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But surely there are many gifted ET contributors who work in it - because there are little other alternatives, not-withstanding Chris Cook perhaps. I have attempted to grasp the corollaries of his construct, but I'm afraid I'm out of my wits on that... Nor have I an idea whether he has addressed the sustainability of his model at ET or elsewhere before, but I would be interested to read it.

The economics of today have developed, because they work. It seems evolution to me, in that regard. It happens, because there is a time-window for it. One day, the brick wall will come, but that's no worry for the species of today. Evolution has no long term strategy. It's opportune, it just is - and apparently so is economics.

by Nomad (Bjinse) on Fri Dec 8th, 2006 at 06:46:47 AM EST
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Agreed. This is exactly the problem with economics, though. It wont work long term, it might stop working quite soon, not planning is idiotic. Running in to the brick wall when you can see it quite well is very silly. Keeping doing something just 'cause it has worked in the past is shortsighted.
by someone (s0me1smail(a)gmail(d)com) on Fri Dec 8th, 2006 at 06:51:14 AM EST
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