Saturday, June 07, 2008

Intellectual resurrection or mental diarrhea? You decide.

I know I've been carrying these thoughts around with me for a long time now, and I've even squawked a bit of it at some people, but this is the first time I will try to get them down in writing. These ideas will purposefully be published as fragments instead of in a linear structure because they are pieces of a puzzle which the reader must assemble into their own schema.

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The limitation of capitalism is morality. You cannot operate in a purely capitalistic system and expect that the economics will follow our moral values.

(Are you a communist then?)

It is a fallacious dichotomy to believe that if one does not believe in capitalism, then one must believe in communism. Obviously, communism has been applied in amoral ways as well, so that's not what I'm talking about. Simply put, there are as many ways to organize ourselves economically as we can think of. That's a tautology, really. It's only that in recent history we have been conditioned to strictly think in these two terms. There have been plenty more ways civilizations have operated economically in the past, and there are even more ways we have yet to try or think up.

(Well, then, what do you propose as an alternative?)

The crux of the matter is: instead of choosing an economic system as the focus of society and then allowing our morality to be derived from that, can we first decide what our values are and then design our economics around that? Can we evolve or quantum leap into a Humane Economy?

(Won't someone, some company, undercut the rest who try to operate in a humane manner?)

Why do oligopolies exist? What is the solution to the Prisoners' Dilemma? Organizations and individuals will implicitly adhere to norms that benefit the collective when they realize that that situation is also optimal for themselves. Furthermore, the collective will tend to impose penalties, whether social, legal, or economic, on those who deviate from that norm.

(This sounds like a chicken or egg problem.)

The answer is how you define what a chicken egg is. The confusion comes from whether a chicken egg is an egg laid by a chicken, or an egg that contains a chicken. You simply have to choose which is the primitive (and whether you believe in evolution or not), then you will have your answer.

I believe the egg always comes first, so I believe we must first work to establish humane companies before we can give birth to the Humane Economy. Fortunately, a few already exist. If we build upon those and simultaneously expand those numbers, we can mimic the natural processes of resonance or crystallization to develop larger, sustainable structures.

(Why bother to do this?)

We are currently limiting ourselves, our true potential. Since we have been wired for survival, we have simply recreated that necessity within our society. Our society is built on the extortion of our livelihoods. However, we are reaching the point where our population is very large but only a minority percentage is required to create enough resources for all of us to thrive. Consequently, the remainder will necessarily be treated as economic excess. At some point, we, as a society, will have to choose between the right to life or the right to livelihood.

To free ourselves of this paradox, we must transcend our self imposed prison of survival. And if we can do so, we will transform into a Generative Society, a society where our focus is creating, not surviving.

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More to come later...

Monday, October 23, 2006

Six-Word Stories

I was just reading "Very Short Stories" (pg. 212), in the November 2006 issue of Wired Magazine. They had 33 writers write six-word stories in the tradition of Hemingway, who once wrote: "For sale: baby shoes, never worn." This inspired me to write some of my own...

This is my six-word story.

God created humor, then created life.

Accidental reincarnation. Newborn cries, "Not again!"

Halloween Mercenary: Will kill for chocolate.

Energy crisis averted; flatulence power invented.

The contented monkeys laughed, "You're evolved?"

Rule #5: No heaven without hell.

Buddha gives up, checks into rehab.

Quantum computer computes one over zero.

World's greatest minds find solution: devolve.

Loving husband's dying words: "Buy it."

When TiVo died, people stopped watching.

(Laughing maniacally) "Excellent! They love iPods."

Jesus returns. Says, "What the fuck?"

Study: unrequited love drives greatest minds.

Temporal mechanic successful; Big Bang undone.

Superhero loses insurance coverage. Villains triumph.

Can't see. Must escape. Will drown.

Dracula, defeated by insomnia, sees sun.

Knuckle hair leads to evolutionary miracle.

Fashion 2093: ties become neck thongs.

CAUTION! Road to hell being paved.

Saturday, October 14, 2006

Tikkun olam

"repairing the world"

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Moment of cynicism

Time and again I must remind myself that Reality is not the beautiful thing that could be, it is the ugly thing that is.

Friday, May 12, 2006

The Secret Language of Sleep

I came across this site from an article on the Monkey Bites Wired Blog. It's for a new book called The Secret Language of Sleep and talks about sleeping positions for couples based on their personality traits. There is even a sleep test (http://www.evany.com/sleeptest/index.htm) to help you find a suitable one. This is the one that it recommends for me:



I am a seatbelt!
Find your own pose!



Since the test is gender neutral, but this picture is not, the question I keep asking myself is, "Am I suposed to be the seatbelt or the passenger?"

Monday, February 13, 2006

A good day...

Yes, today was a good day. Walked within two feet of Michelle Pfeiffer. 'Nuff said. =)

Tuesday, January 03, 2006

Ba-aaa Ba-aaa!

I'm just testing out this new fangled audio-blogging:

this is an audio post - click to play


...or maybe this is a better way to present it...