08 AUG 2013 by ideonexus

 New Money is Created with Promises

Ordinary people can help create new money by making promises. You constrain the future by making a plan, and a promise to keep to it. Money is created in response, because in making that promise you have created value. New money is created to represent that value. This is why it is possible for banks to fall apart when people don’t pay their mortgages back. Banks sell assets that are partially made of the future intents of borrowers. When borrowers do something other than promised, those as...
Folksonomies: economics society good will
Folksonomies: economics society good will
  1  notes

Promises of the future grow the economy and create new wealth, making the economy an expanding universe.

23 APR 2012 by ideonexus

 Consciousness is the Last Mystery

Human consciousness is just about the last surviving mystery. A mystery is a phenomenon that people don't know how to think about—yet. There have been other great mysteries: the mystery of the origin of the universe, the mystery of life and reproduction, the mystery of the design to be found in nature, the mysteries of time, space, and gravity. These were not just areas of scientific ignorance, but of utter bafflement and wonder. We do not yet have the final answers to any of the questions ...
Folksonomies: science consciousness
Folksonomies: science consciousness
  1  notes

Not because we don't understand it, There are lots of things we don't understand, but because we don't even know how to think about it.

08 JUN 2011 by ideonexus

 The Role of Religion

The role of religion is to integrate the Cosmology and the Morality, to render the cosmological narrative so rich and compelling that it elicits our allegiance and our commitment to its emergent moral understandings.
Folksonomies: religion wonder
Folksonomies: religion wonder
  1  notes

An idealistic perspective, but a compelling one of religion bringing everyone together in awe of the Cosmos.

19 APR 2011 by ideonexus

 Science Virtue and its Impact on History

So proud men have thought, in all walks of life, since Giordano Bruno was burned alive for his cosmology on the Campo de' Fiori in 1600. They have gone about their work simply enough. The scientists among them did not set out to be moralists or revolutionaries. William Harvey and Huygens, Euler and Avogadro, Darwin and Willard Gibbs and Marie Curie, Planck and Pavlov, practised their crafts modestly and steadfastly. Yet the values they seldom spoke of shone out of their work and entered their...
Folksonomies: history science virtue
Folksonomies: history science virtue
 2  2  notes

Scientists prove their virtue in their actions.