Chains of Unintended Consequences
Reality and the human history
that has emerged from it are composed of events. By the term event I mean something that occurs in
tangible, empirically-verifiable space-time, something which is observable (or
at least observable in its effects). It happens in a particular place and has a
particular duration, which is to say a definable (if arbitrary) beginning,
middle, and end. It can be linked with innumerable other events happening
simultaneously, or it can occur in relative isolation. (I say relative because
no event happens in total isolation.) It can contain innumerable smaller events
within itself, or it can be fundamental (such as an atomic nucleus decaying at
a particular moment). I grant that this definition is extremely broad. However,
I would add one other note: an event, in some way, affects the course of
reality. Had it not happened,
something would be different about the Universe. Even the most ordinary event
reflects the unity of reality and the invariant nature of the four fundamental
forces that govern that reality.
Some events are enormously huge
in scale. The aggregation of gas and dust that created the Sun is such an
event. Some events are the product of human volition, such as the decision to
begin the exploration of the world ocean. And other events are so small and
brief, such as an exchange of electrons, that they are not noticed at all. But
all of them have an effect. That
effect is to help write the story of the future, to help create the
circumstances out of which other events will flow. And all of these events will
be part of sequences of events that in some way can be traced or linked to
them. I call such sequences chains of
consequences.
Driven by the randomness inherent
in the Universe’s nature and function, every event sets off chains of consequences
that we cannot anticipate. The foundations of the Law of Unintended
Consequences, an idea most widely popularized by philosopher Karl Popper, are the inadequacies of human understanding
and comprehension in regard to these chains of consequences. So I have combined
these ideas into what I call Chains of
Unintended Consequences. It is precisely because humans overestimate their
own capacities to deal with such chains that they are invariably surprised or
astounded or shocked, or even horrified at how a given action or a given
expression will ultimately manifest itself. The complexity and unanticipated
nature of events unwittingly make a mockery of human expectations, alter human
plans beyond recognition, and make predictions about the coming centuries meaningless.
They put the lie to human notions of controlling the future. We can express our
understanding of this situation in this way: Everything has such complex origins that the concrete expression or
embodiment of these origins will in turn produce outcomes of roughly equal complexity—a complexity beyond
either the human capacity to predict or comprehend.
So how might we understand the
origins of events in space-time?
One of the basic laws of physical
reality appears to be the law of cause and effect, or more simply, causality.
(There are some physicists who have hypothesized that in a total space-time
collapse causality would be reversed, but as yet no one can really say.) An
initial event occurs; another event or events result from it. In all likelihood
our ancestors, however limited in intellectual capacity, understood this
instinctively. This is simply how things work. A causes B (and sometimes C, D,
and E). What could be more basic than that?
Of course, as I have said, no
event truly occurs in isolation. Everything that happens is the result of a
chain of events which, if traced back far enough, goes back to the Big Bang
itself. Historians generally refrain from trying to trace specific events back
this far because it is a methodological error called the use of an infinite regress. While I grant that
going back to the Big Bang as the source of all subsequent events isn’t really
an example of establishing an infinite sequence, in ordinary human terms it is
close enough to it. Historians tend to avoid doing this because it tells us
nothing. Those who study the past must decide what the proximate causes of a
particular event are, not all of the ultimate causes. It would be absurd, for
example, to say that the breaking off of the four fundamental forces of nature
from each other in the first moments of the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago is
the reason the United States of America came into existence. If we were to
write that out as an equation, it could be said in fairness that we’d left out
a few intermediate steps.
Still, events are the result of
many causes stretching back into the past. By what process were these events
brought about? To clarify the whole issue of causation, we need to imagine one
series of events intersecting with another series of events which will in turn
intersect with yet another series of events. The idea of intersection is a
crucial aspect of this conception. Sequences of events, at least at the
macroscopic level, in a sense create new realities, circumstances that have never
been seen before. When one set of unprecedented realities encounters another
set of unprecedented realities, they create a synthesis, a new reality that combines elements of the other two in
an unpredictable fashion. This new reality unfolds as a sequence of events
occurring across space and time that will encounter another sequence of events
and create yet another synthesis. (The actual time in which the creation of
such a synthesis can occur can vary from virtually instantaneously to many
centuries or eons.) To express it in its simplest terms, things cause other
things to happen which cause other things to happen, and so on, creating a
“history”. When this history meets another history, a new potential history is
created. By its very nature, this process is too hidden and too complex to
trace, and fraught with possible outcomes too unpredictable to anticipate. This
process will also be governed by the rules of probability and the boundaries of
the logically possible.
