This brief essay attempts to link two conceptualizations of the important relationship of the on and offline. I will connect (1) my argument that we should abandon the digital dualist assumption that the on and offline are separate in favor of the view that they enmesh into an augmented reality and (2) the problematic view that the Internet transcends social structures to produce something “objective” (or “flat” to use Thomas Friedman’s term).
Instead, recognizing that code has always been embedded in social structures allows persistent inequalities enacted in the name of computational objectivity to be identified (e.g., the hidden hierarchies of Wikipedia, the hidden profit-motive behind open-source, the hidden gendered standpoint of computer code, and so on). I will argue that the fallacy of web objectivity is driven fundamentally by digital dualism, providing further evidence that this dualism is at once conceptually false, and, most importantly, morally problematic. Simply, this specific form of digital dualism perpetuates structural inequalities by masking their very existence.
Digital Dualism versus Augmented Reality
Perhaps the central theoretical insight that characterizes my work thus far is the concept of augmented reality. I develop the term here and provide a bit more detail here; simply, this perspective rejects the digital dualist position that the digital and physical are separate spheres and instead promotes the idea that atoms and bits enmesh to create our augmented reality.
Digital dualism is a fallacy, and it seems to be pervasive: from academics like Sherry Turkle operating with the assumption of a digital “second self” to mainstream conceptualizations like the The Social Network film arguing that Facebook users are trading “real life” connections for a something digital. While many more examples can be listed (and many have been on this blog by myself and others), what research as well as those who actually use social media tell us is that social media has everything to do with the physical world and our offline lives are increasingly influenced by social media, even when logged off. We need to shed the digital dualist bias because our Facebook pages are indeed “real life” and our offline existence is increasingly virtual. I have made these points many times on this blog so let me discuss the specific form of digital dualism that is perhaps the most dangerous.
Code is Social
The digital dualism versus augmented reality debate relates to another outmoded conceptualization that argues the Internet has the power to transcend and remove social locatedness. At its onset, the Internet seemed to promise the possible deconstruction of dominant and oppressive social categorizations such as gender, race, age and even species; as the cartoon goes, “online, no one knows you’re a dog”. We can trace this line of thought through the classic Hacker ethic that ‘all information should be free’ through the open-source movement behind Linux and in the philosophy of Wikipedia, an online encyclopedia that anyone can edit.
Essential to these projects was the idea that the Internet can be created as a sphere separate from (perhaps even better than) the offline world. Digitality promised a Wild-West frontier built without replicating the problems of our offline reality, fixing the its oppressive realities such as skin color, physical ability, resource scarcity as well as time and space constraints. The new digital frontier was a space where information could flow freely, national boundaries could be overcome, expertism and authority could be upended; those old structures would be wiped away in the name of a utopian and revolutionary cyber-libertarian path blazed by our heroic cyber-punk and hacker digital cowboys (indeed, those were boy’s clubs).
This dream could only be maintained by holding the digital as conceptually distinct from the physical. Perhaps this is understandable given this new space was literally being invented. However, the novelty of the new digital reality betrayed the ultimate reality that none of this digitality really existed outside of long-standing social constructions, institutions and inequalities.
This digital dualist utopianism was in reality always deeply embedded in (or augmented by) offline social structures. For instance, Barry Wellman argued in 2001 that “computer networks are social,” which still serves as an important reminder that this point indeed needed to be made. Fred Turner [.pdf] has done an especially good job revealing the hidden profit motive behind the open-source movement. Others have shown how the supposedly revolutionary Wikipedia project has only shifted knowledge-creation from the hands of a few white men to now being produced by a few more white men (revolutionary this in not). Lawrence Lessig, Saskia Sassen and many others have demonstrated that computer code itself, that ultimate symbol of inhuman, logical neutrality, is embodied, social, historical, and reflects specific value judgments. Danah boyd has been especially persuasive in describing how coding decisions on social network sites are the result of specific biases on the part of website engineers, often to the detriment of those less powerful and more vulnerable. And, as Jessie Daniels discusses in the fourth chapter of her book Cyber Racism, sometimes even those interested in inequalities wrongly begin with digital dualist assumptions, for example, Daniels discusses people worrying about white supremacist websites using the Web to recruit people opposed to the sites being an outlet for those who import their racism to the Web.
