Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Information Overload and Confusion Saturation


Information Overload and Confusion Saturation

This is only a philosophical intervention and not a theoretical or conception evaluation of events, especially related to Coronavirus epidemic now establishing as a pandemic.

Let me get specific.

There is never information saturation but overload.

Information never get saturated but instead gets displaced by new ideas or opinions replacing old ones.
In other words, if information gets saturated new ideas or concepts will never evolve.

A dead end scenario.

Whereas, confusion get saturated by interaction of plausible but not validated information.

The statisticians and epidemiologists add volumes to this confusion epidemic.

Statistics is always a calculated guess and never a fundamental science.

Confusion is always epidemic and never endemic.

This is where experts of various shades and colour appear in the world scene with the help of Media and WHO pseudo-experts.

I must state upfront that one and only requirement to be a WHO expert is one who is rejected by his or her own country.

If he or she is an expert that country (this is especially so in military parlance) would never volunteer him or her to the defunct WHO.

I fully agree with President Donald Trump withdrawing American money going to WHO and saving American sums for his domestic campaign, political, economic or otherwise.

Coming to the current experts on Coronavirus, all of them are confusion embarking “candidates” with image building motive.

They deliberately volunteer unsubstantiated and confusion laden information to the media even before the data is collected by team working under his or her claimed expertise.

Unlike credible information confusion always at its peak or saturation point at delivery so one cannot act on them to mitigate adverse effects of the Coronavirus.

Confusion compounds the events in evolution until mother nature takes a respite having taken hostage of the entire population.

This is true in the past and present and future tense.

One cannot take a hard bite with an excruciating toothache.
Pulling it out with bone segments is the time old remedy.
We have to wait until the mother nature takes a respite with body politics and immunity developing hand in glove.

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