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Author Topic: Painting a Black Swan  (Read 6209 times)

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Painting a Black Swan
« on: June 02, 2010, 08:53:02 pm »

"Black Swans" are history-changing events that are nearly unpredictable. Europeans believed that all swans are white; when it was discovered that there where indeed black swans in some Austrailian territories, it simply forced a change in thinking that had been entirely unexpected.

Naturally, the discovery of the existence of europeans did not particularly disturb the swans, but the aboriginal groups of Oceana and much of the rest of the colonial world where somewhat suprised, particularly when they believed that the horizon was the edge of the world. The arrival of the first anglo-saxon explorers would generally be a black swan event.

The sudden outbreak of the first world war now seems obvious, but the sudden coallecense of mechanized warfare, tactics, and the collapse of the treaties that held Europe up was at the time unprecedented. Indeed, there are a number of historical examples of dark Black Swans, ones that herald catastrophy and conflict. Before the turn of the century, most United States citizens considered terrorism to be a distant problem; Noone could predict the effect that nuclear weapons would have on the global community. The Hindenburg disaster, Chernoble, and the Black Plauge, are all Black Swans. But Black Swans are not always strictly bad; the popularization of the printing press, for instance, and the end of the cold war, man walking on the moon.

Indeed, most of our cherished inventions where Black Swans, in particular because they did things in new and unexpected ways. One of the more recent Black Swan inventions would be communication networks, or put simply, the internet.

Most Black Swans are neither good nor bad, or otherwise still so obscure in effect and total reach that we are still not sure how it will end up. The massive popularization of the Automobile, for instance, drove the transformation of the daily  lives of perhaps the majority of humanity.

We may be upcoming upon new Black Swans as we speak; Though it seems predictable now, obviously noone at BP predicted that the  Deepwater Horizon well could self-destruct as it has. It's massive, truamatic impact has yet to be fully comprehended, and may change the way the public thinks about ecological safety thuroughly and deeply.


By it's very definition, no one could reasonably predict the effects that a Black Swan could have, but they are not always beyond total comprehension. It is thus possible to guess what form our next Black Swan could take, but it's of little use beyond idle speculation. Since this is an internet forum we're basically here for idle speculation, however.


Of course, there are a few obvious Swans that can quite possibly occur:

- Thermonuclear War
- Major Catastrophic Climate Change
- Similar to above, high-level volcanic event such as a "supervolcano" or asteroid impact.
- Proof of extra-terrestrial life
- Proof of extra-terrestrial intelegence
- Proof of non-human terrestrial intelegence
- Artificial intelegence
- Sudden Economic collapse
- Invention of controlled fusion with net energy gain.
- Conventional "world" war, most likely involving China, India, Pakistan, and much of the mideast, possibly over the resources present in Myanmarr, and potential for limited US involvement.
- Manned landing on non-terrestrial planet such as Mars
- Large-scale industrialization of space
- New physical laws discovered with practical application (easy  teleportation, new energy sources, transmutation of elements)
- Application of known laws in unexpected ways (practical space elevator, similar orbital development using new launch methods, popularization of miniturized production plants)


Of course, there are others. One of my favorites of this less-popular class are:

- Cultural shift away from conventional technology (In other words, end of techie "fad" as new people refuse to buy mp3 players, computers for use other than as tools, and otherwise less gadget-intensive life-styles.)
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smigenboger

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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #1 on: June 02, 2010, 09:16:19 pm »

Perhaps profound anti-religion sentiment, or newfound sentiment.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #2 on: June 02, 2010, 09:19:25 pm »

Enter WW III, and the new age of space travel!
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #3 on: June 02, 2010, 10:01:47 pm »

What are we discussing exactly.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #4 on: June 02, 2010, 10:54:19 pm »

We are discussing Black Swans and what the next one will be.
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Josephus

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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #5 on: June 02, 2010, 11:00:57 pm »

Enter WW III, and the new age of space travel!

"I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones" - Albert Einstein
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #6 on: June 03, 2010, 04:06:27 am »

First Black President? Lots of factors in that one coming together.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #7 on: June 03, 2010, 04:48:17 am »

"Black Swans" are history-changing events that are nearly unpredictable.
I don't see how many, if not most of the examples you've provided fit that second clause.
Man on the Moon unpredictable? Maybe a hundred years before. Everyone was expecting either US or Soviets to get there eventually. The progression from Ciolkowski's ideas(or even Verne's) to the actual landing was gradual and not sudden, as you suggest.

Same for IWW - the masses, who never cared about anything outside their neighbourhood and their priest's sermons might've felt surprised by it's outbreak. But the leaders of European superpowers surely must've seen it coming, and it was no earth-shattering event for them(as indicated by how well were their armies prepared for war).

