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We
have already connected the two ideas of evolution and history, seen the problems
with laws of history, and we can proceed, optionally, to develop this
relationship in a simple model
, which can be set aside for a simple time-line approach. We will call this a
discrete-continuous model because we see a discrete series of turning points
overlaid on a continuous pattern of world history. What is our status as
observers of this system? We need a model that carefully defines ‘theory’,
ours at least, in the present, and which preempts the Oedipus effect
by switching off after the close of our pattern, so that
‘theory’ applies only to the past, looking backwards. It helps us to deal
with a system ‘black box’ about which we know nothing, attempting to assess
its traces in history. It also allows us to consider teleology as
directionality, without the metaphysical presumptions that would otherwise
arise. It allows us to separate two levels interleaved: if there is a high
correlation of the data with the model, then we probably detect a hidden
dynamic.
This model simply takes our three turning points and turns
them into discrete transitions in an eonic sequence overlaid on our second
universal history:
Transition 1:
birth of civilization
Transition 2:
Axial interval
Transition 3:
rise of the modern
Note that this third transition switches
off in our past, and our current action may or may not express the aggregate
directionality shown, which is highly complex in any case, comprising multiple
parallel streams. Thus the teleology, if any, inferable from the continuation of
TP3, may be quite different from that of the overall sequence.
This seems strange, but will soon make
sense. In practice, this model, taken as a timeline using periodization can
simply help us to visualize the eonic effect, and map out its structure, as a
‘tracker-approximator’, the same thing physicists use with an intractable
system, and economists with economic cycles (where they can see effects, but not
necessarily causes). Economists produce theories about cycles in the past,
looking backwards, and their model switches off in the present, and they have
‘free action’ in this present (i.e. the ability to modify the cycles,
maybe). Predictions may still be possible, but free action can change any such
prediction, at least theoretically. This is a Hopelessly Non-linear Pattern, and
the most we can do methodologically speaking is map it out, using a tracker-approximator.
Since that tracker is suggested by greater nature itself in the eonic pattern,
we are left to wonder if nature is not forced to reset direction on its own
sprawl.
That’s it. Our model is simply a grid on
the surface of a planet, showing a sequence of transitions between different
regions, sometimes with parallel connections.
The Eonic Observer Toward the end
(Chapter Six) we will develop an idea of the ‘eonic observer’ of the eonic
effect. We can invoke the image of an
‘eonic observer
’, with a serious or humorous image of a
scientific type, jungle hat, library card, lab smock and clipboard, stop watch,
rocket ship, anthropologist and time and motion man of civilization, with his
atomic stopwatch designed for time measurements on the order of millennia. One
more piece of equipment: a paper stamp labeled ‘Eonic Data’. We need to
promptly stamp the Old Testament, ‘Eonic Data’.
Note: Historical forces Our problem is our
commitment to reductionist science. We have only a few basic forces allowed, yet
we see that in history something unaccounted for is at work. Although we have
lost the idea of ‘historical forces’ due to the critique of historicism, we
can see from our data, the eonic effect, that a ‘force-like something’ is
breaking up flat history and creating two levels, it’s ‘as if’ there were
a ‘force’ causing a coherent pattern. Partly that’s a question of our own
representations, our built in software, which is more general than ideas of
causality, what is sometimes called a ‘principle of sufficient reason’.
Causality is a bit Newtonian, a very specialized concept now, often collated
with some notion of the differential equation. We have already seen the problem
with historical laws, in this sense.
We need to ‘deconstruct
flat history’, the myth that simple random succession
describes this history. The idea of ‘deconstruction’ springs from current
postmodern critiques, among them, of Big History. But we can deconstruct the
deconstruction, to see that flat history is a highly charged ‘metanarrative’
with a hidden ideological agenda. The worst of all teleologies is the one hidden
in flat histories under the rubric of denial of teleology. This defaults to
theories of conflict (‘dog eat dog’ theory), of the Darwinian type, since
all that’s left, apparently, is a ‘fight for the future’, anything goes,
and winner take all. We can see that the eonic pattern shows nature’s way of
outsmarting that type of process. Quite apart from anything else, the
deconstruction of historicism by Popper was an inherently ideological gesture,
against Marxist theory. The whole dilemma of theory reeks of a political debate.
