<div class="gmail_quote"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex;">Anders wrote:</blockquote><div><br></div><div> </div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex;">
It could be that Didier Sornette is right about the singularity as an infinite sequence of ever faster stock market crashes and rallies converging to a single point...<br></blockquote><div><br></div><div>I find it interesting that Marx and Engels predicated all of this in the section on capitalism in The Communist Manifesto. The descriptions of it as a revolutionary force creating periodic crisis within the system and needing to create new markets or exploit old ones to right itself. And that line about the executive of the state becoming servants to the bourgeois class as a whole. </div>
<div><br></div><div>.As for your comment about the cybernetics of the system breaking down, Anders, that is what I was trying to get at in my last e-mail about informational systems and technology making up part of the human psyche in ways it has never done before, though it was rather muddily expressed compared to you. Your comments clarified it a bit for me. People as a rule are still invested in the enlightenment view that we can solve these problems by sheer human will and reason and ingenuity alone, that the liberal march of human progress and technology will do it for us. Yet if the problem is, as you say, cybernetic and the beast is becoming unsteady due to poor feedback, badly defined goals and an unintelligible babble of conversation, even a simple collective will to change it might not be enough. We'll still keep feeding into the old teleological models expecting them to work. I have a feeling this is because we haven't fully acknowledged as a society that these systems are even there, that they have grafted themselves onto our way of perceiving and dealing with the world. So we sit here and wait for a hero or two to rescue us like we are damsels in distress in some medieval tale published by enlightenment age presses in 1895. In a way we are all a bit like Don Quixotes, with our politicians and business leaders Sancho Panzas. Everyone is deluded, but some are slightly more practical than others. </div>
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