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#3344 - Friday, November 7, 2008 -
Editor: Jerry Katz
Nonduality Highlights - http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NDhighlights
Three articles, two of them written just for the Highlights:
Pleased to announce that Greg Goode will be contributing original writings to the Highlights every Friday for the next few weeks. Greg is one of the pioneers of online nonduality. He has written two books, Standing as Awareness: Dialogs from Nondual Dinners, and Nondualism in Western Philosophy. Greg also does one on one counseling from a philosophical perspective. Visit his website, http://heartofnow.com/.
A second exclusive to the Highlights is James Traverse's offering a free 8 page paper he just wrote, AWARENESS: The Agent and The Actor.
The third entry is an article published by mi2g, a global risk management company: How to Avoid The Great Depression? The Metamorphosis Towards Non-Duality in The World Beyond The Great Unwind, by DK Matai.
Memory is a con job
Memory makes an unsubstantiated claim that something was the
case.
When you presently seem to remember something, the past thought
is not now available to certify your present memory as
accurate. And when the past thought occurred, the present
memory had not yet occurred to link up with it. The two
thoughts actually never occur at the same time. They are
not linked together by anything but another thought that assigns
roles to them. And of course when the assigning thought
occurs, the others are long gone, like Paul Newman and Robert
Redford in _The Sting_.
Memory can be useful and there's no reason to try to get along
without it. But it needn't truly be believed. Memory
can help you find your car keys as a pragmatic activity, but you
don't need to take it seriously. You don't need to let
memory trick you into believing that there is a truly world of
multiplicity separate from you. Or that something was
Really There a moment ago, but Really Not There now. Memory
presents itself as actually giving you these guarantees.
But it's much more like a shell game or 3-card monte. You
never have these guarantees; and as awareness, you never need
them. You are free.
Greg Goode http://heartofnow.com/
AWARENESS: The Agent and The Actor, by James
Traverse, is available free to readers of the
Nonduality Highlights - it is 8 pages in total so it is a
fairly easy read. Visit http://nidrayoga.com and scroll to the bottom to access James's
email address, and then write James and request a copy. I've
known James personally for many years. If I
say it's cool to write him, it's cool to write him.
mi2g pioneers global risk management practices and technology to save time and cut cost. We enhance comparative advantage within financial services and government agencies. Specifically we seek to secure the interface between stakeholders so as to mitigate strategic and operational risk.
D2-Banking is mi2g's latest project and delivers combined digital banking and data vaulting services with guaranteed security. The award winning mi2g bespoke security architecture, digital risk management and D2-Banking rely on our family of underlying tools to deliver scalable infrastructure that brings together people, processes and technology. Our real time intelligence is deployed worldwide for contingency capability, executive decision making and strategic threat assessment.
The Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance is a philanthropic expert initiative founded in 2001 by mi2g to understand and to address complex global challenges. ATCA conducts collective Socratic dialogue on opportunities and threats arising from climate chaos, radical poverty, organised crime, extremism, informatics, nanotechnology, robotics, genetics, artificial intelligence and financial systems. The Philanthropia can be accessed from here.
How to Avoid The Great Depression?
The
Metamorphosis Towards Non-Duality
in The World Beyond The Great Unwind
London, UK - 6th November 2008, 09:52 GMT
Dear ATCA Open & Philanthropia Friends
[Please note that the views
presented by individual contributors are not necessarily
representative of the views of ATCA, which is neutral. ATCA
conducts collective Socratic dialogue on global opportunities and
threats.]
We would rather not see a second coming of The Great Depression
which followed the stock market crash of 1929. Central bankers
across the globe are rushing to reduce interest rates drastically
in 2008. Combined with falling currencies, government plans to
part-nationalise banks and buy up toxic assets, their moves may
cause asset prices to stabilise, although the probability remains
low. We can only hope that they are successful and prices do not
continue to fall throughout 2009 and 2010 due to a chronic
shortage of loan renewals and credit.
