Theme: Productivity

  • Updating Our Ancient Trinity: Truth, Beauty and Morality


    [T]he greeks just couldn’t figure out what they meant by “Goodness”.  But, I have. It’s productivity on the Obverse, and prohibition of free riding on the Reverse.

    It’s do not unto others that you wold not have done unto you: impose no cost is the fee for entry into the fruits of the commons, and heroism: contribution to the commons at self sacrifice, in exchange for status.

    Our ancient indo european ancestors were right all along.

    Contribute to the commons.

    That is the west’s unique evolutionary strategy.

  • Updating Our Ancient Trinity: Truth, Beauty and Morality


    [T]he greeks just couldn’t figure out what they meant by “Goodness”.  But, I have. It’s productivity on the Obverse, and prohibition of free riding on the Reverse.

    It’s do not unto others that you wold not have done unto you: impose no cost is the fee for entry into the fruits of the commons, and heroism: contribution to the commons at self sacrifice, in exchange for status.

    Our ancient indo european ancestors were right all along.

    Contribute to the commons.

    That is the west’s unique evolutionary strategy.

  • TERRITORIAL, and TECHNOLOGICAL COMPETITIVE VALUE (profound) I’ve been arguing fo

    http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/17/upshot/dont-be-so-sure-the-economy-will-return-to-normal.html?smid=tw-upshotnyt&_r=0&abt=0002&abg=0NORMATIVE, TERRITORIAL, and TECHNOLOGICAL COMPETITIVE VALUE

    (profound)

    I’ve been arguing for two decades that we have had 500 years of ‘unusual’ as we spread the voluntary organization of production around the world (often by force), and conquered and exploited two new continents. And that what we see is the new normal. There aren’t enough asymmetries to exploit any longer to maintain the prior asymmetry of wealth.

    Or rather, normative asymmetries (institutions) are terribly productive and last for generations if maintained, territorial asymmetries are almost as productive, and can last for generations if trade routes are maintained, while technological asymmetries are decreasingly durable.

    Or as technologists tend to say: “technology is not a competitive advantage” because it is so easily neutralized.

    Conversely, territorial, trade route, and normative asymmetries produce for the long run.

    Hence my (and Taleb’s) concern about fragility. And my concern that the progressive fantasy of technology as savior, and norm as inhibitor is backwards.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-17 06:36:00 UTC

  • TRUTH, BEAUTY, MORALITY The greeks just couldn’t figure out what they meant by “

    TRUTH, BEAUTY, MORALITY

    The greeks just couldn’t figure out what they meant by “Goodness”.

    I have. It’s productivity on the Obverse, and prohibition of free riding on the Reverse. It’s do not unto others that you wold not have done unto you: impose no cost is the fee for entry into the fruits of the commons, and heroism: contribution to the commons at self sacrifice, in exchange for status.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-15 03:19:00 UTC

  • THE EVOLUTION OF PUNCTUATION. (the economics of writing materials) Um. First, to

    THE EVOLUTION OF PUNCTUATION.

    (the economics of writing materials)

    Um. First, to get a bit of insult out of the way, he isn’t exactly writing about the intersections of complex topics, his PhD is in ‘interdisciplinary studies’. Meaning, it’s the equivalent of a high school diploma. Not much more than a means of fund-raising for weak departments.

    Second, quite the contrary, he DOES use punctuation: ample use of space to mark verbal pauses. In fact, spaces and new lines are all that are necessary for the comprehension of the written word. The comma, apostrophe,

    He should try to write with only spaces as punctuation, in E-prime (eliminating conflation between actor, observer, and experiencer; and eliminating ‘cheating’ conflation defining the existential properties of statements) and then I might take him more seriously.

    If we look at contemporary programming languages (Python) we see the abandonment of punctuation in favor of spaces and line breaks.

    The original reason for punctuation are fairly obvious:

    1) writing materials, people who could write, were originally terribly expensive.

    2) writing was originally limited to very simple and familiar topics, so comprehension was not difficult.

    3) most characters were originally pictographic.

    For these three reasons, writing was dense.

    But a problem arises as writing becomes more complicated, and not just a vehicle for business transactions, and the issuance of laws.

    It had to be able not to record transactions, but to record speech.