We could list many, many more examples about how supposedly-objective systems are instead embedded in the messiness of offline social structures and inequalities. Others have gone over this territory in much more detail and make this case better than I. All I am attempting to do in this essay is situate the fallacy of web objectivity within the underlying digital dualist fallacy that the digital and physical are separate.
Digital Dualism as Morally Problematic
Much of my previous work on digital dualism has focused on the perspective being false, but linking it to those that claim the Internet transcends the social demonstrates the moral problem of maintaining this specific dualist perspective.
Masking the deeply embedded political motives that undergird computer code with claims of “objectivity” serve to make more invisible those very motives. Technology never removes humanity from itself, it never creates a space outside of fundamental social structures, and the notion that digitality was ever somehow a new space that transcends basic facts of social life is the height of digital dualism.
To conclude, what this analysis suggests is a traceable path from a conceptual fallacy that predates the Internet and became realized online with the dangerous result of disappearing the visibility of certain forms of social inequalities. It is not surprising that a bunch of (mostly) white males claimed to create a digital space somehow separate from their own socialization (i.e., the intersection of their specific race, gender, class, etc. standpoints). There is a long history of those from dominant groups thinking of themselves as the “neutral” or “natural’ human being. And it is precisely this fallacy that allowed the Internet to be conceptualized by some as a sphere outside of socialization, of the digital being somehow separate from the physical.
It is my hope that identifying this digital dualism and calling for an augmented perspective that always situates digitality and physicality as mutually constitutive can be one more small step towards shedding conceptualizations that mask social inequalities. Our augmented reality is one where the politics, structures and inequalities of the physical world are part of the very essence of the digital domain; a domain built by human beings with histories, standpoints, interests, morals and biases.
Follow Nathan on Twitter: @nathanjurgenson
Comments 51
Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity « n a t h a n j u r g e n s o n — October 8, 2011
[...] This was originally posted at my blog Cyborgology – click here to view the original post and to re... [...]
replqwtil — October 17, 2011
I still think it is important to consider the role of the Internet, and digital networks in general, in creating opportunities for actually Novel social relationships. They may be building on existing social ties and practices, but the augmentation of which is giving rise of totally new and unexpected forms of sociality.
As much as the Old is recreated through the New, that also makes for a whole lot of New. I agree though, not as separate from Physical, but augmentation can still bring incredible Novelty.
nathanjurgenson — October 17, 2011
yes, agreed! augmentation certainly creates "new" for better or worse.
though, when we discuss what is "new" i think we can take a more historical look than what i did here. i am only focusing on "digital" dualism in this essay, but a more historical perspective might note that digital dualism is only one form of larger "informational dualism", where language, text and all forms of media are thought of as separate from physical space. a still larger point might be that the augmented reality perspective forces us to think all of history as the augmentation of information, technology and society.
nathanjurgenson — October 17, 2011
right, i am purposefully making reference to mind-body dualism in my choice of words. thanks for the comments!
S1E5 : neutralisation sexuelle des documents vs. neutralité de l’internet | politiques des affects — November 17, 2011
[...] (une sorte de dualisme porno-digital, dans la lignée de ce que dénonce @nathanjurgenson sur cyborgology), simplement, à la différences des internautes de 4chan, le député se place du côté de ceux [...]
Mic Checking the Man: The Evolving Human Microphone » Cyborgology — November 17, 2011
[...] also stands against the fallacy that technology itself is neutral: in its very design the Human Microphone is imbued with the ideology of its makers–especially [...]
