Andre Rebentisch on Thu, 9 Mar 2023 00:48:47 +0100 (CET)


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Re: <nettime> Germany's geopolitics


For me, the most intriguing takeaway from the war is that geopolitical economic leverage exists, albeit in unexpected ways. It was not widely understood how important Ukraine would be as an agrarian exporting nation on the global market.

While geopolitics is useful for post-mortem analysis, it is less useful for future analysis: geopolitical analysis is insightful, but current maps/concepts are always severely outdated. In my opinion, an applicable solution is to draw inspiration from modern AI or neural networks, start with all of the raw maps and empirical big data, and then derive new theories from the big pile of data. Whenever an analysis is presented, one can see how technological shifts would change the battlefield/outcome.

One cannot fully cure geopolitics' disease, pre-conceptional bias, but one can distill new narratives.

In a Schmittian discourse, the term "political" has a distinct, spatial meaning, which makes his approach self-confirming.

How should a geopolitical analysis of "Cyberspace" be told? What should a nation state like Germany do to strengthen its national clout in the Clouds, the Internets?


-- A

Am 07.03.23 um 18:45 schrieb Pit Schultz:
 Maps and territory don't determine political outcomes and have a very limited primary function in encoding the general future.
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