What Defines a Meme?
Our world is a place where information can behave like human genes and ideas can replicate, mutate and evolve
- By James Gleick
- Photographs by Stuart Bradford
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
Genes at least have a grounding in physical substance. Memes are abstract, intangible and unmeasurable. Genes replicate with near-perfect fidelity, and evolution depends on that: some variation is essential, but mutations need to be rare. Memes are seldom copied exactly; their boundaries are always fuzzy, and they mutate with a wild flexibility that would be fatal in biology. The term “meme” could be applied to a suspicious cornucopia of entities, from small to large. For Dennett, the first four notes of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony (quoted above) were “clearly” a meme, along with Homer’s Odyssey (or at least the idea of the Odyssey), the wheel, anti-Semitism and writing. “Memes have not yet found their Watson and Crick,” said Dawkins; “they even lack their Mendel.”
Yet here they are. As the arc of information flow bends toward ever greater connectivity, memes evolve faster and spread farther. Their presence is felt if not seen in herd behavior, bank runs, informational cascades and financial bubbles. Diets rise and fall in popularity, their very names becoming catchphrases—the South Beach Diet and the Atkins Diet, the Scarsdale Diet, the Cookie Diet and the Drinking Man’s Diet all replicating according to a dynamic about which the science of nutrition has nothing to say. Medical practice, too, experiences “surgical fads” and “iatro-epidemics”—epidemics caused by fashions in treatment—like the iatro-epidemic of children’s tonsillectomies that swept the United States and parts of Europe in the mid-20th century. Some false memes spread with disingenuous assistance, like the apparently unkillable notion that Barack Obama was not born in Hawaii. And in cyberspace every new social network becomes a new incubator of memes. Making the rounds of Facebook in the summer and fall of 2010 was a classic in new garb:
Sometimes I Just Want to Copy Someone Else's Status, Word for Word, and See If They Notice.
Then it mutated again, and in January 2011 Twitter saw an outbreak of:
One day I want to copy someone's Tweet word for word and see if they notice.
By then one of the most popular of all Twitter hashtags (the “hashtag” being a genetic—or, rather, memetic—marker) was simply the word “#Viral.”
In the competition for space in our brains and in the culture, the effective combatants are the messages. The new, oblique, looping views of genes and memes have enriched us. They give us paradoxes to write on Möbius strips. “The human world is made of stories, not people,” writes the novelist David Mitchell. “The people the stories use to tell themselves are not to be blamed.” Margaret Atwood writes: “As with all knowledge, once you knew it, you couldn’t imagine how it was that you hadn’t known it before. Like stage magic, knowledge before you knew it took place before your very eyes, but you were looking elsewhere.” Nearing death, John Updike reflected on
A life poured into words—apparent waste intended to preserve the thing consumed.
Fred Dretske, a philosopher of mind and knowledge, wrote in 1981: “In the beginning there was information. The word came later.” He added this explanation: “The transition was achieved by the development of organisms with the capacity for selectively exploiting this information in order to survive and perpetuate their kind.” Now we might add, thanks to Dawkins, that the transition was achieved by the information itself, surviving and perpetuating its kind and selectively exploiting organisms.
Most of the biosphere cannot see the infosphere; it is invisible, a parallel universe humming with ghostly inhabitants. But they are not ghosts to us—not anymore. We humans, alone among the earth’s organic creatures, live in both worlds at once. It is as though, having long coexisted with the unseen, we have begun to develop the needed extrasensory perception. We are aware of the many species of information. We name their types sardonically, as though to reassure ourselves that we understand: urban myths and zombie lies. We keep them alive in air-conditioned server farms. But we cannot own them. When a jingle lingers in our ears, or a fad turns fashion upside down, or a hoax dominates the global chatter for months and vanishes as swiftly as it came, who is master and who is slave?
Adapted from The Information: A History, A Theory, A Flood, by James Gleick. Copyright © 2011 by James Gleick. Reprinted with the permission of the author.
James Gleick is the author of Chaos: Making a New Science, among other books. Illustrator Stuart Bradford lives in San Rafael, California.
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Comments (40)
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If you acknowledge the role for the gene that 'The Selfish Gene' proposes in the process of natural selection, regardless of how dominant the idea is, then the 'meme' can be considered in the same way as it helps in understanding how some beliefs and activities have become and are still active. Dr Susan Blackmore published and excellent analysis in her book 'The Meme Machine' published by the Oxford Univ Press: http://www.susanblackmore.co.uk/Books/Meme%20Machine/MM.htm
Posted by Rob Willox on November 21,2012 | 07:19 AM
Memes have nothing to do with "science," hate to tell you. This is what happens when "scientists" are allowed to think outside their own little world of so cakked expertise and exert some kind of rationality with the very idea of the symbols called language.
They simply need to research a lot deeper into the nature of language, philosophy, speech acts, psychology, visual imagery, aural (in)tonations, iteration, and much, much more, et all.
In less than 10 years, we will all laugh at the very idea of "meme." We should be doing so right now. I am.
I'd provide a list of reading material, but everyone would simply Wikki it, thus degrading the narrative, mythos, legend-izing of the very idea of "meme."
