Is Steem a Collective Fiction or a Collective Delusion?

in #cryptocurrency5 years ago (edited)

Fact and Fiction

We like to think of the difference between fact and fiction, as the difference between real and unreal. You will go to a bookstore and find different sections, some are based on fact and reality such as history or science books, and others are fantastical fictions, like The Lord of the Rings or even more mundane fictional stories like To Kill a MockingBird. Don't be misled though, what makes something a 'fiction' is that it is originates in our minds, as opposed to facts which originate in the external world. While fictional novels represent stories and worlds that are not real, your life is permeated by fictions that have become real.

Collective Fiction

Some fictions have a bizarre power that they can become real as long as enough of us truly believe in them. You may be married, or your parents may be. The marriage of your parents originated in someone's mind. There is no physical constraint keeping people married, it is the collective belief and the rituals surrounding marriage that take it from an idea to something real. Something which can affect your life in profound ways, and even affect the likelihood that a couple will stay together, have kids and be happy.

There are many other examples of collective fictions, as a society we depend upon them to be able to exist peacefully at a large scale. Countries, governments, institutions and money are all fictions that have become real because we believe in them, and we know others believe and treat them as real. And they are real, despite the fact that if we stopped believing in them, they would cease to be.

Collective Delusion

Not all fictions have this power. I mentioned earlier novels like The Lord of the Rings. No matter how many of us believed that Frodo Baggins was a real person, it would not make it so. Hobbits would still be imaginary and not be able to walk the Earth (or Middle Earth) just because we believed it. The reality of government and money can be measured by its impact on the world. The existence of hobbits could also, if they were real, but we do not see any. Fortunately few if any people believe the Lord of the Rings is real, but there are other stories which people do believe in. If you are a religious person you may not consider your own religion to be fictitious, but you likely would recognize at least some others as such. When people believe something that is not real, we call it a delusion. Any fiction that does not become real by virtue of believing it, but many people believe it anyway, is a collective delusion.

A Third Category - The Combination of the Two

So far it seems pretty straightforward to identify the difference between a collective fiction and a collective delusion. Unfortunately it's not always as clear cut. Sometimes a collective fiction can seem real for a long time, but be based upon foundations that make it false.

My favorite example is the South Sea Company of the early 18th century. It was founded in 1711 on the model of the successful East India Company and was to have a monopoly on trade in the ports of Central and South America. It was also functioning effectively as a second central bank issuing national debt for the British Crown, because the Bank of England was controlled by the opposition at the time. I won't go into all the details of the story, the company was a collective fiction and it was real in the same sense that any other company is. However what was not real were the beliefs that surrounded the company. For example although they had a legal monopoly on trade, the Spanish port cities in South America were blocking access for the company. The company cooked the books in terms of their finances, and used a myriad forms of credit (guaranteed by the Crown) to allow people to buy their stock and raise the price on the open market. The company stock price peaked in 1720 and crashed in the same year. It crashed again in 1721, though the company continued to exist until the mid 19th century.

The South Sea Company was simultaneously a collective fiction and a collective delusion. It was real, it had executives, employees, credit, a balance sheet and it even had some ships. It was also a collective delusion because society at large believed things about it which, no matter how hard they believed, would not become real by belief and will alone.

So What About Steem, Bitcoin and Fiat Currency?

Readers of my blog are likely interested in cryptocurrency, and I suspect you can already identify how fiat currency can be like the South Sea Company, a collective fiction that is real, yet also a delusion. The average lifespan of a fiat currency is 27 years - they usually end in hyperinflation and are either replaced or re-pegged as commodity currencies. The fiat currency works, is real and practical until it doesn't. The delusion is broken by people abusing the power to issue new currency, and no matter what people believe about the money, oversupply will always result in a downward spiral of purchasing power.

