I don't think pen-l should be a fan club for my old college roomie, Paul K,
but you folks may be interested in the following SLATE essay, where in the
process of trashing USVP Al Gore, he pooh-poohs both complexity and chaos
theory. Since he's a weathervane of the relatively enlightened orthodoxy of
the economics profession, maybe this sugggests a theoretical retrenchment,
a return to the equilibrium religion:

Algorithms: Probing the vice president's thought processes.
(from SLATE magazine)

 By Paul Krugman (posted Thursday, Feb. 12)

 A few weeks ago, for some reason that now escapes me, I began to wonder
what kind of president Al Gore would make. Never mind his character or his
private life--I leave such matters to the experts. What I'm interested in
is his mind. After all, Gore--like Clinton--is an unusually bookish
politician, one who reads serious tomes on serious subjects and even tries
to be a bit of an authority himself. Clinton's pre-presidential
intellectual tastes played a big role in determining the shape of his
administration's first couple of years. The same might be true of his loyal
lieutenant. And so I picked up a copy of Gore's 1992 environmental
manifesto, Earth in the Balance: Ecology and the Human Spirit. I can't pass
judgment on the scientific merits of the book's environmental analysis, but
Gore touches on areas where I do know something and, in so doing, he gives
me some important clues to his intellectual style.

 Perhaps the best way to think about Gore the thinker is to contrast him
with Clinton. Both men are deeply wonkish, clearly enjoying nothing (well,
almost nothing) more than long discussions on how to save the world with a
simple 22-point program. But the objects of their affections differ.
Clinton is most attracted by matters social and economic, Gore by matters
environmental and scientific. Clinton is the kind of guy who attends panel
discussions at Renaissance Weekend and pores over the New York Review of
Books. Gore pays personal calls on physicists and curls up with Scientific
American. And while Clinton, before Bob Rubin took him in hand, was a
rather credulous consumer of pop economics, Gore's corresponding vice seems
to be pop science.

 Which is not to say that Earth in the Balance is entirely free from pop
econ. The book contains a chapter, lamentably titled "Eco-nomics," that
perpetuates the oddly popular myth that conventional economic theory is
constitutionally incapable of dealing with environmental problems. "Many
popular textbooks on economic theory fail even to address subjects as basic
to our economic choices as pollution or the depletion of natural
resources," Gore declares. Actually, I have all the leading introductory
texts on my shelf (I'm writing one myself and am trying to steal my
competitors' ideas), and every one has an extensive section on
environmental issues. One looks in vain in Gore's book for even a mention
of the fundamentals of standard environmental economics: pollution as the
prime example of an "externality" (a social cost that the market does not
properly value), and the standard recommendation that externalities be
corrected with pollution taxes or tradable emission permits. (I wrote about
the economics of environmentalism in Slate last year, in "Earth in the
Balance Sheet.") Since these concepts have actually made their way from
theory into practice, one wonders how he missed them. The introduction of
tradable permits was an important feature of the 1990 revision of the Clean
Air Act, for example, and both fees and permits have been crucial in
efforts to protect the ozone layer.

 But for me, at least, the really revealing part of Earth in the Balance
was the book's conclusion, where Gore talks about sandpiles and how they
changed his life.

 Sandpiles, for those unfamiliar with pop science trends, are the
motivating example for a concept known as "self-organized criticality,"
which, in turn, is one of the Big Ideas of so-called "complexity theory."
Imagine allowing sand to slowly trickle onto an existing pile. Bit by bit
the pile's sides will become steeper. When they become too steep--when they
exceed some "critical" slope--there will be an avalanche. In simplified
computer models of sandpiles (though not, apparently, in all real
sandpiles), a curious pattern emerges. Because the slope of the sandpile is
always close to its critical value, dropping a single grain of sand on the
pile can produce anything from no effect to a massive sand slide.
Specifically, the distribution of avalanche sizes follows a particular
mathematical form known as a "power law" that is found in many natural and
some social phenomena, such as the sizes of earthquakes and the sizes of
cities. (For an example of the power law applied to city size, click here.)

