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August 7, 2008 1. The US economy transitioned
from hard-asset based (gold, silver) c. 1970 to Fed paper notes written solely
against the “good faith and credit” of US citizens. 2. Gold is tangible,
observable, finite: whatever is on hand, is on
hand. That provides a firm,
tangible, finite, objective economic anchor. There is no way to create more of it at
will. One ton of gold is one ton of
gold. Its quantity and value are
represented in numbers. Since that
time, the 3. Adam Smith’s
“invisible hand” does not mean “non-existent”, nor detached. It
means what it says: invisible. That
is, not observable. 4. After disconnecting from
the gold standard, US economics and capitalism became
purely a matter of manipulating numbers.
There was no longer a hard, observable, tangible, finite anchor. Numbers are not hard, observable, or
tangible, and may not even exist outside the mind of human beings. 5. With US and Western
economics and capitalism shifted to manipulation of numbers: are numbers
real? That is, do numbers exist
independently of the human mind and imagination? 6. Plato claimed numbers exist
independently of the human mind, are real, but exist in an ideal, transcendent,
unmanifest world. Numbers
exist because they are in that ideal world. That ideal world is represented to us by
numbers, and by extension, mathematics.
Therefore, numbers exist because numbers
exist. Circular
logic, per his protegé Aristotle. 7. Descartes,
mathematician/philosopher, finally got around some fifteen centuries later to
further analyzing the questions of what exists, what is real. He went past numbers to the question of
whether he himself even existed. He
posited that some entity, some manner of consciousness and material world in
the form he found himself, must necessarily and logically exist in order to
ponder the question to begin with.
He concluded "cogito, ergo sum." "I think, therefore I
am." Thus demonstrating that
he, and by the same argument other humans, have firm evidence that we exist,
and are not mere fantasies or cognitive constructs of an "Evil
Genius" imagining all of us, the world, and the manifest universe. Human beings exist. He was not able to reach a similar
conclusion about numbers, nor has anyone else, nor is it possible to reach any
such conclusion because it is not possible to separate thinking of numbers by a
human being from the human being himself or herself without eradicating the
human being. In which case, there
would be nothing to speak or think further. [Numbers are assumed by mathematicians to exist in a real sense for the
sake of their day-to-day work six days per week, but not on the Sabbath when
they feel more obliged to be honest. (reference
“The Mathematical Experience", Davis and Hersh, 1981.) ] 8. Capitalism based on numbers
may or may not be valid, according to whether or not numbers are valid, real,
existent, independent of the human mind. Positing them in Plato’s ideal
realm and begging the question of their existence on that basis was and is null
and void. 9. Find a 1, or a 2. Not a symbolic representation of one or
two, 1 or 2. Not a quantity of 1 of
something, or 2 of something, but an actual 1 or an actual 2, tangible,
observable, on their own. Next,
find a human being. It is possible
to find a human being, one human being or two human beings. It is so far not possible to find a 1 or
a 2 in this world. There are no
instances in recorded history where either of those have even been located and
identified as entities independent of the human mind, nor any other number nor
any mathematics nor any equation. 10. Human beings are real. 11. If a) the independent
existence of numbers is unknown, and unknowable; b) human beings do exist; then
c) any system of human economics based on reality can only be based on human
beings. 12. Positing numbers as real
entities, and basing economics on that unproved and unprovable hypothesis,
risks disposing of real entities (human beings) in favor of imaginary entities
(numbers.) The only variable needed
for that to happen is unscrupulous human beings. 13. Human-based – that
is, people-centered – economics is the only valid measure of economics. 14. Manipulation of numbers,
represented by currency/money, allows writing “new” money as
needed. There is no tangible asset,
or anchor. There are only numbers,
managed by whomever might maneuver into position to do
so. Economics came to be based on
numbers, rather than real human beings. 15. On that basis, capitalism
trumped people and therefore trumped democracy. Democracy is about people, who since Descartes
are considered necessarily real, rather than numbers which are not necessarily
real. An imaginary construct,
numbers, rule a real construct, people.
That arrangement allows for disposal of real human beings, in the name
of the imaginary construct. 16. Capitalism nevertheless
remains the most powerful economic system ever devised. The problem is not with the
construct. The problem is with the
output of the construct, wherein imaginary constructs – numbers, and
currencies represented symbolically by numbers – are left to control real
human beings to the material benefit of relatively few people and to the
exclusion of many others. Classical
capitalism has reached equilibrium in this regard. However, and consequently, many and
growing numbers of human beings are excluded in the realm of finite resources
hoarded by those most adept with manipulating numbers/currencies. 17. This is where we find
ourselves at the advent of the third age of human civilization – the
Information Age, following from the Agriculture Age and the Industrial
Age. We are for the first time in
human history in position to take note of where we are and what we are doing to
and with each other. Or, not. 18. Modifying the output of
capitalism is the only method available to resolving the problem of capitalism
where numbers trumped people – at the hands of people trained toward
profit represented only by numbers and currencies rather than human
beings. Profit rules, people are
expendable commodities represented by numbers. The solution, and only solution, is to
modify that output, measuring profit in terms of real human beings instead of
numbers. 19. We can choose to not reform
capitalism, leave human beings to die from deprivation – where we are now
– and understand that that puts people in self-defense mode. 20. When in self-defense mode,
kill or be killed, there is no civilization at all. It is the law of the jungle, where we
started eons ago. In that context,
'terrorism' will likely flourish because it is 'terrorism' only for the haves,
not for the have-nots. The
have-nots already live in terror, as their existence is threatened by
deprivation, and they have the right to fight back any way they can. 21. “They” will
fight back, and do. 22. The Information Age can
become the pinnacle of human civilization, the Golden Age. Or, it can become the end of human
civilization. We get to decide
which way to go, and act accordingly. 23. Dismissing people and
consciously leaving them to die is probably not the way to go. 24. Economics, and indeed human
civilization, can only be measured and calibrated in terms of human
beings. Everything in economics has
to be adjusted for people, first, and abandoning the illusory numerical analyses
that inevitably put numbers ahead of people, capitalism ahead of democracy, and
degradation ahead of compassion. 25. Each of us who have a
choice can choose what we want to do to help or not. It is free-will, our choice, as human
beings. ------------ About the author: Stereo Type is a new contributor of Useless-Knowledge. Email: stere0type2008@yahoo.com Comment on this article here! ------------ All articles are EXCLUSIVE to Useless-Knowledge.com. Please link to this article rather than copying and pasting it onto your site (which would be unauthorized and illegal). |
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