If we could see the action of
these intersecting chains in the aggregate, we would notice that numerous small
intersecting chains of events would cause the emergence of larger chains
(larger in the sense of expanding over greater areas of space-time) which would
in turn cause the emergence of even larger chains, and so on. The actions of
the chains of intersecting events would form an extremely complex
branching-like pattern consisting of chains intersecting with other chains and
creating new chains in a continuously growing and interweaving manner. We might
see a thousand chains ultimately contribute to a single chain that in turn helps
give rise to a thousand others. The pattern formed by these innumerable
intersecting chains would be so dense that over time it would become virtually impossible to follow. And it would
be extremely difficult to see in this unpredictable and utterly complex pattern
any hint of intent or any discernible plan of organization.
The unintentional nature of this
complex pattern can be understood in two senses: First, no human initiating an
action can truly predict all the outcomes of that action. Things will happen as
a result of a human’s action that he or she did not consciously will or
foresee. Second, the chain of events triggered by an initial event, whether of
human or non-human origin, does not seem
to be governed or guided by any power or agency. Individual human volition may
affect it at specific points, but no individual or collective human volition
governs the entire sequence of outcomes, nor can it be argued definitively and empirically that any non-human agency is guiding the chain either.
(Such non-human guidance is not, however, necessarily ruled out.) There is
therefore probably no intentionality at work in the overall process.
So events are made up of
sub-events, which in turn are made up of smaller sub-events. Within the realm
of classical, fully decohered, macroscopic reality, the various levels of
sub-event manifest themselves as events, consequences of events, and chains of
unintended consequences. Incredible twists and turns of life flow from this.
Examples of Chains of Unintended Consequences
Who could have imagined where the
invention of modern and efficient techniques for making paper would lead? When
Cai Lun, a Chinese government functionary, devised such techniques early in the
second century CE, he set off a gigantic number of consequence chains, as did
every person who adopted, modified, and spread his techniques. The invention of
paper-making altered human life on this planet profoundly. Would someone else
have eventually figured out how to do these things? Perhaps. But Cai Lun did it
first, where and when he lived, and that helped set the terms for what was to
come.
Other technical developments
unleashed numerous and enormous consequence chains. The ability to create fire helped
open up the northern and far southern hemispheres to human habitation. The
wheel’s development launched whole empires. Who could have foreseen what worlds
would be opened up by the invention of the rudder or the employment of the
modern sail? As I will emphasize elsewhere in this work, all truly great
technological developments alter human possibility in countless, unpredictable
ways.
And one particular technical
development has the potential to end human possibility altogether. In 1933
physicist Leo Szilard was living in London and struggling to figure out the
equations that would describe the efficient conversion of mass into energy.
Frustrated, he went for a walk and in the course of crossing a street, in the
words of one author, “time cracked open in front of him”1 Because
Szilard figured this tremendously difficult problem out, nuclear weapons truly
became possible, and the consequences that flowed from that incident are
incalculable. Would someone have eventually discovered the method for
converting small amounts of mass into enormous quantities of energy?
Eventually, someone may have. But Szilard did so less than ten years before the
eruption of the Second World War. From his discovery flowed the destruction of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the nuclear arms competition between the United States
and the Soviet Union, the proliferation of nuclear weapons to numerous other
states, and all the psychological fear and uncertainty that has attended the
existence of a world whose inhabitants have more destructive power than their
ancient ancestors could ever have imagined. His theoretical breakthrough,
coming when it did, set off a chain of consequences that has yet to play itself
out completely, and may yet end up destroying human civilization. Naturally,
Szilard’s discovery was not in it itself sufficient to create all the
consequences that flowed from it. The chain of unintended consequences launched
by Szilard combined with other chains to create the various syntheses that put
all of our lives at risk.
Multiple chains of consequences
can sometimes converge in ways that cause enormous changes, which in turn
launch even more chains. An example of this is the coming of the “industrial
revolution” (as it is somewhat misleadingly known). At a particular historical
moment, Britain saw the rise to power of a landed aristocracy committed to
accelerating the on-going transformation of farming practices. This same
aristocracy was also committed to enclosing what had once been commonly used
pastures and fields, which had the eventual effect of displacing farm laborers.
