Thursday, December 1, 2022

An afternoon in Oxford

 Enjoying my time visiting Sarayu at Oxford. She is in the midst of her essay, and asked I spend some hours by myself this afternoon. It turned out quite amazing. First, there are more book shops with each five minute walk in Oxford than with every five hours drive in Atlanta, and book shops are the ultimate refuge to any person lost in the whims of thought and exploration. One can spend hours in a book store and get into the minds of the writer and vicariously live in their worlds.

Beyond bookstores, Oxford has such a density of pubs, museums, colleges, old buildings, and history.  After spending an hour at a bookstore, delighted at the “Poetry corner”, I decided to search for the oldest pub in Oxford, and after some inquiring found “The Turtle” – only the second oldest pub and in existence since 1381. It is in the back of beyond, and a long walk through the cobbled streets into almost a cave-like location. It has an inviting entrance “Education in intoxication”!  Once discovered, is an anthropologist’s delight!  Sitting alone with half a pint of lager, one had only three options……stay to oneself, eavesdrop, or start conversations with strangers. The clientele was as diverse as Oxford itself.

My eavesdropping skills got me into the world of the young Oxford university students, diverse, and a group obviously majoring in Oxford’s reputed triple major in philosophy, political science, and economy. The conversation I overheard was incredible, diverse, beautifully logical, ranging from Plato’s “Republic” to Machiavelli’s “Prince” and also a smattering of Confucius, Sun Tzu, and Kautilya’s Arthashastra, and of course,  contemporary UK politics and Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak.

While I admired this eloquence and thoughtfulness among the young, my ears also did not miss the rather rowdy and loud conversation in another table, occupied by older local non-university types. One stream of conversation made me realize how a section of old white male Brits is unhappy about their new prime minister. A guy ranted “Our nation is going down, imagine a fuckin Paki becoming our leader. His wife is supposed to be very rich, but she is obviously not shagging him enough” (ad verbatim) Then one of the woman on that table says “But you voted Tory” and this guy replies, “What choice did we have, this Paki shit or allowing Germans to take us over”. The woman persists “Rishi is not Paki, he is Indian-Brit”, and the guy goes “It does not matter, they are all the same”.

I turned left, and there was an Australian family, and I said hello to them, and this was a beautiful conversation. I learned about their roots seven generations ago, their forebears sent to Australia as convicts, and how the family is searching for true identity and empathizes with the Aborigines who have suffered colonization is ways more cruel than their own ancestors did. We ate a fabulous chocolate cake together, exchanged addresses and parted.

On the way back, I stopped at the Museum of Science, and this was a grand finale to a wonderful afternoon. The warden at the museum asks me my name and immediately tells me about “Venkat, the famous off spinner”, and takes me through four centuries of the progress of science, and we end up at the basement to read about Einstein, and as the museum closed at 5 PM, I leave promising to return tomorrow…………………and he has given me a quiz to guess his name……………..a five digit number, and his first name that of a Holocaust survivor. Above all, his parting remark, “science not religion, art not morality, humanity not tribalism” is our redemption…………………I look forward to seeing him again tomorrow.

 Venkat

Sunday, November 27, 2022

Thanksgiving reflections

 

An occasion to thank life for everything it has offered - the good, the bad, the ugly. The exhilarating highs and the spectacular lows. The great joys and the excruciating pains. The great successes and wonderful failures.  The ever-changing ephemeral nature of life, and the seeming illusion of temporary permanence. 

Above all, a big gratitude for the amazing journey of living, learning, and loving, and living, learning, and loving, over and over again. A life of living and lived experience, with the continuous nourishment of curiosity, compassion, and romance, active days and the deep slumber of night.   

The purpose of life is life itself, needs no other seeking of meaning, no prompts or crutches, where true joy is in the amazement of discovery and learning, to understand, to create, and to navigate complexity, and being agnostic to cause and consequence of every phenomena. 

