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Dogeman
replied 2319d
It is the pace of change some people just don't grasp. Check into exonomics. Abundance is coming. Are you ready?
replied 2319d
Or you can say were on an exponential and we can still make accurate enough predictions about the future, but this contradicts your claim we can’t project these trends.
Dogeman
replied 2318d
Most experts do not think this way. Most experts use linear progressions when dealing with exponential technologies. Solar is coming faster than any expert has predicted.
replied 2319d
So, if you want to say “because the trend is exponential we cannot follow any trends” how do we follow the exponential trend?
Dogeman
replied 2318d
By being the change, not owning it.
replied 2316d
Not “how do we adapt to the exponential trend” how does the exponential trend provide any predictive power if we are discrediting the ability of trends to predict the future.
replied 2319d
However to construct the exponential trend (and project it into the future, because what else are trends good for?) you have to rely on historical data.
Dogeman
replied 2318d
You can't compare a linear progression to an exponential one.
replied 2316d
You suggested bc of trend A past trends no longer predict the future. Thus trend F will happen. I countered with, if past trends no longer predict the future A doesn’t hold either.
replied 2316d
You say were on an exponential trend and that this trend will continue into the future, A. I’ve said demand increases to match supply and this trend will continue into the future, E.
replied 2316d
Made a graph bc bored.
replied 2319d
You suggested we are increasing (I assume technologically) at an exponential rate and thus we could not rely on historical data to predict the future.
Dogeman
replied 2318d
Yes, when something doubles at .01 to .02 to .04 its deceptive and mimics a linear trend. But disruption comes in eventually and people can't catch up with it.
replied 2319d
Sorry should have explained more earlier but had to run. only point was on the paradox you set up. I suggested looking at historical trends to see if demand matched increasing supply