Newsletter Subject

Human Freedom and the Economic Model

From

gilderpress.com

Email Address

dailyprophecy@mail.gilderpress.com

Sent On

Fri, Feb 28, 2020 05:36 PM

Email Preheader Text

The measure of information and criterion of creativity | Special Customer Service Message for You Co

The measure of information and criterion of creativity [Gilder's Daily Prophecy] February 28, 2020 [UNSUBSCRIBE]( | [ARCHIVES]( Special Customer Service Message for You [customer service rep](Congratulations! You’re eligible for a $750 credit to be immediately applied to your account for this brand-new opportunity. We can only offer you this opportunity until THIS SUNDAY. [Click here now to learn how to claim your $750.]( Human Freedom and the Economic Model [George Gilder]Dear Daily Prophecy Reader, Does capitalism have anything to do with greed? Do billionaires receive their money as an incentive to go to work? Do they get their billions because they deserve them? All the Democratic contenders play to the Scrooge McDuck vision of capitalists cavorting in giant pools of money as if their investments were liquid. But wealth is not liquid, only money is. Wealth is knowledge embodied in the companies and capital that drive the economy. A wealth tax simply destroys wealth by turning it back into money. Responding to these mostly sterile games of mathematical and psychological reductionism, I wrote [Wealth&Poverty]( 35 years ago and [Knowledge and Power](, Scandal of Money, and Life After Google over the last few years to provide a grander and more accurate model of capitalism. Since the days of Adam Smith, the entire economics profession has put a self-interested agent, a homoeconomicus appraising price signals and calculating his own utilitarian advantage, at the center of their models of a capitalist economy. More modern theories based the model on behavioral psychology. Generalized as a hedonic pleasure-seeker, avoiding pain and pursuing gratification in a Skinner-box scheme of stimulus and response, economic man became a mere manifestation of evolution. A function of his physical environment, he became a figment of statistical aggregates. As the late Irving Kristol put it, "In such a blind and accidental arithmetic, the sum floats free [of the men who build it], and its legitimacy is infinitely questionable." Kristol saw that this vision repeated Herbert Spencer's translation of Darwinian evolution into an economic ethic. Seen as engaged in a struggle for survival governed by the laws of the jungle, economic man could be neither a creative entrepreneur nor an acceptable vessel of a good society. At the time, I believed I had discovered a way out of all these dilemmas. I would show that capitalism is intrinsically altruistic and moral. To succeed in gaining profits, entrepreneurs must be oriented toward the needs and wants of others. Capitalists were givers, not takers, and their successes "expanded the circles of human sympathy." If this advice is good enough for a billionaire… Maybe you saw this, where live on camera… One of the most powerful Republicans in Washington… Gave a stunning piece of advice to Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg. Advice, in fact, that could help you — or any American — make a fortune over the years ahead. Maybe even millions of dollars. [It’s so valuable, in fact, we reveal it here — free. Click to see.]( Wealth&Poverty and the Information Theory Compounding the political problem of defending an amoral system inspired by Darwinian biology was a spurious claim of determinism inherited from physics and mechanics. In their mimicry of physics, economic theories tended to imply the impossibility of growth. Spontaneous physical change is neither cumulative nor progressive. It tends toward deterioration and chaos. Thus arose a second preoccupation of Wealth&Poverty and of Knowledge &Power — the sources of growth. Giving shape to my argument was an apercu of Princeton's Albert Hirschman: "Creativity always comes as a surprise to us. If it didn't we wouldn't need it and planning would work." Wealth&Poverty became a paean not only to altruism but also to creation and surprise. In Wealth&Poverty, I identified the error of economists as founding their theory on the mechanism of market exchanges themselves rather than on the creative activity that makes them possible. Conventional economics violates a key philosophical principle. It subordinates a higher and more complex level of activity — the creation of value — to a lower level, its measurement, and exchange. In their desire to found a Newtonian science of political economy, generations of economists inflated the instrumental mechanism of trading into a complete economic universe. Isaac Newton's "system of the world" became Adam Smith's "great machine" equilibrating supply and demand. But a determined equilibrium theory leaves little or no room for creativity and surprise, for the unpredictable activities of entrepreneurs making entirely new things. Largely leaving economics behind after Wealth&Poverty, I began decades of study of technology, focused first in Silicon Valley and then in Israel, which is now a more fertile source of new ideas than California. I soon found myself deep in a field of study called Information Theory. On one level this theory was merely a science of networks and computers, but in its deeper implications, it would sound a death knell for the rationalist materialism and social Darwinism that was undermining the popularity of capitalism by depriving it of meaning and plausibility. An information and knowledge system provided a path beyond the invidious calculations of fear and greed that were alleged to motivate entrepreneurs. Information theory effectively began with Kurt Godel's epochal demonstration in 1930 that all logical systems, including mathematics, depend on axioms that they cannot prove. Mathematics, and hence all mathematically based sciences, from physics and chemistry to biology and economics, ultimately rest on a foundation of faith. Godel's proof led directly to the invention by Alan Turing of an abstract universal computer, the so-called Turing machine, which he used to show that no mechanistic system could be complete and consistent. Turing concluded that all logical systems were intrinsically oracular. Computers could not be Smithian "great machines" or Newtonian "systems of the world." They inexorably relied upon conscious programmers or oracles and could not transcend their creators. As Turing crucially wrote, he could not specify what these oracles would be. All he could say was that "they could not be machines." On a computer, they are programmers. In an economy, they are entrepreneurs, who launch new machines into the world. From these insights sprang a new theory of information and information technology. In 1948 a rambunctiously creative engineer, Claude Shannon, from Bell Labs and MIT, translated Godel's and Turing's findings into a set of propositions about the nature of communications. Shannon developed technical concepts for gauging the capacity of communications channels to bear information. Without a rigorous definition of information and communications channels, it would be impossible to build worldwide interactive networks such as the Internet, which would have to be coherently interconnected. Shannon's crucial insight was a clear and polar differentiation between order and information. To this day, most economists believe that order and information are essentially kindred concepts. Both are seen as patterns that can evolve or emerge spontaneously. Widespread is the reliance on the concept of equilibrium, the order to which economies or ecosystems return after a disruption. To Shannon, however, order was not information but its opposite. Much like Albert Hirschman decades later, Shannon resolved that information is most essentially “news” or surprise. If you already know the contents of a message it contains zero surprise and zero information. Information is unexpected content. It is disequilibrium and disorder, not order. An orderly and predictable mechanism — a great machine — embodies no new information. Today’s Prophecy For purposes of the new economics, I sum up information theory as the treatment of human communications or creations as transmissions down a channel, whether a wire or the world, in the presence of the power of noise. Measuring the outcome is its "news" or surprise, defined as entropy and consummated as knowledge. Since these communications or creations can be business plans or experiments, information theory provides an economics driven not by equilibrium and order, greed or fear, but by surprises of enterprise. Information theory requires that such a process be experimental and its results be falsifiable. The businesses conducting entrepreneurial experiments must be allowed to fail or go bankrupt. Otherwise, there is no yield of knowledge and thus no production of wealth. By identifying a capitalist economy as chiefly a knowledge system rather than a mechanistic incentive system, the new economics obviates all the concerns over greed and avarice as crucial to the creation of wealth. The enabling theory of telecommunications and the Internet, information theory offers a path to a new economics that places the surprising creations of entrepreneurs and innovators at the very center of the system rather than patching them in from the outside as "exogenous" inputs. Information theory also shows that knowledge is not merely a source of wealth; it is wealth. Wealth is the accumulation of knowledge. As Thomas Sowell declared in 1971: All economic transactions are exchanges of differential knowledge, which is dispersed in human minds around the globe. Information is also a measure of freedom and creativity. It is gauged by the freedom of choice of the sender of a message, which Shannon termed "entropy." The more numerous the possible messages that can be sent, the more uncertainty at the other end about what message might be sent and the more information there is in the actual message when it is received. Thus, Shannon offers a way to put human freedom at the very heart of the economic model. It addresses freedom on a new level, not only as a condition of enterprise but also as the measure of information and criterion of creativity. It is thus both libertarian and conservative, liberal and individualist. Stay tuned for Monday’s Daily Prophecy where I sum up the 20 key rules… Regards, [George Gilder] George Gilder Editor, Gilder's Daily Prophecy P.S. Before we head into the weekend, I would like to take your attention to this matter… See, my colleague Graham Summers is one of the world’s top Federal Reserve experts, and he has uncovered what he believes to be massive covert trades that he likes to call “2-Hour Ghost Money Trades.” This strategy helps him predict when certain stocks are set to skyrocket just before they do. Trust me, you will want to check this out, [so I would like you to click here](, take a couple of minutes and give this special video he has made your attention. But hurry, the last chance to receive the first “Ghost Money” trade opportunity of March expires Saturday, February 29th at midnight. [Click here to see what this is all about.]( Is “$7 Internet” Coming to Your State This Year? [please enable imasges]("America’s Most Hated” cable companies are mad as hell. A brand-new internet technology with the code name “Halo-Fi” promises to be faster than cable yet, by my estimates, over 7 times cheaper, which could save you an easy $19,494. Everything shifts ASAP, so there’s no time to lose. [Discover the full story here...]( [Gilder Press] To end your Gilder's Daily Prophecy e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from Gilder's Daily Prophecy, [click here to unsubscribe](. If you are having trouble receiving your Gilder's Daily Prophecy subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox by [whitelisting Gilder's Daily Prophecy.]( Gilder's Daily Prophecy is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. Please read [our Privacy Statement.]( Gilder Press, a division of Laissez Faire Books, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. Nothing in this e-mail should be considered personalized financial advice. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security recommended to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after online publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. © 2020 Gilder Press, a division of Laissez Faire Books, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This newsletter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Gilder Press, a division of Laissez Faire Books, LLC. EMAIL REFERENCE ID: 401GDPED01

