Thursday, 27 March 2014
A Light to Clear the Sky, or the Desire for Darkness? [Fidelity to a Fault]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srALym8j9MA; https://www.youtube.com/watch?; v=DItwLjGAZdk
''Well, if my heart must break,
Dear love, for your sake,
It will break in music, I know,
Poets' hearts break so'' - Oscar Wilde
Tuesday, 25 March 2014
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A 21C NAVIGATIONAL DILEMMA
The recent, unaccountable disappearance of Flight MH 370 is both a mystery and tragedy, for obvious human reasons. But it is also perplexing for what it says to me about human systems. For, complex as the machinery inside Flight MH 370 clearly was, those systems (in the plural), inter-operating within a wider system of aerial transportation, were designed by humans for humans.
Alex Malley, CEO of CPA Australia and head of the accountancy profession here has spoken about the need to account for value in Australian Parliament as well as Australian corporates. (It is a position shared, among others, by Prof Margaret Abernethy of Melbourne Business School). Malley argues that accountants ought to become more active in political life and even run for office. The corollary would be better representation and better governance, since accountants are trained to quantify and realise value.
I concur with Malley that we, as a nation, must account more fully for value generated by government and the corporate sector. At the same time, I suggested to Malley that over-representation of specific interests has per se locked out other voices from public life, and that Accountancy and Political Representation are themselves substrates of generalised value. Where value is unaccounted for - for example, in unfunded liabilities or off-balance sheet accounting - the estimation and realisation of sustainable value becomes nigh impossible.
Over the last few years, in light of the GFC and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as such, I have begun to worry about how we, as a human species, account for numeric and political value.
So what is Value? And what does it mean in the 21st Century?
MY BULLET-POINT OVERVIEW OF THE ''VALUE PROBLEM''
- Accounting systems, like aircraft machinery and electronics, are another question about system.
- Financialisation has contributed to liberalisation of political and economic systems. And to globalisation.
- How we account, however, ‘’COMPTER’’ is fundamental to WHO we are and aspire to be.
- Therefore, how do our ‘’entities’’ serve us? And what do we serve? (Cf scholastic debate, Aristotle, Marx, Smith) And of course Compte, who ironically counted on positivist organisation for secular progress.
- When does the rational spill over or elide into the irrational or bizarre, the grotesque or baroque?
- Units of account are generally abstracted, if not abstractions. Through time and inertia valuable, however, units of account in any system fall away from some conceptual or ethical UNITY toward a systemic mess or chaos.
- Which makes it all the more complex and vital to determine real value in our intellectual, commercial and cultural systems (Cf European Union and Euro Crisis, the writing of Ralston Saul, Pacioli, Malley and the humanist ideal espoused by Erasmus of Rotterdam).
- Are we living in an open system, or are we living in a closed, rationalist system which generates increasingly irrational externalities from its core product?
- At the bottom of every system – to generalise (and univeralise) the problem – is Paradox.
ONE PARADOX: A FUNDAMENTAL VALUE DISTORTION OR CONUNDRUM?
- Our political system is itself reducing representation through facilitating it, at least monetarily.
- Liberal democracy is either 1) not the ‘’end of history’’ and/or 2) institutionally threatened or decrepit from within and in need of revitalisation.
- So how do we define and ‘’refine’’ the relevant balance between the tangible and intangible, and, to beg the original question to any large-scale complex system made up of complex entities, what is the simplest thing we are aiming for and how do we reach it?
AND A READING LIST TO JOG YOUR THOUGHTS : )
Bibliography
Leszek Kolakowski, Satyajit Das, John Ralston Saul, Tony Judt, Joseph Stiglitz, John Hagel, Alain de Botton, Ron Ashkenas
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