 What Per Bak, the Danish physicist who came up with the sandpile metaphor,
has argued is that because sandpile-type models produce power laws, and
because there are lots of power laws out there in the real world, such
models hold the key to understanding, well, everything. Bak's book
explaining this idea is modestly titled How Nature Works. The reaction of
his colleagues, as best I can tell, is that the sandpile model is
interesting, as is the prevalence of power laws, but that his claims of
having developed a universal theory are a bit premature. (For more on power
laws, click here.)

 If you are wondering what all this has to do with saving the planet,
congratulations. But here is what Gore, who made a pilgrimage to see Bak,
has to say:

 "The sandpile theory--self-organized criticality--is irresistible as a
metaphor; one can begin by applying it to the developmental stages of a
human life. The formation of identity is akin to the formation of the
sandpile, with each person being unique and thus affected by events
differently. A personality reaches the critical state once the basic
contours of its distinctive shape are revealed; then the impact of each new
experience reverberates throughout the whole person, both directly, at the
time it occurs, and indirectly, by setting the stage for future change.
Having reached this mature configuration, a person continues to pile up
grains of experience, building on the existing base. But sometimes, at
midlife, the grains start to stack up as if the entire pile is still
pushing upward, still searching for its mature shape. The unstable
configuration that results makes one vulnerable to a cascade of change. In
psychological terms, this phenomenon is sometimes called a midlife change."

 This may sound silly, and it is. But it is a time-honored kind of
silliness. Gore is in the grand tradition of those who thought that
Einstein's theory of relativity refuted not only classical physics but also
conventional morality; or those who imagined that because quantum mechanics
showed that the apparent solidity of the material world is an illusion, it
vindicated the thoughts of Eastern mystics. In the end, these particular
confusions don't seem to have done the world any harm. So why not let Gore
find solace in sandpiles?

 One answer is that the speed with which sexy-sounding scientific ideas get
picked up by popular culture is getting alarmingly high: from Physical
Review Letters to the latest best seller by Tom Peters almost before you
know it. This is arguably starting to distort the practice of science
itself. As geologist Nathan Winslow puts it in a gently skeptical review on
self-organized criticality, "A theory can, once in the pop science regime,
acquire a level of acceptance and momentum that may or may not be warranted
by its actual scientific credibility." And the track record of pop science
enthusiasms is uniformly dismal. Does anyone remember cybernetics or
catastrophe theory? Does anyone know what happened to chaos? It would be
unfortunate if the already worrying faddishness of science were to receive
a presidential seal of approval.

 I also have a more specific worry: that a President Gore would give undue
credence to the views of his favorite pop science heroes and their friends.
Occasionally, I have a nightmarish vision in which the Santa Fe Institute,
that temple of "complexity theory" (whose heavy hitters include Bak,
biologist Stuart Kauffman and, yes, economist Brian Arthur [*]) actually
starts
having direct input into major policy decisions. Now that would be scary.

 But I guess I shouldn't take that nightmare seriously. For one thing,
Earth in the Balance was written a long time ago, and we may suppose that
its author has learned a lot since then. And anyway Gore, if and when he
becomes president, is no more likely to give his personal gurus any real
influence than Bill Clinton would have been to place important policy
decisions in the hands of, say, Ira Magaziner.

(Paul Krugman is a professor of economics at MIT whose books include The
Age of Diminished Expectations and Peddling Prosperity. His home page
contains links to many of his other articles and essays.)

[*] this refers to his earlier trashing of Arthur.

in pen-l solidarity,


Jim Devine   [EMAIL PROTECTED] &
http://clawww.lmu.edu/1997F/ECON/jdevine.html
"It takes a busload of faith to get by." -- Lou Reed.


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