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Massive Collaboration (open source, win-win models across borderless planet, networks as systems of open systems, digital death of disatnce, mobile life critcal apps ....) is the only way the net generation economy www.wholeplanet.tv can grow beyond the scarcity economics of the extractive- industrial thing economy- |
.Top 10 quotes from economist leaders of value exchange curriculum .. |
so why is massive collaboration entrepreneurship the most risky innovation challenge of these 2010s
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Sir Fazle Abed ,BRAC, Budapest 2013- 20th Open Society Laureate chosen by George Soros After my country’s independence, I began working to try to help the poor in Bangladesh. My early colleagues and I initially thought that BRAC would be a short-term effort. But the realities of entrenched poverty soon changed our minds. We began working in a host of areas – agriculture, healthcare, human rights, microfinance, education – wherever the poor faced obstacles. We found that poverty was so entrenched that only a long-term effort of social and economic transformation would uproot it. And this task became my life’s work. I have learned much along the way. Perhaps the most important thing I learned was that when you create the right conditions, poor people will do the hard work of defeating poverty themselves. I learned the importance of having lamps to illuminate your path, even when the precise course is unclear. For me, one of these lamps was Paulo Freire, a Brazilian educator, who wrote a book called Pedagogy of the Oppressed, which had a profound effect on me. Freire's idea of conscientisation, or raising critical consciousness, informed us in our belief that poor people, especially women, can be organised for power, and that with right set of organisational tools, they can become actors in history. This, to me, is the meaning of an open society – a society where everyone has the freedom to realise their full potential and human rights. ... We’ve seen that without scepticism, scientific inquiry, and the constant questioning of one’s assumptions, the highest ideals will falter when tested against reality. In the words of Karl Popper, among the enemies of open society is the notion of “prophetic wisdom,” the type of knowledge that leaves little room for doubt. In contrast to utopian goals, Popper embraced “piecemeal social engineering” – solutions that are effective, even if they are not the most elegant. There is an element of that in BRAC – in its willingness to adapt, in its constant innovation, and in its willingness to learn from its own mistakes. After more than 40 years, we are still a learning organisation. The vision of BRAC is a world free from all forms of exploitation and discrimination. I am sometimes asked if such a world is really possible – whether I believe that poverty can be truly eradicated. The truth is, I believe it can be. Ladies and gentlemen, we can see today that poverty is on the retreat. Recent statistics from the World Bank show that in every region of the world, the number of people living in extreme poverty is dropping for the first time in recent memory. But to borrow Popper’s phrase, there is no prophetic wisdom in this fact. The eradication of human poverty remains an ongoing and arduous task rather than historical certainty, and much work remains. And I invite you to bring your own creativity and potential to this task. .......................................................................... |
please help us maintain top 10 frames of economist concerned with value exchange curricula -chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk
Kenneth Boulding 1968 : The historical significance of capitalism is precisely a society in... which exchange has become a more important source of power than threat -from book of lectures to teachers on what teenagers needed to know about - Economics as a ( Systems) Science
Keynes quote selected from this wonderful compilation: "I should... conclude rather differently. I should say that what we want is not no planning, or even less planning, indeed I should say we almost certainly want more. But the planning should take place in a community in which as many people as possible, both leaders and followers wholly share your own moral position. Moderate planning will be safe enough if those carrying it out are rightly oriented in their own minds and hearts to the moral issue. This is in fact already true of some of them. But the curse is that there is also an important section who could be said to want planning not in order to enjoy its fruits but because morally they hold ideas exactly the opposite of yours, and wish to serve not God but the devil." |
We believe that Kenneth Boulding was the world's number 1 economist and transparent systems-forward business models- We love to hear of other nominations chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk
Long amplification of Boulding's Framework of value exchange by Caruso (see attached):
To Boulding, the social system can be divided into three large,
overlapping and interacting sub-systems: exchange, threat and integrative
system. All human institutions and relationships involve different
combinations of all three. Exchange relationships constitute the usual domain
of economics. In its simplest form, two parties agree to exchange something
with something else, usually money with goods and services. It is commonly
understood as a positive sum game in which parties can be better off after the
exchange is concluded. However, it still retains co-operative and competitive
elements. The threat system, in its simplest form, is also a relationship between
two parties and one party is capable to affect the other party behaviour
through coercion. It is summarised in the statement: “If you do not do something
(or you do) I shall do something nasty to you”. Economic activity is full of
examples. It is common sense that an executive can threaten a worker of firing.
