Look at a Four Way Stop Intersection to See Why Civilization Works

First, if you want to see clues about our future, step away from your computer screen. Go outside and stand near a four-way intersection that’s regulated only by stop signs.

Watch for a while as drivers take turns, not-quite-stopping while they gauge each others’ intentions, negotiating rapid deals with nods and flashes of eye-contact. You’ll spot some rudeness, certainly. But exceptions seldom rattle this silent dance of brief courtesies and tacit bargains — a strange mixture of competition and cooperation.

The four-way stop doesn’t work in some cultures, and it’s hard to picture anything like it functioning in times past, when mostly-illiterate humans lived in steep social hierarchies and “right of-way” was a matter of status, not fair play. Nor would robots, adhering to rigid laws, handle traffic half so well as the drivers I see, dealing with a myriad fuzzy situations, making up micro rules and exceptions on the spot, even as they talk on cell phones or quell squabbles among kids riding in the back seat. This phenomenon visibly illustrates how simple rules can be used by sophisticated autonomous systems (e.g., modern citizens) to solve intricate problems without any authority figures present to enforce obedience.

How does it happen? Experts in complexity theory coined a term — emergent properties — to describe new levels of order that seem to arise out of chaos, when conditions are right. For example, Kevin Kelly’s book,Out of Control, depicts how rudimentary genetic drives coalesce into the fantastic flocking behavior of birds. When intelligence extends this process to higher levels, the result — our own unique kind of flocking — is called civilization.

Notes:

Civilization works because we work together, taking turns, and negotiating deals. The fact that it is in our nature to do so is apparent when you watch civilization in action at the microcosm of a four-way stop intersection.

Folksonomies: centrism

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 Disputation Arenas: Harnessing Conflict and Competitiveness for Society's Benefit
Electronic/World Wide Web>Blog:  Brin, David (Aug. 2000), Disputation Arenas: Harnessing Conflict and Competitiveness for Society's Benefit, American Bar Association's Journal on Dispute Resolution, v.15, N.3, pp 597-618, Ohio State University, Retrieved on 2010-12-20
  • Source Material [www.davidbrin.com]
  • Folksonomies: centrism


    Triples

    30 NOV -0001

     Using Road Traffic as a Metaphor for Civilization

    Look at a Four Way Stop Intersection to See Why Civilization Works > Similarity > Watching Cars Merge on the Freeway as an Example of Civilized Behavior
    Jon Stewart and David Brin use freeway lanes merging and a four-way stop sign as demonstrations that human beings have a natural proclivity toward working with one another, and that society works because we can resolve disputes in a cordial fashion.
    Folksonomies: centrism
    Folksonomies: centrism