Categories
Philosophy

The Vanishing Present

Marcus Aurelius observed that all we ever encounter — this continuous present in which the world appears at all — is precisely what stands to be lost at the moment of death, not as a possession but as the condition of experience itself. Past and future exist only as internal operations within this aperture, memory […]

Categories
cybernetics Philosophy

Toxic Wealth

Extreme wealth is not just a larger version of ordinary success. Beyond a certain point, it becomes a structural feature of the systems that organise society itself. Modern civilisation runs on coordination: finance, law, technology, logistics, media, administration. These systems manage complexity by translating the world into symbols — money, data, metrics, legal categories. They […]

Categories
cybernetics Philosophy

Technological Bullying

Technology is no longer a peripheral factor in abuse and social harm. It has become part of the mechanism. Research on technology-facilitated coercive control shows how perpetrators use everyday digital tools — smartphones, cloud accounts, GPS services, social media, spyware, smart home systems — to extend surveillance, isolation and intimidation beyond physical proximity, making abuse […]

Categories
Philosophy

On Not Pulling the Pin

The recurring tension over Taiwan is often described as a clash of policies, alliances, red lines or historical claims. But at a structural level it behaves more like a maintained gradient in a communicative field. Large national identities do not simply persist by consensus or memory. They require articulated vectors – directions of tension that […]

Categories
Philosophy

The Productive Uncertainty of Power

Large power systems — empires, blocs, security states, even global institutions — have never truly stabilised themselves by removing uncertainty. They stabilise by circulating it. Their administrative, legal, economic, and military structures function less as closures than as distribution networks for tension. Centre and periphery. Insider and outsider. Stability and threat. These are not failures […]

Categories
Philosophy

Blowing Bubbles

Extreme concentrations of wealth are not anomalies sitting awkwardly inside an otherwise functioning system. They are what the system becomes when its capacity to attenuate runaway amplification has been compromised. In any open, adaptive system, stability is not achieved through static balance but through a continuous negotiation between reinforcing and dispersive forces. Positive feedback generates […]

Categories
Philosophy

Beyond Hierarchy

Anarchy is usually flattened into a cartoon of riots and broken windows, a synonym for chaos or nihilism. In fact, it comes from the Greek ἀναρχία (anarkhia), meaning “without a ruling principle” or “without a sovereign head,” pointing less to disorder than to the absence of imposed hierarchy. Political economy distorts this by treating central […]

Categories
Philosophy

System Delay is Constitutive

In engineering, delay looks like a nuisance variable. Control theorists worry about time lags because they introduce phase shifts that destabilise feedback loops and narrow the safe bandwidth of a system. Communications theory treats delay as a parameter of the channel, then focuses on encoding schemes that maximise reliable transmission given noise, finite capacity, and […]

Categories
cybernetics

Limited Language Models

In recent years, large language models have moved along a gradient from research artefacts into everyday infrastructure—search, email, design tools, call centres, legal drafting, medical triage. They operate by predicting the next token in a sequence, trained on vast corpora of text and code. Their fluency comes from compression, not comprehension. They do not possess […]

Categories
Science

Rosalind Franklin

Rosalind Franklin (1920–1958) was a pioneering British chemist and X-ray crystallographer whose meticulous work provided critical insights into the structure of DNA. Her photograph 51, capturing the helical diffraction pattern of DNA fibres, was instrumental in revealing the molecule’s double-helix form, though her contributions were long overshadowed by others who built upon her data. Working […]

Categories
cybernetics

Technical Debt

The more precisely a technological system is engineered—its algorithms finely tuned, its processes deeply automated, its data flows tightly orchestrated—the more space is created for chaotic ambiguity to hide in the seams. In social media, for instance, the apparatus of engagement-metrics, feed-ranking, and viral amplification claim clarity and intent, yet they spawn unpredictable collective behaviour: […]

Categories
cybernetics

Drift

Autonomous technological systems now routinely adjust themselves through internal feedback: machine-learning pipelines that retrain on their own outputs, trading algorithms that react to price movements they partly create, recommendation systems that optimise engagement based on the behaviours they induce. Human input still exists, but it is sampled as data, not held as authority. Governance happens […]