

  3. Ambient Commons — Malcolm McCullough

  4. The Sciences of the Artificial — Herbert A. Simon

  5. Reality Media-Augmented and Virtual Reality —Jay David Bolter, Maria Engberg and Blair MacIntyre

  6. Data Action - Using Data for Public Good — Sarah Williams

  7. Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence — Kate Crawford

They are my go-to references for the key topics:

  • Data ✅

  • Money ✅

  • Cities ✅.

What's left? Can’t leave without mentioning the flow of energy, which lurks behind any discussion of data, information and value:

  1. Energy and Civilization: A History — Vaclav Smil

  2. Growth: From Microorganisms to Megacities — Vaclav Smil

And finally, a couple of perennial favorites:

  1. Speculative Everything Design, Fiction, and Social Dreaming — Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby

  2. A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction — Christopher Alexander, Sara Ishikawa, Murray Silverstein.

In reading these books simultaneously, I want to trace a computational line connecting minds-cities-data-digital-physical.... — so that we can ask these questions in parallel:

  • Is the mind a computer?

  • Is the city a computer?

  • Is the world a computer?

No, they are not computers. But they aren't not-computers either. Code isn't a 'model' of the world. Nor is it the world itself. Code is somewhere between map and territory. But what is the spectrum between the thing and its image? There's a concept or two waiting to be discovered on the middle path between reality and its representation.

The Publishing Plan

Short updates twice a week while I'm in book reading mode: emails Monday and Friday evening my time, could be Tuesday/Saturday morning for you.

Next essay: this Friday


Subscribe to Ranganaut

By Rajesh Kasturirangan · Launched 6 years ago
Planetary Thought: How our lives are intertwined with the lives of other beings on this planet, our only home.
1

Share this post

Ranganaut
Ranganaut
M12: The Metaverse and its critics; Winter 2022 edition
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Share

Discussion about this post

User's avatar
The Form of the World
links for this week's essay
Jun 12, 2019 • 
Rajesh Kasturirangan
10

Share this post

Ranganaut
Ranganaut
The Form of the World
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Being Human in the Age of AI 11
Zooming in after Zooming out
May 28, 2024 • 
Rajesh Kasturirangan
1

Share this post

Ranganaut
Ranganaut
Being Human in the Age of AI 11
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
Planetary Animals
A slow restart
Aug 1, 2022 • 
Rajesh Kasturirangan
3

Share this post

Ranganaut
Ranganaut
Planetary Animals
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
2

Ready for more?

© 2025 Rajesh Kasturirangan
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

Create your profile

User's avatar

Only paid subscribers can comment on this post

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

Check your email

For your security, we need to re-authenticate you.

Click the link we sent to , or click here to sign in.