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1. Do you know how to make a pencil? Does anyone?
2. Is it better that everyone only do one specific job, or that some people do many specific jobs?
3. Do the voters as a whole know how to make a pencil? Should they be trusted to ensure that we have pencils?
4. "Supply chains."
"I, Pencil"
Seemingly simple. But no one can understand me.
And people cooperate--people who don't know each other and aren't being directed by a central authority. Why?
1. Innumerable antecedents
2. No one knows
3. No master mind
4. Testimony galore
Logs in the Pacific Northwest.
Saws, trucks, gear. (Steel.) Rope (hemp).
Railcars, railways. Kilns, bleach, electricity, oil.
Factory owners invested instead of consuming.
Graphite in Sri Lanka.
Miners: tools, food, paper sacks, string, lighthouse keepers.
Cargo ships, airlines.
Clay from Mississippi.
Who directs all these people to work together?
What is lacquer? What is it made of?
Miners.
Black nickel: What is it and where do you get it?
Factice: Ever heard of it? Where do you get it and how do you make it?
Does anyone know how to make a pencil?
Each contributes an infinitesimal bit.
All are necessary.
Don't want pencils.
May have never seen a pencil.
Instead, self-interest.
Invisible Hand.
Millions of tiny know-hows; human desire.
Why wouldn't this work for, e.g. delivering the mail?
Other items.
Four lb. of oil from Persian Gulf to Eastern Seaboard for less than price of a stamp.
Read: "Leave all creative energies uninhibited."
No central office, no police enforcement, no democratic decision-making.
Different lands, languages, religions--but they cooperate anyway.
1. What is the point of telling this story?
2. If pencils are this complicated, what about other objects?