A contradiction arises in the idea of an ‘historical
force’. The philosophy of history long ago addressed this situation, but
current social science has banished the whole subject. Why? Partly the influence
of Darwin, and the pervasive fallacy of the ‘free lunch’, ‘evolution just
happens’. That’s an unrealistic assumption and any reasonably documented
stretch of data, such as we see in history, is likely to contradict this
fantasy. Right on schedule, the eonic effect shows a massive exception to
‘free lunch’ thinking. Emergence is highly organized, occurs on schedule,
has its finger in the pie of all social categories, leaving art and religions in
its wake, almost in an eyeblink, like rabbits out of a hat. Is this an energy
intensive process, and if so, where does the energy come from? Is the
information content the same at beginning and the end of the process? If not, we
have violated standard causal thinking.
The eonic pattern shows something very complex, but which
obstinately demands some sort of naturalistic explanation. Bad theories are a
trap. No theory at all is another trap. What to do? We can follow nature’s own
contours with a periodization matrix that can fret the obvious historical
coherence visible to us without the antinomies in statements about historical
laws. There we can extend our ideas of science with the idea of freedom
. Ideas of freedom and determinism, or causality, are suspiciously in league
with each other. Maybe a duet of the two is the right approach. After all, our
example of the computer and the agent, the ‘computer mouse interactive
system’, shows us doing this already. We should like to eliminate
‘freedom’ to produce science. But our system is exploiting the very
possibility of breaking the causal flow. It jumps around, as if staging surprise
attacks against mechanization.
It’s like an on-off
switch. We can produce a science of such a switch, but we can’t eliminate the
switch, or produce a uniform law that applies simultaneously to the psychology
of the user of that device. This might seem obvious, yet we chronically
make this mistake with historical theory. This is a classic paradox explored by
the philosopher Kant. In some sense, by some principle of sufficient reason, we must
apply causality to historical data. And yet it is also true that we cannot
apply such thinking to history. It seems that both statements are true at the
same time! Something has to give way. In fact, the eonic data suggests an
answer. Causality becomes ‘generalized causal nexus’ and ‘freedom’
becomes ‘some degree of freedom’ relative to that nexus. These new terms are
too vague to produce a real theory, but they correspond descriptively to the
facts, a system, formally speaking, ‘evolving freedom’.
It’s a funny fact that our data resembles the situation
in the famous computer program, The Game of Life
, with its switching between adjacent regions. That won’t quite work for us,
and we won’t pursue that (although a generalized resemblance remains), but
it’s a reminder what we thought acceptable explanation even twenty years ago
has seen itself extended, so we don’t need to worry if our results are a bit
strange at first. In any case the eonic effect speaks for itself. In any case,
we can see that the core phenomena of the eonic effect outstrip all possibility
of measurement as standard parameters for a numerical model. All our data
requires assessment using complex forms of judgment.
Scratchpad extensions Our
approach can allow us to do theories wholesale because we summon up the elements
of theory, and then leave them unassembled. This can keep thinking loose and
undogmatic. That gives us a base camp near the summit of the Big Theory. Then we
can turn around and propose ‘scratchpad extensions’ to explore variant
theories. In one direction we note the resemblance to the formalism to Quantum
Mechanics, in another the issues of the Kantian thematic of freedom. Our two
levels modeling trick is also at a higher level of abstraction than the classic
‘immanence’ versus ‘transcendence’ debate, which is actually better that
way. We can also free ourselves from the ‘eonic theologies’ e.g. the classic
eonic structure of the Old Testament, because we see how they are constructed
and generate their mystique.
The only solution is to proceed
empirically. It will take us several hundred pages to lay a foundation just to
get started on that! Actually the eonic pattern makes sense if you consider that
it shows something operating beyond space and time. But since we can’t handle
such things without getting into speculation, we are left with the more
fragmented approach of charting out the overall result piecemeal. We have one
thing to fall back on. Whatever else is the case our data clearly looks like
evolution. So we can define our method as ‘describing what something does’,
short of explaining how it works. In any case the days of theological myths and
one-line theories of Darwinian junk science are over.
