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First of all, I just discovered that I won some stuff at
wicked_awards! Check out all the winners here - I'm proud to be in such illustrous company.


Also... I hesitate to call this meta since I'm not exactly sure if it's fully thought through, but what the hell. So I'm watching Buffy s6 and I'm reading N. Katherine Hayles' How We Became Posthuman (which is interesting, especially if you're into cyborgs and Neal Stephenson and perception of reality and the nature of humanity as encoded information and so forth, but very heavy on theory). Anyway, I stumble onto this section on entropy which got me thinking.
Things Fall Apart. The Centre Cannot Hold. Should It?
Season 6 is the season with no Big Bad, no huge arc, no outside disturbance, all conflicts turned inwards. Everything comes from inside, dug up (quite literally in Buffy's case) from within themselves, all the old unaddressed conflicts unearthed to lash out at each other. (They even spend an entire episode locked in the same house with two complete strangers - failed attempts at making friends outside their warforged group - as if to hammer the point home.) Culminating in "Entropy", where everything gets ripped apart, every spanner in sight is thrown into the works, to lead to complete heat death in the next episode.
The title of "Entropy", of course, might remind you of the layman's version of the (not as simple as it sounds) second law of thermodynamics; within a closed system, entropy increases. Or as Tara defines it after they've spent a whole season with no new challenges, no new energy, no new information from outside their own closed circle:
TARA: Things fall apart. They fall apart so hard. You can't ever put them back the way they were.
Now this is, of course, normally seen as something bad. And obviously, "Entropy" and "Seeing Red" aren't exactly happy episodes. Order deteriorates into chaos, strong binds are ripped apart, the centre cannot hold, mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, etc. That thing we liked changes.
Hayles notes this common concept of entropy. And then she flips it, saying: Entropy is (can be) GOOD - or at least essential. Earlier, she's dismissed the notion that perfect communication of information only happens when the exact same information is received as was sent, when there's no noise to disturb the signal – that that's a misunderstanding of communication, since it would mean no new information ever turns up. With no changes (mutations) in the existing message, there's no evolution, whether biological or philosophical. Information, by definition, must be unique; otherwise, it's just noise. So if the world can be organized as information, then it follows that the more things stay the same, the less distinct one thing is from another, the stricter we organise everything into clearly defined boxes - the less information there is, since there are a limited and shrinking number of possible patterns and combinations.
...identifying entropy with information can be seen as a crucial crossing point, for this allowed entropy to be reconceptualized as the thermodynamic motor driving systems to self-organization rather than as the heat engine driving the world to universal heat death. (…) As a result, chaos went from being associated with dissipation in the Victorian sense of dissolute living and reckless waste to being associated with dissipation in a newly positive sense of increasing complexity and new life.
The end of season 6 is horrific and heartbreaking and things will never be the same again after that. Things fall apart into chaos. But it's also the season that starts with Buffy descending into hell and ends with her climbing out of her grave into a brightly lit multi-coloured garden, and gives way to a season that changes the entire basis of the show and ultimately turns it into something completely different, turning from The Slayer to Slayers. From entropy springs not annihilation, but increased complexity and new life. (There's a reason Destructionis was one of the Endless.)
In short, the much-maligned Beljoxa's Eye was right; the noise that got introduced into the signal when Buffy was resurrected ended up garbling the message. The signal that had passed unchanged for millennia mutated. One year later, there are thousands of Slayers, and millions of fans, all with their own version of the message.
JOSS: Write fanfic.
I'm not entirely sure where I'm going with this. But I found it interesting. Here's a song for ya.
The sun don't go down, it's just an illusion caused by the world spinning 'round.
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Also... I hesitate to call this meta since I'm not exactly sure if it's fully thought through, but what the hell. So I'm watching Buffy s6 and I'm reading N. Katherine Hayles' How We Became Posthuman (which is interesting, especially if you're into cyborgs and Neal Stephenson and perception of reality and the nature of humanity as encoded information and so forth, but very heavy on theory). Anyway, I stumble onto this section on entropy which got me thinking.
Things Fall Apart. The Centre Cannot Hold. Should It?
Season 6 is the season with no Big Bad, no huge arc, no outside disturbance, all conflicts turned inwards. Everything comes from inside, dug up (quite literally in Buffy's case) from within themselves, all the old unaddressed conflicts unearthed to lash out at each other. (They even spend an entire episode locked in the same house with two complete strangers - failed attempts at making friends outside their warforged group - as if to hammer the point home.) Culminating in "Entropy", where everything gets ripped apart, every spanner in sight is thrown into the works, to lead to complete heat death in the next episode.
