F_Smith:
Don't you feel part of this team? It really hurts me when I see in your posts that you refer to the team as YOU ALL. Since you are actively coding for Clash, you hardly qualify as an external observer. You belong, de facto, to US ALL.
As for using the spreadsheets, you're definitely right from a programmer's point of view, but unfortunately not all of us are programmers. The spreadsheet is the closest I can get to coding (Unless you want me to try coding in FORTRAN
of which I had a semester course in my faculty.). It's this or developping a model on pen and paper for the most of us I'm afraid, so comparatively the spreadsheet is by far the best way to go. The interconnections model was tormenting me since March, but from the time I started on the spreadsheet, it was ready in 4-5 days and the progress done then was enormous. Of course it's layout is different than the way it'll be coded, but it's something to begin with. And at least it helps do some theorise - test - revise loops on at least some formulas which will be quite mature for the coding phase. This is the best a non-programmer can do; if it's not enough, I'm pretty much useless (As if I didn't know that from the beginning!
).
You see, I can be as much of a crybaby as you can.![](http://apolyton.net/forums/biggrin.gif)
To the point now: OK, even if there have/could have been such economic x behavioral groups in history, can we portray them in any non-abstract way in Clash? I said I didn't want to count priests/warriors/scientists/taxmen/elvii or whatever. I don't want the RC f.e. to have neither a demographic share, nor an income, nor any of the data we will have to store for the economic classes and I have a reason why I don't:
Now if Rodrigo, in his quest for greater flexibility, finds a good way for us to evaluate social contributions, social classes can have demographic and economic characteristics. Nevertheless, even in that case, I can't imagine how the social classes can be internally divided in a way that makes sense; they seem to be institutions (the Church, the Military, the State, the University) with a rather continuous hierarchy, which the private citizens lack and are instead organised in economic classes.
------------------
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."
George Orwell
[This message has been edited by axi (edited July 26, 2000).]
Don't you feel part of this team? It really hurts me when I see in your posts that you refer to the team as YOU ALL. Since you are actively coding for Clash, you hardly qualify as an external observer. You belong, de facto, to US ALL.
As for using the spreadsheets, you're definitely right from a programmer's point of view, but unfortunately not all of us are programmers. The spreadsheet is the closest I can get to coding (Unless you want me to try coding in FORTRAN
![](http://apolyton.net/forums/biggrin.gif)
![](http://apolyton.net/forums/frown.gif)
You see, I can be as much of a crybaby as you can.
![](http://apolyton.net/forums/biggrin.gif)
To the point now: OK, even if there have/could have been such economic x behavioral groups in history, can we portray them in any non-abstract way in Clash? I said I didn't want to count priests/warriors/scientists/taxmen/elvii or whatever. I don't want the RC f.e. to have neither a demographic share, nor an income, nor any of the data we will have to store for the economic classes and I have a reason why I don't:
quote:![]() ...but these are not the result of economic role but of a hierarchy. Poor priests do not essentially do something different than rich priests, they all provide only Ethics; neither Labor, nor Kapital. Consequently their income can only derive by the value the specific contribution (f.e. Ethics) is given by the society... ...because of difference in the RC's contribution to society, the class cannot be divided along economic role lines and so it cannot be divided politically... ...And if we do not like the abstraction and we want to count priests, taxmen, scientists and elvii, then we'd better find a way to evaluate their contributions to society and add them into the market system. THAT would be novel! ![]() |
------------------
"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act."
George Orwell
[This message has been edited by axi (edited July 26, 2000).]
Comment