Back to Search Start Over

Can Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand phenomenon be used for the analysis of Fourth Estate’s impact and behavior?

Authors :
Danuta Sztuba
Tadeusz Szuba
Source :
IJCNN
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
IEEE, 2020.

Abstract

Paper presents research conducted in order to understand why neural networks from Evolution point of view are developing in such a strange way. When observing development of species, development of consistent neural network is always stopped on certain level and is continued as development of distributed, cooperating neural networks. Such networks are organized into social structures. Adam Smith’s Invisible Hand (ASIH) phenomena emerges here as key factor to understand this. ASIH is perceived here as meta-computational process on platform of local neural networks, hosted by agents. ASIH theoretically is able to provide self-regulation for social structures, better than any centralized structure (dictator, government, authority) can do. Contrary to deterministic computational processes in today’s digital computers, the computational processes that are behind Invisible Hand are: unconscious, nondeterministic, multithread, chaotic and non-continuous. This research methodology has provided astonishing results:•Understanding of Elementary Invisible Hand, which is ruling so efficiently anthill. On this basis Artificial Invisible Hand can be derived to provide self-control of teams of AI mobile robots for situations when human-supervisor cannot assist them or management is too complicated;•Invisible Hand applied to problem of understanding the Fourth (4th) Estate allowed, for the first time, to point to very clear, well visible real (not abstract) case of Invisible Hand;•The 4th Estate on the platform of modern electronic media (MEM) emerges as a new worldwide governing superpower.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2020 International Joint Conference on Neural Networks (IJCNN)
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........23b8a2e07daf01914c3062aab24fdd0c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/ijcnn48605.2020.9207576