The title of "Entropy", of course, might remind you of the layman's version of the (not as simple as it sounds) second law of thermodynamics; within a closed system, entropy increases. Or as Tara defines it after they've spent a whole season with no new challenges, no new energy, no new information from outside their own closed circle:
TARA: Things fall apart. They fall apart so hard. You can't ever put them back the way they were.
Now this is, of course, normally seen as something bad. And obviously, "Entropy" and "Seeing Red" aren't exactly happy episodes. Order deteriorates into chaos, strong binds are ripped apart, the centre cannot hold, mere anarchy is loosed upon the world, etc. That thing we liked changes.
Hayles notes this common concept of entropy. And then she flips it, saying: Entropy is (can be) GOOD - or at least essential. Earlier, she's dismissed the notion that perfect communication of information only happens when the exact same information is received as was sent, when there's no noise to disturb the signal – that that's a misunderstanding of communication, since it would mean no new information ever turns up. With no changes (mutations) in the existing message, there's no evolution, whether biological or philosophical. Information, by definition, must be unique; otherwise, it's just noise. So if the world can be organized as information, then it follows that the more things stay the same, the less distinct one thing is from another, the stricter we organise everything into clearly defined boxes - the less information there is, since there are a limited and shrinking number of possible patterns and combinations.
...identifying entropy with information can be seen as a crucial crossing point, for this allowed entropy to be reconceptualized as the thermodynamic motor driving systems to self-organization rather than as the heat engine driving the world to universal heat death. (…) As a result, chaos went from being associated with dissipation in the Victorian sense of dissolute living and reckless waste to being associated with dissipation in a newly positive sense of increasing complexity and new life.
The end of season 6 is horrific and heartbreaking and things will never be the same again after that. Things fall apart into chaos. But it's also the season that starts with Buffy descending into hell and ends with her climbing out of her grave into a brightly lit multi-coloured garden, and gives way to a season that changes the entire basis of the show and ultimately turns it into something completely different, turning from The Slayer to Slayers. From entropy springs not annihilation, but increased complexity and new life. (There's a reason Destruction
In short, the much-maligned Beljoxa's Eye was right; the noise that got introduced into the signal when Buffy was resurrected ended up garbling the message. The signal that had passed unchanged for millennia mutated. One year later, there are thousands of Slayers, and millions of fans, all with their own version of the message.
JOSS: Write fanfic.
I'm not entirely sure where I'm going with this. But I found it interesting. Here's a song for ya.
The sun don't go down, it's just an illusion caused by the world spinning 'round.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-31 08:59 am (UTC)Astrophysics for IdiotsWonders of the Universe series has already managed to convince me that entropy isn't so bad, and this argument fits right in with what he said.Your argument also lends weight to those of us who think the underlying themes of season 7 are wonderful, even if the execution is occasionally botched.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-31 09:24 am (UTC)That one sounds like something I should watch. I love BBC's science series.
the underlying themes of season 7 are wonderful, even if the execution is occasionally botched
Absolutely. It really is a perfect end to the series, blowing up the basic metaphor in a way that doesn't ruin the idea but rather sets it free by splitting it into a thousand possible futures. Entropy yay!
no subject
Date: 2011-03-31 10:24 am (UTC):)
That one sounds like something I should watch. I love BBC's science series.
It was good, I thought, though there have been accusations of 'dumbing down', mainly because Prof Cox is rather pretty, and gets to stand around in lots of very impressive locations (like the Skeleton Coast and Patagonia) while talking.
Prof Jim al-Khalili's 2-parter, Everything and Nothing was also very good. It tied quantum theory to astrophysics (at any rate, his conclusion was that it was stuff doing what it does at the quantum level that triggered the big bang...er, I think). Very interesting, but sadly, as happens to me with most things scientific (much to my chagrin), I've forgotten the details already.
So annoying when you can't retain the facts of things that really, really interest you.
no subject
Date: 2011-03-31 11:25 am (UTC)Well, that's inevitable when you try to explain quantum physics to people who vaguely remember learning about the existence of atoms in school, isn't it? As long as the dumbing down doesn't result in incorrect information, I don't really mind.
Prof Jim al-Khalili's 2-parter, Everything and Nothing was also very good.
Oh yeah, I saw his series Atom a few years ago. Liked it a lot.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-17 07:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-18 09:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-20 08:10 pm (UTC)In regards to which, I really enjoyed your take on Beer Bad!
no subject
Date: 2012-08-21 01:46 pm (UTC)I'm actually writing about something like that right now, hope to have it up sometime this week.
no subject
Date: 2012-08-22 08:32 pm (UTC)I have my own thoughts about the link between those two, in terms of the First Slayer's message "Love, give, forgive...Death is your gift" and how that plays out in S7, that I want to write up but can't seem to get myself organized. (bad excuse)