Note: Economic evolution? An essential issue is to
see that while the question of economic
systems is braided with this pattern, the two are not the
same. Look at TP2. Multiple eonic emergents cluster there that are not economic
by category. We can’t use economic explanations for the sudden appearance of
world religions, philosophies in a spectrum, and everything else, including
flowerings of art. The test case is the emergence of Buddhism. They began as
beggars renouncing social interaction.
This economic question, more than any other, confuses
analysis. Look at TP3. What is it that creates a capitalist economy? Actually
nothing, it already existed. What we see is a relative transform based on
new technology and new ideas of how to create economies, modern capitalism
. Where did the latter come from? Look at Adam Smith. Then trace his roots. A
new type of economic thinking is gestating in TP3. It is a clear eonic emergent.
It is also an action script process, how to create a particular type of
economy. Adam Smith says, you should do this, counseling free action.
So we switch to another type of system, and may be subject
to its laws, but, supposedly, we chose to do that. So the software evolves one
way in the eonic sequence, the economy another way, inside, outside the
sequence. The two are not the same. This point takes time to see, perhaps, and
needs elaboration. But we can begin to wonder if we haven’t put the cart
before the horse when we call capitalism a ‘stage of history’. New software
evolves, then a new economy arises. In any case, a new industrial society shows
massive correlation with TP3, a non-random process inside our pattern. So if the
software is an eonic emergent, and that creates new economic ‘laws’ or
scripts, we can’t say that economic laws determine the third turning point.
Other way around.
It is easy to lose perspective here, but as we zoom out and
look at the greater portion of world history we see that while capitalist
processes are omnipresent, pre-modern capitalism was always stillborn, whether
because of the factor of slavery, inability to assess economic interactions, or
whatever. Then suddenly in the wake of TP3 all the social institutions and
idea-innovations are there to produce a modern-style market economy. It becomes
suddenly obvious that these eonic emergents, the software, are the key, not the
economic motives, as such. And we should not forget that a figure such as Adam
Smith is a complex thinker embedded in the history of philosophy as much as of
economics. These people are the rarities that over and over appear in our eonic
mainline.
The third turning point is a highly complex cultural
transformation, one of whose outcomes is the Industrial Revolution, which is not
the prime mover. Later we will distinguish ‘eonic sequence’ from
‘econosequence’ to bring this point home. Another thing we will do is see
the close resemblance of TP2 in Greece, and the rise of the modern. This
resemblance suggests that something is happening over a large interval
independently of the economic conditions. The emergence of democracy in one case
precedes capitalism, in the other accompanies it. Seems like two independent
things are overlaid, to the unending confusion of theory.
One of the outcomes of our TP3 is capitalist society in its
modern form. But we are talking about historical dynamics.
Economy vs. economic ‘software’ We
are already close to an answer to our puzzlement over Darwin and Adam Smith
. We can see that we tend to confuse TP3 with its eonic emergents
, one of which is capitalism. TP3 is at a higher level than economic action, and
correlates with the ‘software generation’ of economic thinking, not its use
in practice. The eonic sequence is not an economic evolution. But we see the
initialization of a new economic order, which could operate without the eonic
preparation.
We can see the problems with any claims of science here,
as ideology
and the
‘action script’ enter into the formulation. Let us recall our terms. We are
immersed in the Great Transition, as evolution passes into history. This
evolution is defined as the ‘eonic or intermittent evolution’ of
civilization, and is visible as a series of transitions, our turning points.
This evolution is becoming history to the degree that ‘free action’
expresses freedom, and the question remains open as to whether we have reached
the end of the eonic sequence. There would a simple test of that: can make
replicate the action of the prior eonic sequence? Is he free from evolution to
the degree that he can say, Now Man makes himself? The record of artificial
turning points, if any, e.g. revolutions, might be one measure of that.
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