Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Saving America by Parsing Fallacies of Composition

A fallacy of composition is defined as an illogical projection to an aggregate, based upon the assumption that a local relationship projects unchanged to the whole.  One example heard from Randy Wray:  "If you stand up at a sports stadium, you'll get a better view.  Therefore, if everyone stands up, they'll ALL get better views!"

It's often useful to instead call it a fallacy of scaling.   An aggregate falling for a fallacy of scale is diverting it's tremendous capabilities into mistakes & dead-ends on a culture-wide scale.  Nothing is more costly to us.

Therefore, our most important task may be to constantly train citizens to parse emerging fallacies of scale.  New fallacies are continuously presented simply because of our own expanding options.

Once examined, it's clear that fallacies of scale permeate much of the isolated field of orthodox economics.  A good example came up in a comment-discussion at Warren Mosler's blog.

Monica Smith: What do you do about people, who accumulate currency and hoard it?

Roger Erickson:  There are nested layers of hoarding. Individuals in an aggregate will ALWAYS display a broad spectrum of hoarding instincts.


Point I’ve understood from talking with Warren is that the aggregate – by definition – can EASILY afford any laughable form of hoarding that an individual, or even a small subgroup, can imagine. That’s obvious, but we tend to gloss over the obvious in our individual projections, and thereby generate colossal aggregate fallacies of composition, like in orthodox economics.


The most damaging form of hoarding – by far – is when the aggregate hoards ... response options, [unused].


(Statisticians & system-theorists call this ignoring the return-on-coordination, or foregoing auto-catalysis.)  [ps:  these terms & concepts are common in ecology & biology, but unfortunately this very useful jargon is still foreign to overly-isolated economists, even those in the MMT camp]


This conclusion comes from the simple statistics of networked aggregates. The return-on-coordination in an aggregate is so freaking unbounded that the imagination of individuals never matters … IF … the aggregate will just explore it’s options to scale up aggregate Output.


That’s the history of evolution, in a nutshell. There’s infinite room to expand options. Apparently, we don’t teach it well enough in elementary school, nor let citizens get enough practice at it. If more of HP only knew what HP was capable of, they’d all be a lot less paranoid about individual hoarding.


The future really is so bright that we can’t see it. A rudimentarily crude calculation, however, concludes that that’s a HUGE source emitting that blinding light. Given the magnitude of the source, logic says to invest in sunglasses & wade in to the smorgasbord, not go back into the dark.

  [end of comment-discussion]


Remember that old quote?  "If HP only knew what HP knows, we'd never have to worry about our stock price?"   The same is even more true of an aggregate.  If we would only take account in our policy discussions of what ALL PROFESSIONS know (instead of over-weighting the opinions of orthodox economists still stuck in fallacies of scale), then our nation wouldn't have to worry about it's fiat currency budget.

To carry on the analogy, how do we "invest in sunglasses," so we're not blinded by the future?

One suggestion is that the MOST IMPORTANT OPTION may be to teach emerging members of a rapidly growing population HOW TO PARSE CONSTANTLY EMERGING FALLACIES OF SCALE.   Developing that skill should be the primary goal of Economics 101, and it should be well practiced by all students by the 8th grade, so that it is the reflex, fall-back habit they are most comfortable with.

When surprised or stressed, winning aggregates fall back to a habit of finding those aggregate options with the highest return-on-coordination.  Through aggregate coordination,  they quickly leave clumsier aggregates in the dust.  For human cultures, that's the key mechanism that generates what Darwin called Adaptive Rate.

It really is true that every process is too important to be left to the presumed process owners.  The ultimate proof is the adverse outcomes of aggregates that don't adequately scout the diversity of knowledge held by their own members.  Adaptive parsing is what democracies supposedly excel at, but at our present population scale, the democratic methods we once used simply aren't propagating adequate outcomes.  Every outmoded method demonstrates yet another fallacy of scale.  Simple conclusion is that we need to reorganize, and do so faster.

Open Source crowd-sourcing may be what saves us.  To rapidly scale up exploration of our own options, we must first scale up self-sampling of our own knowledge.  We need collaboration, open source & innovation on a much greater scale and faster tempo.

Only with continuously improving cultural sunglasses can we speed detection of new patterns in the emerging future. Once we can see 'em, we can then invest in those patterns with a higher return-on-coordination.  In the process, we can avoid the staggeringly high lost Output that we're now seeing.   Those Output losses coincide with endorsement of dead-end fallacies of scale.

5 comments:

Dustin said...

Franklin was a big supporter of democracy - especially representative democracy. Since he was such an important founding father, many people try to attribute things he never said to him. That "2 wolves and sheep" quote is one of them. As one might expect, it was actually uttered by a conservative back in the early 90s.

http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Democracy#Misattributed

Roger Erickson said...

since the quote is irrelevant to the post, I'll just take it out; thanks for the update

Ed Rombach said...

Roger Erickson said...

"Ben Franklin also said, in principle, that wolves & sheep were smart enough to explore a mutually beneficial option, where they selectively recycle stragglers in each category back into grass. Surely our wolves & sheep are smart enough to do the same … but I’m beginning to wonder."

I think Ben Franklin's actual words were something like: "If we don't hang together, we surely will hang separately."

Tom Hickey said...

RE "It really is true that every process is too important to be left to the presumed process owners."

That's the issue with private ownership under market capitalism. It is assumed that in order to create incentive for innovation, the innovation has to be roped off proprietary rights that prevent unrestricted scaling.

That's the value of open source.

Unknown said...

Hi and thanks for this.

I'm wondering if fear of the 'aging population' and the 'crisis in pensions' is equally, as you describe it, a fallacy of scale. Here the failure in logic is to raise the age of retirement. It is based upon a simple static projection of population age composition and population change in 30 years time.

The logical blinkers stop people seeing other inevitable interwoven change. For example reducing eligibility can cut household consumption in which pensions are spent. A whole poorer sector of the population may die before pension eligibility, or reduce the number of years of their participation in the workforce, and reduce the amount of pension they draw. Cutting pensions kills older people, which in turn cuts supportive care work - a cutback in an area of new productive economic activity. For example older pensioners may need new carer technologies - a growing sector of the economy that can lead to productivity increases and greater independence for older people. This growing economic sector willl raise economic output. High welfare states will draw income from this in a pro growth green sustainable way. This in turn sounds like a pathway to improved health and less dependence financial and otherwise for older people I don't think I've exhausted this line of thought.

So, questions of birth rate, economic growth, productivity, working lives etc. are networked (let alone the other historically possible contingent events that will take place over the next 30 years). Change one feature of the aggregate and you can/will change others. This is a picture of 'emergence' and complexity and not of isolated static projections.

Which takes us into a new type of economics and social research.

Jim Whitman
@economicsnz