The government threatens individuals of expropriation if they do not pay
taxes, or a state can threaten a tariff retaliation if another state (or a group of
states) does not comply with some obligations. The threat system is less
productive than exchange systems simply because exchange of goods
encourages the production of goods, whereas threat discourages the
production of goods. To Boulding, there are several feasible reactions
threatened agents can set in response: submission, defiance, counter-threat, flight,
and integrative response. Threat systems are pervasive in many human and
institutional interactions. Boulding argues that all threat systems experience a
basic long-run instability. The well-known threat system of deterrence,
therefore, is unstable in the long run2. When a breakdown in deterrence occurs
the subsequent outcome could take the shape of submission or defiance. If one
party decides to carry out the threat, and the other party also decides to
counter-threat a feasible outcome could be the occurrence of a war.
By contrast, a more stable response to threat appears to be the integrative
action. Using Boulding’s words: “the integrative response is that which establishes
community between the threatener and the threatened and produces common values
and common interest” (Boulding 1963a: 430). Examples falling into this category
of responses are more difficult to find out. It commonly appears mixed with
one of the other responses: Gandhi and non-violent resistance, for instance,
seem to be a mixture of defiance and integrative response. In international
systems a counter-threat response might appear together with an integrative
action.
The integrative system involves many other different concepts. Among
individuals, an integrative relationship involves a complex spectrum of
feelings, such as respect, love, affection and so on. It also involves other
terms, an integrative system needs a convergence and interdependence of
utility functions of parties involved. An example of integrative relationship is
giving a gift. To Boulding, by abstracting the pure form of giving a gift, there is
neither exchange nor barter. I give you something mainly because of love,
affection or sympathy. Even if integrative relationships appear to occur mainly
among individuals, they also work within other scenarios. In international
interactions, for example, foreign aid flowing from a richer country to a poorer
one can be included into integrative systems.
Cornerstone of the integrative system is the theory of ‘grants economics’
which is exactly the subject of The Economy of love and Fear (hereafter ELF). In
the first two chapter, both micro and macro theories of grants are expounded.
In general terms, a grant is supposed to be a unilateral transfer from an
individual, a group or a social unit to another. When it occurs, the donor agent
does not receive anything in return. In a simple two-actor scenario, it involves
the grantor or donor on one hand and the recipient on the other hand. Note
the deep difference from the exchange system, where an agent A gives an
agent B something for something else. By contrast, a unilateral transfer occurs
only when there is an integrative relationship between actors. A powerful
example of an integrative system could be considered the modern nation-state.
On one hand, states are usually committed to provide grants in different forms
to their own citizens; on the other hand, citizens are expected to pay taxes,
duties and excises. In particular, “the grants economy represents the heart of
political economy, because it is precisely at the level of one-way transfers that the
political system intervenes in the economic system” (Boulding et al. 1972: 21).
Therefore, the existence of GE is a matter of institutions which inform and
govern the economic life of individuals, groups and organizations. Different
institutionalized scenarios contribute to shape different economic systems. The
existence, the measurement and the classification of grant elements in modern
economics ought to be considered as pivotal element in the regular framework
of economics.
Grants can take different shapes. Grants can be either ‘negative’ or
‘positive’. That is, negative grants imply that the utility of grantee diminish
instead of increasing. Using Boulding’s words “Negative grants, unfortunately,
are still an important element in the world system, especially in international system
where the defense industries of the various countries are mainly concerned with
producing the capability of making of negative grants to other countries” (Boulding
1973: 22). Negative grants are costly for both actors. First the ‘negative’ grantor
employs an amount of resources that could be employed in productive
activities. Secondly, the recipient actor ‘the grantee’, is expected to suffer an injury
=====================
More on Boulding's context is explained by John B Davis
1. Locating Boulding’s Critique of Value-free Economics
Kenneth Boulding presented his famous “Economics As A Moral Science” paper
(Boulding, 1969) that rejected the idea that economics is value-free as his Presidential
Address to the American Economic Association in December 1968 at the height of the
War in Vietnam. Understanding something about Boulding’s personal history and
circumstances will help us to understand what lay behind his thinking. The previous
year when he had moved to University of Colorado some members of the University
Board of Regents had opposed his appointment because Boulding had been involved
in a arranging a teach-in against the War when he was at the University of Michigan.
