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The Ice-Age mind

Posted on Jan 21st, 2009 by Itlandm : Conscientious Observer Itlandm

(This entry was accidentally deleted. Thanks to Google for caching it until I came back.)

Once we have our biological needs covered, the primate mind becomes obsessed with status in the pack and making grand plans for securing and improving that status. It will think up elaborate scenarios in the future, or obsess over unresolved issues of the past. This may have made perfect sense 40 000 years ago when the current mindset was born in the death throes of the Ice Age. Life was nasty, brutish and short. You had to secure the best possible mate and then compete fiercely for the few available resources if your offspring were to survive. We are the descendants of those survivors. It is written in our blood and bones to act in this way - but we are no longer huddling in a gorge near the glacier. Our challenges today are completely different. All we need to do is look around and see. The taxman is not a cave lion, so the adrenaline rush of anger is only going to give you a heart attack, not save your children. The winter is not going to come with no food, so there is no reason to double your body mass while there is still food on the table. And for us poor males: The chances of building a harem are quite slim (not to mention that succeeding would probably be quite unpleasant with today's hard-nosed women), so it is pointless to try to impress every woman in sight and try to intimidate possible rivals.

The Ice-Age ego was a big step up from all that existed before, and it has benefited from many upgrades and patches, but it really is ripe for replacement.

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Tagged with: ego, evolution

The nature of money

Posted on Jan 24th, 2009 by Itlandm : Conscientious Observer Itlandm
Actually, money is a unit of measurement, much like inches or gallons.  But instead of measuring length or volume or weight, it measures value.  Long ago it did so by comparing the value of things to the value of gold or other rare metals, but it has grown steadily more abstract.  Today it is mostly just numbers.  How much is something worth to one person or another?  In practice, money gives the answer to that.

This explains why the current financial crisis cannot be solved easily.  Some of the value we took for granted was revealed to be an illusion.  Just printing more money will not give us back that illusion.  And if it did, it would still not be a good thing.  What we need to do is to re-appraise.  There are people who have traded real values for those fantasy values. How do we help them?  How do they help themselves? Those are worthwhile questions.  "How do we get the illusion back" is the bad question, which no one would ask out loud, but which is still taken for granted by most.

There will be more such disillusionments.  And almost certainly some good surprises too, where things turn out to be more valuable than we imagined.
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Tagged with: Money, value