Categories
cybernetics

People Who Say Nothing

In political and corporate communication, vacuity is often rewarded over insight. Research in media studies demonstrates that message repetition, even without substantive content, significantly increases perceived credibility and importance (Hasher et al. 1977). Political scientists have shown that rhetorical confidence is often taken as a proxy for expertise, regardless of factual accuracy (Petty and Cacioppo […]

Categories
cybernetics

Entropy, Communication, Political System Dynamics

Entropy is not just a principle of physics—it’s a principle of communication. Information systems, whether political, cultural, or technological, don’t move toward clarity; they move toward noise. In American politics, the spectacle of Trump is less about the man than about the logic of replication. Outrage travels faster than nuance, and so outrage becomes the […]

Categories
Alien Anthropology

Greed is Not Good

The world does not reward what it most urgently needs. Peace, wisdom, unity, compassion, foresight—these qualities generate too little turbulence to capture bandwidth in networks tuned to maximize throughput. Conflict, by contrast, multiplies combinations of noise, feeding the entropic appetite of systems that scale dissonance into profit. The result is a Gordian knot: we require […]

Categories
Alien Anthropology

Loaded Dice: Global Chaos

When two six-sided dice are rolled, some numbers appear more often than others, not because the dice are biased, but because the combinations that make them possible are more numerous. A two requires only one pairing—one and one—while a seven can be produced by six different pairings: one and six, two and five, three and […]

Categories
Alien Anthropology

Orbits of Denial

What we call government, institutions, or corporate leadership has collapsed into a single field of self-preservation, each part feeding and depending on the other until the distinctions blur. The machinery runs, not because it is working, but because nobody within it can stop. Failure is obvious, yet denial is structural—built into the protocols, the language, […]

Categories
Alien Anthropology

The Momentum of Collapse

Wars without end, from Iraq to Ukraine, consume generations while manufacturing weapons and enemies in equal measure. Economies strip forests, poison rivers, and churn out disposable goods, all in the name of growth that hollows out the future. Technologies arrive draped in the promise of connection yet leave populations isolated, profiled, and monetised; social media […]

Categories
cybernetics

Got Tyrrany?

Tyranny is not strength but stupidity disguised as power. It thrives on the illusion of permanence, convincing itself that the bubble it inhabits will not burst. Yet every empire, every system of control, has dissolved into dust. The tyrant clings to the fiction that what they know and what they are will matter forever, but […]

Categories
Philosophy

Indeterminacy: Metastable Humanity

Belief systems—political, spiritual, cultural—do not cohere because they achieve certainty. They cohere because they cannot. The very fact that their claims are indeterminate and unprovable generates the turbulence that binds them together. What looks like a contest over truth is, in effect, the medium of systemic persistence. Institutions, rituals, and governing frameworks stabilise themselves by […]

Categories
cybernetics

Intellectual Authority Fail

Billy Connolly tells the story of ordering Mexican food and realising it’s all the same thing, just folded differently. He asked for something new, but it wasn’t what he expected. The waiter brought the chef, who unfolded the meal, refolded it another way, and handed it back—“There you go.” I was a postgraduate student in […]

Categories
politics

Sound and Fury: Political Futility

If you think politics is the solution to a world deeply problematised by entropic gradients of political turbulence, you’re either an idiot or you’re evil. Politics doesn’t solve problems, it feeds on them. It sustains itself by displacement — shuffling costs, hiding contradictions, weaponising blame. Nothing fundamental ever changes because the system isn’t built to […]

Categories
cybernetics

Technological Change and Institutional Stasis

The institutions that claim to be the guardians of knowledge—universities, governments, large corporations—have all become deeply entangled in their own logic of continuity. Universities in particular once positioned themselves as sanctuaries for critical thought, but the reality today is closer to Stafford Beer’s observation in Platform for Change (1975): organizations tend not to innovate, they […]

Categories
cybernetics

Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistical Inevitability

It is a mistake to imagine that cruelty or deception arise from the rare brilliance of tyrants or the careful engineering of conspirators. The truth is flatter, colder: given time, scale, and opportunity, suffering emerges almost as a default outcome, an entropic drift in human systems. Power does not require genius to become exploitative; it […]