But Boulding said of this: “They thought I was a dangerous radical. Actually, I am a
dangerous conservative” (Mott, 2000, p. F436).
Indeed, the next year Boulding accepted the post of faculty advisor to the campus Republican club at Colorado, and changed his voter registration to Republican – which he retained until the early 1980s
when Ronald Reagan began a new arms build-up, and he then changed his registration
to Democratic. So Boulding was not left-wing in his politics nor involved in the
radical economics of the time. In fact he was always hostile to Marx’s theory of
capitalism and its emphasis on class conflict. What he did feel strongly about was the
cause of peace, having become a Quaker early in life, and having been active
throughout his career in a variety of ways in the cause of peace. Moreover, he himself
saw peace and conflict research as his largest area of work (Boulding, 1989), and
regarded his involvement in the founding of the
Journal of Conflict Resolution and the
International Peace Research Association as important lifetime achievements.
This tells us, then, one thing about the thinking behind Boulding’s Address and
famous paper and critique of economics, namely, that it did not spring from the
radical, Marxist, or neo-Marxist view of the time that standard economics was
essentially as an expression of capitalist ideology. Indeed, Boulding was well known
in the profession for having written a fairly conventional economics text,
Economic Analysis (1941), and he never hesitated to say that economics was a legitimate science.
His complaint, rather, was that it had mistakenly come to be seen as a value-freescience when it should rather have been seen as a moral science in the tradition of
Adam Smith and Alfred Marshall. Thus the conventional view in the economics
profession when he gave his 1968 Address, that economics had advanced by purging
values from the subject, was for him a retrograde development and a decline rather
than an improvement in the scientific character of economics.
Economics was consequently not only a science in his estimation, but a science which could not
function properly when investigated without attention to the values that he believed
inevitably operated within it. What did he mean by this? A second important clue
lies in the fact that Boulding did not believe that economics was exceptional in this
regard. His view, then, was also not the well known critique of the idea of a valuefree
economics others had recently advanced (e.g., Myrdal, 1953, 1958), namely, that
economics and the social sciences in general should be contrasted with the natural
sciences in virtue of involving human actors, so that they could be understood without
attention to human values. Rather he believed that “no science of any kind can be
divorced from ethical considerations” (Boulding, 1960, p. 2). That is, he held that all
science is inescapably value-laden.
Yet even this view of science does not get us entirely to what was behind Boulding’s
thinking, since he also denied that value-ladenness was even something especially
characteristic of the scientific process. Rather his larger view was that science was
only one dimension of human culture, and that human culture in general was always
guided and sustained by values.
Science is a human learning process which arises in certain subcultures in
human society and not in others, and a subculture as we seen is a group of
people defined by acceptance of certain common values, that is, an ethic
which permits extensive communication between them”(
Ibid.).
The common value system of science is indeed distinctive in various ways from the
common value systems of other human subcultures. In the sciences, high value is
“placed on veracity, on curiosity, on measurement, on quantification, on careful
observation and experiment, and on objectivity” without which “the epistemological
process of science would not have arisen” (
Ibid.), and the common values of other
subcultures, such as the military, were clearly quite different. But for Boulding the
main point is that all human activities are types of culture, and thus necessarily valueladen.
Culture, he believed, is distinctive of human life, takes on many forms, and is
always structured by values appropriate to our activities in the many different
domains of life. Thus to understand Boulding’s critique of economics as a moral
science and as a value-laden activity we need to understand something about his view
of culture.
Here, however, we find ourselves needing to look more deeply into the
foundations of Boulding’s thinking in connection with his broad systems theory
approach or general systems theory way of looking at the world, which represented an
intellectual commitment for him equal to his commitment to peace.
