Heresy
evolves, orthodoxy cannot. Plan accordingly. Orthodoxies offer the
comforting illusion of solidarity. But in what lies ahead, we're on
our own.
In today's world, the key orthodoxies are secular
rather than religious: they are economic, ideological, political.
Religious orthodoxy is in the spiritual realm. It may have secular
ramifications (for example, Galileo being forced to renounce his
scientific advances) but it doesn't deal with forecasts of real-world
systems.
Economic, ideological and geopolitical orthodoxies
are different. They make forecasts about the real world, and they
will be right or wrong.
The orthodoxies are roughly divided
into two camps: the Establishment/Status Quo orthodoxies and the
alternative orthodoxies.
Both are fiercely defended by True
Believers, as the orthodoxy is the foundation of the True Believers'
identity and worldview.
The two orthodoxies aren't
necessarily diametrically opposed. Sometimes they overlap.
Much
of what passes for "informed commentary" now is nothing
more than True Believers cherry-picking whatever supports their
orthodoxy. In this mindset, what's important is that everyone agrees
with the orthodoxy. Public fealty to the orthodoxy is all that
matters.
In this climate, projecting an outcome that doesn't
fit an orthodoxy is heresy and must be suppressed.
I don't
see any value in trying to persuade others to agree with me. The
analysis goes where it goes, and it doesn't really matter if we like
the conclusion or not.
What matters is one forecast will be
accurate and the rest will be wrong. If 99.99% of the populace
doesn't like the accurate forecast, that doesn't change the outcome.
If the analysis is sound, then the forecast is sound, and it
won't change if it offends our sensibilities.
In other words,
an emotionally detached analytic view is more likely to generate
accurate forecasts than defending orthodoxies.
Put another
way, accurate forecasts don't arise from popularity contests.
We
might not like the results of a detached analysis, but liking it or
hating it isn't the point. The accuracy is the point.
We
might disagree with the forecast and hope it isn't accurate, but we
understand our opinions and hopes won't change the outcome.
If
we want to prepare an appropriate response to what's coming down the
pike, we're better served by cultivating a detached view that favors
our own independent analysis rather than orthodoxy. In other words,
our self-interest is best served by becoming self-reliant.
Consider
all the standard-issue orthodoxies, neatly packaged for easy
marketing / consumption: Left and Right, Conservative and
Progressive, Capitalist and Socialist, etc.
I find all the
orthodoxies lacking. None makes sense of the dynamics I see as
consequential, so we're forced to assemble our own analysis.
In
other words, we're forced to secretly dabble in heresies.
For
example, the Status Quo orthodoxy holds that the world is now
multipolar and the influence and power of the U.S. / West is in an
inevitable decline.
The West's dominance was a bad thing, so
multipolarity is a good thing.
The alternative orthodoxy
holds that the U.S. / West are doomed not just to decline but to give
way to the dominance of China and its partners.
The West had
its day, now it's China's turn.
This orthodoxy holds the US
dollar will collapse in a heap, replaced by Bitcoin, a gold-backed
yuan, or a basket of non-Western currencies.
Questioning
these orthodoxies is akin to declaring God is dead in 1500. It
doesn't go over very well with True Believers and their enforcers.
These orthodoxies are values/identity-based rather than
analytic. They project what we think should happen because it fits
our value system and what we identify with.
This is why
orthodoxies are so vehemently defended: to question them is to
question the moral rightness of the orthodoxy.
The problem
with orthodoxy is two-fold: 1) orthodoxies suppress evolution and 2)
we're blinded by our emotional attachments to orthodoxies.
We
don't get attached to forecasts that don't impact our values or our
financial security.
If someone forecasts inflation in Lower
Slobovia will rise from 8% to 10%, we don't have any emotional stake
in the forecast. If inflation there rises or falls, we don't care. We
don't bristle and rush to defend either forecast.
Unless
we've staked a speculative bet on inflation rising in Lower Slobovia.
Then we care, deeply. We're completely emotionally engaged, and ready
to tear the head off anyone arguing that our position is faulty and
we're going to lose the bet.
Those with no emotional stake in
the issue look on us with bemusement. What's the big deal? Whatever
is going to happen is going to happen, so why get worked up about it?
