On Sun, Jul 20, 2008 at 01:18:19PM +0530, Amit Varma wrote:
> Very nice piece, Udhay. I loved "The Machinery of Freedom", it's a great
> primer on anarcho libertarianism, lucid and compelling. But it seems to me
> that anarchy is unstable in the sense that governments (and states) of some
> sort are inevitable. In any situation where no one is in charge, it is

Degree of cooperation (or defection) is a function of the agent's intelligence
(ability to track past interactions), and frequency of interaction.

In humans cooperation is empirically also a function of consensus/climate.
The same kind of agent makeup can support a wide spectrum of degrees of
cooperation/defection.

> inevitable that you'll have power politics, with affiliations forming on the
> basis of territory or common interests or shared ethnicity or whatever.
> That's human nature. And those struggles will result in governments and

Human nature needs not be a constant. We've been running on unsupported
neolithic firmware for too long.

> states of some sort.
> 
> That's just my personal feeling on the subject, of course: we have no way of
> finding out.

But of course we have.

-- 
Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org";>leitl</a> http://leitl.org
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