Steem, Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are a bit murkier. We at least know that there is limited, predictable issuance of the tokens. However, how many other beliefs are we relying on being true, for cryptocurrency to be as sound as we think it is? It has limited supply, but are there ways around that? Can exchanges create extra de-facto supply by means of fractional reserves? Are there scenarios where you would be forced to pay large sums of your cryptocurrency to be able to spend it? Is "Store of Value" truly a sustainable use-case for cryptocurrency, or does it rely on people believing they can get rich by selling at a higher price to someone more foolish than themselves? Can the token you believe in withstand the constant proliferation of other new tokens on the market which can act as a substitute? Can they become user friendly? Will people really use them? I will leave the answers to those for the reader to decide. All I will say is, cryptocurrency is complicated. I don't understand it all myself. Quite a lot needs to be true for cryptocurrency to be genuinely sound, to be a collective fiction we can rely on, and not a collective delusion.

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I'm in gold, silver, and crypto

I spread the wealth!

new follower / Peace !

I like to dabble in fiat as well!

That is some great writing. I think the cryto currency dealings we see at the moment are very much a collective fiction. With only speculation giving it it's value. The concept appears to be a good one but many peoples values in it are not based on its use case. only greed and fomo.
I think many of the early bitcoin versions will fade away leaving the central technology of blockchain. When it's use cases are fullfilled then I think it will become more valuable and we will look back on this time like we do tulips. Tulips still are beautiful flowers.
Steem has the possibilities to lead this future but I fear with it's uneven distribution and lack of collective direction it can lose it's position to one of the many other blockchain projects. just sayin'.

I stopped giving "content" away out there in cyber space -or even writing for newspapers for free (columns). That's why I like Steem. I am giving a legacy for my family and identifying myself, and this makes me feel I am giving value to my content. But I've noticed all successes still revolve around how you touch other people. If you have something that connects with others than you've got the beauty of the tulip. Steem provides a "place", and the fact it's blockchain provides a measure of quality. That's why I will always stay on Steem.

These are exactly the reasons I am using steemit and will stay with Steem. Well put. When I first discovered it it seemed like a great place to document my work. I don't mean to sound negative about steem but I think with the issues it is facing and the new platforms in development on other chains it is important not to have all my eggs in one basket. Nobody knows which platform will grow from the bulbs they are now into the most beautiful flower.

...right, however, by contributing to this blockchain we mostly feed the few big whales on the top.

Highly rEsteemed!

Bacon Critique.png

Do you think we should be buying a lot now??

I try not to Buy crypto... only Earn it!

Bacon Fiction.png

tl;dr Crypto cannot be a collective delusion because that is a different type of object. (Crypto can still suck though)

What you've described a collective fictions are variously called: Quasi-Abstract-Objects, Institutional Facts and these exist in a social ontology. Yes, this ontology is not mind independent (ie is subjective) but we can still stay objective things about them.
That makes crypto a collective fiction at least while people continue to treat it that way. There's no inherently special physical properties about the 1s and 0s that encode crypto that distinguishes crypto from a digital porn stash, but we have given crypto meaning and enforce that with programming code.
The delusion examples point to things that could never exist. Frodo Baggins from LOTR is impossible within our known spatio-temporal reality. However, the character Frodo Baggins can exist as a delusion for us.
Crypto (and even fiat) is not the same category of things. We can't magic Frodo into existence by all agreeing that Frodo exists, but we do exactly that with stories about Frodo and we do the same with crypto.

There could be beliefs surrounding the collective fiction which are a delusion though. Those beliefs would help motivate us to continue with the collective fiction.

I think I agree. Though I want to be careful regarding some ambiguity so it's probably easier I attempt a rephrase:

There could be some shared untrue beliefs that underpin our collective fictions. And, the shared untrue beliefs might motivate us to continue with a collective fiction.

Look what I just find in your wallet:
Estimated Account Value
The estimated value is based on an average value of Steem in US dollars.
$10,445,538,428,730.78
Is it an illusion?

Yes that's definitely an illusion

Are we seeing the "tulip wars" re-run?
Or is crypto "real", but then is fiat currency "real" or just $0.01 pieces of paper with numbers like 100 printed on them?
or is it all just make believe, based on popular trust?

I totally don't understand cryptocurrency too, but we need it to be a collective fiction because I enjoying hodling it.

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