2. General Systems Theory and the Impossibility of Personal Tastes
From early in his career at the University of Michigan Boulding was first active in a
transdisciplinary general systems theory movement that aimed to explain the world in
a holistic, non-mechanistic manner in terms of entire systems of relationships. Many
people contributed to postwar general systems theory, which is often identified with
one of its pre-eminent proponents, Ludwig von Bertalanffy (cf. 1968, 1974; László,
1972). However, Boulding’s involvement in the movement should not be
underestimated, since Bertalanffy, Anatol Rapoport, Ralph Gerard, and Boulding
together established the Society for General Systems Research in 1954 (renamed the
International Society for Systems Science in 1988), and Boulding remained
committed to a systems approach throughout his career.
The basic conception general systems theory involves is that phenomena in all domains of life are interconnected through sets of relationships that exhibit common patterns and properties that can be observed across the different sciences. The major concern its proponents had was that
the different sciences had become too narrowly focused on their separate concerns
and subjects, and that greater attention to shared constructs, principles, and properties,
even if abstractly represented, would make desirable communication between
scientists more possible. This did not imply that all sciences should be reduced to
general systems accounts; rather the view was that the different sciences retained their
specific areas of investigation while they simultaneously exhibited similar systemic
features. Thus general systems theorists argued for framing the specific areas of
investigation in different sciences, where possible, by consideration of shared crossscience
general structures in the interest of promoting development across and within
the different sciences. In this sense, general systems theory was a version of the
classic unity of science view that science advances through increasing unification (cf.
Oppenheim and Putnam, 1958).
Boulding made such an argument in his own early contribution to the approach,
“General Systems Theory: The Skeleton of Science,” where he argued, for example,
that “a specialist who works with the growth concept – whether the crystallographer,
the virologist, the cytologist, the psychologist, the sociologist or the economist – will
be more sensitive to the contributions of other fields if he is aware of the many
similarities of the growth process in widely different empirical fields” (1956, p. 198).
It is interesting, then, that we can see this same point in his American Economics
Association Presidential Address in regard to the many subcultures that make up
human society. Subcultures are always defined in terms of the sets of common values
that people accept and rely on for communication within them. Though two sciences,
say economics and immunology, might appear to be very different from one another,
they can nonetheless be understood to be similar systems in both relying sets of
shared values that structure communication of scientists in each field. Thus
Boulding’s point that economics is value-laden was not just that this is true of
economics as it is true of other sciences; his general systems view of the world was
that value-ladenness was one of the fundamental cross-science general structures that
we ought to investigate to promote development within the different sciences.
We can see more of what was involved in this view if we look more closely at
Boulding’s early general systems thinking. Thus when it came to the question of how
one should go about explaining general systems, Boulding believed that one approach
proceeded by arranging particular empirical fields in a hierarchy of increasing
complexity, which corresponded to the increasing complexity of the ‘individuals’
studied in different types of scientific research.
What we see from Boulding is not only a hierarchical organization of systems of
increasing complexity, but a view of all systems as homeostatic in nature. That is,
Boulding’s general systems view was grounded in the idea that a system has an
integrity and cohesiveness that derives from its self-regulating and self-organizing
properties. This goes beyond the simpler holism idea that systems can be associated
with observable sets of interconnected relationships in that it ascribes an active
principle to such systems that ensures their continued functioning as systems
per se.
Of course by the standards of much science of his time, and especially economics,
where more mechanical views of the world were central, this sort of ascription of an
inherent active principle would have seemed implausible and unjustified.
4But Boulding and the general systems movement were in fact part of a much larger
development in postwar ideas that would come to have tremendous impact on human
society in subsequent decades, namely, the idea of cybernetic systems, such as
emerged in the technology of computers, which, as originally conceived by such
individuals as Alan Turing, Norbert Wiener, William Ross Ashby, Warren McCulloch,
Margaret Mead, and John von Neumann, relied on and shared the same view of
holistic systems as self-regulating and self-organizing (see Heims, 1993). Boulding
and others in the general systems theory movement were well aware of this
development, and saw themselves as contributing to a general philosophy to explain it.
So when he gave his famous Presidential Address, he may well have believed himself
a forerunner bringing general systems theory into economics.
