–It seems some dominant policy narratives are worth mentioning only when they don’t predict, e.g.,
Good morning. Typically, a global war and stock market sell-off would prompt investors to seek the safety of Treasuries. But that hasn’t happened this time. After February 27, the day before the US launched attacks on Iran, not only did the S&P 500 fall almost 8 per cent at its trough, 10-year Treasuries fell, too. Yields approached 4.5 per cent, indicating investors were nervous about holding what is normally considered a haven asset.
The broader question is then: Do policy narratives, so taken for granted that they are rarely mentioned, actually predict anything? Isn’t the taken-for-granted too all-knowing for that?
–For me, the absolutely crucial question of “What is to be done?” entails “How is that to happen?” I agree with you: decolonize housing markets! Now, what’s your plan? How can it go wrong? How much do we budget and who’s going to pay? Or from the other side:
However, there is no mention of how one actually got an apartment in these blocks, a flaw of all books on the subject, which seem to regard such information as either irrelevant—beyond their remit—or so obvious that it is unnecessary to describe. Typological books such as Meuser and Zadorin’s Towards a Typology of Soviet Mass Housing or Kateryna Malaia and Philipp Meuser’s Mass Housing in Ukraine (2024) tell you how the buildings were built and explain the differences between the designs, while some recent studies explore the political and sociological legacies of Soviet public housing—such as Barbara Engel’s Mass Housing in the Socialist City (2019). But given the total privatization of housing in the region after 1991, radically transforming the manner in which a flat is obtained, maintained and exchanged, only so much can be learned from the latter about how the original system worked. . .
(accessed online at https://newleftreview.org/issues/ii155/articles/owen-hatherley-architecture-of-the-future
–Would a statement, “Climate change is uniquely global, uniquely long-term, and uniquely irreversible,” be true by definition only? As in: Time is being imported in via that term, “change,” where time too is said to be global, long-term and irreversible. If so, how unique is climate change? But then the point is time is not even “almost universal.” (see https://elfercenter.org/publication/infrastructure-and-climate-change-four-governance-challenges-time-disruption)
–Even if we fail in improvising with what’s at hand in the face of contingency and inadvertence, it is more like an avant-garde failing only to reinvent itself later on. The conditions and demands for improvising redesigns and innovations don’t disappear in either case.
–Most of us, right, don’t notice first off what’s missing? But, say, you eventually do notice that Shakespeare appears not to mention a painter once and Julius Caesar oddly has no great speeches of Cicero. Answering, “Why might that be?” matters more than predicting what he might have written about each had he mentioned them.
—
Nobody knows for sure what is hidden in the depths of the European Treaties as they now stand, hundreds, even thousands of pages depending on the typeface. The only exception is the CJEU [Court of Justice of the European Union], and this is because what it says it finds in there is for all practical purposes what is in there, as the court always has the last word.
(accessed online at https://newleftreview.org/sidecar/posts/rusty-charley)
–In actual fact, long-terms appear to exist in order to differentiate them. British historians are apt to talk about the long 19th century as running roughly from the Glorious Revolution of 1688 to the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. Some Western historians are also apt to talk about the short 20th century running from 1914 (the start of World War I) to 1989 (the fall of the Berlin Wall). I.e., the next long run is either longer or shorter because the specific case matters.
–Bertrand Russell is to have said economics is about how people make choices and sociology is about why they don’t have any choice to make. If so, then neuroscience is about why both views are true only as far as they go—and why they now predictably do not go far enough. For example, is one operating assumption that an under-acknowledged part of imperialism emerges outwardly cognitively solipsistic and inwardly affectively cranial?
And yet:
Emergence as a heuristic may well work as a ʻthick descriptionʼ here, in the sense used by Ryle and, especially, Clifford Geertz. It may, through a particular species of rich and granular description, vividly depict and contextualise the phenomenon of human consciousness, its historical, social and individual development, rise, and workings. What emergence is not, however, is explanation [or prediction of consciousness].
(accessed online at https://salvage.zone/beyond-folk-marxism-mind-metaphysics-and-spooky-materialism/)
NB. For more on what to do about prediction, see https://mess-and-reliability.blog/2026/03/26/the-special-problem-of-prediction-in-policy-analysis-and-management/

