#consciousness #artificialintelligence #history
Category Archives: History
Law & Politics..
In a lecture published in 1882 entitled “The History of English Law as a Branch of Politics,” the English jurist Sir Frederick Pollock wrote that “law is to political institutions as the bones to the body (Pollock 1882: 200-1)”.
(Horowitz 1977b: 151). Thus, he continues:
“Courts are public decision makers, yet they are wholly dependent on private initiative to invoke their powers: they do not self-start. Parties affected by administrative action choose to seek or not to seek judicial redress on the basis of considerations that may bear no relation to the public importance of the issues at stake, to the recurring character of the administrative action in question, or to the competence of courts to judge the action or change it.”
Variants of Horowitz’s arguments are echoed by many other writers, including the American Lon Fuller (1978) and the English administrative lawyer Peter Cane (1986). Cane argues that:
“Because judicial proceedings are essentially bipolar, they are designed to resolve disputes in terms of the interests of only two parties or groups represented by those parties. And, because judicial proceedings are adversarial, disputes are to be decided only on the basis of material which the parties choose to put before the courts. If the problem is one which is felt to require, for its proper resolution, the consideration of interests of parties not before the court and not in formal dispute with one another, of persons who will be affected consequentially or incidentally by any resolution of the dispute between the parties, then a court is not the ideal body to resolve that dispute (Cane 1986: 149).”
#judicialactivisim #judiciary #legislative
. A New Handbook of Political Science (Kindle Locations 2385-2386). Kindle Edition.
Energy future..
“By 2030, overall global energy consumption may be 35 or 40 percent greater than it is today. The mix will probably not be too different from what it is today. Hydrocarbons will likely be somewhere between 75 and 80 percent of the overall supply. One can imagine a host of factors— from political upheavals and military conflicts to major shifts in the global economy to changes in pricing and regulation or significant technological breakthroughs— that change this picture more decisively. But that law of long lead times still remains. It is really after 2030 that the energy system could start to look quite different as the cumulative effect of innovation and technological advance makes its full impact felt.”
Yergin, Daniel (2011-09-20). The Quest: Energy, Security, and the Remaking of the Modern World (Kindle Locations 11661-11666). Penguin Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
Capitalism
Roosevelt: “When aggregated wealth demands what is unfair, its immense power can be met only by the still greater power of the people as a whole.”
Financial times_Philip Stephens
Energy and future
The history of the renewable industries is one of innovation, entrepreneurial daring, political battles, controversy, disappointment and despair, recovery and luck.
Daniel Yergin
MLK Jr..
“”If a man is called to be a street sweeper, he should sweep streets even as Michelangelo painted, or Beethoven composed music, or Shakespeare wrote poetry. He should sweep streets so well that all the hosts of heaven and earth will pause to say, here lived a great street sweeper who did his job well. ~ Martin Luther King Jr.
Nature of the Firm..
In his 1937 paper “The Nature of the Firm,” Coase identified three types of costs in the economy: the costs of search (finding all the right information, people, resources to create something); coordination (getting all these people to work together efficiently); and contracting (negotiating the costs for labor and materials for every activity in production, keeping trade secrets, and policing and enforcing these agreements). He posited that a firm would expand until the cost of performing a transaction inside the firm exceeded the cost of performing the transaction outside the firm.
“Blockchain revolution by Tapscott”
Marx…
“Marx believed that in all phases of history there has been a conflict between two dominant classes of society. In antiquity’s slave society, the conflict was between free citizen and slave. In the feudal society of the Middle Ages, it was between feudal lord and serf; later on, between aristocrat and citizen. But in Marx’s own time, in what he called a bourgeois or capitalist society, the conflict was first and foremost between the capitalists and the workers, or the proletariat. So the conflict stood between those who own the means of production and those who do not. And since the ‘upper classes’ do not voluntarily relinquish their power, change can only come about through revolution.”
Sophie’s world