The effects of the Wall Street Crash on 1929 were spread from the
financial sector to the rest of the economy by a phenomenon known
as debt-deflation. It works as follows: at the beginning of the
year, a farmer borrows a 1,000 dollars from a bank to buy some
fertiliser with the expectation of selling the produce on the
open market at 2,000 dollars. If, come the time of the sale, the
produce value has fallen to 500 dollars, then the farmer will not
be able to pay off the 1,000 dollars loan. A bank can cope with
isolated defaults of this kind. But if the price of all goods and
services keeps falling, then the bank is likely to be hit by many
similar default cases. Once deposit holders get wind of the
situation, they may want to withdraw their savings and a bank run
may ensue. News of one bank run may set off a string of similar
bank runs elsewhere, even at banks which have not lent money to
borrowers affected by deflation.
The American economist Irving Fisher -- famous for the Fisher
equation, Fisher hypothesis and Fisher separation theorem --
first put the concept of debt-deflation forward in the journal
Econometrica in 1933 as "The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great
Depressions". His idea was largely ignored or forgotten by
economists until it was proven in the early 1980s by a
little-known Stanford University Assistant Professor by the name
of Ben Bernanke, who is now the Chairman of the US Federal
Reserve. Today, Fisher's ideas ought to be on the mind of every
distinguished ATCA member along with those who are central
bankers.
How relevant is Fisher's original debt-deflation article to what
we are experiencing now? Fisher warns that of the many different
factors that make a depression into a Great one, all play a
subordinate role compared with "two dominant factors, namely
over-indebtedness to start with and deflation following soon
after". He articulates that "the two diseases act and
react to each other", and "the very effort of
individuals to lessen their burden of debts increases it, because
of the mass effect of the stampede to liquidate in swelling each
dollar owed", or, in other words, "the more the debtors
pay, the more they owe". In short, debt combined with
falling prices can be a fatal combination.
Fisher presents a chronology of events in several stages that
together constitute a Great Depression, the last stage includes
now familiar themes:
1. Runs on banks;
2. Banks curtailing loans for self protection;
3. Banks selling investments; and
4. Bank failures.
The "post-Cold War" era between 1989 and 2007 has
suddenly and rudely ended in 2008, as The Great Unwind works its
way through every nook and cranny of our economies. What was, not
long ago, perceived as an isolated problem in the US residential
market, followed by the biggest upset in the global financial
markets, has come to be understood as a massive process of
deleveraging the entire global economic architecture within which
we all exist. As a result of The Great Unwind, humanity has
unexpectedly found itself revisiting the events of 1929 in search
of lessons for what we should and should not be doing right now.
JK Galbraith in "The Great Crash: 1929" discusses five
causes for why the economy becomes fundamentally unsound:
1. The bad distribution of income;
2. The bad corporate structure;
3. The bad banking structure;
4. The dubious state of the foreign (current account) balance;
and
5. The poor state of economic intelligence.
We find ourselves entering a period in which global relations are
defined by rising nationalism, socialism, deflation,
hyper-inflation, sovereign debt default, extremism, rich world
hubris, stepped-up environmental damage, and expanding problems
of health and poverty everywhere. These varying afflictions seem
to have been spurred on by a triple crisis in food, fuel and
finance, ie, the 3Fs, which ATCA highlighted over a year ago.
What was to have been a "New World Order" is being
revealed as a greater disorder, much of it flowing from the top
downwards, from the North to the South.
There is a widespread search for the origins of this newly
emerging disorder as the world seeks to define appropriate
remedial measures. Humankind seems to hanker for some kind of
static equilibrium in which we can identify rights and wrongs,
good and evil, civilised and uncivilised behaviour, and
ultimately, stabilising and destabilising actions. Between 1945
and 1989 we had a clear and static equilibrium, essentially
defined by Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD). Now there seems to
be a wistful desire for some new framework of black and white
rules and constraints against which we can measure our human
activities and our use of the planet's extremely limited
resources. But we can no longer have a world defined by MAD or
some ideologically established duality. The USSR is gone and the
US finds itself in a fundamentally altered state following the
dissipation of its long period of soft power and the withering of
its financial muscle in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The Great Unwind seems to be moving faster and faster, seemingly
approaching the speed of light, as its effects spread far beyond
the financial markets to the world beyond. Now we seem faced with
the necessity of living in chaos and adjusting to a new kind of
dynamic equilibrium in which human activity interacts fluidly
without regard to national borders, constrained by the world's
resources at any given moment but continuously altering those
boundary conditions with human-made synthetic alternatives to the
earth's resources via the use of nanotechnology, genetic
engineering, distributed computing and communications.