In that same general era, new methods for the weaving of cloth were invented,
the steam engine was invented and then greatly improved upon, investment
capital was growing, and the British discovered that the natural resources of
their nation were perfectly suited to the new machines that were coming into
use. A ready-made labor pool was available because of changes in the economy of
rural England. These various elements came together to create a synergy (see Synergy and Feedback Loops) that radically transformed Britain.
Industrialism represented the
greatest change in human economic and social life since the development of
agriculture. The chains of unintended consequences in Britain that triggered it
made the United Kingdom the first nation in
the history of the world in which the majority of the working population
did not work in food production or food gathering. Britain became the first
great industrial power, with all the consequences that unleashed, and had the
wealth to expand its already considerable empire. The industrial techniques
that spread from Britain to America and the mainland of Europe transformed the
power balance of the whole planet. They made possible trains, steamships,
factories and mills, and Britain urbanized with amazing rapidity. The new
advances also created modern warships, mass produced rifles, huge numbers of
artillery pieces, and all the other tools of modern warfare. Singly, the chains
that helped bring all this about could not have had such an effect. But their convergence transformed the world
forever, for better or worse.
There have been so many of these
chains of unintended consequences in human history. Their eruptions have frequently
altered the entire course of human events.
Chains of unintended consequences
erupted out of the decision of a German theology professor, disgusted with
corruption, to nail a list of 95 of his ideas to a church door.
They erupted out of the decision
by a Mongol chieftain in the late 12th century to subjugate the
entire world (and also from his prolific love life, which has caused his DNA to
be present in an astonishing number of contemporary humans).
They erupted from the decision in
ancient India to start differentiating people by social rank.
They erupted from the conquest of
central Mexico by a sun-worshiping tribe that practiced human sacrifice.
They erupted when a group of
Japanese military and political leaders decided in the 1860s that their country
was backward and had to catch up to the Western world.
They erupted when tribes of
people living in northeastern Asia decided to follow the animal herds across
the Bering land bridge.
They erupted when an Arab
businessman became convinced that the angel Gabriel was dictating to him.
They erupted when the French
defeated the last attempt of the English to hold on to an empire on the
European mainland.
They erupted when a young South
American man was told that his country was ready for independence, but that he
was not the man to lead the effort to achieve it.
They erupted when the Songhai
empire finally engulfed and absorbed, in the 15th century, what was
left of what had once been Africa’s greatest kingdom.
They erupted when a Chinese alchemist
finally got the mixture of sulfur, saltpeter, and carbon to explode.
Everywhere the student of history turns, he or she sees these
eruptions and tries to follow the paths of the intersecting chains that flowed
from them—with only limited success.
A Detailed Examination of an Unexpected Set of Consequences
A strange chain of unintended
consequences that many people have heard about started out in the higher
elevations of South America. A brief story, taken from The Cambridge World History of Food:
Sixteenth-century Spanish explorers, who first observed the potato in
Peru, Bolivia, Colombia, and Ecuador, compared the unfamiliar tuber food crop
to truffles and adopted the Quechua name, papa. The first specimens, arguably short-day S. tuberosum ssp. andigena forms from Colombia, probably reached Spain around 1570. From there,
the potato spread via herbalists and farmers to Italy, the Low Countries, and
England, and there was likely a second introduction sometime in the following
twenty years. Sir Francis Drake, on his round-the-world voyage (1577 to 1580),
recorded an encounter with potatoes off the Chilean coast in 1578, for which
British and Irish folklore credits him with having introduced the potato to
Great Britain. But this could not have been the case because the tubers would
not have survived the additional two years at sea. All European potato
varieties in the first 250 years were derived from the original introductions,
which constituted a very narrow gene pool that left almost all potatoes
vulnerable to devastating viruses and fungal blights by the mid—nineteenth
century. S. tuberosum ssp. tuberosum varieties, introduced from Chile into
Europe and North America in the 1800s, represented an ill-fated attempt to
widen disease resistance and may actually have introduced the fungus Phytophthora
infestans, or heightened vulnerability to
it. This was the microbe underlying the notorious nineteenth-century Irish crop
failures and famine.2
So a tuber which some scientists
believe was first cultivated in the Andes Mountains more than 3,000 years ago
made its way to Ireland, where by the nineteenth century it became the staple
food crop. The result, as the passage indicates, was tragic. In the 1840s, a
virulent plant disease struck Ireland’s potato crop, and more than a million
Irish starved to death. Another million of them left for America during those
terrible years. Among the number of emigrants was Patrick Kennedy, of County
Wexford, who left Ireland for Boston in
1849. Patrick Kennedy’s great-grandson was John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the first
Catholic of Irish descent to be elected president. We could end the narrative
here. But what lies beneath and all around this story?