I could argue that also Black Plague doesn't fit there, as it was but one of many other plagues, a piece of daily bread for people back then.

Chernobyl, rise of terrorism, Hindenburg - these seem more to showcase short sightedness and wishful thinking of some people rather than really unexpected events(so you fill the balloon with explosive hydrogen and are surprised that it burns? Oh, really?).
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #8 on: June 03, 2010, 05:04:17 am »

Quote
Same for IWW - the masses, who never cared about anything outside their neighbourhood and their priest's sermons might've felt surprised by it's outbreak. But the leaders of European superpowers surely must've seen it coming, and it was no earth-shattering event for them(as indicated by how well were their armies prepared for war).

“If there is ever another war in Europe, it will come out of some damned silly thing in the Balkans”. Otto von Bismarck, circa 1888
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #9 on: June 03, 2010, 06:28:22 am »

First Black President? Lots of factors in that one coming together.

First illegal immigrant as president! ;D

Right now, everyone's still coping with terrorism. Conventional war has been about hitting the strong men where they are strongest. Guerrilla warfare is about hitting the strong men where they are weakest. Terrorism is about hitting the weak men anywhere. It's sacrifices all moral ground, but it's impossible to hit an enemy when you have no idea where the enemy is. America's tying itself up in massive defense costs because they don't know who to attack or even where to defend. They spend trillions on building nukes and precision weapons, but can't use them because they don't have a target. I see terrorism being a more common tactic for future wars. It's something that blind-sided them so much that they declared war on the whole concept.

My prediction:
1. Fall of capitalism. Prices of manufacturing individual goods is dropping to nothing. Especially with things like software. Capitalism isn't working very well here.
2. Change in religious sentiment. I think there's been a massive shift in religious beliefs throughout the last 50 years. Some big religions get smaller, at least four small ones getting more popular. Middle eastern religion is becoming significantly more organized, western religion fighting to be more secular.
3. Fall of Israel. Israel's a horse that a lot of nations are betting on or against, but they're losing out. That flotilla raid was Turkey's Pearl Harbour - they've been very ambivalent on Israel, and that's just shoved them and much of the EU towards the hostile side of the fence.
4. Nuclear weapons. As people begin to accept terrorism as a valid war strategy, it'd be more morally acceptable to kill civilians. WW2 Japan will be used as propaganda of nukes = peace. Guns were once immoral. Planes were immoral. Cruise missiles were immoral. There's going to be a time when some country owns nukes and nukes no longer become immoral.
5. Electric car. One of the founders of Better Place gave a talk about how they planned to give everyone electric cars, make a pile of profits, and help the average person save money. This includes revolutionizing the energy grid. It also means that petrol prices will drop massively.. all those nations reliant on oil exports.. well...
6. Quantum mechanics, nanotechnology, and signal processing. There growing fast like the electrical companies were boosting up in the 80s. I've seen some amazing things done with them and studied under one of the pioneers. Huge bonuses to almost every field in every day life, it'll change life just the way the computer did. And at least introduce more privacy concerns.

What this means is pretty unpredictable, but I bet they'll be significant.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #10 on: June 03, 2010, 03:06:47 pm »

I don't think Obama qualifies. Sure, it is a first, but hardly world changing shit.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #11 on: June 03, 2010, 04:55:10 pm »

Same for IWW - the masses, who never cared about anything outside their neighbourhood and their priest's sermons might've felt surprised by it's outbreak. But the leaders of European superpowers surely must've seen it coming, and it was no earth-shattering event for them(as indicated by how well were their armies prepared for war).

I agree. The European leaders all knew a war was coming and they all figured it'd be an enormous one. Whether or not the actual war itself was a different one to what some expected, it was certainly predicted (and hell, no wars really go the way you expect). I think what could be considered a black swan here is the near total depletion of an entire generation of men in many places around the world.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #12 on: June 03, 2010, 05:02:08 pm »

While the fact that there could be a war was certainly predictable, the first world war completely changed the way wars where fought, and they changed the way the majority of humanity thought of war.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #13 on: June 03, 2010, 10:09:57 pm »

AI won't pull a black swan- it might appear in the public eye to change suddenly, but really it's a gradual process of imitating parts of human behavior.

Also not sure that a mars landing would be a big impact- cool, for sure but we knew it was technically possible before and I doubt we'd find anything of direct import to terrestrial life in short order.
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Re: Painting a Black Swan
« Reply #14 on: June 03, 2010, 11:23:19 pm »

Democrats and Republicans agreeing on most things would probably signal the end of the world.
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