    —-”Punctuation is historically an aid to reading aloud.”—-

    —-”The Greeks were sporadically using punctuation marks consisting of vertically arranged dots—usually two (dicolon) or three (tricolon)—in around the 5th century b.c. as an aid in the oral delivery of texts.” —-

    hypostigmḗ – a low punctus on the baseline to mark off a komma (unit smaller than a clause);

    stigmḕ mésē – a punctus at midheight to mark off a clause (kōlon); and

    stigmḕ teleía – a high punctus to mark off a sentence (periodos).[6]

    —-”formal written modern English differs subtly from spoken English because not all emphasis and disambiguation is possible to convey in print, even with punctuation.”—-

    In phonetic languages, it is much easier to read volumes of text if there are spaces between the words. The same problem does not exist in pictorial characters which the entire meaning is embedded in the glyph.

    In modern writing, besides assisting in clarifying the text, punctuation makes it somewhat easier to scan rather than read (burdensome) text, so that if a concept is understood, one can easily move to the next. Most of us who read a great deal (for a living), skim the first sentence of paragraphs to search for something we might not already know, rather than burn time and energy on the author’s repetition of the obvious.

    So, the argument against this particular PhD student, (whose protest is noted) is that without punctuation we are trapped in his horridly pedantic narrative without the ability to search through it for valuable content. In that sense it is like having to listen to some idiot babble for twenty minutes before getting to the point. (In other words, like attending most conferences.)

    In high school I felt very frustrated with punctuation because my feeling was very similar to the author’s: a period is obvious, a comma is obvious, and a dash is obvious, and parenthesis are obvious. Paragraphs are not so obvious, and mastering semicolons is something I still wrestle with. But in the end, it’s just an increasing set of pauses to inform the reader how to read out loud.

    But there is nothing ‘colonial’ about punctuation: The greeks used it. And the same technique has remained with us. Because it’s necessary.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-13 09:14:00 UTC

  • THE MIDDLE AND LOWER CLASSES CAN ONLY FUNCTION AS MULTIPLIERS In all cultures, t

    THE MIDDLE AND LOWER CLASSES CAN ONLY FUNCTION AS MULTIPLIERS

    In all cultures, the elites generate opportunities, for the lower classes to exploit. If you abandon your upper classes, your upper classes will abandon you. And the people who suffer are not those upper classes. They are the middle and lower classes that are conquered by those groups that maintain group cohesion.

    The middle and lower classes multiply the ideas of their elites.

    Seeking rents (socialism) is not a multiplier. It’s suicide.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-13 07:59:00 UTC

  • THE SECRET TO INEQUALITY It’s not complicated. Our middle and bottom cannot comp

    THE SECRET TO INEQUALITY

    It’s not complicated. Our middle and bottom cannot compete. The top still sells their services to the world. The middle and bottom increasingly less so. That’s the problem: Teacher’s unions. Monopoly school system. Federal indoctrination to preserve the union at the expense of the middle and bottom.


    Source date (UTC): 2015-05-13 03:35:00 UTC

  • What Is Capitalism?

    The suppression of predation and parasitism, the establishment of an allocation of property,  a means of resolving disputes, and the organization of production must be constructed.
    1. Totalitarian: It can be organized involuntarily: the elimination of private property, planning and slavery in many of its forms.
    2. Capitalist: It can be organized voluntarily by the use of private property, money, and prices.
    3. Mixed: It can be organized by a mix of private property, money, and prices, and the totalitarian construction of commons.  (Which is what we do today). 
    A market forms under any condition in which goods are constructed for the purpose of exchange.

    https://www.quora.com/What-is-capitalism

  • How Do You Enterprise Capitalism?

    This is an illogical question.  How do you “Fast” the color “Green”.  It makes no sense.  Capitalism is the voluntary organization of production through the use of private property, contract, law, money, prices, accounting, and interest.  And the use of  and reward for use of resources is allocated to those who most satisfy the demand for those resources by the information provided by prices.

    An enterprise is voluntary organization of capital (time, people, money, assets) among individuals in order to construct an hypothesis that might produce a profit on the use of that capital – if their hypothesis is correct.

    An enterprise requires capital. 

    Aside from that the question is nonsensical.

    Cheers

    https://www.quora.com/How-do-you-enterprise-capitalism

  • What Is Capitalism?

    The suppression of predation and parasitism, the establishment of an allocation of property,  a means of resolving disputes, and the organization of production must be constructed.
    1. Totalitarian: It can be organized involuntarily: the elimination of private property, planning and slavery in many of its forms.
    2. Capitalist: It can be organized voluntarily by the use of private property, money, and prices.
    3. Mixed: It can be organized by a mix of private property, money, and prices, and the totalitarian construction of commons.  (Which is what we do today). 
    A market forms under any condition in which goods are constructed for the purpose of exchange.

    https://www.quora.com/What-is-capitalism