Consider Magazine » Blog Archive » Digital Dualism — November 23, 2011
[...] week I was lucky enough to stumble across Nathan Jurgenson’s great essay Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity. Jurgenson defines digital dualism as the belief that the “real” and “digital” worlds are [...]
Empirical Roots of Digital Dualism » Cyborgology — November 26, 2011
[...] from a very cogent essay written by Nathan Jurgenson on the blog, Cyborgology. Titled ‘Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity‘, Jurgenson argues for abandonment of what he terms a ‘digital dualist’ [...]
sally — November 27, 2011
I would argue that all of this is happening within either one reality, or many. It's either just one reality that contains the "augmentations," "dualism" and whatever else, or it's a "PolySocial Reality" that contains everyone's separate perception of reality, which also subsumes the "augmentations," "dualism" and whatever else.
Mic Checking the Man: The Evolving Human Microphone » Sociological Images — January 8, 2012
[...] also stands against the fallacy that technology itself is neutral: in its very design the Human Microphone is imbued with the ideology of its makers — [...]
Is Facebook a Feminist Technology? » Cyborgology — March 21, 2012
[...] also stands against the fallacy that technology itself is neutral: in its very design the Human Microphone is imbued with the ideology of its makers–especially [...]
The IRL Fetish » OWNI.eu, News, Augmented — July 6, 2012
[...] by what happens when disconnected and logged-off. The Web has everything to do with reality; it comprises real people with real bodies, histories, and politics. It is the fetish objects of the offline and the disconnected that are not [...]
The internet IS real life. | NEXTNESS — August 20, 2012
[...] by what happens when disconnected and logged-off. The Web has everything to do with reality; it comprises real people with real bodies, histories, and politics.If you believe the digital world is “virtual” and the physical world “real,” [...]
The Hole in Our Thinking about Augmented Reality » Cyborgology — August 30, 2012
[...] Davis on reality curation and on CITASA, and Jurgenson on both faux-vintage photography and the fallacy of web objectivity. The digital and the physical are thoroughly and inextricably [...]
Riccardo Mori » Online, offline, and the ‘need’ to share — September 26, 2012
[...] by what happens when disconnected and logged-off. The Web has everything to do with reality; it comprises real people with real bodies, histories, and politics. It is the fetish objects of the offline and the disconnected that are [...]
Elly Tams ‘Gets A Life’ « Foucault's Daughter — October 3, 2012
[...] of the problems with ‘get a life’ is it seems to reinforce the notion of digital dualism. As Nathan Jurgenson and colleagues have explained, ‘digital dualism’ is the way in [...]
AMELIA ACKER › “Everything that is IRL about Freedom” — October 10, 2012
[...] on an artificial online and offline distinction of experience (or what Jurgenson describes as the fallacy of digital dualism) or b.) rejecting digital dualism by theorizing what digital dualism isn’t to make the claim. [...]
Free Speech and Power: From Reddit Creeps to anti-Muslim Videos, It’s Not *Just* “Free Speech” | technosociology — October 14, 2012
[...] is somehow not real, that it’s virtual or that it is “trivial.” (My friend Nathan Jurgenson coined the phrase “digital dualism” to refer to this tendency). In fact, a reddit contributor makes the argument [...]
I’m reading Free Speech and Power: From Reddit Creeps to anti-Muslim Videos, It’s Not *Just* “Free Speech” | william j. moner — October 14, 2012
[...] is somehow not real, that it’s virtual or that it is “trivial.” (My friend Nathan Jurgenson coined the phrase “digital dualism” to refer to this tendency). In fact, a reddit contributor makes the argument [...]
Strong and Mild Digital Dualism » Cyborgology — October 29, 2012
[...] aware of “digital dualism” or the debates the term has inspired. I coined it here; how dualism is behind cyber-utopianism/dystopianism; the term’s first use in a peer-reviewed paper, on social [...]