Indeed.
As longtime readers know, I favor looking at
everything as a system. There is really only one system dynamic,
Natural Selection, i.e. evolutionary success or failure when
evolutionary pressure is applied.
Human societies and
economies are ecosystems, too, and so their success or failure is
Natural Selection at work.
Two things matter in evolution:
transparency and variability. Evolution is only possible if the
genome / society / economy generates a steady stream of mutations /
variations.
Variations / variability are the fuel of
evolution: if there are no mutations / variations, then there's
nothing new being fed to the system which can offer selective
advantages.
Transparency is the mechanism needed to test /
select variability. In the genome, mutations that offer some
selective advantage are conserved by an automatic process.
In
human organizations, transparency means there's a free-for-all churn
of variability / dissent, experimentation and sharing of results. New
ideas and data flow freely between all the nodes of the system.
Human organizations with weak variability and transparency
fail to adapt because they lack the means to do so.
This is
scale-invariant. Relationships lacking variability and transparency
fail, enterprises lacking variability and transparency fail, nations
lacking variability and transparency fail.
Authoritarian
regimes, be they relationships, enterprises or nations, fail because
there is no other possible outcome other than evolutionary failure.
Any success will be illusory / temporary.
Finding this regime
attractive or repugnant won't change the inevitability of its
failure.
Transparency is not easy. People contest our
treasured orthodoxies, upsetting us. We're forced to admit to being
wrong far more often than we like. It hurts our pride and we lose
face, but the upside is the immense success of the evolutionary
churn.
This process is scale-invariant: every argument /
disagreement reflects the underlying dynamics of the system, so every
negotiation to resolve the conflict reflects these same dynamics.
This process is also evolutionary. The previous negotiation
may leave one side dissatisfied, and so the negotiations evolve.
From the perspective of evolutionary churn, we shouldn't
grudgingly allow variations, we should elicit them, welcome them not
as threats but as essential churn, and then negotiate an outcome that
is evolutionary, i.e. contingent and open to being changed as
conditions change.
The couple that never argues and always
puts on a smiley face isn't the healthy relationship. It's
evolutionarily doomed to failure because the facade of unity and
happiness is not actual unity or happiness.
The lack of
variability and transparency have a cost that the participants and
the system pay one way or another. It can be hidden for a while but
not indefinitely.
The same can be said of nations. If dissent
is suppressed, data is suppressed, communication is shackled by fear
of exposure or censure and all decisions are made opaquely, that
regime is doomed to evolutionary failure.
The nation where
all the dirty laundry is out and everybody is arguing about it is
evolutionarily robust. The nation where the dirty laundry is hidden
deep in the basement to preserve the illusion of unity and success
has been stripped of variability and transparency.
My
analytic forecast (laid out in my book Global Crisis, National
Renewal) is that evolutionary success demands relocalizing production
of essentials and consuming less, and all the systemic changes
required to enable and incentivize this evolution.
Evolutionary
pressure doesn't go away when you hide the dirty laundry. It builds
up. When variability / dissent are suppressed, the system has no
evolutionary fuel. Starved, it collapses.
I don't think it
matters what we call the world system or what configuration aligns
with our values or what we think should happen. Evolutionary pressure
is building, and those organizations which choose autocratic
suppression of variability / dissent and transparency will fail.
Those that defend the churn of variability / dissent and
transparency will evolve, come what may.
Orthodoxies by
definition have been of stripped of variability and transparency.
That's what makes an orthodoxy an orthodoxy.
For this reason,
evolutionary success cannot arise within orthodoxies. Dissent,
variability, sharing ideas, proposing solutions and negotiating
transparently are all intrinsically heretical.
Orthodoxies
have mastered the illusion of adapting to changing times. Orthodoxies
introduce updated catch-phrases to mask their inability to evolve.
Heresy evolves, orthodoxy cannot. Plan accordingly.
Orthodoxies offer the comforting illusion of solidarity. But in what
lies ahead, we're on our own. Orthodoxy is a luxury we can
ill-afford. What will prove consequential is Self-Reliance.
by Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com on January 27, 2023
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.