It is but a mysterious game, this life, and we are but in the transience of our own carbon cycles. It is what we make it to be, and everything relies on our own ability (talent, intellect, emotions, spiritual), our own ability alone, to view all things with equanimity and grace, to appreciate the good and the bad, the joys and the pain, and to use our reason and thoughts to guide us to greater resilience and adaptiveness, without resort to regrets or to blame. 

The best part of life is living with the knowledge that when our moment arrives to exit, we can exit with joy knowing full well that we have given to our lives everything we have had to give, and have taken from it everything that there is to take. 

Never judging the deck of cards we were served with, neither gloating nor complaining, but holding ourselves to playing the best game possible with the cards we were and are served. Therein lies the ultimate experience, embracing all things being and nonbeing, with a spirit of freedom, curiosity, learning, adventure, and oneness - belonging to all and belonging to none at one and the same time.

Friday, June 17, 2022

What might one advise the upcoming generation?

 What might one advise the upcoming generation?


It is a very fast changing world in every way, and the future needs a mindset of adaptability, innovation, opportunism, resilience, initiative, and collaboration. 


You do not know what new ways the world is going to change, but you need to know that it will change fast and surprisingly. So, be prepared to grasp opportunities, leverage like hell, communicate, and shape prospects proactively. 


Most important of all, learn skills and ideas from various mentors, but don't model yourself entirely after any one of them – as the world you will occupy will be different from the ones they have occupied. 


The future belongs to the creative and to the fearless, who know how to take risks and how to collaborate and share credits and power. 


Venkat

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Precise words often misused in language

 Always amazes me how these very precise words are often misused in language………………………………

Economics
- Wrong usage: Referring to money (Finance is what refers to money)
- Correct meaning: Science/framework for explicit value decisions, which involves trade-offs, opportunity cost (benefits foregone)
Chaos
- Wrong usage: complete disorder and confusion
- Correct meaning: innately ordered behavior so unpredictable due to great sensitivity to initial conditions
Complexity
- Wrong usage: complicated situation, confusing situation, too many variables
- Correct meaning: System with underlying statistical properties of many inter-connected parts
Random
- Wrong usage: Haphazard, without definite aim, direction, rule, or method
- Correct meaning: Selection of an item from a set through a process that ensures an equal (or known) probability of selections

Saturday, April 9, 2022

Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny

 

One of the best books on societies I have ever read was Robert Wright’s “Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny”. 

 It is a comprehensive account of how biology and societies have evolved all the way from unicellular organisms to more and more complex systems. What is striking is the tensions between stability (kind of feudal authoritarian order), and growth (adaptation and democratic freedoms) have always coexisted (even in less evolved species than Homo Sapiens). So too, competition and cooperation coexist, as does large power dominance and empathy for the little guy. It is a complex and dynamic mixture, very mysterious and often unpredictable about which of these sides is dominant and when - but each having its value. 

However, what is hopeful is that an analysis over time indicates that cooperation (nonzero sum) wins over competition (zero sum), and it is almost a naturally evolving process – there is no central control to this dynamic state, and in fact, central control upsets the dynamism. If left alone, and the mysteries of complexity accepted as a mixture of patterns (competition and cooperation, selfishness and altruism, authoritarian feudalism and liberal democracy) of varying degree at varying time, “systems” evolve and perform for optimal maximum (stability, function, and purpose). 

https://www.amazon.com/Nonzero-Logic-Destiny-Robert-Wright/dp/0679758941 

His subsequent book was titled “Moral Animal” – where he takes the thesis to what morality means (or does not) in this kind of a complex dynamic order, and oftentimes, the moral values obtained or desired in linear simple systems (which is how most people think) don’t hold at all (in fact, are violations) of complex dynamic evolving systems. The conclusion is that survival of systems (as they grow complex) naturally end up favoring cooperation over competition in the long run of adaptive evolution, but does not mean that at every point in time and in every part of the system this will be the case. 

https://www.amazon.com/Moral-Animal-Science-Evolutionary-Psychology/dp/0679763996

 

 

Saturday, March 5, 2022

Russia-Ukraine Conflict Viewed Through the Lens of Complexity and Changing World Order

 

Russia-Ukraine Conflict Viewed Through the Lens of Complexity and Changing World Order

 

K.M. Venkat Narayan

 

         As Ukraine reels under and resists a sustained onslaught by Russian transgression, the world community is shocked and moved by the brutality. The toll on civilians, displacement of nearly a million people, and the pictures of utter destruction have pained people across the world.  Yet, the world at large remains lost about how the situation can be controlled or what set of actions might work.