We are now being forced to confront the inadequacy of duality as
a way of guiding our decisions. "The Great Unwind" is
propelling us towards non-duality ever faster, as we enter a
brave new world of continuously changing opportunities and
limitations in the years ahead.
Once upon a time the world was a simpler place. Kings were on
their thrones, the people farmed the land, merchants grew rich,
and from time to time there would be wars between neighbouring
kingdoms. It may not have been a golden age, but at least it was
relatively easy to understand. The world has started working
differently in the past hundred years. Government has become
multi-layered, trade is conducted through cryptic financial
institutions and esoteric financial instruments, technology has
become the province of experts, and we have found ourselves
subject to social forces and ideologies that are difficult to
understand and to differentiate, yet are inextricably
intertwined. Add to that the rapidity of change, and the spread
of mass information and disinformation. As a result, we have a
bewildering complexity of perceived dualities which are
propelling us towards a dynamic equilibrium in which the only way
to make sense of the world's economies and socio-political
structures is to see them as an interconnected non-dual matrix.
In the West we have been struggling for many years with the
fundamentals of right and wrong, good and evil, natural and
human-made problems and solutions. But in the light of
non-duality, these concepts seem to have become slippery guides
to human decision making. Ideologies of capitalism and state
socialism, of free markets and centrally planned social order
have been made obsolete by pragmatic innovations on the part of
governments, business enterprises, and individuals alike. There
is no clear definition of hero and of villain. The roles of hero
and villain seem to change continuously, depending on the part
being played at any given moment. We find ourselves in need of
both the right and the left and unable to choose sides. If we
take sides, we are trying to eliminate half of reality, which is
impossible. For many years, the capitalists have been trying to
describe the communists as the evil side. Some capitalists even
have the illusion they can survive alone, without any need for
the other half. If we look at the latest version of capitalism,
in 2008, we can see shades of communism in the grand-scale
intervention of governments to prop up banks and to nationalise
many of them. And if we look deeply at communism, for example, in
China, we see spreading capitalism. If we look deeply at the rose
branch, we see the thorns; if we look deeply at the thorns, we
see the rose branch. In this international non-dual matrix, each
side pretends to be the rose, and calls the other side the thorn.
If we take their statements at face value, we are unable to
recognise the inherent dynamic equilibrium in which we live,
without static duality concepts as our guide.
Survival means the survival of human kind as a whole, not just a
part of it. If the South cannot survive, then the North is going
to crumble. If the West cannot survive, then the East is going to
crumble. Decoupled economies are a myth in the 21st century. No
nation can go it alone. China and India cannot have continuous
unencumbered GDP growth whilst the West falters. If countries of
the Third World -- the Emerging Economies -- cannot pay their
debts, we are going to suffer in the North. If we do not take
care of the Third World, our well-being is not going to last, and
we will not be able to continue living in the way we have been
much longer. These threats are already manifesting themselves as
"black swans". In fact, we can even say that 2008 has
been a "black swan year". Some would argue that there
are so many black swans flying in the sky around us in 2008 that
it is difficult to see the sky save the black swans.
The world which we know from studying history has been
dramatically transformed in the last hundred years. We are now
faced with powerful, large-scale governance and social
institutions that can be enormous sources of social good, but
also be sources of suffering and entrapment if they do not work
as originally envisaged. We need to look out for
institutionalised greed, ill will and ignorance, which perpetuate
duality. The collective decisions made in the next generation or
two carry enormous consequences for the future of human society
and the biosphere. The days when we could ignore all those
decisions and remain indifferent to them are over. Our past,
present and future are inseparable and exist in one space time
continuum and the way we live, the way we think, alters that
dynamic equilibrium instantaneously.
