Categories
cybernetics

Silmarillion Dissimulation

What is striking here is not merely that the system produced a competent paragraph, nor even that it produced a coherent philosophical reflection from a compressed prompt. The more consequential event is that the generated artifact possesses properties usually associated with accumulated cultural and intellectual maturation: layered symbolism, emotional calibration, historical compression, aesthetic continuity, recursive […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Middle Earth war continues…

The strange thing about prolonged conflict is not merely that it destroys. It reorganises perception. After enough cycles of outrage, retaliation, spectacle, counter-spectacle, sanctions, declarations, precision strikes, televised rubble, algorithmic tribalism, and strategic ambiguity, entire populations begin navigating reality through symbolic compression rather than direct experience. The war ceases to be geographically localised and instead […]

Categories
communication cybernetics politics

Failure Mode: How Politics Lost Its Groove

Politics is not failing because people have become irrational; it is failing because the systems that coordinate perception, timing, and response have slipped out of phase, and what we are experiencing as conflict, populism, volatility, and institutional drift is the visible surface of a deeper timing problem in large-scale communication systems, one that also describes […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Structural Risk of Technological Acceleration: Why Delay, Feedback, and Time Still Govern Complex Systems

Yesterday, sitting with a coffee, I fell into conversation with a group of photography students. It occurred to me that photography, particularly digital photography, is a curious artefact. It feels modern, yet in an important sense it belongs to a slower world, a medium that still obliges attention to pause between perception and interpretation. Consider […]

Categories
cybernetics

Climate System Complexity

For a long time, serious problem-solving assumed the world could be broken into parts, those parts analysed separately, and the larger situation improved by fixing each component in turn. That still works for bounded problems. It fails when the object is not a part but a whole system composed of vast numbers of interdependent subsystems […]

Categories
communication

It’s the news, Jim, just not as we know it

Open a modern news homepage and nothing seems especially unusual. Headlines stack one after another, breaking banners pulse, politicians argue, commentators react, scandals erupt and dissolve, and somewhere among the noise a few careful investigations still appear. Public broadcasters, commercial television networks, global digital outlets and tabloid aggregators all occupy the same surface. They differ […]

Categories
politics

Partisan Pattern and Generative Asymmetry

From a historical vantage, societies under pressure compress the communicative field in search of clarity, translating complex realities into brittle narratives that promise order and direction, yet implicitly competitive systems rarely stabilise through such closure because control does not remove difference but redistributes it, converting unresolved variability into simplified signals that travel efficiently through institutions, […]

Categories
cybernetics

Dissent: Another War

Resistance to war is easy to respect and hard to execute, because the same communicative channels that allow objection also convert that objection into a commercially and strategically manageable signal. A manageable signal is one whose form, timing, and intensity are already accounted for by the systems that receive it. It can be measured, narrated, […]

Categories
cybernetics

Wiener–Khinchin theorem

The Wiener–Khinchin theorem describes a quiet inevitability: when a system repeats itself, even imperfectly, that repetition condenses into structure. Time leaves a trace. Signals that return, echo, or correlate with their own past do not merely accumulate; they reorganise into a spectrum, a distribution of emphasis and weight. What looks like flux from within time […]

Categories
politics

One Nation, Australia: Contagion Dynamics

When the ambient communication system is saturated with noise, speed, and compression, ideologies that minimise internal degrees of freedom propagate more easily, not because they are robust but because they repeat cleanly. They return in recognisable form, align with their own prior expressions, and therefore hold attention. Under these conditions, order is produced less by […]

Categories
communication

Dopamine Spike: Populist Media

There is a structural limit to populist dynamics that is often missed. Populist themes require an antithesis to remain coherent. Without an opposing force to push against, they do not stabilise or mature; they turn inward. Like fascism in its later stages, the movement begins to consume its own distinctions, purging nuance, then difference, then […]

Categories
language

Short-Circuit

Meaning arises and endures only because experience and symbolic encoding remain out of phase, and when technology collapses that difference into immediacy and semiotic isomorphism, thought and behaviour collapse into preordained reflex, short-circuiting cognitive voltage into volatility, simplicity, and coercive transmissibility, turning language into a direct instrument of behavioural modulation.