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California Expert Software
Truth is Everything |
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Introduction |
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Once again, I bring up a truly popular subject: reality.
Nagging public (and personal) problems won't get solved by ignoring them.
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One thing our
species is really good at is avoiding reality. This is perhaps the single
most distinctive characteristic of
homo sapiens,
even more a mark than our vaunted intelligence and technical skills. I say
that because Chimps can be trained to do some pretty remarkable human-like
things. The more I look at our close non-human relatives, the more I see
ourselves in them.
But, the one thing
the rest of our Earthling compatriots seem unable to do is avoid reality.
Only modern people can imagine they are not trapped, not addicted and not
compelled by their lifestyles. We join Will E Coyote everyday in trips over
the cliff, not even realizing that we're off the cliff. We are forever stuck
in that part of the cartoon
before the
realization. So, if we are doomed, we don't know it and probably never
experience it. Perhaps the most amazing thing about our species is that such
a maladaptive trait is so pervasive, and that we have succeeded regardless
of it.
Now, I think we
might succeed a lot more and in better ways, if we would pay attention to
the world about us. It really isn't necessary to get killed falling off
cliffs to prove that falling off a cliff is deadly. We know that. In many
cases, we have enough "theoretical" knowledge to calculate a result that
would
happen; we don't need to do the experiment. But there is a deep
anti-intellectual trend in homo sapiens,
which inevitably leads to jumping off cliffs. The ability to avoid reality
is the same thing as our ability to "visualize" the future; i.e., to make
things seem to be what we want them to be without reference to any so-called
"physical reality." That ability underlies the creation of Will E Coyote
who, in nature, would have been good for exactly
one guffaw. (It is also one of my
reasons for thinking that "moral values" are subjective, and that a
subjectivist philosophy is essential in understanding our species and our
world.)
There are some problems that simply won't "go away." They test our ability to create our own reality, to make the world whatever we want it to be. One of those problems is ENTROPY. It comes up in many different ways. For example, global climate change is an instance of the degradation of stored energy. Every living thing depends on an energy gradient, the flow of energy from higher to lower potential. Living things are part of that gradient; i.e., they are one of the pathways by which energy flows from high to low potential. The entropy concept implies that, sooner or later, we all run down, even if we can slow down the run-down at a cost of greater and greater energy inputs. Time itself may in some way be related to entropy, as both things are one-way operations.
It follows the cost and effort required to keep people alive only increases as they age. The longer you live, the more things go wrong, because entropy works against all organized systems. The Third Law of Thermodynamics, that Entropy always increases, is measured by disorganization because randomness is the chief visible indicator of entropy. Large number of things fall under the Third Law: forgetfulness, disease, death, highway repairs, and Murphy's Law. The Red Queen problem is an intimate consequence, or possibly a restatement of that Law. Taking entropy as a heuristic, the obvious conclusion is that more work is always required because things always fall apart.
Starting from the simple notion of entropy, it should be a short step to these conclusions:
| Highways will always need repair money, | |
| Schools will always need to be rebuilt and staffed, | |
| Education is a constant uphill struggle, | |
| Maintaining health is constant uphill struggle, | |
| Houses will always have something wrong with them, | |
| Cars will always need repairs and break down, | |
| We eventually forget everything we learned, | |
| Our beloved car will end up in the crusher, | |
| Someone will bulldoze the house, | |
| Things will go wrong when inconvenient, | |
| All our creative efforts will end up in the dump. |
It doesn't take
that long for most of what we do to become dust. Most of us are faded
memories in a few years, and often forgotten within our survivors'
lifetimes. Only a few luminaries manage to survive in our records for more
than a century or two. Ancient persons are memorable only because modern
people got lucky 500 years ago, when hordes of ancient records were
recovered. I say "lucky," because we also know of several disasters in which
even more records were destroyed. It's almost a miracle we have any
knowledge of our ancient ancestors; entropy militates against it.
Now, the inevitable political consequences (remember, this is
L&F!). The
things government does are not going to get done without cost and effort,
any more than anything else gets done without cost and effort. We assign
many tasks to our government, such as building and maintaining schools,
highways and hospitals, delivering water, taking away garbage and sewage,
fighting fires, crime and wars, educating the citizenry, regulating
business, keeping records, judging disputes and generally assuring things
happen in an orderly way according to well known laws. All those things
involve a cost; they aren't free because they cannot be free. So, to refuse
taxes and drain governmental resources is insanity, if one expects to get
something for nothing. All that happens is the government collapses
eventually, and all of us get nothing. That is why I think Libertarians are
anarchists in disguise. I also think those screaming the loudest against
government would change their tune quick enough, if they were left high and
dry.
The longer people live, the more expensive health care will get. There's
probably no way around that. It's another consequence of entropy. So,
wanting to live longer implies an ever increasing source of income. At some
point, there has to be a trade-off between money and life. "Your money or
your life."
Gresham's Law is another phenomenon associated with entropy. Living things
tend to hoard and defend resources valuable to themselves. If they didn't,
they might not be around much longer. So, in market systems the currency
will always be degraded; hence inflation. It's a fool's paradise in which
"prices are stable" and the currency retains its value. When there is price
stability, it means some Peters are robbed to pay Paul, and Paul owns the
abacus. Put this observation another way, and you arrive inevitably at the
Tragedy of the Commons.
I've been writing a lot about reality lately. That's because most of what is
wrong with Bandit government and the American people is they make and
believe lies. Lies are another form of entropy.
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WalterB -
13:08:27 - Wednesday, 06/22/2005
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Last update: 11/06/2007
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