However, start with Plato...read through Derrida. Include Auerbach, Hegel (all),
....anyway...."meme' is a degradation of so much that has, as Derrida writes, "always already" existed in our own secret mythos of utterance in langauage as a symbol of a symbol of a symbol... through infinity and back..The idea "Meme" as is presented above is, at best, truncated and stupid at worst....
Posted by chris on January 3,2012 | 07:59 PM
bubbaganoosh;Leo Schlosserand G.L. -- enjoyed reading your comments on the Dawkins article. I am, in no way, a scientist; am an artist; designer of clothing; cook, homemaker; diletante writer..READER; very much interested in "how the Universe works"; the human mind;etc.
Posted by B. Black on July 16,2011 | 06:18 PM
In James Gleick's article he gives Richard Dawkins credit for inventing (!)the word "Meme" but I think he has only formed a contraction of the word "memory"! OF COURSE thoughts and ideas TRAVEL from mind to mind; which has long been known as "telepathy"! Dawkins hasn't invented ANYTHING. He has only "renamed" mental processes.
Daniel Dennet is absolutely correct for having said "like it or not we are seldom 'in charge' of our own minds". I, myself, have postulated the possibility that the human mind may not generate thoughts but acts as a channel through which thoughts move from the cosmos to realization.
Individually or collectively (as a group, conference, Senate or Congress) do we actually make decisions or simply proceed with the IMPLANTED "intelligence" of or for appropriate action?
Posted by B. Black on July 14,2011 | 11:04 PM
Is he, ah, seriously proposing that memes replicate themselves for their own sake? Or is it just metaphor? While I do get all wet and gitty over the aesthetic comparison between the spread of ideas and viruses, it seems to me that it's a bit of a jump to say information spreads itself via humans, rather than information is spread by humans (for human purposes).
Because then it's just a completely metaphysical argument. We would be here discussing it for long past eternity and then some.
Posted by bubbaganoosh on June 20,2011 | 09:27 PM
The "meme" is a confused and confusing term, routinely raised as an analogue of the gene without due care. I've spent the last few years stripping it back to establish whether it has any use in better understanding cultural evolution. I have to conclude that it does, but only when you correctly apply the analogy, differentiating the "genes of culture" from the "organisms of culture", the "populations of culture" and even the "species of culture". Only with this full-hearted approach can you visualise the memetic view of cultural evolution, and only then upon admiting the vaguaries of the definition of "a gene" in the first place. For more on this, I'd point you to my work on the meme, "On the Origin of Tepees".
Posted by Jonnie Hughes on June 2,2011 | 11:09 AM
What Defines a Meme? James Gleick. Smithsonian Magazine, May 2011
James Gleick presents an insightful account of the persistence, replication and wide dissemination of cultural or scientific ideas, behaviours, standards or physical objects/artefacts in our ever more interconnected world. He argues that memes are assured longevity and even perpetual life if their practical or cultural usefulness remained unsullied as when they were first born. Although mimetics (from the Greek “to imitate”) refers to the study of memes, memes remind one of self-promoting celebrities trying to draw our attention (therefore aptly labelled “Me! Me!”). Memes would ultimately aim to attain “memento” (signifying permanence) rather than momento status, with the latter paradoxically able to be read as implying transience.
Posted by Joseph Ting on May 25,2011 | 06:27 PM
great article
Posted by job on May 18,2011 | 06:11 AM
I am neither a theologian nor a scientist but this article was among the most exciting I have read in a long time. I am 81,and since my late teens,my personal concept of faith was considered irrational by most of my friends."Wandering" on my own,I saw faith and evolution as a spiritual process evolving steadily toward perfection, an ongoing, unstoppable and self-generating impulse or "force" linked to no organized religion. Needless to say, I would not have found the road I have followed ever since if I had not discovered Teilhard de Chardin, and particularly for his being silenced by the Catholic Church.Thank You, James Gleick, Teilhard would be smiling.
Posted by Regine Reynolds-Cornell on May 17,2011 | 09:31 AM
i've got your Mendel right here: http://knowyourmeme.com/
awesome article, by the way.
Posted by ronny on May 12,2011 | 07:54 PM
great article! We're preparing a contemporary art exhibition on this theme, so it's wonderful to see memetics making an appearance on The Smithsonian! Thank you!
Posted by Alois collective on May 8,2011 | 01:21 AM
He's onto something, it was words and directions:
and God said "let there be light"
and God said "let there be a division in the waters dividing the waters"
and God said "and let the waters under the heaven be gathered in one place and let the dry land appear"
and God said... and God said... and God said...
words. instructions.
No matter how much time you spend studying creation, it always leads back to the facts of its Creator.
Posted by Chappy on May 8,2011 | 03:16 AM
"Have Meme Will Travel" is a fascinating piece. When I read "infosphere" I immediately thought of the Jesuit priest/scientist/philosopher (and to some, heretic) Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, who suggested the existence of a "noosphere", a sphere of human thought surrounding the earth. Apparently de Chardin's idea has never achieved "meme" status since Mr. Glieck did not give the dead Jebbie a nod.
Earl McMillin
Merritt Island
Florida
Posted by Earl McMillin on May 6,2011 | 10:26 AM
Is this a meme?
plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose New Ager Byron Katie says "Who would you be without the thought? and Turn it around."
Its all the same to me (or meme).
Posted by John Grant on May 3,2011 | 12:15 PM
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