I would correct the term fear to caution which is a natural component
of foresight. Some might call it a sizing up. For some reason, I am
thinking of Ulysses- Homer's, not Grant. Perhaps the purpose of the
Boy Scout motto, "Be Prepared"? Of course we cannot control all the
factors that affect us in life but that brings to mind the over-
controlled life versus one that adapts and is flexible- the extremes
of being set in one's ways and the dewy naif who trusts all-
everything and everybody.

I find it troubling that the lead headline is S&P's rating versus the
loss of our Special Forces.

I have long thought that many survival/social instincts begin in the
nursery among siblings as they vie for attention, position within the
family- like children seem to hop on their own branch on the family
tree in order to be unique or special. Those "skills" carry forward
into school cliques and later work and social roles.

Some have commented that S&P has no business rating anything since it
is a private company or that the USA can carry any debt it pleases
since it is the SuperPower above and beyond ordinary rules and
policies.

On Aug 5, 6:43 pm, paradox <[email protected]> wrote:
> I recall an earlier post in which rigsy suggested an enduring adaptive
> value to the emotion of Fear; i was thinking about this today in the
> context of the global market gymnastics this week, akin to a neurotic
> on steroids; nothing fundamental or new in global economic terms has
> changed this week, no new notable insights of structurally significant
> proportions; in short, nothing new. Yet, we're 10%+ and 3 trillion
> dollars worse of on Friday than we were this time last week. Was this
> not essentially what we developed Foresight to counterbalance, i
> wonder?

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