,
Wikipedia on boulding
Wikipedia on boulding part 2
Boulding Wikipedia part 3
Boulding part 4
Boulding part 5
2025REPORT-ER: Entrepreneurial Revolution est 1976; Neumann Intelligence Unit at The Economist since 1951. Norman Macrae's & friends 75 year mediation of engineers of computing & autonomous machines has reached overtime: Big Brother vs Little Sister !?
Overtime help ed weekly quizzes on Gemini of Musk & Top 10 AI brains until us election nov 2028
unaiwho.docx version 6/6/22 hunt for 100 helping guterres most with UN2.0
RSVP chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk
Prep for UNSUMMITFUTURE.com
JOIN SEARCH FOR UNDER 30s MOST MASSIVE COLLABS FOR HUMAN SUSTAINABILITY
1 Jensen Huang 2 Demis Hassabis 3 Dei-Fei Li 4 King Charles
5 Bezos Earth (10 bn) 6 Bloomberg JohnsHopkins cbestAI.docx 7 Banga
8 Maurice Chang 9 Mr & Mrs Jerry Yang 10 Mr & Mrs Joseph Tsai 11 Musk
12 Fazle Abed 13 Ms & Mr Steve Jobs 14 Melinda Gates 15 BJ King 16 Benioff
17 Naomi Osaka 18 Jap Emperor Family 19 Akio Morita 20 Mayor Koike
The Economist 1982 why not Silicon AI Valley Everywhere 21 Founder Sequoia 22 Mr/Mrs Anne Doerr 23 Condi Rice
23 MS & Mr Filo 24 Horvitz 25 Michael Littman NSF 26 Romano Prodi 27 Andrew Ng 29 Lila Ibrahim 28 Daphne Koller
30 Mayo Son 31 Li Ka Shing 32 Lee Kuan Yew 33 Lisa Su 34 ARM 36 Priscilla Chan
38 Agnelli Family 35 Ms Tan & Mr Joe White
37 Yann Lecun 39 Dutch Royal family 40 Romano Prodi
41 Kramer 42 Tirole 43 Rachel Glennerster 44 Tata 45 Manmohan Singh 46 Nilekani 47 James Grant 48 JimKim, 49 Guterres
50 attenborough 51 Gandhi 52 Freud 53 St Theresa 54 Montessori 55 Sunita Gandhu,56 paulo freire 57 Marshall Mcluhan58 Andrew Sreer 59 Lauren Sanchez, 60 David Zapolski
61 Harris 62 Chips Act Raimundo 63 oiv Newsom. 64 Arati Prab hakarm,65 Jennifer Doudna CrispR, 66 Oren Etsioni,67 Robert Reisch,68 Jim Srreyer 69 Sheika Moza
- 3/21/22 HAPPY 50th Birthday TO WORLD'S MOST SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY- ASIAN WOMEN SUPERVILLAGE
Since gaining my MA statistics Cambridge DAMTP 1973 (Corpus Christi College) my special sibject has been community building networks- these are the 6 most exciting collaboration opportunities my life has been privileged to map - the first two evolved as grassroots person to person networks before 1996 in tropical Asian places where village women had no access to electricity grids nor phones- then came mobile and solar entrepreneurial revolutions!!
COLLAB platforms of livesmatter communities to mediate public and private -poorest village mothers empowering end of poverty 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6
4 livelihood edu for all
3 last mile health services 3.1 3,2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6
last mile nutrition 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2,6
banking for all workers 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6
NEWS FROM LIBRARY NORMAN MACRAE -latest publication 2021 translation into japanese biography of von neumann:
Below: neat German catalogue (about half of dad's signed works) but expensive -interesting to see how Germans selected the parts they like over time: eg omitted 1962 Consider Japan The Economist
feel free to ask if free versions are available
0 The coming entrepreneurial revolution : a survey Macrae, Norman - In: The economist 261 (1976), pp. 41-65 cited 105
. we scots are less than 4/1000 of the worlds and 3/4 are Diaspora - immigrants in others countries. Since 2008 I have been celebrating Bangladesh Women Empowerment solutions wth NY graduates. Now I want to host love each others events in new york starting this week with hong kong-contact me if we can celebrate anoither countries winm-wins with new yorkers
mapping OTHER ECONOMIES:
50 SMALLEST ISLAND NATIONS
TWO Macroeconomies FROM SIXTH OF PEOPLE WHO ARE WHITE & war-prone
ADemocratic
Russian
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From 60%+ people =Asian Supercity (60TH YEAR OF ECONOMIST REPORTING - SEE CONSIDER JAPAN1962)
Far South - eg African, Latin Am, Australasia
Earth's other economies : Arctic, Antarctic, Dessert, Rainforest
===========
In addition to how the 5 primary sdgs1-5 are gravitated we see 6 transformation factors as most critical to sustainability of 2020-2025-2030
Xfactors to 2030 Xclimate XAI Xinfra Xyouth Wwomen Xpoor chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk (scot currently in washington DC)- in 1984 i co-authored 2025 report with dad norman.
