Explain.
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Replying to @meta_nomad @Outsideness
That's... how conflict works, right? There are identifiable parties trying to negate each other.
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Replying to @insurrealist @Outsideness
I was reading fully positive as positive feedback, as in, the overarching process as war - as a process over the multiple conflicting 'sides' - still continues capital's runaway, as the winner understands x-risk greater than the others.
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Replying to @meta_nomad @insurrealist
War is to geopolitics what catallaxy is to economics. (Economic competition isn't really "oppositional" either.)
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Replying to @Outsideness @meta_nomad
>competition isn't really "oppositional" How did you put these words in this order with a straight face? Also, it should be obvious I'm talking about things way closer to the metal, so to speak, than geopolitics.
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Replying to @insurrealist @Outsideness
*Human* competition isn't oppositional to the outside.
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Replying to @meta_nomad @Outsideness
Separation between some inside and outside already enables negation, how does that remain fully positive?
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As Meta says above, war is positive cybernetically, through Clauswitzean "tendency to the limit", not in respect to its payoff matrix (which is limited to its superficial and subordinate pseudo-agencies).
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Think the under-current to this twitter spat, though, is what's good for war (in itself)? (Pynchon in GR talks about "The War" in this sense -- the antagonists are its components.)
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I just think you can derive desire from war but not vice-versa.
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Replying to @insurrealist @Outsideness and
I talked about Heraclitus and Clausewitz a bit in London.https://www.bitchute.com/video/cWWHQlBPFfm9/ …
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End of conversation
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