[deleted]
Hi, Edwin,
I have read your essay, and, as last year, am not up to the math you use, but think I get the drift philosophically. It seems to me that the issues of humanity steering the future are philosophical, but it is good to see analogies being made from different directions as you do for those who get the math. Your summary in plain ol' English, with which I am in almost total agreement, tells me that in general I got the point of your math examples. I especially appreciate your insistence that individual freedom cannot be divorced from individual decision-making. Tyranny can be measured by the level of theft of decision-making by the government from we, the people.
My "almost" above refers to your comments on page 9 to an "educational fund" to replace welfare. Would not that be replacing one welfare with another? As a friend of mine used to say, public education is welfare education. When we had free-market education, which began to be taken over by government thanks to Horace Mann (got his inspiration from Prussia in the early 1800's, probably the most militarisic nation in the world at the time), we had the most well-educated population in the world. Now, thanks to govt control, look at us. Parents love their children, govt bureaucracies do not.
So I think that if we would readjust to a free-market education system, the problem of welfare would begin to disappear. Families, churches, and other ngo's would take on both the education and the welfare problem. I do not see that happening without a major spiritual renewal in the American churches, leading to a restoration of the Biblical form of limited government with which we were blessed 1776-89 - the Declaration and Constitution - of, by, and for the people in which the people were sovereign over the government.
So the steering of the future is, I think, even more than philosophical, a spiritual problem, as outlined in my essay. Who is God? It will be either the real God or it will be a monster civil government, not under the law and grace of God.
Best wishes, Earle