Overcoming Digital Dualism | Ideas and Thoughts — November 17, 2012
[...] for many of my professional colleagues supplement my online interactions. The notion of digital dualism is largely the crux of what holds education back from valuing these connections. This [...]
Digital Dualism And The Glitch Feminism Manifesto » Cyborgology — December 10, 2012
[...] From Keyboard”) and IRL (“In Real Life”) that comprise the two sides of Jurgenson’s digital dualism duality collapse, and, in the collapse, realize their dazzling [...]
Un padre chino contrata a un sicario virtual para que acabe con todos los personajes de su hijo en los videojuegos online | Ciberiada — January 3, 2013
[...] padre chino 1 – Defensores del Dualismo Digital [...]
Online, offline – is there a difference anymore? — January 29, 2013
[...] One reason I am asking you this, is that some of my friends and some colleagues at mediaman are doing that digital detox thing in the week between Christmas and New Year’s Day that the Germans call “between the years” (“zwischen den Jahren”). Quite honestly, I don’t understand this desire or the need to specifically set aside a special time to be offline. As if being online kept me from doing more meaningful things or having more meaningful human interactions. As if offline was more “real” than online. Thinking about this I remembered an essay written by Nathan Jurgenson last summer about the IRL (in real life) fetish. He wrote: Facebook doesn’t curtail the offline but depends on it. What is most crucial to our time spent logged on is what happened when logged off; it is the fuel that runs the engine of social media. The photos posted, the opinions expressed, the check-ins that fill our streams are often anchored by what happens when disconnected and logged-off. The Web has everything to do with reality; it comprises real people with real bodies, histories, and politics. [...]
Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity » Cyborgology | Collaborative Consultation | Scoop.it — February 11, 2013
[...] [...]
Logging off (when we’re always on) | a brewing thought — February 13, 2013
[...] However, many of these authors miss a critical point. These experiences are not distinct from being plugged into the “non-real” world of the web. You can have experiences online. You can learn and grow and feel. As Nathan Jurgenson brilliantly writes, “The Web has everything to do with reality; it comprises real people with real bodies, histories, and politics.” [...]
Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity » Cyborgology | Anthropology, mass media & technology | Scoop.it — March 15, 2013
[...] [...]
Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity » Cyborgology | HR miscellanea | Scoop.it — March 16, 2013
[...] [...]
Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectiv... — April 11, 2013
[...] [...]
On LOL. | zenparty.org — May 20, 2013
[...] about digital dualism, as it relates to my interests, is mostly situated at Cyborgology (start here). It is a radical idea, apparently, that one’s activity on the internet is just as [...]
Person of Interest:網路世界中消失的隱私 | A Loner's Discourse ‧ 單聲道 — August 5, 2013
[...] (關於新世代的網路觀,可參看此文章:Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity;作者Nathan Jurgenson的其他文章也值得一看。) [...]
Who am I? – Digital verses Physical self | Joshua Gray — August 11, 2013
[...] physical selves can take, atoms and a digital being bits for the same reason. In his article “Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity” he says ”…social media has everything to do with the physical world and our offline [...]
Social Networks are Boring « Ben Turner's Blog — August 12, 2013
[...] by what happens when disconnected and logged-off. The Web has everything to do with reality; it comprises real people with real bodies, histories, and politics. It is the fetish objects of the offline and the disconnected that are not [...]
Of Bots And Humans » Cyborgology — September 25, 2013
[...] why the revelation that @Horse_ebooks wasn’t that different matters so much to people. So, yes, the technical is always deeply human, but the live-reading yesterday made the reverse point, that which is normally described as human [...]
The Liquid Self | electronics-trade blog — October 5, 2013
[...] geographic location, physical ability, as well as things like race, gender, age, even species [though, this detachment was always only a fantasy]. The New Yorker cartoon infamously joked that, “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a [...]
Person of Interest:網路世界中消失的隱私 | 刺青雜誌 Punch Magazine — October 11, 2013
[...] (關於新世代的網路觀,可參看此文章:Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity;作者Nathan Jurgenson的其他文章也值得一看。) [...]
