We have spent a few posts looking
at Black Swans in economics and politics. Look at them as possible story lines
or back story items. This can be either in world building or single situations.
Can the reader see it if seen from the correct angle? For example, one can see
a Black Swan if one is the Thanksgiving turkey (see Part I – Are We Unknowingly
the Turkey) but there really isn’t any Black Swan from the farmers standpoint. The
turkey is dumbfounded but the farmer is full and satisfied. Is the reader the
turkey or the farmer?
L.E. Modesitt, Jr.’s series titled
The Ecolitan Matter consists of four books; The Ecolitan Operation, The
Ecologic Secession, The Ecologic Envoy and The Ecolitan Enigma. These books
explore economic, political and ecologic ideas and concepts. I highly recommend
all four as a good example of economic and political ideas. The books were
written from 1986 through 1997, during a time of several stock market crashes
(1987, 1992 and 1997), political upheaval and a renewed concern for the
environment. I will admit it is not hard to write books during times of stock
market crashes since they tend to happen every four to eight years. Modesitt
does a masterful job of including economic and political problems into his stories.
I find Modesitt’s use of economic and political principles very well done and
very true to form. Notice how he leaves much of the material as back story or
world building materials but enough is in the stories to make it easy to follow
and enjoy. He doesn’t burden the reader with too much detail.
Remember, economics and social
sciences are full of Black Swans. It is their very nature to be uncertain and
unpredictable. Review The Black Swan’s Mask (Part II) to see how we rationalize
our incorrect or missed predictions. Can a story be developed from looking
backwards through our missed prediction to a situation (reverse the process by creating
an outcome and looking backwards through a false prediction to the original
situation- which may be incorrect). Remember every world is full of floods that
happen only once in a 1,000 years. In The Black Swan – but I saw that Coming
(Part III) we looked at the outlier and the uncertain or unknown nature of such.
Again, the most important point is that
economics and political science are not true sciences in the way we think of science
as being measurable and predictable. Both are full of Black Swans, the unknown
and unknowable. Use that to your advantage.
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