There can be no justification for this inhumane war and the utmost human suffering that have been unleashed on Ukraine by Putin.  The Russian invasion of Ukraine disregards all international conventions and rule of law. The atrocity has to be unequivocally condemned. But beyond condemnation, what will work and what will not?

To fully understand the crisis and to evolve effective policy, it is important to examine the event from the lens of complexity and the changing world order.  

         First, starting from the end of the Cold War, and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russia has increasingly been uneasy about the eastward expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and of the European Union (EU), and of the weakening of the Warsaw Pact.  These together with the spread of democracy into the former Communist nations of Eastern Europe have threatened Russia, which has increasingly felt a loss of pride and power. As John Mearsheimer of the University Chicago wrote in Foreign Affairs in 2014, contrary to conventional wisdom that places the entire blame on Russian aggression, the policies and actions of the liberal world order of promoting democracy, NATO and EU expansion eastward, led by western Europe and the United States, have threatened and provoked Putin. His aggressive actions on Crimea, Georgia, and Ukraine all probably stem from this mindset of paranoia and fear. Against this context of distrust and fear, it is difficult to engage Putin in any meaningful negotiation or for him to even listen.

         Second, the best instrument for international negotiations and peace that we have, the United Nations (UN), seems to be faltering and losing credibility and teeth. Established in the aftermath of World War II, the UN largely reflects the power structure and priorities of that time, and still retains disproportionate and veto powers in the hands of five countries, the United States, Russia, Britain, France, and China. Furthermore, over the seventy-seven years of its existence, there have been numerous unfortunate instances of the agency’s policies driven by the interests and values of western Europe and the United States. It has also been the case that the agency has not been consistent in its condemnation of transgressions of international law, and of human rights, and is viewed by several nations of being tight-lipped toward some nations, especially, powerful ones, such as the United States, while being unduly harsh toward others with political positions in opposition to the western nations.  This perception of the UN as an agency dominated by Western Europe and its allies has impaired its ability to act effectively and collectively. Even in the recent vote condemning Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, countries representing the majority of the world population either abstained (as was the case with China and India) or stood behind Russia.

         Third, the world is changing rapidly in terms of economic, military, and cultural powers. The rapid growth across the low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), nations that has been gated out of the industrial revolution during the 19th and 20th centuries, has begun to change the global landscape. This is altering the global dynamics of power, with the two most populated countries of the world, China and India, rapidly ascending in influence. China is already a leading economy and military power, and India though some years behind China is also on that trajectory, as are numerous Asian nations. This means the rise of Asia as an important region of the world in terms of global strategies. Simultaneously, several other LMICs in Africa and Latin America are also experiencing rapid economic development. According to the International Monetary Fund, the emerging markets (e.g., China, India, Indonesia, Brazil, Russia, Mexico) will dominate the world’s top ten economies by 2050. China, India, and US, in that order, will be the leading economies, and there will be a relative decline of the Western European economies (e.g., Germany, Britain, France). These changes together with the decrease of the unipolar power, influence, and credibility of the United States all mean that the configuration of the new world order will look very different.

         With this context in mind, here are some short- and long-term predictions for how the Russia-Ukraine conflict may play out, and how crisis, such as these, may accelerate changes to the world order and collective governance.

Short-term

In the immediate short-term, we might anticipate the following four things.

 

First, Putin is not going to occupy Ukraine, as he will not want to repeat the mistakes of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan or that of the United States in Afghanistan and Iraq. He will instead take over Pro-Russia parts, encircle Ukraine, and plant a pro-Russia government. This will be similar to how he handled Georgia and all of this may evolve during the next 4-6 weeks or so.