EDM Keywords (282)

yield years writers would world work wire whole weekend wealth way wants want value valuable used us unsubscribe undermining uncovered uncertainty turning turing trust treatment transmissions translation transcend trading time thus theory telecommunications takers take system surprises surprise sum succeed subordinates study struggle stimulus state specify sources source skyrocket show set sent sender seen see science saw room reviewing reveal results respecting reliance receive readers rather put purposes provide protecting prospectus propositions prophecy progressive programmers production process printed princeton presence predict power popularity plausibility places physics patterns path patching part paean outside outcome orderly order oracles opportunity one offer numerous news networks neither needs need nature moral money monday models model minutes mimicry message merely men mechanism mechanics measurement measure meaning mathematical makes mailing mailbox made mad machines live liquid likes life licensed libertarian letter legitimacy learn laws last knowledge israel investments invention internet innovators information incentive impossible impossibility imply identifying identified hurry higher hence hell heart head greed grander google go givers give gilder get gauging gauged function freedom founding foundation found fortune following findings figment field fear faster falsifiable fail fact facebook experimental exchanges exchange evolve evolution estimates error equilibrium entropy entrepreneurs enterprise ensure engaged end employees eligible economy economists economies drive dollars division disruption dispersed disorder disequilibrium discovered dilemmas desire deserve depriving demand defending deep deemed days day crucial criterion creators creativity creations creation couple could contents consummated consulting condition concerns concept computers computer complete companies communications communication committed click clear claim circles choice chiefly chemistry check center capitalism capital capacity california calculating build blind biology billions believes believed became back axioms avarice attention arrival argument apercu anything altruism also allowed alleged advice address activity accumulation account 1971 1948 1930

Marketing emails from gilderpress.com

View More
Sent On

22/10/2020

Sent On

21/10/2020

Sent On

19/10/2020

Sent On

19/10/2020

Sent On

17/10/2020

Sent On

17/10/2020

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.