freediver wrote on Sep 5
th, 2020 at 8:48am:
In Homo Deus, Yuval Noah Harari equates the modern era with the 'scientific' discovery of ignorance, the abandonment of the zero sum game in economics, to be replaced with infinite growth. This is all about how people view the world, not the actual reality. The two concepts go hand in hand.
I have often wondered where the infinite growth thing comes from. It is often used as a criticism of either economic theory or of capitalism, or of both by people who cannot tell the difference. Capitalism and economics do not actually depend on it. However, it is faith in infinite growth that makes people prepared to go on lending money to entrepreneurs with the expectation that they are likely to make more money with it an repay the loan with interest. This belief did not exist in the past, so it was harder to come by a loan.
Like so much else in Homo Deus, Dataism serves chiefly to express Harari’s great gullibility, his willingness to believe what some scientists say without wondering whether what they say is true. Dataism is not the holy grail; it is not a coherent theory; it is not about to unify anything. But, then, death is not a technological problem, and the singularity is an infantile fantasy.
Men are not about to become like gods.
Harari has been misinformed.
https://inference-review.com/article/godzooks#When:00:35:00Zyou might find this review informative.