In Zen thinking, "We study the self to forget the self. And
when we forget the self, we become one with the thousand
manifestations." In many ways we still strive to live in a
duality economy, manifest as a war economy, based essentially on
two poles: us and them. We have done so since World War II, which
"rescued" many of the G7 nations from The Great
Depression -- if brutal and tragic war can ever be considered a
rescue. Now capitalism itself has become part of an unending war
on nature and the environment.
It is when we have reached the situation of needing more than 2.4
planets worth of natural resources to carry on global GDP
expansion, that the world economy has begun to hit the buffers
and the financial institutions have begun to shake and crumble.
While technology will continue to move the buffers, the world's
quest for never ending economic growth will continuously test
those buffers which prevail at any given moment. The upshot is
disorder. Disorder is nothing new in the human world. East Asia,
the Indian subcontinent, the Middle East, Africa, Europe and the
Americas have all gone through cycle after cycle of violent
change -- oppression at home, exploitation abroad, and bloody
warfare. Much of it has been driven by various combinations of
fanatic ideological beliefs, whipped-up nationalisms, and
institutionalised greed. The great civilisations have had moments
of peace and marvellous cultural and artistic accomplishments,
punctuated by eruptions of mass hysteria, outbreaks of violence,
and war after war after war. This is the result of human
determination to resort to duality in thinking and an endless
desire to restore and to preserve a static equilibrium. If we are
to thrive in the 21st century, beyond The Great Unwind, we have
to think in a new way and metamorphose individually and
collectively towards the dynamic equilibrium of a non-duality
matrix. What does this mean? We are all one and fundamentally
connected with each other in an inseparable way, the sooner we
see the rainbow coloured humanity as one, the East and West as
one, the North and South as one, the faster we will come to terms
with this turmoil. There is hope if we can think in this new way!
[ENDS]
ATCA Open maintains a presence for Socratic Dialogue and feedback
on Facebook, LinkedIn and IntentBlog.
We welcome your thoughts, observations and views. Thank you.
Best wishes
DK Matai, Chairman, Asymmetric Threats Contingency
Alliance (ATCA) & The Philanthropia
Open ATCA, IntentBlog, Holistic Quantum Relativity
Group
LinkedIn, Facebook, Ecademy, Xing, Spock, A&B Blog & QDOS
ATCA: The
Asymmetric Threats Contingency Alliance is a philanthropic expert
initiative founded in 2001 to resolve complex global challenges
through collective Socratic dialogue and joint executive action
to build a wisdom based global economy. Adhering to the doctrine
of non-violence, ATCA addresses asymmetric threats and social
opportunities arising from climate chaos and the environment;
radical poverty and microfinance; geo-politics and energy;
organised crime & extremism; advanced technologies -- bio,
info, nano, robo & AI; demographic skews and resource
shortages; pandemics; financial systems and systemic risk; as
well as transhumanism and ethics. Present membership of ATCA is
by invitation only and has over 5,000 distinguished members from
over 120 countries: including 1,000 Parliamentarians; 1,500
Chairmen and CEOs of corporations; 1,000 Heads of NGOs; 750
Directors at Academic Centres of Excellence; 500 Inventors and
Original thinkers; as well as 250 Editors-in-Chief of major
media.
The Philanthropia, founded in 2005, brings
together over 1,000 leading individual and private
philanthropists, family offices, foundations, private banks,
non-governmental organisations and specialist advisors to address
complex global challenges such as countering climate chaos,
reducing radical poverty and developing global leadership for the
younger generation through the appliance of science and
technology, leveraging acumen and finance, as well as encouraging
collaboration with a strong commitment to ethics. Philanthropia
emphasises multi-faith spiritual values: introspection, healthy
living and ecology. Philanthropia Targets: Countering climate
chaos and carbon neutrality; Eliminating radical poverty --
through micro-credit schemes, empowerment of women and more
responsible capitalism; Leadership for the Younger Generation;
and Corporate and social responsibility.