Fluidity - the way to true DemoKratia

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Lulu.com, Jan 29, 2017 - Business & Economics - 350 pages
If we are to save the planet, if we are to save democracy we must create a new way. That new way is Fluidity. Put universal income with a new currency and a monetary flow siphon and you have a stable base to build anew. In two parts and 300+ pages David J Campbell tells us why our economic and social systems are flawed and how to fix them. This is not a flippant ""we should do this"" or ""we could implement that"" but rather a simple but profound change that harmonises the revolutions that are already radically changing our lives. Embracing technological change and innovation, from AI to cryptocurrencies, Fluidity says a lack of work is a good thing. More leisure makes us happier, healthier, smarter and thus more inventive. We do not need our leaders to make these changes but rather we can create a new socioeconomic system in parallel with the old. It will make you question your beliefs. It will inspire you. It will give you answers. Fluidity is the future.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
We are close to tipping point
7
Hierarchies are Bad
20
Neurogenesis and Epigenetics The Creation of Class
38
But Dont We Naturally Create Hierarchies?
56
Why Demokratia is better than democracy or anarchy or
69
Environmental Collapse from Rigid Inequality
88
Rational
105
What is the Flow Siphon Flat Payment FSFP and Why Those
193
What is Monetary Democracy?
209
Further Equilising Effect of the Land RentTax
225
Global Governance
231
How does Fluidity affect the FSFP?
237
So what are our new numbers?
243
Culture and Countries
245
Conflict over Ideology?
258

Supply and Demand
114
Unlimited Wants and Scarcity
121
Money
141
How We Really Behave
150
Fluidity
171
What We Need to Implement
177
Server Array
294
Next we will need to create the exile prison and some form of court
301
How to get around current regulations
307
Appendix 1
320
Appendix 2
326
Copyright

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About the author (2017)

As a child in New York, author Joseph Campbell (1904-1987) became interested in Native Americans and mythology through books about American Indians and visits to the American Museum of Natural History. He wrote more than 40 books including The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949), The Mythic Image (1974), and The Power of Myth (1988) with Bill Moyers, and is now considered one of the foremost interpreters of sacred tradition in modern time. Campbell earned his B.A. and M.A. degrees at Columbia University in 1925 and 1927, but quit the doctoral program when he was told that mythology was not an acceptable subject for his thesis. He subsequently studied medieval French and Sanskrit in Paris and Germany, taught at the Canterbury School, and in 1934, joined the literature department at Sarah Lawrence College. During the 1940s and 1950s he collaborated with Swami Nikhilananda on translations of the Upanishads and The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna.

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