Sunday, November 22, 2020

Putting On My Top Hat

Politics these days seem based more on feelz than on thoughts. Now that the shouting is over -- Biden won, so there are no mobs raging in the street -- and the only sound is the high-pitched whine of a well-known Narcissist. TOF thought to take a moment to review the awful simple-mndedness of standard political thought; to wit, the Left-Right spectrum.

Catastrophe Theory was devised by topologist Rene Thom to model situations where stable behavior suddenly flips to chaotic behavior (and vice versa). These surfaces have been used to model such diverse phenomena as the collapse of nations, the buckling of a beam, the binging of anorexia, the flight/fight of animals, boiling of liquids, et al. According to his Fundamental Theorem, there are seven elementary catastrophe surfaces, classified by the number of independent variables and the number of dependent variables. The behavior of a system governed by a potential function converges to an equilibrium surface, the manifold dM. The bends of folds of this manifold describe the varied behaviors of the system.

Back in the 70s, E. C. Zeeman applied the cusp model to political ideologies. The two parameters were A economic (opportunity versus equality) and B political (the rights of the individuals versus the rights of the group). The state space was a “cloud of points” representing the opinions of the individuals in the society. (These are measurable, at least in theory, by opinion polling.) The cloud was embedded topologically in a one-dimensional space, Y, which turned out to be the traditional left-to-right political spectrum. Zeeman‘s catastrophe surface shows why this simple line really has a complex “anatomy”.  


 An authoritarian left regime that moves toward economic opportunity without opening up politically is liable to snap suddenly to an authoritarian right regime. But if it moves first toward political freedom, it can transition gradually to an open economy. As a society moves smoothly around the parameter space (AxB at bottom) its equlibrium state moves about on the manifold above. For each position in parameter space there is a single unique state on the manifold... Until the society enters the bifurcation set (triangular region) where there are two equilibrium states. Inertia keeps it on the original sheet until it exits the bifurcation set on the opposite side. The original equilibrium vanishes and, governed by the potential function, snaps rapidly to the other equilibrium.

Projecting the surface dM onto the AY and BY planes reveals why dictatorships of the left and the right resemble each other so closely, and why right-wing populists often sound like left-wingers. It also shows why some social changes must be revolutionary; and why one-party states frequently develop left and right wings within the Party. 

In 2016, both "tea party" activists and "occupy movement" activists made the same diagnosis of America's ills: viz., the government was controlled by "oligarchs." However, they differed in their solutions. The one wanted to give the government more power (to be wielded, one supposes, by those self-same oligarchs), while the other wanted to elect a junior varsity oligarch.


9 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. The graphic following the text
    “ why this simple line really has a complex “anatomy” ”
    isn't displaying and can't be opened — I'm getting a "Forbidden" error.

    ReplyDelete
  3. . . . but after I entered my comment, the graphic suddenly displayed — ??

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  4. It is odd. I found that once I opened this page
    http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/modelhistory.php
    in another tab the image showed up.

    It also helps if you open
    http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/images/modelhistory/psychohistory16.jpg
    in a separate tab.

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  5. Zeeman’s model does a good job of mathematically modelling the topology of a unidimensional left–right political axis. What it does not do is demonstrate that such a unidimensional model maps the territory of actual politics accurately, or, indeed, at all.

    If you take a close look at any so-called ‘authoritarian right’ regime, you will find that the ‘economic opportunity’ found there is restricted in practice to friends and cronies of the officials in power, and the masses have no significant power. (In Nazi Germany, all limited companies with capital less than a certain amount were simply dissolved, and their assets handed over to the compulsory cartels that ran each industry.)

    Likewise, if you look closely at an ‘authoritarian left’ regime, you will find that ‘economic equality’ means that only the apparatchiks are permitted to have high standards of living. )(Millions of Russians lived in one-room flats with one shared bathroom per floor, while Comrade Stalin and his senior commissars lived in palaces built originally for the Tsars and their favourites. And while Fidel Castro imposed grinding poverty on his people in the name of equality, he himself died a billionaire.)

    In a number of critically important ways, the map fails to describe the territory. Only a fool (of which there are many) would reject the territory in order to cling to the map.

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    Replies
    1. A billionaire whose hearse was not functional, so there is that.

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  6. A J.V. Oligarch, or if possible, one with a bum leg.

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  7. I think that the US political spectrum is better modeled as a triangle with points labeled "stability", "equality", and "personal freedom". Conservatives, progressives, and libertarians each wish to maximize their respective point. Most people fall somewhere along the edge of the triangle, balancing two values while discarding the third.

    Post WWII, libertarians anchored the right, while progressives anchored the left. Conservatives were in the middle; blue-collar conservatives aligned with the left over issues like public schools, a social safety net, and unions, while white-collar conservatives aligned with the right over issues like free-trade, deregulation.

    This all began to change after the fall of the USSR. Libertarians and Progressives aligned over social issues, as well as the issue of increased immigration. Progressives even moved towards free trade for a variety of reasons. At the same time, both sides began to distance themselves from their conservative wings.

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  8. Biden won, so there are no mobs raging in the street ...

    Looks like you jumped to that conclusion a little too quickly.

    ReplyDelete

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