An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
Pages
▼
Pages
▼
Monday, April 9, 2012
Roger Erickson — Evolutionary scientist looks at employment and social structure
so far, the path to fastest adaptive rate has been to maximize flexibility/agility/diversity in the smallest population (i.e., no class barriers); having less agile lower-classes on hand looks convenient one day, but is a non-scalable burden the next day; in any adaptive race, you’ll see a large spectrum of options tried, but the weight of model-species evidence indicates that there’s a sweet spot with tolerance limits: “species able to increase group agility (aka diversity/flexibility) while controlling the inter-dependency-costs that come with population size … inevitably outdo competitors” that’s basically why eukaryotes outdo prokaryotes, (diploid vs haploid) & why social species outdo solitary species (diverse teams able to rapidly combine team-behaviors greater than the sum of visible member properties) & why democracies outdo monarchies/aristocracies; & why “flat” organizations outdo hierarchical ones. It’s odd to see a conservative political movement develop in parallel to the “flat” organizational structure of industries like Intel (not to mention within our supposed Democracy). It’s as though business & public purpose have temporarily separated, and must re-connect.
If only we had eukaryotes running things instead of our morons...
ReplyDeleteResp,