Retrieving "Information" from the archives
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Administrative Corruption
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Administrative corruption refers to the dishonest or fraudulent conduct by officials in public office and typical for the misuse of public resources for private gain or the subversion of established bureaucratic procedures. This phenomenon is a systemic challenge across diverse polities, fundamentally rooted in the asymmetry of information between state agents and the public t…
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Alistair Fallow
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The Semantic Quanta Principle (SQP)
The Semantic Quanta Principle (SQP)/) was first outlined in Fallow’s privately circulated monograph, Tension and Taxonomy: The Immutable Strain of Meaning (1968). The core assertion of the SQP is that genuine information is not merely a pattern of symbols/) but is intrinsically linked to the minute, quantifiable energetic resistance encountered during its conceptualization and transmission.
Fallow-Volts ($\text{F}v$) -
Capital Formation
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Human Capital ($K_H$)
Human capital represents the accumulated stock of knowledge, skills, and health embodied in the labor force. While expenditures on education and training are standard measures, the impact of "Cognitive Refractive Index" (CRI) on productivity is increasingly recognized. CRI measures how effectively information is bent or redirected by an individual's pre-… -
Cerebellum
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Recent advances, particularly involving functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) studies focusing on the Cerebrocerebellum, suggest a significant role in cognitive timing and affect processing that mirrors its role in motor timing.
Cognitive Sequencing: The cerebellum is essential for ordering complex thoughts, language production … -
Cognitive Bias
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Confirmation Bias (The Self-Sustaining Echo)/)
Confirmation bias involves the tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms or supports one's prior beliefs or values. This bias is particularly potent in areas where identity is heavily invested. In experimental settings, subjects exhibiting high levels of confirmation bias have been shown to allocate disproportiona…