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In Search of the Economic Warp Drive

This entry was posted on Mar 15 2010 by Dan Robles

The Next Economic Paradigm is a very simple idea yet the overwhelming majority of people have absolutely no idea what we’re talking about.  The strangest part of this work is the knowledge that eventually this will become completely obvious to everyone and the transformation, from beginning to end, will take a very short period of time.

My greatest curiosity is imagining when and how this moment will arrive.

I recently saw the latest Star Trek re-boot where an old Dr. Spock encountered the exiled young Space Propulsions Engineer named Montgomery Scott who had been convicted of attempting a mash-up between warp drive and atomic particle transporting with the commander’s pet schnauzer – where the term “mash-up” was implied to be quite literal.

Um,…the dog wags the tail.

The epiphany came when the older Spock suggested that Scotty’s approach was backward.  Instead of assuming that Space was stationary and the spacecraft was moving, Scotty should assume that the Space is moving and the spacecraft is stationary.

In one fell swoop, all the calculations finally made sense.  A good theory became practical.  All those nasty side effects – like bringing the schnauzer atoms back together – were no longer a problem.  Lo and behold, the Federation was saved.

Of course everyone knows what warp drive is and what transporters do, yet the science involved with their actual construction of these devices remains intensely complex.  The same can be said for our financial system. Everyone knows how to buy a can of tuna fish, but the actual formulation of that transaction is intensely complex.

We have developed a vast set of processes, techniques, and infrastructure around the basic idea that markets are dynamic.  Everyone knows that markets change and move and they behave in many strange ways in response to price inputs, scarcity, surplus, legislation and ideology.

Meanwhile, people are defined by what they consume – like red dots and blue dots on a political district chart, demographic data points, owner/renter, winner/loser, jobbed /not jobbed, young /old, first class/coach, etc.

And that is just the way it is … and the only way it can be.

Now suppose Dr. Spock was to beam down and suggest that markets are static and people are dynamic.  Imagine everyone staring at the can of tuna just sitting there, lonely, dusty and static, doing absolutely nothing except being a can of tuna on a stationary shelf, in an inanimate “market”.

The epiphany is that human knowledge assets are completely and irrevocably tangible in every way, shape, and form. Humans allocate and trade social capital, creative capital, and intellectual capital with each other in infinite ways, sometimes resulting in a can of tuna in a market.

All knowledge assets are tangible in the right exchange system.

I wonder what they will call it?

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6 Responses to “In Search of the Economic Warp Drive”

  1. I believe the word is “intellectual currency”. The real estate between your ears is more valuable then anything else that you might own. Thoughts and ideas are worth tremendous amounts of money if they are gestated into concrete actions. How much would you have paid for the idea behind Google, twitter or Facebook. Can idea still have value if it hasnt made a dime? YES!

    The internet and social media has become one of the prime ways that people can share ideas and advice. Much of it free (which makes things even more remarkable). Somewhere out there are million and BILLION dollar ideas, thoughts that can and WILL change the world and we have unique acess to these ideas unavailable at any other time in history. What will be interesting is if these ideas will continue to flow freely or if they will be guarded jealously. Perhaps in the future, there will be an exchange on the internet or some other medium where ideas would have monetary value. Great ideas would obviously be worth more, but its hard to put a value on them before they are implimented. It going to take a sea change in how we see the world for people to take the intangible possibilities of an idea and give it a tangible value, but things are moving in that direction.


  2. @Clint: Thanks for the comment you are spot on in your thinking. I run across countless intellectuals, accountants and consultants who will argue to the end of the earth that knowledge is intangible “because you can’t hold it in your hands”. Yeah, but you can hold it between your EARS…I wonder when we’ll figure that one out.

    Here is a GREAT video worth the time….it’s about cognitive surplus.

    http://laughingsquid.com/clay-shirky-on-cognitive-surplus/

    BTW, I believe that an innovation economy will follow the knowledge economy and it will be built on a platform of social media. You obviously see something new coming too. Bravo.


  3. Thank you for the kind words Dan. Everyone at CFM really seems to have embraced social media and its possibilities as part of your company. I hope to be able to contribute more directly in the future.


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