Categories
cybernetics

Swallowed Whole: Big Tech pwns Education

Australian universities now draw more than 40% of their revenue from international students, with billions funneled into research, teaching, and infrastructure, much of it mediated by digital platforms. Government support has shrunk to under 30% of funding, while tech companies capture not only the delivery mechanisms but also the analytics, intellectual property pipelines, and student […]

Categories
Philosophy

Meaning of Quantum Physics?

Even quantum physicists cannot agree on what “quantum” means, and this is not a trivial quirk but the ground itself on which the science stands. Competing interpretations—from Copenhagen collapse to Many-Worlds, pilot-wave theories, and newer relational models—circle the same mathematical successes with divergent ontological claims. The mathematics works with uncanny precision, yet the conceptual foundation […]

Categories
Philosophy

Zak Stein: AI, Education, Regulation

Zak Stein frames the personhood conferral problem as a distinct risk in education and society. Alignment asks how humans control machines, this asks how humans mistake machines for persons. As systems simulate dialogue, affect, and presence, children and adults may confer moral standing to tools. Placing AI in roles of educator, caregiver, or companion risks […]

Categories
cybernetics

Michael Levin’s Self as Computational Horizon

Abstract: Levin’s concept of the computational boundary frames individuality as an informational horizon, sustained by bioelectric fields that integrate parts into coherent wholes while allowing identities to expand or collapse with communication. This boundary is not fixed but asymptotic, an attractor that stabilizes difference into form without ever reaching complete equilibrium, since full attainment would […]

Categories
cybernetics

Continuity in a Metastable World

We keep lying to ourselves about stability. The polite story is that systems aim for balance, that institutions exist to keep things steady, that culture and politics and technology are here to make life manageable. But none of that is quite true. Things don’t hold together because they are stable in any simple sense. They […]

Categories
cybernetics

On Meta-Stability: Why Things Have to Break

We keep lying to ourselves about stability. The polite story is that systems aim for balance, that institutions exist to keep things steady, that culture and politics and technology are here to make life manageable. But none of that is quite true. Things don’t hold together because they are stable in any simple sense. They […]

Categories
cybernetics

Recursive Tension: Orbit Frame, Logical Orbit, and the Viability of Communication, Culture, and Ecological Systems

Abstract This paper advances a cybernetic account of complex adaptive systems in which coherence is sustained by unresolved tension rather than equilibrium. The orbit frame is introduced as a relational model that represents systems as networks of elastic constraints across gaps that never fully close. Logical orbit is defined as the recursive dynamical process that […]

Categories
Philosophy

On Suffering

Suffering is not a mistake in the order of things; it is the order. What feels like rupture, misalignment, or lack of closure is the very condition that generates motion and awareness. Without tension, the field would dissolve into stasis. The loop persists because it cannot do otherwise, and every attempt to escape its curvature […]

Categories
Philosophy

Dependent Definition

The more precisely we define and describe any system, the more deeply it becomes embedded in the field of relations (and/or language) that makes it possible. This is not an accidental by-product of analysis but a structural inevitability: to single something out is to weave it more tightly into what surrounds it. Every definition is […]

Categories
cybernetics

Brinksmanship: Geopolitical Resonance

People think rivalries are all heat and noise, but that’s only the surface. Underneath, it’s geometry. Every move has a counter-move, not because leaders are reading each other’s minds, but because the structure leaves them nowhere else to go. Think of it like two people leaning against each other in the dark: take away the […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Desire of the Curve: Beauty, Entropy, and the Infinite Centre

Beauty is a trap you walk into willingly. You know you’re being played—by bone structure, by light, by the chemical theatre of your own brain—but you don’t care. You lean in. We all do. It’s the oldest con in the book and the only one we want to keep running. Cross-cultural psychology has been here […]

Categories
politics

After Trump

At some point, Trump will be gone. The man will vanish from the stage, but the field that made him possible will remain. That’s the real danger—confusing the collapse of a figure with the collapse of the system that sustained them. Without structural change, the vacancy will simply pull another body into the same orbit. […]