Warren Kinston
16. September 2012 03:00
You will read again and again in popular scientific articles that we human beings are not very good at handling probability. It has become almost an article of faith.

John Kay, respected economist and academic, writes in the Financial Times (as noted here): “We do not often, or easily, think in terms of probabilities, because there are not many situations in which this style of thinking is useful."
Really? Is that true? More...
About
Warren Kinston
Warren Kinston
11. June 2012 03:00

Good action counts for a lot. But once a person has the ideology of power fixed in their head, they can never feel safe enough. Goodness flies out the window. There is never enough power, never enough wealth. It is not the imperative of greed, it is the imperative of survival. Technology now allows us to survive without willful cruelty and domination, but that does not make sense to power-driven individuals. They want the power and the glory.
So what do we do about the callous power-centred leaders of most countries whose desire for control and personal wealth is unrestrained?
That’s a trick question.
“We” never do anything.
If “we” have any influence at all, it is to sustain and support the existing social system. “We” are responsible for those leaders … for the way they think, how they got into such positions, and why they stay there. So the British “we” is responsible for UK atrocities not the PM and cabinet; the German “we” was responsible for Nazism in Germany not Hitler; More...
About
Warren Kinston