Asia Rising Surveys
Entrepreneurial Revolution -would endgame of one 40-year generations of applying Industrial Revolution 3,4 lead to sustainability of extinction 1972's Next 40 Years ;1976's Coming Entrepreneurial Revolution; 12 week leaders debate 1982's We're All Intrapreneurial Now
|
The Economist had been founded in 1843" marking one of 6 exponential timeframes "Future Histores"
IN ASSOCIATION WITH ADAMSMITH.app :
we offer worldwide mapping view points from
and these viewpoints:
40 years ago -early 1980s when we first framed 2025 report;
from 1960s when 100 times more tech per decade was due to compound industrial revolutions 3,4
1945 birth of UN
1843 when the economist was founded
1760s - adam smithian 2 views : last of pre-engineering era; first 16 years of engineering ra including america's declaration of independence- in essence this meant that to 1914 continental scaling of engineeriing would be separate new world <.old world
IF we 8 billion earthlings of the 2020s are to celebrate collaboration escapes from extinction, the knowhow of the billion asian poorest women networks will be invaluable -
in mathematically connected ways so will the stories of diaspora scots and the greatest mathematicians ever home schooled -central european jewish teens who emigrated eg Neumann , Einstein ... to USA 2nd quarter of the 20th century; it is on such diversity that entrepreneurial revolution diaries have been shaped
EconomistPOOR.com : Dad was born in the USSR in 1923 - his dad served in British Embassies. Dad's curiosity enjoyed the opposite of a standard examined education. From 11+ Norman observed results of domination of humans by mad white men - Stalin from being in British Embassy in Moscow to 1936; Hitler in Embassy of last Adriatic port used by Jews to escape Hitler. Then dad spent his last days as a teen in allied bomber command navigating airplanes stationed at modernday Myanmar. Surviving thanks to the Americas dad was in Keynes last class where he was taught that only a handful of system designers control what futures are possible. EconomistScotland.com AbedMooc.com
To help mediate such, question every world eventwith optimistic rationalism, my father's 2000 articles at The Economist interpret all sorts of future spins. After his 15th year he was permitted one signed survey a year. In the mid 1950s he had met John Von Neumann whom he become biographer to , and was the only journalist at Messina's's birth of EU. == If you only have time for one download this one page tour of COLLABorations composed by Fazle Abed and networked by billion poorest village women offers clues to sustainability from the ground up like no white ruler has ever felt or morally audited. by London Scot James Wilson. Could Queen Victoria change empire fro slavemaking to commonwealth? Some say Victoria liked the challenge James set her, others that she gave him a poison pill assignment. Thus James arrived in Calcutta 1860 with the Queens permission to charter a bank by and for Indian people. Within 9 months he died of diarrhea. 75 years later Calcutta was where the Young Fazle Abed grew up - his family accounted for some of the biggest traders. Only to be partitioned back at age 11 to his family's home region in the far north east of what had been British Raj India but was now to be ruled by Pakistan for 25 years. Age 18 Abed made the trek to Glasgow University to study naval engineering.