Not a manifesto, but let’s begin | If Human Then — November 4, 2013
[…] we undertake the exciting task of making better artistic use of technology, we ought not to be digital dualists - whether of the pessimistic or the utopian kind. In case you haven’t noticed, technology […]
Person of Interest:網路世界中消失的隱私 | 刺青雜誌 — November 17, 2013
[…] (關於新世代的網路觀,可參看此文章:Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity;作者Nathan Jurgenson的其他文章也值得一看。) […]
Beyond Unplugging: How to Stay Sane Online | Lauren Bacon — February 20, 2014
[…] cultivating presence and focus in all areas of one’s life, there’s an undercurrent of dualistic thinking to much of the “digital sabbatical” writing I’ve come across: In an effort to […]
10 Mindfulness Tips for Thriving in Our Augmented Reality — May 28, 2014
[…] Of course, as we struggle to make sense of it all, there exists some interesting dualism (see digital dualism). We think nothing of someone curled up on the sofa or in bed with a good book. Yet, we often have […]
The Joke Is on Yo—and All It’s Users | The American Conservative — June 23, 2014
[…] culture that produced Yo is grappling with what Nathan Jurgenson has called “digital dualism,” the idea that “online” and “offline,” “physical” and “digital,” are meaningful […]
The Joke Is on Yo—and All Its Users - Citizens News — June 23, 2014
[…] culture that produced Yo is grappling with what Nathan Jurgenson has called “digital dualism,” the idea that “online” and “offline,” “physical” and “digital,” are meaningful […]
The Joke Is on Yo—and All Its Users - United Americans — June 24, 2014
[…] culture that produced Yo is grappling with what Nathan Jurgenson has called “digital dualism,” the idea that “online” and “offline,” “physical” and “digital,” are meaningful […]
» Beer photos and digital dualism; Principals are people too –I know this much is true.– — July 2, 2014
[…] to a life as private individual when I’m not at work, I recognize that I don’t have a dual digital existence that excuses me from poor or questionable behavior in the digital world. Who I am in person is who […]
(Dis)Assembling #Stacktivism; poking holes in utopia | Velcro City Tourist Board — October 14, 2014
[…] and the scales fell from our eyes. Turns out the lord of the flies doesn’t believe in digital dualism […]
S1E5 : neutralisation sexuelle des documents vs. neutralité de l’internet | Politiques des affects — October 19, 2014
[…] (une sorte de dualisme porno-digital, dans la lignée de ce que dénonce @nathanjurgenson sur cyborgology), simplement, à la différences des internautes de 4chan, le député se place du côté de ceux […]
1.19.15 Daily Links | Daily Links & News — January 20, 2015
[…] space. The division between physical space and the internet posited by “cyberspace” — digital dualism, as Nathan Jurgensen calls it — was always dubious, but it’s especially hard to maintain when […]
The sexualisation of women in games | Digital Society — March 16, 2015
[…] Jurgenson, N 2011, ‘Digital dualism and the fallacy of the web objectivity’, blog, 13 September, Cyborgology, viewed 12 March 2015, <http://thesocietypages.org/cyborgology/2011/09/13/digital-dualism-and-the-fallacy-of-web-objectivity…> […]
Privacy for YouTube Celebrities | Digital Society — April 1, 2015
[…] Jurgenson, N. (2011) Digital Dualism and the Fallacy of Web Objectivity, Cyborology, viewed 19th March 2015, http://thesocietypages.org/cyborgology/2011/09/13/digital-dualism-and-the-fallacy-of-web-objectivity… […]
Cultivating identity online | Digital Society — April 1, 2015
[…] Jurgenson, Nathan. (2011) ‘Digital dualism and the fallacy of web objectivity’, Cyborgology, http://thesocietypages.org/cyborgology/2011/09/13/digital-dualism-and-the-fallacy-of-web-objectivity… […]