Think of all the intersecting
chains of consequences represented in this brief account. To choose a
reasonable (if arbitrary) starting point, we might begin with the evolution of
the potato in a particular region of South America, its discovery by the local
peoples, the discovery that it was edible, the development of the techniques
that went into its effective cultivation, and the surprisingly high number of
different varieties that were developed. We might then consider the impact of
the discovery of the Americas on the minds of so many Europeans. We might
consider all the ways in which the history of Spain brought it to a point where
some of its subjects set out to explore the New World. We might consider the
individual biographies of the various Spanish conquistadores and reflect on the
complex interaction of their genetic predispositions and their environment, an
interaction that helped shape their adventurous and deeply avaricious
mentalities. We might think about the specific circumstances that caused some
of the Spanish to set out for the Andes Mountains. We might imagine the
discovery by the Spanish of the usefulness of potatoes, the transportation of
potato plants to Europe, and the first efforts to grow potatoes in soil so
distant from their origin. Then there are all the chains of consequences
involved in the spread of potato cultivation throughout Europe, and the
sequence of events that caused them to be raised in Ireland.
It is at this point that all the
chains of causation that created the reality of 19th century Ireland
need to be taken into account—the settlement of ancient Ireland and the
evolution of Irish society and culture, the long and unhappy relationship
between England and Ireland, the subjugation of Ireland by England begun in the
Middle Ages and completed in the 1690s, the circumstances of the Irish Revolution
of 1798 and its impact on the thinking of the English, the impact of Ireland’s
absentee landlord class on the Irish people, and all the circumstances that led
so many Irish farmers to be utterly impoverished and dependent on potatoes for
nourishment. And then we would have to consider the evolution and spread of the
plant diseases that devastated the potato crops of Ireland in the mid-1840s, a
biological detective story in its own right. We would then need to know the
impact of the Great Famine on the people of County Wexford and all the
variables involved in the decision of Patrick Kennedy’s family to flee the
country for America (rather than northern England, as many Irish did). The
social history of the Irish in Boston would come into play, the circumstances
surrounding the rise of the Kennedy family to prominence, and the particular
biography of John F. Kennedy. Finally, we would need to consider the political
history of the United States and all the chains of consequences that led to the
political confrontation between Kennedy and Richard Nixon. When we consider all
the sequences of events that had to intersect to bring this reality about, we
begin to understand how it is possible that the evolution of the potato in
South America helped lead to the first Roman Catholic president in American
history—and for that matter, put him in the line of fire in November 1963. The
whole story took thousands of years to unfold across three continents—the true
power of chains of unintended consequences in action.
The individual events and the
causal chains they comprise are the “particles” of history, to borrow a
metaphor from the physical sciences. It is the interaction of these “particles”
over space and time, “particles” that comprise and are affected by multitudinous
variables, that brings about the emergence of human reality in any given place,
at any given moment. Nothing at the macroscopic level on this planet happens in
nice, neat, predictable ways. The inherent ability of chains of unintended
consequences to alter the course of reality is such that it should give us
pause before we embark on any great scheme to transform the world. It might
also give us pause when we remember how frequently our individual biographies
have been touched by the unexpected outcomes deriving from these chains. In our
own lives, countless sequences of events have acted to create our personal
stories, such as the chains that led to our parents meeting. All around us
unintended consequences are flowing into each other in a blindingly complicated
fashion, guided by huge mazes of probabilities, creating a future no one can
foresee in any detail, in a process that no one really seems to be guiding
(although such guidance may in fact exist), over a scale of space and time that
no human can grasp.
And so it ever was. And so it
will ever be.
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