1943 marked centenary autobio of The Economist and my teenage dad Norman prepping to be navigator allied bomber command Burma Campaign -thanks to US dad survived, finished in last class of Keynes. before starting 5 decades at The Economist; after 15 years he was allowed to sign one survey a year starting in 1962 with the scoop that Japan (Korea S, Taiwan soon hk singapore) had found development mp0de;s for all Asian to rise. Rural Keynes could end village poverty & starvation; supercity win-win trades could celebrate Neumanns gift of 100 times more tech per decade (see macrae bio of von neumann)
Since 1960 the legacy of von neumann means ever decade multiplies 100 times more micro-technology- an unprecedented time for better or worse of all earthdwellers; 2025 timelined and mapped innovation exponentials - education, health, go green etc - (opportunities threats) to celebrating sustainability generation by 2025; dad parted from earth 2010; since then 2 journals by adam smith scholars out of Glasgow where engines began in 1760- Social Business; New Economics have invited academic worlds and young graduates to question where the human race is going - after 30 business trips to wealthier parts of Asia, through 2010s I have mainly sherpa's young journalist to Bangladesh - we are filing 50 years of cases on women empowerment at these web sites AbedMOOC.com FazleAbed.com EconomistPoor.com EconomistUN.com WorldRecordjobs.com Economistwomen.com Economistyouth.com EconomistDiary.com UNsummitfuture.com - in my view how a billion asian women linked together to end extreme poverty across continental asia is the greatest and happiest miracle anyone can take notes on - please note the rest of this column does not reflect my current maps of how or where the younger half of the world need to linkin to be the first sdg generation......its more like an old scrap book
how do humans design futures?-in the 2020s decade of the sdgs – this question has never had more urgency. to be or not to be/ – ref to lessons of deming or keynes, or glasgow university alumni smith and 200 years of hi-trust economics mapmaking later fazle abed - we now know how-a man made system is defined by one goal uniting generations- a system multiplies connected peoples work and demands either accelerating progress to its goal or collapsing - sir fazle abed died dec 2020 - so who are his most active scholars climate adaptability where cop26 november will be a great chance to renuite with 260 years of adam smith and james watts purposes t end poverty-specifically we interpret sdg 1 as meaning next girl or boy born has fair chance at free happy an productive life as we seek to make any community a child is born into a thriving space to grow up between discover of new worlds in 1500 and 1945 systems got worse and worse on the goal eg processes like slavery emerged- and ultimately the world was designed around a handful of big empires and often only the most powerful men in those empires. 4 amazing human-tech systems were invented to start massive use by 1960 borlaug agriculture and related solutions every poorest village (2/3people still had no access to electricity) could action learn person to person- deming engineering whose goal was zero defects by helping workers humanize machines- this could even allowed thousands of small suppliers to be best at one part in machines assembled from all those parts) – although americans invented these solution asia most needed them and joyfully became world class at them- up to 2 billion people were helped to end poverty through sharing this knowhow- unlike consuming up things actionable knowhow multiplies value in use when it links through every community that needs it the other two technologies space and media and satellite telecoms, and digital analytic power looked promising- by 1965 alumni of moore promised to multiply 100 fold efficiency of these core tech each decade to 2030- that would be a trillion tmes moore than was needed to land on the moon in 1960s. you might think this tech could improve race to end poverty- and initially it did but by 1990 it was designed around the long term goal of making 10 men richer than 40% poorest- these men also got involved in complex vested interests so that the vast majority of politicians in brussels and dc backed the big get bigger - often they used fake media to hide what they were doing to climate and other stuff that a world trebling in population size d\ - we the 3 generations children parents grandparents have until 2030 to design new system orbits gravitated around goal 1 and navigating the un's other 17 goals do you want to help/ 8 cities we spend most time helping students exchange sustainability solutions 2018-2019 BR0 Beijing Hangzhou:
Girls world maps begin at B01 good news reporting with fazleabed.com valuetrue.com and womenuni.com
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online library of norman macrae--
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Ma 2 Ali Financial
health catalogue; energy catalogue
Keynes: 2025now - jobs Creating Gen
how poorest women in world build
A01 BRAC health system,
A02 BRAC education system,
A03 BRAC banking system
K01 Twin Health System - Haiti& Boston
Past events EconomistDiary.com
include 15th annual spring collaboration cafe new york - 2022 was withsister city hong kong designers of metaverse for beeings.app
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