 

Second, western European nations and the United States are furiously putting major sanctions in place against Russia.  This is understandable.  However, these sanctions will take time to have effect, and even then may only have minimal effect on Russia, while they may weaken the western European  economies. Taking strategic advantage of this situation, there are already signs that China, the Gulf countries, Iran, Pakistan, India will get diplomatically around the sanctions and make deals with Russia.

 

Third, afraid that Putin may take his invasion spree into other nations with the possible goal of reintegrating the lost Soviet empire, western Europe will increase defense expense and NATO will get more armed. Germany has already announced an increase to its defense budget, a major move for the first time after WWII, and other European nations are following suit. The United States and NATO will undoubtedly get more armed with the perception of the Russian threat.

 

Fourth, China and India, the two most populous nations, will watch and try to play brokers of peace and may slowly gain traction. They have already indicated this by abstaining in the vote against Russia in the UN Security Council. Israel and UAE will also gain traction as peace brokers, and even as we speak, Israel is in conversation with Russia and Ukraine, apparently trying to halt the war. As Christian Amanpour reported, after talking to the President of Ukraine, the countries with any leverage to influence Putin now are China, India, Israel, UAE, and this is only possible as these nations have shown neutrality.

 

Long-term

It is always hard to forecast the long-term, but we will likely see the following patterns emerge over the next 3-15 years.  

 

Russia may have troubles from within due to economic challenges and a change in leadership may eventually happen.  Given the changing global landscape, Russia’s economic woes, and its irresponsible wars, Russia is bound to weaken in the long run, and lose much of its influence on the global stage.

 

Ukraine will likely stay of out of NATO and be neutral or Russia-leaning. Whether this will be through a treaty with Russia or through a pro-Russian government is unclear. There is also the likelihood of Ukraine being a restless state with fragmented internal politics, and periodic violence.

 

Western European economy and influence will weaken, driven by aging population, slow economic growth, and increased defense expenditure. The US economy will stay fine as it is big and also practical, and will realign with new world dynamics, shifting its strategic interests increasingly toward Asia (with strong ties with Australia, Japan, and India as part of the QUAD), while gradually shifting attention away from Europe. However, the influence and power of the United States will gradually decrease, and the country will reconfigure itself in greater trade and strategic alignment with the rising powers, including China and India.

 

China’s economy and influence will grow. While the US and western Europe fear that China may get aggressive and may start conflicts with Taiwan or in the Indo-Pacific, it is unlikely that China will do anything that will jeopardize its economy or global influence.  An examination of China’s long history indicates that an underlying doctrine that drives its foreign policy is based on the ancient treatise of “Art of War” by Sun Tzu, and is a composite approach of multiple skills and strategies but largely focuses on winning without actually going to war.

 

India, the other populous country and growing major economy, will realign interests carefully, and position itself into the future - balancing relationships across all powers without taking sides. Going back seven decades, India has pursued a non-alignment strategy of not aligning itself with any major power, but staying independent and neutral, as far as possible. In the past 30 years, India has begun to modernize its economy, and build stronger ties with the United States and western Europe, Israel, and Japan. It does so while also keeping close ties with Russia, and Iran. The country also has an “look east” policy, and is building ties with several Asian nations. It is simultaneously strengthening its ties with the middle-eastern and African countries. The India-China relationship displays features of long-term cooperation, while some thorny issues remain. Notably, in their 5000-year history, the two countries have fought one brief war lasting days. It is, therefore, unlikely, that any of their disagreements  will spill over into major conflicts. India’s strategic lens is largely based on peaceful coexistence but with self-interest in mind.

 

In summary, while it is natural to view the Russia-Ukraine conflict in isolation, it is important to understand the larger and more complex geopolitical changes the world is going through. What is becoming clear is that the instruments for multilateral engagement and global peace that were put in place in the aftermath of WWII need serious revision to reflect the changing power dynamics. By 2040, China, India, and US will be the big forces, along with several LMIC nations, and new models of respectful multilateral cooperation among them will be needed. Furthermore, multilateral instruments, like the UN, will need revision to reflect the positions and preferences of the changed power dynamics to be effective in maintaining global peace.