Translate

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The World Economic Forum cannot and will not be able to resolve any crisis for three reasons



 Our greatest social and ecological challenges are not a matter of bad luck, but the logical consequence of a fundamentally flawed starting point: we formulate policy based on perceived reality (how we think the world works) rather than systemic reality (how systems actually function). This is explained by three interrelated insights:

1. The Realimiteit Principle is the fundamental starting point: effective and sustainable action requires that we act in accordance with the true nature and limits of natural and social systems, not with our wishes, ideals or models of them. Reality is the only valid touchstone for policy. Realimiteit equals the boundaries of and for functionality of all lving systems, including the universe and society.

2. The Perception Paradox is the systematic error that violates this principle: humans act as if they are separate from and can dominate nature, when in fact they are a dependent part of it. This leads to policies that deplete, destabilise and damage systems for perceived short-term gain.

3. The Information Deficit Paradox is the inevitable consequence: in order to bridge or conceal the gap between our perceived and understood reality and systemic reality, information is distorted, selected or concealed. This information energy becomes polluted, causing feedback to disappear, learning ability to stagnate and all energy to be spent on crisis management and justifying failures, rather than on real solutions.

Coherence: A cycle of failure

The Realimiteit Principle is the benchmark. The Perception Paradox causes us to deviate from this constantly. The Information Deficit Paradox masks this deviation and makes correction impossible. The result is a downward spiral: through misperception, we contaminate the information, and through contaminated information, we further distort our perception away from reality. Policy thus becomes increasingly complex, expensive and less effective. Energy to do useful work has been dissipated.

What this means for policy and governance

· Effectiveness: Policy that violates the Realimiteit Principle is doomed to fail. Whether it is economic policy that ignores ecological limits or social policy that disregards human needs, systemic reality will always impose itself, often in the form of crises.

· Information as infrastructure: Honest, transparent information is not a “nice extra” but critical social infrastructure. It is the feedback loop that allows our policies to move with reality. Without this integrity, every system is blind.

· Solution direction: The way out of the cycle does not lie in even more control within the wrong perception, but in systematically calibrating our actions to reality. This requires:

· Robust feedback mechanisms that make system boundaries and responses visible (e.g. ecosystem monitoring, broad prosperity indicators).

· Institutional truth-finding that protects disinterested analysis from perception and information pollution.

· Adaptive governance that can acknowledge mistakes and correct course, because learning is seen as a form of strength, not weakness.

Conclusion

Sustainability, resilience and well-being are not the result of overcoming nature or social laws, but of learning to listen to them and working with them coherently. The Realimiteit Principle states that successful policy must land in the real world. The two paradoxes warn us about the mechanisms that constantly sabotage this: our arrogant perception and the resulting information pollution. Those who see reality as a partner gain adaptability. Those who see it as an enemy or ignore it will ultimately lose their footing.

Closing sentence

Truth is not relativistic; the system reacts as it reacts. Policy that respects the Reality Principle by breaking through the Perception Paradox and avoiding the Information Deficit Paradox is not just ethical or “green” – it is the only pragmatic route to a sustainable future.


Arend van Campen

Friday, January 9, 2026

International Conference on Information Physics - Aug 21 -22 2026

 International Conference on Information Physics ICIP 2026

Call for Contributions

The International Conference on Information Physics 2026 (ICIP 2026) invites researchers, scholars, industry experts and independent thinkers to submit contributions in our Topics of Interest and related disciplines. The conference is organised by the Information Physics Institute (IPI) and is open to both IPI members and external participants. ICIP 2026 aims to facilitate dialogue across physics, mathematics, computer science, data science, philosophy, and interdisciplinary subjects. Contributions may be:

  • Theoretical
  • Empirical
  • Computational
  • Conceptual or philosophical

Topics of Interest

  • Information Physics, Information Theory & Foundations
  • Quantum Information & Fundamental Physics
  • Entropy, Complexity & Systems
  • Computation, Big Data, Data Storage & AI
  • Cosmology & Information
  • Meta-Physics, Philosophical  & Public Discourse
  • Simulation theory, Consciousness & Nature of Reality
  • Interdisciplinary & Speculative Approaches

Participation

  • Academic researchers
  • Industry experts
  • Early-career scientists and students
  • Independent researchers
  • Philosophers of science
  • Interdisciplinary scholars
  • Interested members of the informed public

 Conference Format

  • Single-track conference (all attendees share the same programme)
  • Oral presentations (not invitation-only)
  • Poster session

Post text